June 2012

by Tristan Quinn-Thibodeau, Outreach and Partnerships Manager of the Global Movements Program

[Ed note: As we've been reporting, WhyHunger's Tristan Quinn-Thibodeau has been at the Rio +20 UN sustainable development summit. The Summit ended yesterday, but at the end of last week, Tristan sent us these notes about his time there.]

My experience at Rio +20 has been amazing. I will certainly miss the cavernous food court in pavilion two capable of providing lunch to ten thousand people, the hundreds of people searching for those with influence and pressing their issues and their case for human rights, sitting next to amazing social movement and NGO leaders on the three- to four-hour round trip shuttle ride to the Summit, the coconuts you can both eat and drink for only $2 at the beach-side snack shacks, and the monument of Christ the Redeemer standing over the city and promising meaningful hope for tomorrow.

I have spent much more time on the inside of the official negotiations, where most civil society and NGO representatives are, than on the outside, where the vast majority of social movements are. Civil society groups have worked so hard to present their ideas and get them into the final text of the negotiations, and it’s incredible to see their effort paying off at the official level. I have spent my time in many meetings with delegates, sitting through hours of negotiations where governmental lawyers debate whether to “support,” “affirm,” re-affirm,” or “promote” basic human rights that were established seventy years ago, and reading the rapid reports of colleagues through a variety of ad hoc networks, updating everyone on the twists in the negotiations. The pressure exerted by just being in the negotiating room and then reporting who said what to others on the outside, is critical in this process.

The ideas that civil society leaders are proposing on the inside are very sensible, especially in agriculture. It seems like all those here who are working on agroecology – and there are many at this level, like Drs. Miguel Altieri, Hans Herren, and Vandana Shiva, among many other leaders– know that they have the better argument. Industrial food production leads to pollution, fewer jobs, unhealthier food, and distribution schemes that leave many hungry. Industrial agriculture has to brand itself as “sustainable” in order to survive, but only agroecology is actually sustainable. It has really been a privilege to be here to listen and work with these leaders.

Tristan Quinn-Thibodeau interviews Chavannes Jean-Baptiste of MPP (Mouvman Peyizan Papay)

Sitting in the inside sessions has also impressed upon me the power of the official text. Subtle but legally binding language is incredibly important, because it is a way for governments to be held accountable to their commitments. For example, the current text includes a reference to the right to water, and all governments have said that – as of yesterday (this was written on June 21, during the final days of the Rio+20 negotiations) – they were all in consensus on this point. The text could change tomorrow, but from now on, no government can dispute the fact that there is a global consensus on the right to water. That is a big deal. Even the US, who has not officially recognized the International Covenant on Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights, can be held accountable for those rights because they are affirmed in the Rio+20 text, which the US had agreed to.

Similarly, it is critical that the right concepts and definitions are included in the text. Being legally bound to “the right to adequate food” is much different than “the right to food.” The “right to food” is much broader and could impact global trade policy, national antihunger policies, and even the labor conditions of workers in the food system. “Adequate” food, however, limits this human right and suggests that what is important is having enough food, rather than having healthy food or a just food system.

On the outside at the People’s Summit, people are very excited, they are very committed, and they are very confident. (It doesn’t hurt that the People’s Summit is being held on a gorgeous beach in downtown Rio!) My sense is that even though most consider Rio+20 to have been a failure, all the people, movements, and organizations at the People’s Summit are in agreement on what the future of society should look like and know they have the right answer. They see the lack of action on the part of governments in Rio+20 as merely a stalling tactic and overall think it is clear that governments are not proposing any real solutions.
The president of one of the main UN civil society women’s groups framed the situation to me by saying that the job of civil society now is to prepare for the 2017 Summit on Sustainable Development. Although the Summit happens every year, she speculates that in five years, environmental and social issues will have gotten so bad that governments won’t be able to delay anymore and will be forced to ensure principles of human rights, justice, and democracy. As representatives of civil society and social movements, it will be our job then to continue to make sure that the UN recognizes these rights and principles and upholds them even more strongly.

