Pubdate: Tue, 03 Jun 2014 Source: Alberni Valley Times (CN BC) Copyright: 2014 Glacier Community Media Contact: http://www.avtimes.net/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4043 Author: Jen Fisher-Bradley Page: 4 Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v14/n472/a06.html FOOD SECURITY AT STAKE IN RAPIDLY CHANGING CLIMATE Re: "Applications roll in for medical pot," ( Alberni Valley Times, May 27) Once again, denial keeps all the players from understanding what's really at stake - our food insecurity in a rapidly changing climate. A recent report of 170 glaciers on the Island in the 1970s, with only five remaining, persistent deepening drought in California and the culprit, GHG emissions, continuing to rise exponentially all point in the same direction. Sensible people will tell you we urgently need proactive policies. Denial is a well-known mental illness. When it comes to denial there is no sense, only overwhelming inner pressure to keep the truth out of sight and out of mind. The players are farmers, the Agricultural Land Commission, medical marijuana growers and all three levels of elected government. It's a no-brainer, in exchange for the right and license to grow medical marijuana on agricultural land, we need increasing production of local food. This kind of policy is known as a quid pro quo. Mr. Thompson says food should be grown on farmland. He implies food production is the appropriate use of the agricultural land reserve. I couldn't agree more, but where is that food and why aren't farmers on Vancouver Island producing it? The short answer is they can't afford to, for a variety of complex marketing, economic and geo-political reasons, not the least of which is the oil and gas oligarchy which governs our current food system. Pegged to each other through legislation, the production of medical marijuana and of local food creates a natural flow of reinvestment into food production. A farmer growing both medical marijuana and food on agricultural land could make a decent living, while at the same time preparing our Island's population for the deadliest crisis humanity has ever known - - rapid climate change, and there's no time to waste. Jen Fisher-Bradley Port Alberni - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom