As Food Supply Chain Breaks Down, Shoppers Turn To Farm-To-Door CSAs : NPR
▻https://www.npr.org/2020/05/10/852512047/as-food-supply-chain-breaks-down-farm-to-door-csas-take-off?t=1590735627701
The coronavirus has exposed the vulnerabilities and fragility of the U.S. global agribusiness supply chain. The CSA model’s focus on local and fresh is ideally suited for a crisis that has people deeply worried about germs on lettuce, beets or broccoli as the crops make their way from the field to the kitchen counter.
People “don’t want that many hands on their food right now,” said Sarah Voiland. “And we can offer that.”
CSAs still represent a very small slice of America’s $100 billion farm economy. But their renaissance marks a rare bit of good economic news for an agriculture industry battered by trade wars, threatened by climate change and now facing a global pandemic.
And the new success brings new challenges. Many CSAs are now scrambling to find additional labor to plant, harvest and deliver produce to meet the moment. “We’re totally able to produce so much more than we are, but we don’t have the workers,” said Redmond, of Full Belly Farm. “We’re so stressed out by that that, you know, just knowing that there’s going to be a difficult time getting workers, it just doesn’t make any sense to ramp up production.”
A big question for CSAs is whether the renewed interest represents a fleeting reaction to fear or a more sustainable, long-term trend.