public health Archives - Real Food Media https://realfoodmedia.org/tag/public-health/ Storytelling, critical analysis, and strategy for the food movement. Thu, 04 May 2023 16:58:47 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.1 Real Food Scoop | No. 62 https://realfoodmedia.org/real-food-scoop-no-62/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=real-food-scoop-no-62 https://realfoodmedia.org/real-food-scoop-no-62/#respond Thu, 04 May 2023 16:58:47 +0000 https://realfoodmedia.org/?p=5421 Did you know it’s possible to grow crops without using poison? But they don’t do it, because they forgot how. And the people who sell the poison don’t want them to remember. They don’t want us to remember that we used to grow beautiful corn and wheat without using any chemicals at all. That’s why... Read more »

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Did you know it’s possible to grow crops without using poison?
But they don’t do it, because they forgot how.
And the people who sell the poison don’t want them to remember.
They don’t want us to remember that we used to grow beautiful corn and wheat without using any chemicals at all.
That’s why it’s important for you to know
that people and nature have to be friends.
If we harm nature, we end up harming ourselves. – Fabián Tomasi

 

 

Argentine farmworker Fabián Tomasi was an iconic voice against the use of pesticides until his death from cancers caused by pesticide exposure in 2018. He was, as many have been and continue to be, a literal body of evidence of the dangers of pesticides.

Research has shown that more than 90 percent of Americans have traces of pesticides in our bodies, most of which comes from the food we eat. Yet, despite the mass amounts of evidence of the dangers of pesticide use, the world has never used as many pesticides as it does today. The United States uses more than any other country, including some of the most dangerous pesticides that are banned in other countries. 

With the release of the US edition of the Pesticide Atlas, a powerful compendium on the state of pesticide use and why it matters, leaders at prominent US civil society organizations working for common sense pesticide action (including Pesticide Action Network (PAN) North America, the Center for Biological Diversity, Hawaii Alliance for Progressive Action, and Real Food Media) highlight the alarmingly persistent use of toxic pesticides in the United States—and what we can do about it. 

 

In community and solidarity,

Tiffani, Christina, Tanya, and Anna

 

Read Issue No. 62 of the Real Food Scoop

Download the Pesticide Atlas

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Launch of the US Edition of the Pesticide Atlas https://realfoodmedia.org/us-edition-of-the-pesticide-atlas/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=us-edition-of-the-pesticide-atlas https://realfoodmedia.org/us-edition-of-the-pesticide-atlas/#respond Wed, 26 Apr 2023 12:30:10 +0000 https://realfoodmedia.org/?p=5414 US Edition of Pesticide Atlas highlights alarming use of pesticides in the United States—and what we can do about it.    The world has never used as many pesticides as it does today, and the United States uses more than any other country, including some of the most dangerous pesticides that are banned in other... Read more »

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US Edition of Pesticide Atlas highlights alarming use of pesticides in the United States—and what we can do about it. 

 

The world has never used as many pesticides as it does today, and the United States uses more than any other country, including some of the most dangerous pesticides that are banned in other countries. With the release of a US Edition of the Pesticide Atlas, a powerful compendium on the state of pesticide use and why it matters, leaders at prominent US civil society organizations working for common sense pesticide action, including Pesticide Action Network (PAN) North America, the Center for Biological Diversity, Hawaii Alliance for Progressive Action, and Real Food Media highlight the alarmingly persistent use of toxic pesticides in the United States—and what we can do about it. 

 

The US edition of the Pesticide Atlas is one of five published around the world as part of the Germany-based Heinrich Boell Foundation’s series. Other editions include Germany, EU, Kenya, Italy, and Nigeria.

 

New chapters in the US edition include:

  • A snapshot of pesticide use in the United States and the connection between pesticide production, use, and the climate crisis from Margaret Reeves and Asha Sharma of Pesticide Action Network North America;
  • A look at how the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has failed to properly regulate pesticides and how this has led to the heavy use of dangerous pesticides, and subsequent devastation to biodiversity from Nathan Donley and Lori Ann Burd of the Center for Biological Diversity;
  • An overview of pesticide industry PR tactics to deter and delay action on pesticides from US Edition editor, Anna Lappé, and journalist and co-founder of US Right to Know Stacy Malkan;
  • A story of dedicated organizing for common sense pesticide regulation on the Hawaiian islands from Executive Director of Hawaii Alliance for Progressive Action, Anne Frederick.

