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NOCO Cluster Wants To Boost Local Food's Economic Heft

Natalie Maynor
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Flickr/Creative Commons

More cities want to take eating local food from just a hip trend to an economic generator. But as with many grassroots movements, there can be some growing pains along the way. Northern Colorado advocates are trying a new model to spur growth and they’re borrowing ideas from the tech sector.

The cluster model is seen as a way to address those pains by bringing all the regional players together to solve problems affecting each piece of the supply chain that takes a locally-grown carrot from the ground to your plate.

“It’s great to do all that farm to table stuff, but let’s now figure out how to make it impactful,” says Josh Birks, economic health director with the city of Fort Collins.

To help make local food more accessible, Fort Collins is supplying seed money to get the Northern Colorado Food Cluster off the ground. It’s success will be judged on much more than just additional markets and restaurants. A successful cluster should add jobs and tax revenue to the local economy, Birks says. The city’s played a role in coalescing other industry clusters around clean energy and water issues.

“We’re taking a concept that has been successful in more traditional industry areas, like technology, or the renewable energy space and we’re trying to apply it to something that’s very different: a food system,” Birks says.

These clusters help business owners share ideas and facilitate planning, Birks says. They’re part policy council, part think tank, part task force and part trade association. Ashley Colpaart, the Northern Colorado Food Cluster’s coordinator says another part is facilitating dialogue about “the constraints in the food system, but also the opportunities.”

Luke Runyon
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KUNC and Harvest Public Media
Ashley Colpaart is the Northern Colorado Food Cluster's coordinator.

One the biggest challenges in growing a food system is lack of communication, Colpaart says. Farmers who run small operations rarely have the time to network, and bigger companies don’t see the benefit in working with smaller entities. That leads to a food system where only the big companies talk with each other, and vice versa for the small guys, leaving the crucial connections in the middle absent and unformed.

“A lot of the constraints on agriculture is who controls the middle parts of the distribution chain and the processing and manufacturing all of that’s happening by very large companies that are controlling prices and access points,” Colpaart says.

One thing that distinguishes the Northern Colorado Food Cluster from its cluster cousins in technology and water is its membership. Most industry clusters are insular, only open to businesspeople in that sector. The food cluster’s welcoming input from everyone, using the logic that everyone eats and therefore everyone should be heard in a discussion about a changing food system.

That approach can have pros and cons. If you speak with officials at another city with a food cluster, San Francisco for example, the focus is more on industry players.

“I don’t know that the average person really cares about aggregating and moving produce in big trucks,” says Diana Sokolove with San Francisco’s planning department. “It’s kind of an ugly back end side of the business.”

There’s real passion for local food, Sokolove says, but few people are thinking about the middleman, which is an essential step in helping small farmers profit and shoppers buy affordable food. That’s where cities can come in to identify and fortify clusters, says Becca Jablonski, a postdoctoral fellow in the agricultural and resource economics department at Colorado State University.

“I think having some kind of organization that’s helping to bring together different constituents who are all part of the same food system and helping to think through different opportunities, at any scale, is really important,” Jablonski says.

Nationwide interest in local food has spawned an explosion of farmers markets, farm to table restaurants, stylized farm and food publications, and backyard chicken coops. But in some economist circles, all that growth is just “cute,” niche markets that have yet to bear fruit for everyone, especially marginalized groups. City officials have a vested interest in seeing local food take off to support jobs and feed people, Jablonski says. And if there’s already talent in the local community, there’s no need to lure bigger firms to relocate, just boost the ones you have.

In many cases, the local and regional food movement has gone far beyond being “cute.” The U.S. Department of Agriculture has taken notice. Other local food clusters in cities like Louisville, Kentucky, and Portland, Oregon are also taking shape. But Jablonski says getting the local food movement away from its cute image, could mean a shift in what the word local even means.

“Is it just farms that sell at farmers markets directly to customers that are considered part of the local food system,” Jablonski asks. “Or are we talking about something much more broad? And I would argue that that broader definition is much more useful.”

That broader definition includes the cute parts of the system, and the behind the scenes businesses that aren’t.

As KUNC’s managing editor and reporter covering the Colorado River Basin, I dig into stories that show how water issues can both unite and divide communities throughout the Western U.S. I edit and produce feature stories for KUNC and a network of public media stations in Colorado, Utah, Wyoming, New Mexico, Arizona, California and Nevada.
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