Family Farm Defenders Presents its Third Annual Wisconsin “Land of 10,000 Lagoons” Awards at the World Dairy Expo! Celebrates the International Year of the Co-op by Recognizing the Worst Violators of Cooperative Principles in the Dairy Industry!

For Immediate Release 10/1/12
Contact:
John E. Peck, FFD executive director  #608-260-0900
John Kinsman, FFD president  #608-986-3815

Wed. Oct. 3rd  2:00 pm  Main Entrance to Alliant Energy Center (off Rimrock Road/Cty MM near the corner with John Nolen Dr.) in Madison, WI
In recognition of 2012 being the International Year of the Co-op, Family Farm Defenders will be presenting special cow pie plaques at this year’s World Dairy Expo to the three worst U.S. dairy co-ops.

“When it comes to consistently undermining cooperative principles, violating the Capper Volstead Act, and refusing to pay their own farmer members a fair parity price, it is really hard not to acknowledge the leadership of Foremost Farms, Dairy Farmers of America, and Land O Lakes,” noted John Peck. “These co-ops may have been built with the blood, sweat, and tears of family dairy farmers long ago to serve their own best interests, but that is no longer the case.  In fact, these dairy co-ops have become just as unethical, corrupt, and greedy as their corporate counterparts like Kraft, Deans, and Nestle.”

The first producer co-ops in the U.S. were actually founded by dairy farmers in CT and NY back in 1810 and today over 80% of the fluid milk in the U.S. is marketed through cooperatives.  Unfortunately, not all co-ops are equal when it comes to respecting the law and acting for the mutual benefit of members.  Many dairy co-ops have become less democratic and more unaccountable as managers answer to other interests, block vote for their own members, and engage in illegal price fixing behavior.

For instance, Deans tried to buyout Foremost Farms to create a quasi-monopoly in fluid milk in the Midwest, a move that was fortunately blocked by the Justice Dept. in 2010.  In 2008 the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) levied a $12 million fine against Dairy Farmers of America (DFA) and its two top executives for rigging Class III milk markets at the Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME). Land ‘O Lakes has engaged in similar collusion, and is also promoting factory farm expansion, pushing dangerous biotechnologies like rBGH and RR alfalfa, and importing milk protein concentrate (MPC) from abroad for illegal use in dairy products to the detriment of its own farmers and consumers.

“How long has Foremost Farms been masquerading as a cooperative?  And how did its members agree to be bought out by private dairy giant like Deans,” asked John Kinsman, longtime dairy farmer and president of Family Farm Defenders.  “Eighty years ago Hillpoint Co-op Creamery was organized by farmers with a processing plant and headquarters in the village of Hillpoint, less than six miles from my farm.  Later it became Wisconsin Dairies.  Certain corrupt executives, though, fired responsible employees who exposed short butter weights, milk watering, false sampling, and other illegal activities, which all led to a messy criminal investigation.  Later Wisconsin Dairies became Foremost Farms, and nothing has really changed.  In fact, in a  referendum about a decade ago on the future of the National Dairy Board, Foremost was caught bloc voting for several hundred more patrons than they actually had.”

The winners of last year’s “Land of 10,000 Lagoons” awards presented at the World Dairy Expo were the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC) and American Farmers for the Advancement and Conservation of Technology (AFACT).  Both AFACT and ALEC had major roles in orchestrating state legislation and manipulating public opinion to the benefit of corporate agribusiness and factory farming in Wisconsin.  Sadly, AFACT dissolved itself shortly after receiving last year’s award, and many members of ALEC are now reconsidering their participation in that controversial organization.

Following the “Land of 10,000 Lagoons” award ceremony, Wisconsin citizens will have an opportunity to speak out about how they have been affected by environmental pollution, health threats, political corruption, and other problems emanating from factory farm expansion statewide.

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Family Farm Defenders Endorses National Boycott of Palermo’s Pizza – Demands Justice for ALL Workers Through Out the Food System

For Immediate Release  8/27/2012

Contact:  John E. Peck, executive director, Family Farm Defenders  #608-260-0900

Family Farm Defenders, a national grassroots family farmer organization based in Madison, WI, has formally endorsed the national boycott of Palermo’s Pizza in solidarity with workers in Milwaukee who have been on strike for nearly three months.  Over 100 workers walked off the job on June 1st after years of abusive conditions.  Many of these Palermo’s workers also happen to be undocumented and subject to deportation.

Even though ICE suspended its enforcement at Palermo’s so as to not affect a pending union election, Palermo’s management went ahead on its own and suspended 75 workers for their organizing efforts.  Palermo’s is now recruiting scabs and has also hired the firm, Jackson Lewis, to help with its union busting campaign.  National boycott efforts are focused on Costco, which has positioning itself as a “socially responsible” alternative to Walmart, yet is one of the major retail outlets for Palermo’s pizza.

