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Controversy erupts
over Michael Pollan's Poly lecture
Harris Ranch Beef chairman calls for 'balanced
forum'
BY KATHY
JOHNSTON
Award-winning
environmental journalist Kathy Johnston can be reached at kjohnston@newtimesslo.com.
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Nationally known
sustainable food expert Michael Pollan will now be part of a panel
discussion at Cal Poly on Oct. 15 rather than giving his planned
one-hour lecture. The recently announced format change comes on
the heels of a letter to Cal Poly President Warren Baker from Harris
Ranch Beef Company Chairman David E. Wood, threatening to withdraw a
pledged $500,000 donation for a new meat processing facility on the
campus.
"I find it unacceptable
that the university would provide Michael Pollan an unchallenged forum
to promote his stand against conventional agricultural practices,"
Wood wrote in a Sept. 23 letter to Baker. The invitation "caused me
to rethink my continued financial support of the university," he
wrote.
Pollan is the award-winning
author of "An Omnivore's Dilemma" and "In Defense of
Food," and appears in a recent documentary, Food, Inc. He is a
Knight Professor of Journalism at University of California, Berkeley,
Graduate School of Journalism.
The Sustainable Agriculture
Resource Consortium, which invited Pollan to speak at a free lecture
at 11 a.m. on Oct. 15 at the Performing Arts Center on campus, will
now present "A Conversation with Michael Pollan," which will also
include Gary Smith, Monfort Endowed Chair in meat science at Colorado
State University, and Myra Goodman, cofounder of organic vegetable
company Earthbound Farms.
Baker replied to Wood in a
Sept. 28 letter, "We are diligently working to create a more
balanced forum for October 15. Š Our singular goal is to provide our
students with a full perspective on how the agriculture industry is
working to be efficient in its production techniques, and to make sure
that our students are familiar with the full range of ideas that are
being advanced today."
Baker's letter also
stated his appreciation for Harris Ranch's financial support,
noting, "It's your prerogative to direct it elsewhere if you are
so inclined. It is possible such a decision may result in the delay of
Cal Poly's construction of a meat processing center Š In the end,
I fervently hope that you choose to support Cal Poly."
According to the dean of
the College of Agriculture, Food, and Environmental Sciences, David
Wehner, the decision to change Pollan's lecture format to include a
representative from the beef production industry did not necessarily
result from the Harris Ranch letter.
"We had planned to have
some kind of panel, whether it was on the same day, the next day, or a
week later," he told New Times.
Wehner said he is "not
worried" about Harris Ranch withdrawing funding from Cal Poly,
adding, "It's their prerogative. If they pull it, they pull it."
The new $5 million meat processing facility is about to go out for
construction bids, he said.
It was Pollan's decision
to join a panel discussion, rather than speaking beforehand, the dean
said.
"A fair number of
students will already have read Michael Pollan's writings. Having a
discussion with him is actually going to be more valuable," Wehner
said. "It's a sustainability event, and we wanted to hear about
how the industry is doing more with less-less water, less
fertilizer, less pesticide."
Each speaker will make
opening comments before accepting written questions from the
audience.
Harris Ranch spokesman
Michael Smith, assistant to Wood, said in a phone interview from the
beef company's headquarters in Selma that a decision about funding
for Cal Poly's meat facility "has yet to be made." Smith, a Cal
Poly agriculture alumnus, said many alumni will be coming to the forum
"as a show of force about the direction the College of Agriculture
is taking."
Smith said, "People
across the nation are upset. They are saying enough is enough. This is
bigger than Michael Pollan."
The Sustainable Agriculture
Resource Consortium's director, Hunter Francis, said with the new
format, "the audience will hear something they won't hear anywhere
else." The newly added industry representatives, he said, will
attract a wider audience to the event.
"Our goal is to involve
as many people as possible in discussions on how to improve the
sustainability of our agriculture production and food system. People
really seem ready to have this discussion. Michael Pollan has raised
many people's awareness," Francis said.
The letter from Harris
Ranch Beef Company did not surprise him, since Pollan is critical of
production agriculture. "Harris Ranch is facing their own challenges
with regulations, water resources, and the economy," he
added.
In a follow-up letter to
President Baker dated Sept. 30, Wood and Smith of Harris Ranch wrote,
"We applaud Cal Poly for negotiating a 'compromise format' for
the exchange of ideas and representation of opposing views. Š The
views of elitists like Michael Pollan can no longer go
unchallenged."
Their letter also stated,
"We find it incredulous that the Sustainable Agriculture Resource
Consortium Š has been allowed to operate as an autonomous entity"
that made an independent decision to invite Pollan to speak. The
Harris Ranch representatives pointed out, "Effective September 25th,
SARC now officially answers to CAFES [College of Agriculture, Food and
Environmental Sciences]."
The sustainability group
has been working for some time to become an official Sustainability
Center under the agriculture college, according to Francis. That
process is nearing completion.
Wood's letter to Baker
also criticized the viewpoint of Animal Science Department professor
Rob Rutherford, a sheep specialist who is chairman of the California
Sheep Commission and president of the California Wool Growers
Association. Smith of Harris Ranch had a phone conversation with
Rutherford about sustainability, and Rutherford's opinions
"provided me with both displeasure and outright anger towards the
university," Wood wrote.
"I have shared Mr.
Rutherford's opinions with a number of Cal Poly graduates, donors,
and others in the ag industry. They are uniformly shocked Š They
have likewise questioned whether they should continue to support the
university," his letter stated.
Wood suggested that
Rutherford should be removed from teaching a required class called
"Issues in Animal Agriculture."
Rutherford later told New
Times the faculty recently voted, in an unrelated action, to eliminate
the requirement for that class but to keep offering it.
Regarding the evolving word
"sustainability," Rutherford said, "We're trying to sustain
civilization. It's a matter of using the tools at our disposal in an
effective fashion, to feed people and all organisms far, far into the
future."
He added, "The purpose of
a university-the root word is universe-is to explore as many
different ideas as we can. Students ought to be capable of critical
thinking and analysis."
Rutherford welcomes the
idea of a Sustainability Center at Cal Poly, not just for organic
farming but also for architecture and engineering.
"I'm certain it will
cause conversations. I think that's what we're about."
>>
__________________
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Publisher &
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edibleSLO: Celebrating Local Food, Farmers and Urban
Gardening in SLO County
2500 Oakview Rd. *
Templeton, CA 93465 *
805.434.3950
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