A Worthy Goal for a New Century
Toronto Star - January 8, 2000
By Carol Goar
The idea that any Canadian, rich or poor, shjould be able to walk into
a doctor’s office and get help, was once considered revolutionary. In
a single generation, it has become a defining principle of Canadian citizenship.
Debbie Field would like to launch a similar revolution in the 21st
century. Her goal: to ensure that every Canadian, rich or poor, has enough
to eat.
She envisages a day when food banks will be obsolete, low income families
will be able to put fresh fruit and vegetables on the table, no child
will be too hungry to learn and no motehr will go without adequate nutrition
to make sure her children are fed.
If the concept of food as a basic right sounds utopian, consider the
objections that were raised 56 yeaers ago, when Saskatchewan Premier Tommy
Douglas pledged to make health services "an inalienable right of being
a citizen."
People said he would bankrupt the province. They warned that the privilege
of free medical care would undoubtedly be abused. They predicted that
doctors would never join a state-controlled health plan. They said private
medical insurance, with welfare covering the very poor, was a much more
logical approach.
Today, many of the same barriers stand in the way of a universal food
security plan.
There are concerns about the cos. There are fears that people would abuse
the right to subsidized foo. There are predictions that the agri-food
industry would refuse to participate in a public nutrition program. There
are worries that restaurants and grocery stores would stop donating excess
food to charity.
But Field is convinced that, with enough work, enough debate and enough
determination, she can build a nation-wide consensus that healthy food
is a basic right.
This is no flash in the pan millennial scheme for the 47-year-old social
activist. She has been working since 1996 to develop a comprehensive plan
to ensure that everyone in Ontario has access to affordable, nutritious
food by the year 2002.
She has brought together representatives of the private food industry,
the agricultural community, the health sector and grassroots organizations
to talk about new ways of fighting hunger. She has come up with 28 specific
policy recommendations. She has tested her ideas at the local level, establishing
innovative programs such as The Good Food Box, which makes fresh produce
available at cost to low-income people; Community gardens, which allow
urban residents to grow their own vegetables on unused city lots and community
kitchens which teach basic nutrition and cooking skills.
But it is a long way from a preliminary discussion of food security to
a practical plan to eliminate hunger. It is a huge leap from a handful
of successful community nutrition programs to a nation-wide food security
network.
Unfortunately, Field has no podium from which to promote her vision.
She has no simple solution to hunger– no plastic card that entitles a
person to eat properly– to put forward. She does not even have across-the-board
support of anti-poverty activists. Some think it is wrong to focus on
food, when poor people really need a decent income, affordable shelter
and a job.
What she does have working in her favour, besides her own indomitable
spirit, is the obvious failure of the existing system.
Despite a robust economic recovery, hunger continues to grow. Food banks,
set up in 1981 as an emergency stop-gap, have become permanent fixtures
in most Canadian cities. Some have to ration scarce supplies, such as
baby formula. Donors, tired of incessant food drives, have to be prodded
to give.
Meanwhile, Canadian farmers, caught in a vicious global subsidy war,
are struggling to hang on to their land as crop prices plummet and their
debts pile up.
Clearly, something is wrong. Yet almost no one is asking the obvious
questions:
Why should Canada, with its capacity to be the world’s bread basket,
have both a farm crisis and a problem of chronic food insecurity?
Why should Ottawa spend billions of tax dollars treating illnesses that
could be prevented by proper diet?
Why should 790,000 Canadians depend on charity every month to eat?
What Field needs is someone in a position of power to take up her cause
with passion, commitment and willingness to take political risks as Douglas
did, a generation ago.
If the founder of medicare were alive today, he would concede that his
critics were right in some respects. Universal health care did put a heavy
burden on taxpayers. Some people do overuse the system. Some doctors resent
socialized medicine. Some politicians would like to privatize health care
services.
But in a larger sense, Douglas was right: No Canadian should be penalized
for getting sick.
Field’s critics may turn out to be right, too. Food isn’t the solution
to poverty or homelessness. It won’t replace the social safety nets that
have been yanked back.
But in a larger sense she is right: No Canadian child should grow up
eating the crumbs from someone else’s table.
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