“Family Farm Defenders may be the first national family farm organization to support the Palermo’s workers and their national pizza boycott, but I doubt we will be the last,” said John Peck, executive director.  “Our group believes there should be justice across the entire food/farm system and so this struggle is our struggle.  Among the principles of food sovereignty is the right to collectively bargain, to have dignity in one’s workplace,  and to receive a living wage –  sadly, that is not the current policy at Palermo’s.   An injury to one is an injury to all, whether you are a family farmer being price gauged by agribusiness giants or a food worker being exploited by a corporate pizza maker.”

Support for the Palermo’s workers and the national pizza boycott is consistent with other Family Farm Defenders solidarity efforts – such as support for the United Food and Commercial Workers (UFCW) strike against Tyson at the nation’s largest pepperoni plant in Jefferson, WI back in 2003-2004, the recent fight of the International Longshore Workers Union (ILWU) against Bunge/EGT on the grain loading docks in Washington State, the current lockout of 1300 Bakery, Confectionery, Tobacco Workers and Grain Millers International Union (BCTGM) workers by Crystal Sugar at five plants in MN, ND, and IA, as well as the in ongoing struggle of the Coalition of Immokalee Workers (CIW) to gain justice for tomato pickers in FL.  Family Farm Defenders, along with the Wisconsin Farmers Union, was also one of the organizers behind the historic “Pull Together” Farmer Labor Solidarity Tractorcade that brought 50 tractors (plus some manure spreaders) to the WI State Capitol on March 13, 2011 for the largest rally in WI history with over 150,000 people.

Family Farm Defenders will be spreading word about the national Palermo’s pizza boycott to its members and allies, and will also be urging other national family farm organizations to lend their solidarity to workers in Milwaukee

For more info on the Palermo’s strike, visit:  www.sliceofjustice.com

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Land O Lakes Campaign Gains Steam!

Over a year ago Family Farm Defenders contacted Land O Lakes, one of the largest dairy cooperatives in the U.S, to urge them to pay family farmers a fair price for their milk and to stop engaging in other questionable practices that hurt farmers and consumers (such as pushing GMOs like RR alfalfa and rBGH, importing milk protein concentrate (MPC) for use in dairy products, and colluding with other dairy giants to manipulate dairy prices at the Chicago Mercantile Exchange).  Given that 2012 is the U.N. Year of the Co-op, it is also disturbing to have a once proud farmer driven co-op like Land O Lakes routinely violating the Rochdale Principles of International Cooperation, as well as the 1922 Capper Volstead Act.

Unfortunately, Land O Lakes has not yet responded to the valid concerns of family farmers, which means FFD and its allies are now ramping up their public accountability effort in order to get their attention.

To hear a good overview of dairy price fixing and why Land O Lakes is being taken to task, listen to WORT Community Radio’s (89.9 FM in Madison, WI) interview with Joel Greeno, dairy farmer and FFD vice president.   You can find the interview at:  http://archive.wort-fm.org/  by scrolling down to Labor Radio Aug. 24th.

Also, FFD’s executive director, John Peck, had an article on the U.N. Year of the Co-ops identifying “bad” co-ops such as Land O Lakes in the August issue of Z Magazine.  You can read a version of the article here:  It\’s 2012! Are You Feeling Cooperative Yet?

For those who would like to share their concerns with Land O Lakes directly, FFD has produced a consumer oriented “Land O Fakes” postcard spoofing off their popular butter brand.  You can download your own copy of the postcard here: Land O Fakes Postcard

If you would like bulk quantities of this postcard to distribute as part of your local organizing please call the FFD office and we’ll get them in the mail to you as soon as possible:   #608-260-0900

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Family Farm Defenders Responds to Midwest Drought by Raising Funds to Help Wisconsin Farmers – Teams Up With the First Annual Wisconsin Reggae Festival for a Drought Relief Benefit Show

For Immediate Release
Aug. 2, 2012

Contact: 608-260-0900 – John Peck, executive director, Family Farm Defenders

Sat. Aug. 18th 3:00 pm – 1:30 am
High Saloon 701 E. Washington Ave, Madison, WI

Family farmers across America’s Heartland are in the grips of one of the worst droughts in living memory and Wisconsin farmers have been especially hard hit as pastures lie brown and many crops have suffered or been lost all together. Farmers are trying to salvage what corn they can for silage, while others have already been forced to feed animals hay that was supposed to be set aside for this coming winter.

