Réseau pour une alimentation locale durable - contenu

Webinar: Lessons Learned - Effective Internship and Apprenticeship Programs

Hosted by: the New Farmers Initiative of FSC and FarmStart

THURSDAY FEBRUARY 5 FROM 1:00 PM TO 2:30 PM ET

WEBINAR: Linking Farmers to Land - Alternative Land Access and Tenure

Hosted by the New Farmers Initiative of FSC and FarmStart

TUESDAY FEBRUARY 17 1-2:30PM ET

Update on Bill C-18 and a Call to Action for a new Seed Act for Farmers

Bill C-18 or The Agricultural Growth Act passed third reading on November 24, 2014. Once it passes through the Senate and receives royal assent, Canada will have a new Plant Breeder's Rights Act which conforms with UPOV '91 and a new Seeds Act. The Conservative party and the Liberal Party both supported the Bill C-18. The NDP, Green Party and Bloc Quebecois voted against it.

Understanding regional food hubs

The demand for local food is growing fast in Canada, providing small farmers with the perfect opportunity to secure their piece of a burgeoning market. Unfortunately, although many farmers may have expanded beyond farm-direct marketing sources like farmer’s markets and CSAs, they remain challenged by the lack of appropriately scaled distribution and processing infrastructure (abattoirs, processing facilities, small-scale trucking) that would allow them access to larger markets.

The demand for local food is growing fast in Canada, providing small farmers with the perfect opportunity to secure their piece of a burgeoning market. Unfortunately, although many farmers may have expanded beyond farm-direct marketing sources like farmer’s markets and CSAs, they remain challenged by the lack of appropriately scaled distribution and processing infrastructure (abattoirs, processing facilities, small-scale trucking) that would allow them access to larger markets. - See more at: http://foodsecurecanada.org/resources-news/news-media/fsc-news/understan...
The demand for local food is growing fast in Canada, providing small farmers with the perfect opportunity to secure their piece of a burgeoning market. Unfortunately, although many farmers may have expanded beyond farm-direct marketing sources like farmer’s markets and CSAs, they remain challenged by the lack of appropriately scaled distribution and processing infrastructure (abattoirs, processing facilities, small-scale trucking) that would allow them access to larger markets. - See more at: http://foodsecurecanada.org/resources-news/news-media/fsc-news/understan...

Webinar: Demystifying Food Safety

Hosted by Food Secure Canada as part of the Food Business Bootcamp

October 28th, 10AM pacific / 1pm eastern

What really is required to produce safe food as well as what is obligatory under law can seem like a frightening maze. Yet providing safe food consistently is key to an enterprise reputation and brand. Hosted by Food Secure Canada as part of the Food Business Bootcamp

Does Canada Need a National School Food Program?

A new coalition thinks we do, but with every province already covering school food, is it necessary?

Farmers’ seeds at centre of a debate over Agricultural Growth Act

Proponents say this will align Canada with its international trade partners and allow for more private innovation in food biotechnology, while opponents say it will restrict farmers’ rights to save their seeds and place ownership in the hands of the corporations that they are bought from.

By DENIS CALNAN |
Published: Monday, 09/22/2014 12:00 am EDT
Last Updated: Monday, 09/22/2014 12:43 am EDT

Appetite for organic has Quebec’s small farmers thriving

Montreal — There’s nothing new about the increasing demand for local produce; the farm-to-table experience, buying from small farmers within a 100-mile range, has been growing since the early 2000s when the locavore movement was launched in San Francisco.

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