| OCTOBER
23, 2002, COLUMBIA, MO. By “recapturing the middle”
of the pork business, farmer-operated Patchwork Family Farms
has created viable markets for 20 Missouri families. They beat
their $300,000 sales goal in 2001, and are closing in on 2002
goal of _____.
The farms produce hogs without continuous feeding of antibiotics,
no continuous confinement and no growth hormones. Just as
they allow their animals to run outside, Patchwork farmers
run “outside the box” of specialty producers by
insisting their products work in low-income communities as
well as the dollar-driven marketplace.
Patchwork buys hogs from its farmers, assuring them payment
fixed at 43 cents per pound -- or 15 cents per pound above
market -- whichever is higher. The hogs are processed in one
of three federally inspected, family-owned plants that Patchwork
uses in Missouri. Members now deliver the meat to 50 restaurants,
four mainstream supermarkets, a specialty store and a 5,500-member
food co-op. It’s Patchwork all the way through the middle
from farm to consumers or to retailers.
Early customers were several congregations in economically
depressed African-American communities in Kansas City. The
farmers attended Sunday services in the morning, then socialized
and sold their pork in the afternoon. The congregations had
joined the Missouri Rural Crisis Center (MRCC) in the 1980s
to support farmers threatened by low prices and foreclosure.
Thanks to the dedication of its farm families and its supporters
in the MRCC, which sponsored it, Patchwork is nearing a breakeven
point in its business growth. It has received grants from
farming and church non-profits for its feasibility study and
from the USDA for its community food access work. In addition
to funding initiatives like Patchwork, MRCC carries on organizing
and policy work to limit factory farms and encourage family-scale
farming.
In cooperation with Farm Aid, Patchwork members hauled 6,000
pounds of pork products to New York City in October 2001 to
donate it to low-income families affected by the World Trade
Center bombings.
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