January 4th, 2011 By Helena Bottemiller
President Obama signed a sweeping food safety bill into law today, marking the end of a lengthy legislative drama and turning the focus to whether the U.S. Food and Drug Administration will get the additional funding needed to implement the bill. Read More
Tags: budget, food safety bill, legislation, Margaret Hamburg, obama
June 23rd, 2009 By Lisa Hamilton
Author’s note: Lately a number of people have asked me what I think of how the Obama administration is approaching agriculture. Do all the gardens and talk of healthy food represent significant change, or are they a leafy green veneer on what amounts to nothing more than business as usual? Here’s my response, which was mailed by post today. Read More
Tags: agriculture policy, food agenda, new administration, obama, sustainability, tom vilsack
June 23rd, 2009 By Gordon Jenkins

"Harvest Time in Harlem," an education program run by Slow Food USA.
Last week, Michelle Obama made these remarks (VIDEO) to a group of fifth-graders who had just harvested 73 pounds of lettuce and 12 pounds of snap peas from the First Lady’s Garden on the White House Lawn:
“To make sure that we give all our kids a good start to their day and to their future, we need to improve the quality and nutrition of the food served in schools. We’re approaching the first big opportunity to move this to the top of the agenda with the upcoming reauthorization of the child nutrition programs. In doing so, we can go a long way towards creating a healthier generation for our kids.”
It wasn’t Michael Pollan who said those words. It was the First Lady. Coming from her, the phrase “big opportunity to move this to the top of the agenda” is a call to action we cannot ignore. Read More
Tags: food agenda, obama, school lunch, slow food
May 7th, 2009 By Eddie Gehman Kohan
Later today, when the President announces his 2010 budget, which slashes 121 programs and about $17 billion, there’ll be one crucial area where spending will increase. Working with his closest advisers, President Obama is attempting to redress the longstanding civil rights grievances of black American farmers, by proposing a $1.25 billion deal to settle their discrimination case against USDA, which has come to be called ‘The Pigford Claims.’ (Pic: John Boyd speaks at a USDA rally) Read More
Tags: black farmers, new administration, obama, Pigford claims, USDA
April 28th, 2009 By Paula Crossfield
When the news broke that First Lady Michelle Obama was putting in a vegetable garden on the White House lawn in March, I couldn’t help but wonder if it would be the most powerful “soft” policy position on food this presidency could take in the first 100 days. In just planting a garden, she not only might have begun to change our view of vegetables , while inspiring Americans to grow some of their own food and save a little money in this time of economic crisis, but she also might have gracefully encouraged us to diversify our diets — the basis for good health, and by extension, a healthier agriculture system. For this alone, she gets an “A” on her contribution to the administration’s agriculture policy in the first 100 days.
President Obama, on the other hand, entered his role with a stack of urgent crises on his desk. Food advocates couldn’t help but have lowered expectations of how he would address the decline of farming and of rural populations; lobbyists working in the USDA, FDA and EPA; the quality of school lunch; the 36 million Americans suffering from hunger; energy independence beyond the empty promise of ethanol, and more. The real food lobby has gotten used to these vital issues taking a back seat, but that didn’t mean they were going to stop asking our young, hip and multitasking president to change all that. Read More
Tags: first 100 days, Food Safety, Kathleen Sebelius, new administration, obama, swine flu, White House Garden
March 26th, 2009 By Pooja Renee Mottl
According to the USDA, if Americans ate healthier, at least $71 billion per year could be saved in medical costs, lost productivity and lost lives. In fact, the food we eat is affecting our nation’s health to a surprising degree in the form of diet-related disease. Today, the typical American diet – high in saturated fats, sugars and sodium – is a contributor to four of the six leading causes of death and a risk factor for what has now become a nationwide epidemic – obesity. Read More
Tags: food agenda, food movement, new administration, obama, obesity, prevention, surgeon general
March 15th, 2009 By Paula Crossfield
In his weekly address Saturday, President Obama announced that he had put together a “Food Safety Working Group,” whose focus will include fostering communication between federal agencies in order to make sure food safety policies are being enforced, starting with “closing loopholes” that have up to now allowed sick downer cows to make their way into the food system. The goal, he said, is to ensure that the food we eat — including Sasha’s peanut butter sandwiches — are safe from contamination. Read More
Tags: contamination, Death on a Factory Farm, Food Inc, Food Safety, Food Safety Working Group, MRSA, new administration, New York Times, Nicholas Kristoff, obama, pathogens in food
February 18th, 2009 By Naomi Starkman
Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack told several consumer groups yesterday in a conference call that he will ask the meat industry to voluntarily follow stricter guidelines for new package labels designed to specify a food’s country of origin. If the industry does not comply, the administration will write new rules, reported the AP. Read More
Tags: COOL labeling, food labels, meat labels, new administration, obama, Vilsack
January 30th, 2009 By Aaron French
Amid the flurry of news reports and blog analysis this week about the appointment of the Obama family chef to the White House, there’s been one crucial omission. Headlines have credited President Obama with the appointment, despite the fact that the Chef Kass’ position was confirmed by Katie McCormick Lelyveld, who is spokeswoman for First Lady Michelle, not President Barack. Read More
Tags: food agenda, local food, new administration, obama, Sam Kass, white house chef
January 15th, 2009 By Christopher Bedford
During the Vilsack hearings yesterday, there were a few hints of change — a reference to urban agriculture, a consistently stated commitment to “diverse” agriculture. But, overall, the picture was sobering and not a little depressing. The attitudes of the committee revealed a deep concern for industrial agriculture and its future. Read More
Tags: Food Activism, food agenda, local economy, new administration, obama, Vilsack
November 7th, 2008 By Paula Crossfield

On Tuesday night, many people all over America celebrated the election of Barack Obama as our 44th President. He won on a platform of fundamental change, and has invited us, the American people, back into the democratic process again. Accepting his new post, he said: Read More
Tags: activism, food agenda, local food, obama