Exhibitor Registration

Download the 2012 Exhibitor Registration Package
to reserve your spot for next year's Conference.

Highlights 2011

Ontario Local Organic tasting Pavilion

Our Mascot

A Local Organic HomeComing

Sunflower image, a 25-cent yard sale purchase by the manager should light up the 2012 winter

Past Keynotes

September 24, 2011 – The Keynote for 2012 has become the Friday evening Keynote Forum, running January 27, 2012 at 7.30 pm, details to come shortly.

In place of the Saturday, January 28, 2012 Keynote, we are running another set of 5 workshops, starting at 9.30 am in the Guelph University Centre.  Thus, the Saturday will be strictly ‘workshop day.’

 

 

Keynote 2011

Keynote (it’s actually a family affair) •Tom Manley, Homestead Organics, Ontario, joined by •Murray Manley, his father, who started the organic operation over 20 years ago, joined by •Yannick, his son, who currently works in the processing and marketing of the business in eastern Ontario.

Keynote Title: Our Common Thread – Organic Food Through The Generations

So, in the very near future, we’ll post full details of this interesting view of the generational shift in the organic world. Stay tuned !

FLASH/November 25 – we have a fresh quote from Tom Manley on the theme of his Keynote talk…

Tom Manley wrote: “Being chosen as the Guelph Keynote for the 30th anniversary makes our three generations ponder the long and hard road that organic agriculture has travelled. While we were not there at the “modern day” organic start-up in the 1960′s, our farm was actually in the family in the 1860’s, when organic was the only option. Since “re-conversion” to organic in 1985, we have seen many changes and challenges. We are also trying to set the foundation of where the business and the organic sector may go in the next decades. The big question is: how can organic move from 2% to 10% or even 100% of agriculture (assuming that this is the real objective)?

Keynote 2010

Margaret Webb, leading Toronto writer – author of ‘Apples to Oysters: A Food Lover’s Tour of Canadian Farms’ has been confirmed as Keynote for 2010.

Margaret was also author of the recent multi-part Toronto Star series
“Crisis on the Farm.”

Keynote Title – THINK BIG CANADA – The Organic Food Fix – the implications of a totally organic Canada – and what we need to do to get there – in other words, taking steps toward a national food policy for Canada that will feed our future.

This presentation will run Saturday, January 30, 2010 at 9.00 am in Rozanski Hall (just a few steps east of the Guelph University Centre).

Cost: $15 per ticket, which can be paid by cheque, mailed in with your general registration form, or by PayPal which will be ready to take your registration on this Web Site shortly.

margaret (at) margaretwebb.com
http://www.margaretwebb.com

•••

NOVEMBER 24 FLASH – Margaret’s Musings – when asked “what’s happening in your life and what kind of ideas will you be introducing at your Keynote talk”… she said:

A farmer delivered a side of heritage Tamworth pork to my door one day, and we had the kind of conversation that I only seem to have with farmers. Within a five-minute chat, our talk tripped from Toronto traffic to family to the meaning of life to how to shift Canada’s food system into a sustainable future. As way of saying good-bye, he said, “look, if Canadians get behind farmers, we can do this.”

Well, that’s it, I thought. The moment is now. Canadians are itching for a national conversation about food and farming, a national food policy for Canada. What we need is an alliance between farmers and eaters to lead that conversation, to create a new food system that serves the needs of eaters, sustains farmers and rejuvenates the planet. It’s a time for big ideas and big commitment. It’s time to think beyond private food to public food (as one fifth-grade future farmer suggested), beyond the 100 mile diet to the 100 year diet (as one aboriginal farmer recommended), beyond “sustainable” farming (whatever that means, as one organic rancher told me), to a totally organic Canada.

Okay, if you think all my ideas come from farmers, you would be wrong. Just the good ones do. I look forward to the conversation. Margaret Webb – Author, Apples to Oysters: A Food Lover’s Tour of Canadian Farms

 

Keynote 2009

Wayne Roberts

Wayne Roberts

2009 Keynote Address
“Organic Opportunities For Farmers & Consumers”
The Keynote address takes place at 9.00 am, Saturday, Jan. 24 at Rozanski Hall.
You must come into the Guelph University Centre room UC103 (registration) to pay for and pick up your ticket ($15). Then you walk approx. 150 yards east of the U.C. to the Rozanski Building. When on campus, we will guide you to Rozanski once you have registered.

Keynote goes till approx. 10.40 am.

