On Thursday, October 16, WHY and its partners held “Step up to the Plate: Ending the Global Food Crisis.”
The event proved to be an emotional, educational, and poignant evening. The Great Hall at Cooper Union was packed with more than 500 people including activists, students, and journalists. All the attendees were enthusiastic to hear what the speakers had to say and passionate about issues affecting and affected by access to local, healthy, and affordable food.
Acclaimed activists each spoke about food access on a global and local level.
The Call to Action addressed the issue as much more than just food access, but also one of human rights. Improving global trade, finding alternative energy sources and ending poverty at home and abroad all rely on the actions taken by the next president to end the global food crisis we now face. It was a collective prioritizing of the basic belief that every person deserves access to healthy, local, and affordable food.
To read the Call to Action and sign on, visit http://www.usfoodcrisisgroup.org/.
Sponsored by: WHY (World Hunger Year), in partnership with Food First, National Family Farm Coalition, Grassroots International, Agricultural Missions, Pesticide Action Network of North America, Small Planet Institute, Food and Water Watch, Coalition of Immokalee Workers, United Food and Commercial Workers Local 1500, Rainforest Action Network and others.
Supporters: Food Systems Network NYC, Just Food, New York Citizens Trade Coalition, World Neighbors, Global Policy Forum, Community Food Security Coalition, Take a Bite out of Climate Change, Anna Lappé , Edible Manhattan, Hunger Action Network of NY State, Sustainable Table, New York City Nutrition Education Network, Sustainable Connections, Alberto Lovera Bolivarian Circle of NY, The FGE Food & Nutrition Team, Cornell Global Labor Institute, Mazon, Council on the Environment NYC/Greenmarket, New York City Coalition Against Hunger, GreenThumb, East New York Farms!, Added Value, I.N.T.A.C.T. Community Development Corporation, Kalabash Food Cooperative, and others.