Family Farm Defenders, a national grassroots organization based in Madison, WI is no stranger when it comes to disaster and has provided valuable solidarity to stricken family farmers in the past. Within weeks of Hurricane Katrina pummeling the Gulf Coast back in 2005 FFD sent a busload of volunteers with food, medicine, and other relief supplies to the region, followed by a solidarity shipment of WI tractors and other implements to farmer co-ops in MS and LA. In 2007 and 2008, FFD raised over $25,000 in small recovery grants over 40 family farmers and farmworkers hurt by flooding. And in 2011 with help from Farm Aid and the Teamsters Union, Family Farm Defenders delivered 17 semi-loads of donated WI hay to parched ranchers in TX and OK.

The Sat. Aug. 18th reggae benefit concert will feature ten acts on two stages, including such stellar performers as: Dubtonic Kru: Jamaica; DJ I Roach: Minneapolis, MN; Unity The Band: Appleton, WI; DJ Vilas Park Sniper: Madison, WI; Kingtown Rockers: Madison, WI; DJ Affgaad: Minneapolis, MN; Mt. Zion Soundsystem: Milwaukee, WI; DJ $amrock: Madison, WI; Tony Brown: IA; and DJ Kayla Kush: U-Dub WSUM, Madison, WI with food provided by Cafe Costa Rica. Tickets for the concert are $12adv/$15dos (12 & under FREE0 and can be purchased online at: www.high-noon.com or at Willy St. Co-op East & West

Current sponsors of the benefit concert include: 91.7FM WSUM, 89.9FM WORT, Paradigm Gardens, General Hydroponics, Willy Street Co-op, Just Coffee, Maximum Ink, High Noon Saloon, Alchemy, Lakeside Printing Co-op, Jamerica, Amsterdam, Madtown Printing, Mickey’s Tavern, and Revolution Cycles, with more to come.

If you are interested in cosponsorship, please contact: Amy Becher at [email protected]

Donations can also be made online through Razoo:
Online fundraising for Drought Relief for Wisconsin Farmers

Checks can also be mailed to: Family Farm Defenders, PO Box 1772, Madison, WI 53701. Please write “drought relief fund” in the memo line. Family Farm Defenders is a 501 c(3) charitable organization so all gifts are tax deductible.

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Family Farm Defenders Seeks Nominations for the 2nd Annual John Kinsman Beginning Farmer Food Sovereignty Prize

Family Farm Defenders, a national farmer and consumer advocacy group based in Wisconsin, and well known worldwide for espousing the principles of food sovereignty, is proud to announce it is seeking nominations for its 2nd Annual Beginning Farmer Food Sovereignty Prize. The award is named in honor of FFD’s founder and long time activist, John Kinsman.
In Oct. 2010 Family Farm Defenders received the Food Sovereignty Prize from the Community Food Security Coalition at its gathering in New Orleans. Food sovereignty, first articulated by La Via Campesina in 1996, encompasses seven principles:  food as a basic right, agrarian reform, protecting natural resources, reorganizing food trade, ending the globalism of hunger, social peace and the democratic control of agricultural policies.
FFD president and organic dairy farmer and forester, John Kinsman, has said that, “The seven principles of food sovereignty are the finest recipe for global food, social and environmental justice that exist today. Food sovereignty can enhance the dignity of every person in the world, and these principles now inspire and guide Family Farm Defenders in all our plans and actions.”
Family Farm Defenders launched the John Kinsman Beginning Farmer Food Sovereignty Prize last year to encourage young farmers to pursue the principles of food sovereignty as they begin their careers in agriculture.

Last year’s winners included Lindsey Morris Carpenter who has run Grassroots Farm, a 40 member Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) operation near Monroe, WI since 2007 and Daniel and Hannah Miller who have operated Easy Yoke Farm near Millville MN as a CSA operation since 2010 and also sell at farmers markets, co-ops, and retail markets.  Both winners received a cash prize of $2000, plus a fair trade holiday gift basket.

Nominations of beginning farmers are due by Sept. 1st, 2012.  Please send name, address, phone, and email of nominees to:  FFD, P.O. Box 1772, Madison, WI  53703.  Nominations can also be faxed to:  608-260-0900 or sent by email to:  [email protected]
Once the farmers have been nominated a FFD member will contact the farmer for supporting information. Selected farmer(s) will be notified in early October and receive their award at a reception and dinner to be held at the the Goodman Center (149 Waubesa St.) in Madison, Wisconsin from 5:30 – 9:00 pm on Sat. Dec. 8th.

Donations are also being solicited to support the prize itself and all donors will be acknowledged in the award program.  FFD is a 501 c(3) charitable organizations, so all gifts are tax deductible.

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