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Web site sows support for White House farmer

By ASSOCIATED PRESS   Friday, January 30, 2009 - 8:28 p.m.
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MILWAUKEE (AP) — An Illinois family is sowing support for a White House farmer with a Web site allowing people to nominate and vote for their favorite growers.

The nominees range from 10 teens in Alameda, Calif., who grow food for more than 500 formerly homeless people to former pro basketball player Will Allen, an urban farmer in Milwaukee.

Dela Ends, a Brodhead farmer, is also a nominee.

The election ends Saturday, when organizer Terra Brockman plans to forward the names of the top three vote-getters to the White House.

More than 100 farmers from 33 states and Washington, D.C., had been nominated by Thursday afternoon, while more than 27,000 votes had been cast.

Brockman’s family launched the Web site in mid-November after reading a New York Times Magazine article in which journalist Michael Pollan called for the appointment of a White House farmer to complement the White House chef. Pollan suggested replacing five acres of the White House’s South Lawn with an organic fruit and vegetable garden.

Nominations and votes trickled in at first, but then word spread among farming and foodie groups. In the past few weeks, “it’s kind of gone crazy,” said Brockman, 50, of Congerville, Ill.

The push has been embraced by people who favor small, family-run, community-oriented, environmentally friendly farms. Most nominees are organic farmers, and many run community gardens or nonprofit farms.

The White House did not have an immediate comment on the effort. But many early presidents grew food there, including John Adams, who planted a vegetable garden shortly after moving in in 1800.

A top vote-getter in the Brockmans’ contest has been Carrie Little, manager of Mother Earth Farm in Puyallup, Wash. Run by the Emergency Food Network, the farm supplies local food banks and hot meal programs.

Little, 48, of Tacoma, Wash., favors companion planting in which two plants, such as sunflowers and beans, are sown together because they foster each other’s growth. “One of the things that I love to do is work with things that work so well together,” she said. “And companion planting is kind of symbolic of what we all need to be doing anyway.”

Little, who surveyed food bank clients to determine what to grow at Mother Earth Farm, said her first move as White House farmer would be to ask what vegetables President Barack Obama and his family prefer.

“You certainly don’t want to grow things that people won’t eat or enjoy,” she said. Another nominee, David Perkins, said he sees the job as an opportunity to educate people about kohlrabi and other relatively unknown vegetables.

“What’s been part of the problem with agriculture is sort of the narrowing down of diversity and the lack of it,” said Perkins, 51, who runs a 35-acre farm in Vermont, Wis., with his wife, Barbara.

They serve about 2,000 families who buy shares of their harvest in a community-supported agriculture program. Perkins and other nominees said they see the White House farm as a way to show the public how small, environmentally friendly farms can feed people and create jobs worldwide.

“The key thing is that local people are producers,” he said. “Hopefully, the seeds and the inputs you need for farming have a local base.”

That’s why Allen doesn’t want the job. He grew up outside Washington, D.C., and said he feels strongly that the White House farmer should come from there, particularly when so many in the community need work.

Allen employs 35 people at six sites in the Milwaukee area and Chicago that produce vegetables and yellow perch, generating about $200,000 in sales per acre.

“Small-scale farming operations become job-creating monsters,” said Allen, 59.

Still, he was excited about the idea of a White House farmer and said he would be happy to help train someone in green, urban farming techniques.

Another urban nominee, Tim Wilson, 26, runs City Farm in Chicago. The nonprofit teaches low-income adults and youth to grow vegetables at three sites, including one bordering the Cabrini-Green public housing development. The produce is sold to the public and restaurants.

Wilson envisions the White House farmer using compost materials from inner-city Washington, much as City Farm uses food waste from Chicago restaurants. Workers would learn business and agriculture skills by raising produce for the White House and food pantries and for sale.

“A major part of small-scale agriculture is that people need to be making a living off of it for it to be realistic,” Wilson said.

Pollan, 53, of Berkeley, Calif., said he would like to see the White House choose an organic farmer familiar with the challenges a hot, humid Washington summer could present.

“I would definitely look for a White House farmer who knows their way around a fungal disease,” he said. ——— On the Net: White House Farmer: http://whitehousefarmer.com/




reader COMMENTS
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(7)
gina51
Feb 1, 2009 at 9:53 a.m.
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Claire Stader from Madison, WI came in first. So cool to have our state represented. And to come in first place. This is really great.

janesvillean
Jan 31, 2009 at 11:42 p.m.
Suggest removal

Oh, somebody is probably just soused ....

mopsy
Jan 31, 2009 at 10:04 p.m.
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jguernsey, garyprimer is pulling our leg, as usual (lol)

jguernsey
Jan 31, 2009 at 2:58 p.m.
Suggest removal

The word "sows" is being used as a verb not a noun. Therefore, I don't see how it's inappropriate.

garyprimer
Jan 31, 2009 at 1:54 p.m.
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I think that it is inappropriate to call them "white house sows".

gina51
Jan 31, 2009 at 9:58 a.m.
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This is such a great idea. How cool to have the White House gardener be from our capitol. I voted for Claire Stader. I've seen her community gardens in Madison and they are really beautiful and help feed the community. Let's vote Clare in. She is winning at this moment.

mopsy
Jan 30, 2009 at 9:21 p.m.
Suggest removal

Hey, everybody, at the top of the votes by a bit right now is Claire Strader of Madison. How about we give her some more votes and keep her there!(One per IP will count.) Go to WhiteHouseFarmer.com and look for Claire. The names are mixed around on the list so you have to look for her. Read her bio and you will see she is great for the job. Please help keep her at the top!

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