 

“Sixty years after Rachel Carson warned us of the terrible toll of overuse of pesticides here and around the world, the United States continues to use more pesticides than anywhere else on the planet, including some of the most hazardous pesticides banned in other countries. With rising rates of cancer, infertility, and metabolic disorders alongside a biodiversity crisis, taking action on pesticides has never been more important. This report arms us all with the facts, and inspiration, to do so.” — Anna Lappé, editor of the Pesticide Atlas-US Edition and author, funder, and sustainable food advocate   

 

“With a billion pounds of pesticides used each year in the US, the American public reasonably expects that these chemicals made to kill living things are tightly regulated by the US Environmental Protection Agency. But unfortunately that’s not the case. As a result, Big Ag in the US relies on pesticides that many other nations have banned because of their severe dangers. Tragically, that regulatory failure causes the greatest harm to farmworkers and their children and our nation’s most endangered wildlife, particularly pollinators.” — Lori Ann Burd, environmental health director at the Center for Biological Diversity.   

 

On April 26, 2023 at 10:30amPT/1:30pmET join Anna Lappé in conversation with contributors to the US Edition of the Pesticide Atlas in a webinar to share key highlights from the Atlas and their implications. The conversation will center on how we can collectively better understand the connections between pesticide use and public health, the climate crisis, and biodiversity as well as dive deeper into how to understand the policy barriers and opportunities for action on pesticides here in the United States.  Register for the free webinar

 

Contact Info

Anna Lappé

Editor, Pesticide Atlas-US Edition

Food Sovereignty Fund Director, Panta Rhea Foundation

Founder, Strategic Advisor, Real Food Media

anna@realfoodmedia.org 

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More Bad News on Glyphosate https://realfoodmedia.org/more-bad-news-on-glyphosate/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=more-bad-news-on-glyphosate https://realfoodmedia.org/more-bad-news-on-glyphosate/#respond Sun, 12 Mar 2023 17:47:12 +0000 https://realfoodmedia.org/?p=5394 by Anna Lappé As coauthors Stacy Malkan (US Right to Know), Kendra Klein (Friends of the Earth), and I wrote about in our report Merchants of Poison: A Case Study In Pesticide Industry Science Denial On Glyphosate, many folks have been raising concerns about the potential health risks of exposure to glyphosate. Now, a new... Read more »

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by Anna Lappé

As coauthors Stacy Malkan (US Right to Know), Kendra Klein (Friends of the Earth), and I wrote about in our report Merchants of Poison: A Case Study In Pesticide Industry Science Denial On Glyphosate, many folks have been raising concerns about the potential health risks of exposure to glyphosate. Now, a new study from UC Berkeley researchers who have been studying the communities living in the nation’s “salad bowl”—the agriculturally rich Salinas Valley—should raise even more questions for all of us: The study found that children who had glyphosate exposure levels fairly typical for the average American were at higher risk for liver inflammation and metabolic  disorders.  As one researcher noted: “The study’s implications are troubling,” said Dr. Ana Maria Mora, a CERCH investigator and coauthor, “as the levels of the chemicals found in our study participants are within the range reported for the general U.S. population.”

 

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Op-ed: What the pesticide industry doesn’t want you to know https://realfoodmedia.org/op-ed-what-the-pesticide-industry-doesnt-want-you-to-know/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=op-ed-what-the-pesticide-industry-doesnt-want-you-to-know https://realfoodmedia.org/op-ed-what-the-pesticide-industry-doesnt-want-you-to-know/#respond Mon, 12 Dec 2022 00:39:32 +0000 https://realfoodmedia.org/?p=5345 by Stacy Malkan, Kendra Klein, and Anna Lappé, Environmental Health News   In the wake of this year’s global climate summit, advocates are raising the alarm about how industry continues to distort climate policy with public relations spin. Indeed, one of the most critical challenges of our times is the need to confront corporate disinformation.... Read more »

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by Stacy Malkan, Kendra Klein, and Anna Lappé, Environmental Health News

 

In the wake of this year’s global climate summit, advocates are raising the alarm about how industry continues to distort climate policy with public relations spin.

