Activists Want Garden on White House Lawn

News EditorAgribusiness, Media

1whofarm_alabama540President-elect Barack Obama will have his hands full when he takes office in January, and some activists want to make sure his belly is full, too — full of fresh fruits and vegetables. Several campaigns are petitioning Obama to plant an organic garden on the White House lawn, and they’ve devised peculiar ways of getting attention.

Take, for example, Daniel Bowman Simon and Casey Gustowarow and their upside-down, topsy-turvy bus — a vehicle that is actually one school bus flipped on its back and fused on top of another. On the roof, where the second bus’s engine would have been, is a small but hardy vegetable garden.

“People have just kind of gravitated toward this upside-down school bus just because they want to know what it is,” Simon says. “So it opens up the potential for having a conversation.”

Simon and Gustowarow founded the White House Organic Farm Project –- or TheWhoFarm. Since August, they’ve driven through 25 states visiting farms, markets, schools and restaurants, asking people to sign their petition.

“We need to be more holistic in the way that we view health in this country, and a lot of it comes down to eating healthier,” Simon says. “People who eat healthier don’t get sick as much.”

But for the WhoFarm guys and other sustainable-food junkies, eating locally grown produce is not just about health. They say it’s also about cutting down the amount of fuel we use to transport food, encouraging communities to congregate around a garden and rediscovering America’s agricultural roots. Simon says the president should lead by example.

And the WhoFarmers are not the only grassroots gardeners trying to get the president-elect’s attention. In February, Roger Doiron, director of Kitchen Gardeners International, launched an online campaign called Eat the View — the “view” being the pristine White House grounds.

“It might sound a bit trivial to some people, the idea of a garden on the White House lawn,” Doiron says. “But it’s not. It’s something that would speak to millions of people in the United States and even more people around the world who look at gardens and small subsistence farms as a way of making a living, as a way of putting good food on the table.”

Like TheWhoFarm, Eat the View has an online petition. In total, the campaigns have collected about 18,000 signatures. (It’s hard to say how many are duplicates.) At one point, Doiron even raised money for his nonprofit by selling imaginary plots of the White House lawn on eBay.

But not everyone is so supportive of these campaigns. Alex Avery, author of The Truth About Organic Food and director of research at the Center for Global Food Issues, is critical of the larger organic farming agenda.

“I think the idea to put an organic farm on the White House lawn is as shallow a stunt as is the intellectual rigor of the organic movement as a whole,” he says.

According to Avery, feeding the world’s population organically — that is, without synthetic fertilizer — would require plowing down millions of square miles of wildlife habitat in order to achieve the same yield of food.

“It would create no solutions — it would, in fact, create nothing but problems,” Avery says.

6 Comments on “Activists Want Garden on White House Lawn”

  1. I keep reading about Alex Avery criticizing organic farming. I understand he didn’t finish his Ph.D. What ARE Alex Avery’s credentials, except that his father got him the job at the Center for Global Food Issues, which his father STARTED to promote Monsanto’s milk hormones…why should anyone even listen to Alex Avery?

    I applaud Mrs. Obama’s organic garden at the White House.

  2. I keep reading about Alex Avery criticizing organic farming. I understand he didn’t finish his Ph.D. What ARE Alex Avery’s credentials, except that his father got him the job at the Center for Global Food Issues, which his father STARTED to promote Monsanto’s milk hormones…why should anyone even listen to Alex Avery?
    I applaud Mrs. Obama’s organic garden at the White House.

  3. I keep reading about Alex Avery criticizing organic farming. I understand he didn’t finish his Ph.D. What ARE Alex Avery’s credentials, except that his father got him the job at the Center for Global Food Issues, which his father STARTED to promote Monsanto’s milk hormones…why should anyone even listen to Alex Avery?
    I applaud Mrs. Obama’s organic garden at the White House.

  4. I Agree with AC, it’s all too easy for anyone on the internet to get cited as an expert, without anything to back it up. It’s a dangeous situation.

  5. I Agree with AC, it’s all too easy for anyone on the internet to get cited as an expert, without anything to back it up. It’s a dangeous situation.

  6. I Agree with AC, it’s all too easy for anyone on the internet to get cited as an expert, without anything to back it up. It’s a dangeous situation.

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