September 30th, 2011 By Rich Bindell
Food & Water Watch released a new report yesterday called Genetically Engineered Food: An Overview. Sounds rather textbook, yet this report contains answers to questions about this controversial method of food production that big agribusiness does not want you to know. Our researchers worked long hours to provide consumers with information to make informed decisions about GE foods, so you will want to check this out.
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Tags: Food & Water Watch, Genetically Engineered Food, Genetically Modified Foods (GMOs)
November 30th, 2010 By Chris Hunt
Having spent several years working to raise awareness about the problems created by factory farms, I’ve fielded a whole lot of questions about industrial livestock production–so many, in fact, that I’ve often considered publishing a pocketsize list of factory farm FAQs. You know, a little something to inspire lighthearted cocktail party conversation or to use as an icebreaker during first dates. Instant commercial success, guaranteed. Anyway, at the top of the list would be the question, “where are these factory farms?” Read More
Tags: factory farms, Food & Water Watch, map
September 1st, 2010 By Patty Lovera
Last Friday, August 27, USDA and the Department of Justice hosted the fourth in a series of historic workshops on corporate concentration and lack of competition in agriculture; this time the topic was livestock. With more than 500 ranchers, farmers, workers, and concerned consumers turning out for an evening public forum and an estimated 2,000 people in the audience the next day for the official hearing, it was a chance to generate some long overdue public attention on the vital issue of who is in charge of our food supply. Read More
Tags: DOJ, Food & Water Watch, Livestock hearing, Packers & Stockyards Act, tom vilsack, USDA
June 29th, 2010 By Anna Ghosh
It is impossible to build a sustainable food system without addressing the issues surrounding water. The struggle over water in California is more than a century old and continues today with an $11 billion water bond, Proposition 18, proposed by Governor Schwarzenegger for November’s ballot.
Some portray California’s water problems as a farmer vs. fisher battle, but this is a simplistic, inaccurate depiction. Small and midsized farmers are just as concerned about the ecological health of the San Joaquin-Sacramento River Delta as the fishermen and women whose livelihoods have been devastated by the reduction in fish populations over the past several years. Additionally, many feel that continuing the status quo through the development of more dams on California’s rivers will benefit large-scale corporate agribusiness, not the family farms that serve local and regional markets. Anyone who advocates for sustainable agriculture in California needs to know about the state’s water politics.
Join us for the next Kitchen Table Talks in San Francisco on Tuesday, July 20, where we will bring together a fisherman and a farmer to share their stories and provoke thoughtful conversation about the ties between our water and our food. Read More
Tags: AB2775, California Water Commission, farming, fishing, Food & Water Watch, kitchen table talks, san francisco, Water