Indeed, one of the most critical challenges of our times is the need to confront corporate disinformation. While the stakes of Big Oil’s climate denialism and greenwashing are ever clearer — as wildfires tear through communities, entire nations are threatened by rising sea levels, and farmlands are ravaged by extreme weather — a more stealthy set of devastating impacts hides behind the lies fabricated by Big Pesticide corporations.

Like Big Oil, pesticide companies spend hundreds of millions every year on deceitful PR strategies to keep their hazardous products on the market, even as evidence mounts that many pesticides still used today are tied to certain cancers, damage to children’s developing brains, biodiversity collapse, and more.

In a new report, Merchants of Poison, we document a case study of just such pesticide industry disinformation, revealing a PR playbook similar in strategy, institutions — and at times the very same individual players — as that of the fossil fuel industry. As nearly all agricultural chemicals are derived from fossil fuels, this interconnection should come as no surprise.

 

Increase in genetically modified crops

Today, more than 98 percent of genetically modified crops planted in the U.S. are glyphosate tolerant. 

Credit: Merchants of Poison

Merchants of Poison shows how pesticide giant Monsanto (purchased by Bayer in 2019) spent millions on deceptive communications strategies over decades to promote the narrative that its bestselling herbicide glyphosate, better known as Roundup, is safe – as safe as table salt, as Monsanto once claimed.

This messaging encouraged lax regulations that led to widespread use, especially as genetically modified corn and soy engineered to withstand being sprayed with the herbicide came to dominate farm acreage beginning in the mid-1990s.

Today, more than 98 percent of genetically modified crops planted in the U.S. are glyphosate tolerant, and glyphosate is the most widely used agrichemical in the world. In the U.S. alone, nearly 300 million pounds are used each year on farms, public parks, school grounds, and in home gardens. This despite the fact that, as far back as 1984, glyphosate was flagged as potentially causing cancer by U.S. Environmental Protection Agency scientists. And, in 2015, glyphosate was designated as a probable carcinogen by the WHO’s International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC). Recent science has also linked the chemical to lower birth weights among babies, reproductive health impacts, and other serious health concerns.

Manufactured doubt about glyphosate’s cancer link

Pesticide companies spend hundreds of millions every year on deceitful PR strategies to keep their hazardous products on the market.

Credit: Merchants of Poison, data from Food Barons, ETC Group 2022

So how did Monsanto thwart science-based regulation and mislead the public for over three decades? Thousands of pages of internal corporate documents brought to light through recent lawsuits over the cancer risk of Roundup reveal some answers. The documents show a PR machine in overdrive to manufacture doubt about the science linking glyphosate to cancer, and they reveal the many strategies Monsanto used to manipulate the scientific record over decades — from ghostwriting studies to running aggressive campaigns to discredit scientists who raised concerns about the pesticide.

The documents also expose how the company carefully cultivated a legion of front groups and other third-party allies that included top universities, scientific organizations, and professors who claimed to be independent even as they worked behind the scenes with Monsanto to protect sales of Roundup.

The documents also reinforce just how much the “disinformation industry” funded by pesticide companies has become a big business itself. Our analysis found that just seven of the front groups named in Monsanto’s internal strategy documents spent a total of $76 million over a five-year period, starting in 2015, pushing a broad range of anti-regulatory messaging. In addition, six industry trade groups named in the Monsanto documents spent more than $1.3 billion during that same time period, which includes defense efforts for agricultural chemicals including glyphosate.

Pesticides soar in the U.S. 

While the report focuses on Roundup, the chemical is just one of dozens of pesticides that remain on the market thanks to industry’s efforts to deny and manufacture doubt about scientific evidence of harm. Indeed, 85 pesticides that are banned in other countries are still used in the United States. And during just one year, from 2017 to 2018, the EPA approved more than 100 new pesticide products containing ingredients considered to be highly hazardous. Industry disinformation has also enabled growing pesticide sales worldwide; global use has jumped over 80 percent since 1990.

The result? Billions of pounds of pesticides blanket the earth, contaminating wildlands and streams, decimating pollinator populations, and winding up in us, too. Today, more than 90 percent of us have detectable pesticides in our bodies. Many of these chemicals are understood to cause cancer, affect the body’s hormonal systems, disrupt fertility, cause developmental delays for children or Parkinson’s, depression, or Alzheimer’s as we age. And like all petrochemicals, we know another devastating cost: the consequences of pesticides on our climate.