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by Tristan Quinn-Thibodeau, Outreach and Partnerships Manager

I am writing from Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, at the 20th UN Commission on Sustainable Development Summit. Called Rio+20, this is the largest global summit on sustainability and development. Nearly every country is participating, with delegations numbering in the hundreds and even thousands—all debating the future of human society. Because the world is now so connected, the big questions about our economies, our societies, our environments, our problems and our solutions have to be discussed as a global community. The principle question every government is trying to answer is how all people can continue to grow, develop and improve in ways that end poverty and promote fairness without destroying the environment.

When I arrived, I had only a general understanding of the issues to be debated. I wanted to hear from others and to share WhyHunger’s position: that strong local and regional food systems based on ecological principles can end hunger, create jobs and protect nature. But I soon learned that the discussions were much more complex.
[read entire article…]

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There’s only one more week to apply for WhyHunger’s 2013 Harry Chapin Self-Reliance Awards! Recipients receive cash awards of up to $10,000, are honored at the annual WhyHunger Chapin Awards Dinner in New York City and are invited to attend a networking day with current and past winners! Tell us how your organization is making an impact!

Applications are due Friday, June 29, 2012.

2012 HCSRA awardees in action at last week’s HCSRA Networking Day in New York City. This could be you!

CLICK HERE for a downloadable Microsoft Word application, more information and guidelines.

For questions, call 212.629.3227 or email hcsra@whyhunger.org.

 

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This afternoon, the full Senate passed its version of the food and farm bill, missing an opportunity to improve the nation’s health and environment, reduce hunger, and support family farmers. The Senate bill would slash $4.5 billion from SNAP (formally known as food stamps), cut funding for conservation, eliminate already modest support for minority farmers, and continue to subsidize agribusiness corporations and insurance companies. The bill will now go to the House of Representatives, which is expected to begin deliberations in the coming weeks.

Meanwhile, the Wall Street Journal yesterday published another scathing editorial about the SNAP program, claiming widespread fraud – and even insinuating that federal spending to keep Americans from going hungry is what led to the nation’s credit rating being downgraded. In truth, SNAP fraud is at an all-time low, and the program has one of the lowest fraud rates of any federal program. The $77 billion annual price tag (which will drop as the economy improves) amounts to a mere 0.214% of the federal budget. WhyHunger’s cofounder and Executive Director Bill Ayres here further rebuts the Journal‘s outrageous claims.

THE WALL STREET JOURNAL FOOD STAMP FIASCO
by Bill Ayres, Executive Director

It is very sad that a major paper like the Wall Street Journal is once again attacking the food stamp program, which is preventing massive hunger in America. Everyone I know who works to end hunger and reduce poverty wishes both that more people were receiving food stamps and that many fewer people needed to.

The food stamp program, now called SNAP (Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program), was set up to follow the economic cycle.  When the economy is good and unemployment and underemployment are low, fewer people need SNAP.  That is a good thing, because it means fewer people need help and more are self-reliant. My colleagues and I hope that day comes again soon and that fewer people will need food stamps.

However, right now, with long-term high unemployment, we actually need even more people to be on SNAP, because some 28 percent of those eligible are not receiving assistance. More than half of recipients are children.   We want fewer hungry children in America, not more.  That is why the US Department of Agriculture is promoting the program. The USDA is doing a remarkable job of reducing fraud to an all-time low, while adding people to the rolls.

Because of the extreme long-term unemployment that has persisted well beyond unemployment insurance eligibility for millions of people and because millions more were not eligible for unemployment insurance at all, food stamps are absolutely essential for an increasing number of people.  That is why 77 percent of Americans support the program.  They know that as good as our emergency food system is, the food pantries and soup kitchens are already overwhelmed and do not have the capacity to feed millions more.

The $4.5 billion cut to SNAP approved today by the Senate will reduce monthly benefits by $90 a month for 500,000 recipients, many of them seniors. Instead of trying to throw people off the program or reduce their benefits when they are most in need, politicians ought to be creating living wage jobs so hungry Americans do not need to ask for help.  Then there will be fewer people on the program.  Until then, let’s make sure everyone who needs it is enrolled.

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