[UPDATE: time and room change!] A hearing on the Healthy Schools Act of 2009 will be held on Tuesday, February 9, 2010 at 11:00AM in room 500 Wednesday, February 10, 2010 at 10:00 a.m. in Room 412 of the John A. Wilson Building located at 1350 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW. To sign up to testify contact Aukima Benjamin at the DC Council: ABenjamin@DCCOUNCIL.US or (202)724-8062
Like most of the food movement folks in DC who are concerned with community food security and its relationship with public health, I am very excited about the Healthy Schools Act of 2009 that is winding its way through the DC Council’s legislative process. Improving school cafeteria nutrition is long overdue, as are the physical exercise provisions. This bill is a great first step and has the potential to positively impact DC schools and the children who grow up here. I plan to testify in support of the bill at the hearing on February 9th and I encourage others to join me!

However there are areas where I see the need for improvement. One of these has to do with the lack of measures to enable District food enterprises to really take advantage of the farm to school provisions. In other states, farm-to-school initiatives have created significant demand for produce grown by the states’ own farmers.
In a sense, this element is lacking in the Healthy Schools Act as proposed. Why? Well, DC has few farmers.
This, though, can be remedied by amending the Act to specifically cite the decades old DC law–the “Food Production and Urban Garden Program” (DC Code §48-402). This law requires that the city “encourage…produce markets throughout the District of Columbia to increase the supply of and demand for urban gardens.” It also calls for “incentives and community outreach” to be used to ensure that vacant lots in DC are used to grow fresh, affordable food. But the law has gone un-implemented.
What does this have to do with healthy schools and farm to school? The Food Production and Urban Garden Program also required the schools to make “use of suitable portions of buildings and grounds” in furtherance of the program.
Sadly, despite having over 20 vacant, unused school buildings and who knows how many greenhouses, none of this has been done. Little else the city has done has been successful; as only one supermarket has opened in the most deprived areas in the last decade, and the only thing that approached a real live full-service farmers market East of the River closed down just over a year ago (read about it here and here). The one remaining DC Department of Parks and Recreation (DPR) employee who works on gardens and the environment is swamped with all kinds of unrelated tasks by her bosses who lack the vision and desire to carry out the law as it applies to DPR.
There is no reason why the School Gardens Program provisions in the Healthy Schools Act cannot be used to implement this law whose time has come. In fact, the farm to school provisions should require that the school system prioritize the buying of fresh produce and processed food that has been grown inside the District to jumpstart this new market.
Only then will this legislation truly be fair for all citizens of the city. It would then go a long way towards bringing more food to neighborhoods where it’s lacking, provide badly needed job training for green jobs in urban agriculture, and improve public health.
I hope you will join in trying to make a good law better by encouraging our policymakers to go farther and make this a stronger bill with better language.
Carl Rollins volunteers as a farm coordinator at Common Good City Farm





As a parent at Capital City Public Charter School, Ward 1, and as a family nurse practitioner, I am very interested in attending this meeting to learn more. Is it rescheduled due to snow????