The stakes of this disinformation are high. Right now, policymakers in the U.S. and Europe are deliberating about whether to enforce greater restrictions on glyphosate. And a landmark European Union proposal for more sustainable, climate-friendly food systems aims to cut pesticide use by half. But these public health measures are threatened by aggressive industry-led lobby campaigns using stealth tactics like those described in our report.

Just as a growing number of people are seeing the need to take on Big Oil’s disinformation to ensure real action on the climate crisis, we must lift the veil on Big Pesticide’s disinformation tactics and boldly confront the lies the industry spreads and end the indiscriminate poisoning of our planet and ourselves and ensure a healthy planet for all.

Stacy Malkan is the c-founder of US Right to Know. Kendra Klein, PhD, is deputy director of science at Friends of the Earth US. Anna Lappé is an author and founder of Real Food Media.

See the full Merchants of Poison report.

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Merchants of Poison: How Monsanto Sold the World on a Toxic Pesticide https://realfoodmedia.org/merchantsofpoison/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=merchantsofpoison https://realfoodmedia.org/merchantsofpoison/#respond Thu, 08 Dec 2022 18:06:40 +0000 https://realfoodmedia.org/?p=5326 by Anna Lappé   We are pleased to announce a new report out this week from Stacy Malkan and US Right to Know, with support from Anna Lappé and Kendra Klein, PhD, of Friends of the Earth.  Based on a comprehensive analysis of documents released in litigation against Monsanto—and many more obtained in a years-long... Read more »

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by Anna Lappé

 

We are pleased to announce a new report out this week from Stacy Malkan and US Right to Know, with support from Anna Lappé and Kendra Klein, PhD, of Friends of the Earth

Based on a comprehensive analysis of documents released in litigation against Monsanto—and many more obtained in a years-long investigation by US Right to Know—Merchants of Poison: How Monsanto Sold the World on a Toxic Pesticide tells the tale of pesticide industry disinformation, including science denial techniques, attacks on scientists, astroturf strategies, online domination of industry messaging, and other spin tactics. 

Since our founding at Real Food Media, we’ve tried to help expose the ways corporations bend the truth to line their pockets, not protect the public good. This report is another piece of that work, showing how pesticide companies—like Big Oil and Big Tobacco—use spin tactics to shape the story about food and farming, pushing the twin messages that pesticides are safe and that we need them to feed the world.

We hope this report adds to the multifaceted, growing effort to expose industry PR tactics and promote the public good. 

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Celebrating the 50th anniversary of Diet for a Small Planet at the Bay Area Book Festival https://realfoodmedia.org/celebrating-the-50th-anniversary-of-diet-for-a-small-planet-at-the-bay-area-book-festival/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=celebrating-the-50th-anniversary-of-diet-for-a-small-planet-at-the-bay-area-book-festival https://realfoodmedia.org/celebrating-the-50th-anniversary-of-diet-for-a-small-planet-at-the-bay-area-book-festival/#respond Sun, 08 May 2022 01:43:43 +0000 https://realfoodmedia.org/?p=5271 by Anna Lappé It was my first in-person event since the start of Covid, and I was delighted to be with my mom and my dear friend Davia Nelson of Kitchen Sisters. If you catch me smiling at folks in the audience it might be my husband, my daughter, my brother, my 4th grade English... Read more »

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by Anna Lappé

It was my first in-person event since the start of Covid, and I was delighted to be with my mom and my dear friend Davia Nelson of Kitchen Sisters. If you catch me smiling at folks in the audience it might be my husband, my daughter, my brother, my 4th grade English teacher, my kids’ school principal… it truly was a family affair. My mother and I got to talk about the anniversary edition and all the fun we had pulling it together. You can learn more about Diet for a Small Planet at 50 and get yourself a copy at our website here.

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Real Food Scoop | No. 50 https://realfoodmedia.org/real-food-scoop-no-50/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=real-food-scoop-no-50 https://realfoodmedia.org/real-food-scoop-no-50/#respond Fri, 03 Dec 2021 18:59:28 +0000 https://realfoodmedia.org/?p=5146 “It’s very odd to live in a world where medicine is given to you by certain people in white coats, whereas food is that thing that makes you sick.” —Raj Patel, Real Food Reads Ep. 52   If you follow Real Food Media, you know that these past few months we’ve been basking in the... Read more »

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“It’s very odd to live in a world where medicine is given to you by certain people in white coats, whereas food is that thing that makes you sick.” —Raj Patel, Real Food Reads Ep. 52

 

If you follow Real Food Media, you know that these past few months we’ve been basking in the media love fest for Diet for a Small Planet (50th Anniversary Edition), Frances “Frankie” Moore Lappé’s best-selling cookbook-come-political-manifesto. 

Updated for a world set ablaze by the climate crisis, Diet (sadly) remains as relevant as ever. With characteristically rigorous and devastating statistics, Frankie tells us: “Largely because of the shift to corporate-chemical practices and heavy reliance on meat, our food systems globally generate as much as 37 percent of greenhouse gas emissions… Nearly 60 percent of all calories Americans eat now comes from ultra-processed food [and] in 2017, 11 million deaths worldwide—one in five—were from diseases in which poor diet is a risk factor.” 

How did we get here? According to Raj Patel and Dr. Rupa Marya, authors of Inflamed: Deep Medicine and the Anatomy of Injustice, colonialism is largely to blame. In our recent Real Food Reads conversation, Raj observed, “Western colonial capitalist civilization is very weird in thinking that food and medicine are two different things… as opposed to understanding that, in fact, food and medicine are part of a broad, coextensive web.”

So, what’s the antidote? For Patel and Marya, as well as many Real Food Media friends we’ve learned from over the years, looking to the world’s Indigenous cultures, and working to decolonize our food system, is the way forward. Whether or not you celebrate Thanksgiving (or recognize Thanks-taking), here is a Real Food Media reading list filled with decolonizing inspo and planet-friendly recipes:

Wishing you healing and peace this harvest and holiday season,

 

Tanya, Tiffani, Christina, and Anna

P.S. Looking for more info specifically geared towards dismantling white settler narratives of Thanksgiving? Check out this great “Unlearning the History of Thankstaking” resource list curated by Neftalí Duran for the I-Collective.

Read the full issue of the Real Food Scoop

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Diet for a Small Planet — 50 Years Later https://realfoodmedia.org/diet-for-a-small-planet-50-years-later/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=diet-for-a-small-planet-50-years-later https://realfoodmedia.org/diet-for-a-small-planet-50-years-later/#respond Thu, 09 Sep 2021 08:04:52 +0000 https://realfoodmedia.org/?p=5097 by Anna Lappé   Fifty years ago, while experts published scary tomes about imminent world famine, my mother was a 26-year-old researcher curious about exactly why there was so much hunger around the globe. She buried herself in the stacks at the Giannini Library on UC Berkeley’s campus. What she discovered was so shocking, she... Read more »

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by Anna Lappé

 

Fifty years ago, while experts published scary tomes about imminent world famine, my mother was a 26-year-old researcher curious about exactly why there was so much hunger around the globe. She buried herself in the stacks at the Giannini Library on UC Berkeley’s campus. What she discovered was so shocking, she felt she had to share the news with the world: There was actually enough food (there is still today). We humans were actually creating scarcity through then-just-emergent grain-fed, industrial livestock production systems. 

She turned her insight into a pamphlet, which became a longer essay, which became the book, Diet for a Small Planet.   

Last year, as Covid-19 kept our family thousands of miles from each other, I set out to help my mom celebrate the 50th anniversary of this seminal book with a new, special edition.  

This edition includes a new opening chapter by my mom—trying to distill her life’s work into just 15,000 words! And, with the expert hand of the wonderful and talented recipe developer, Wendy Lopez—and loads of Zoom calls and dirty dishes—we also refreshed the recipe section. No more soy grits and margarine! The 85+ recipes include more than a dozen from some of our very favorite cookbook authors and chefs, including several beloved Real Food Reads authors!  

