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Upper Midwest Food Policy Council Training Each of the three 2008 workshops are designed to promote regional networking and information sharing. To that end, workshop registration will give priority to people within the region where they are located. As additional space becomes available, people from outside of that region will be able to participate. Some scholarship funds are available to defray the cost of travel and lodging. First preference for scholarship support will be for limited resource farmers and ranchers. "This is an exciting time for those involved in urban farming in North America. The desire of consumers, at all levels of society, for fresh, locally-produced food as an alternative to food transported over great distances to kitchen tables, restaurants and schools has led to increased opport unities for food production in city neighborhoods, and on farmland in close proximity to cities. Drawing on a growing understanding of the role that local food and urban agriculture plays in strengthening community food security, proponents also point to the links that city farming makes to public health, issues of homelessness and the elderly, urban/suburban land use, education and youth programming, and community/neighborhood development and job creation. In the bigger picture, the increased number of city and suburban farms, in North America and globally can also begin to address the critical issues of climate change and efficient energy use. Looked at broadly, [Urban Agriculture] is a complex activity, addressing issues central to community food security, community development, environmental sustainability, land use planning, agricultural and food systems, farmland preservation, and other concerns.” --from North American Urban and Peri Urban Agriculture Alliance. Martin Bailkey, James Kuhns and Joe Nasr |