Liberty Fruit is cautiously supportive of KC’s local food hub work
Liberty Fruit is cautiously supportive of KC’s local food hub work
In July, a feasibility study will be released on establishing a regional food hub in Kansas City.
The Greater Kansas City Food Policy Coalition website reports that last summer the Kansas City Food Hub Working Group received funding from the Health Care Foundation of Greater Kansas City and the Kansas Health Foundation to study local food hub feasibility. It is a year-long study.
Scott Danner, the COO of Liberty Fruit Co., Inc., in Kansas City, KS, said his firm is supportive of the effort.
Danner said the Food Hub Working Group recognizes the need to organize small-volume local growers and help them with food-safety certifications and indemnities necessary to suit modern day business practices.
“I said we will buy what we can but we still need protection from legal liability on food-safety matters,” Danner said.
“Even when Liberty Fruit was protected on the Jensen Farms issue, once they filed bankruptcy we were not protected” with the cantaloupe tragedy in Colorado. Jensen Farms, in Granada, CO, had food-safety practices in place but the owners still faced criminal charges when their fruit was linked to a massive and fatal listeria outbreak.
Danner noted, “Our area is not so vibrant in local production,” as is the case in areas like Ohio, Illinois, New Jersey and New England.
Danner, who is originally from New England, headed a growers’ cooperative there in the 1980s. “I helped the farmers to get organized” to serve their local communities. Danner’s New England efforts 30 years ago moved from 12 to 62 growers in six years.
He said a patient approach was needed. “If you had one grower with ten crates of squash that was one thing. But if you got ten more growers, you had 110.”
Then came the challenges of uniformity in sizing, packing and packaging.
“I will go sit on the buyer panel,” as an invited guest in a meeting scheduled for Feb. 19, he said on Feb. 12.
Most of the growers involved are from Missouri, although some are from Kansas, Danner said.