You can pre-order your book today at www.dietforasmallplanet.org and please join us with friends and family for one or both of our book launches

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Inflamed: Deep Medicine and the Anatomy of Injustice https://realfoodmedia.org/portfolio/inflamed/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=inflamed Fri, 13 Aug 2021 03:49:55 +0000 https://realfoodmedia.org/?post_type=portfolio&p=5072 The Covid pandemic and the shocking racial disparities in its impact. The surge in inflammatory illnesses such as gastrointestinal disorders and asthma. Mass uprisings around the world in response to systemic racism and violence. Rising numbers of climate refugees. Our bodies, societies, and planet are inflamed. Boldly original, Inflamed takes us on a medical tour... Read more »

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The Covid pandemic and the shocking racial disparities in its impact. The surge in inflammatory illnesses such as gastrointestinal disorders and asthma. Mass uprisings around the world in response to systemic racism and violence. Rising numbers of climate refugees. Our bodies, societies, and planet are inflamed.

Boldly original, Inflamed takes us on a medical tour through the human body—our digestive, endocrine, circulatory, respiratory, reproductive, immune, and nervous systems. Unlike a traditional anatomy book, this groundbreaking work illuminates the hidden relationships between our biological systems and the profound injustices of our political and economic systems. Inflammation is connected to the food we eat, the air we breathe, and the diversity of the microbes living inside us, which regulate everything from our brain’s development to our immune system’s functioning. It’s connected to the number of traumatic events we experienced as children and to the traumas endured by our ancestors. It’s connected not only to access to health care but to the very models of health that physicians practice.

Raj Patel, the renowned political economist and New York Times bestselling author of The Value of Nothing, teams up with the physician Rupa Marya to offer a radical new cure: the deep medicine of decolonization. Decolonizing heals what has been divided, reestablishing our relationships with the Earth and one another. Combining the latest scientific research and scholarship on globalization with the stories of Marya’s work with patients in marginalized communities, activist passion, and the wisdom of Indigenous groups, Inflamed points the way toward a deep medicine that has the potential to heal not only our bodies, but the world.

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Real Food Scoop | No. 46 https://realfoodmedia.org/real-food-scoop-no-46/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=real-food-scoop-no-46 https://realfoodmedia.org/real-food-scoop-no-46/#respond Wed, 28 Jul 2021 20:26:44 +0000 https://realfoodmedia.org/?p=5051 If, like us, you are struggling to keep your tomatoes alive amidst sweltering temps, the climate crisis is probably looming large on your mind.   The agricultural industry has been scrambling to protect crops, too—for instance, Washington state’s cherry orchards—from drying out and causing major economic losses. And while this is an undeniably tragic effect of... Read more »

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If, like us, you are struggling to keep your tomatoes alive amidst sweltering temps, the climate crisis is probably looming large on your mind.

 

The agricultural industry has been scrambling to protect crops, too—for instance, Washington state’s cherry orchards—from drying out and causing major economic losses. And while this is an undeniably tragic effect of the climate crisis, the most urgent reality is: people are dying.

In Oregon and Washington state alone, 180 deaths and counting have been attributed to the recent heat wave (it’s also had a devastating impact on wildlife). Other severe health impacts from the heat are also reported: from heatstroke to breathing difficulties caused by smoke emitted from wildfires to kidney issues that worsen pre-existing conditions like asthma and heart disease.

Those most at risk? Farmworkers and migrants. Humanitarian organizations on the US-Mexico border report dozens of heat-related migrant deaths in the past month—a tragedy likely to worsen “as the world grows hotter, as countries in the Global South become more unstable, and as more folks head north.”

For the largely-immigrant agricultural workforce, very few US states offer heat protections—and dangerous heat is increasing rapidly: June 2021 was the hottest June on record in the United States and farmworkers die of heat at roughly 20 times the national rate, according to the CDC. This has prompted farmworker advocates to redouble efforts to enact state and federal heat protection legislation to guarantee adequate shade, water, and rest breaks for workers.

As another dangerous heat dome is set to descend on parts of the United States, this should be a wake up call to listen to farmworker-led organizations and enact not only heat protection, but broad labor protections, increased wages, access to healthcare, and legal status for frontline food and farm workers (not to mention halting the fossil fuel expansion and industrial ag model causing climate chaos to begin with). Do those who bring food to our tables deserve anything less?

In community and solidarity,

Tanya, Tiffani, Christina, and Anna

 

 
Read the full issue of the Real Food Scoop

 

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