Along with making
plans for the spring semester, I’m starting to look beyond. This week
applications for FoodCorps 2013-14 serve year opened. I encourage you to spread
the word, and I’d be happy to share my experience with anyone interested in
serving. (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PbSMvLOJAko is the link to the new recruitment video.) Uncomfortably, however, I have to start thinking about some difficult
decisions in my future; whether or not I am going to do a second year of
service in North Powder.
I love my job
here, and I honestly think North Powder Charter School is the best FoodCorps
site in Oregon. The enthusiasm this Farm to School Program exudes makes
anything possible, and I am so lucky to be here working with such energetic
people. However, well into my second year of living in an isolated rural area,
I’m not sure that I can handle year three. I deeply crave living in a
well-populated area with friends, stores and entertainment near-by. My FoodCorps
term of service ends in early August, and should I not take on another year I
need to have another job to move into right away. (Grad school is in the cards
for 2014.) I am applying for another FoodCorps term, but will not have to
decide whether or not to commit until May or June.
Elk at the feeding station on a freezing cold morning |
Although I don’t
have a clear vision of my perfect job, I do know some things that I would like.
I want to work in collaboration with other people, and less on independent
projects (which is why I don’t think I’m going to apply for Oregon’s FoodCorps
Fellow position.) I would love not being desk-bound, and to continue educating
students in cafeterias and gardens, but I do not want to be a traditional
teacher. I am very interested in helping schools and communities build infrastructure
facilitating local food access, and the development and revision of
agricultural policy to be friendlier towards small producers. Although my
experience centers around food and nutrition, I am very interested in working
on sustainability and farming issues along with addressing challenges of the
rural-urban divide. And finally, the only reason I can think of which would
induce me to leave Oregon would be if Michelle Obama hired me to be her Let’s
Move! intern. That said, although I demand to once again live in an urban
center, it doesn’t have to be Portland.
North Powder, and the Elkhorns in the distance |
I am looking for
any input my lovely readers might have on organizations I should learn more
about, and most particularly introductions to people who work on sustainable food
issues who would be willing to give me an informational interview about their
job, organization and career advice. It was a brilliantly-timed informational
interview with the right person that brought me to FoodCorps, and I can only
hope I get so lucky again. I’ve started with EcoTrust’s Farm to School Program
(my dream company), but want to learn about other food-oriented nonprofits in
Portland. I want to know if there are any urban demonstration farms in Portland
(like Montana’s Missoula Urban Demonstration Project), CSAs, or small scale
food processors that might have either advice or job openings.
I am available for hire in early August!