Wayne Roberts has worked throughout his life to link social justice, public health, job creation and environmental protection.

The author of the recently-released No Nonsense Guide to World Food, now selling briskly around the world, Wayne Roberts also manages the Toronto Food Policy Council, and is in the thick of the action when it comes to bringing together all the groups — from farmers and fishers to new generation processors, distributors, retailers, to community groups to government health, environment and economic development units to eaters who are building the new food movement inch by inch, row by row. He’ll be sharing his front-row seat on emerging trends with us.

Dr. Wayne Roberts, Ph.D Toronto Food Policy Council, Ontario Since joining the public health department in Toronto in 1999, he has coordinated the Toronto Food Policy Council, staffed the city-wide Food and Hunger Action Committee, co-authored its three reports as well as the city’s Food Charter (the second in North America, and the benchmark for many others), and successfully advocated for the first stream of municipally-funded Community Food Security Grants in North America.

To prepare a new generation of food professionals, he has taught the first Canadian undergraduate class on “food security research methods” at University of Toronto’s New College since 2003, guest-edited two Alternatives Journal special issues on food (one in 2003, and one in 2006), and co-wrote (with Ellen Desjardins) the Ontario Public Health Association statement on “a systemic approach to community food security.” To promote networking among food advocates, he launched Eaters Digest, an electronic information service on local food issues, now distributed to about 3000 Toronto-area food activists. He initiated and co-edits (with James Kuhns) www.foodforethought.net/, an e-mail service and website on global food security issues, circulated to about 10,000 food policy specialists internationally.

He served on the board of the (U.S.-based) Community Food Security Coalition from 2002 to 2008, has been on the steering committee of Food Secure Canada since its inception in 2002, serves on the advisory board of six local food organizations, and on the editorial board of two respected journals (Alternatives Journal and Journal of Hunger and Environmental Nutrition).

He is regularly invited to speak on community food security topics across North America, as well as in Europe, Latin America and Asia.

He is the recipient of the first “Toronto Board of Health Staff Recognition Award,” the first NOW Magazine “Leading Toronto Visionaries,” the first Canadian Environment Silver Award for Sustainable Living in 2002, and the Planet in Focus Eco-Hero Award for 2008.

NOTABLE ACCOMPLISHMENTS AS TORONTO FOOD POLICY COUNCIL PROJECT COORDINATOR

  • Managed the transition of the Toronto Food Policy Council (TFPC) from the old City of Toronto to the newly-amalgamated Toronto (2000). Few of the new municipal councillors or staff had an experience with or positive attitude toward food policy councils; the TFPC is now an integral element of Toronto Public Health (TPH), and food systems and food security thinking are prominent in many TPH documents and in all geographic areas of the amalgamated city.
  • Coordinated Toronto Public Health’s presence in, and City-wide staff engagement with the Food and Hunger Action Committee, which helped a newly-amalgamated and divided City Council move on to positive projects by adopting unanimously three major documents on food policy and a Toronto Food Charter, all of which I authored (2001).
  • Represented Canadian Non-Government Organizations at the World Food Summit in Rome (2002).
  • Represent Canada on the Executive Board of the Community Food Security Coalition, a North American-wide organization (2000 to the present).
  • Represent food policy councils on the Food Secure Canada’s Steering Committee (2002 to the present).
  • Worked with planners and farm organizations in the Greater Toronto Area (GTA) to help plan the formation of the GTA Agricultural Action Committee, in order to facilitate dialogue among farmers and Toronto consumers around local food issues (2004).
  • Organized Toronto’s first local food conference in 2002, now an annual conference event co-sponsored with the rural-based non-profit Caledon Countryside Alliance, the non-profit Local Flavour Plus and the GTA Agricultural Action Committee. This annual event now includes economic developers, agro-tourism leaders and representatives from the Ontario Ministry of Food and Rural Affairs, as well as public health and local farm groups. In July, 2007, Toronto City Council adopted a motion prepared by the TFPC to purchase local and sustainable food; the TFPC is currently spearheading organizations to ensure that recent immigrants and racialized minorities have opportunities to grow local culturally appropriate foods.
  • Worked with students and staff at Toronto’s three universities to launch a speakers series, “Food for Talk,” where students, academics and community experts present their food research – all part of an effort to develop the next generation of professionals prepared to lead community food security work (2004).
  • Invited in July 2007 to deliver a recorded lecture on food security initiatives for individuals, community groups and governments, for Johns Hopkins University’s Schools of Medicine and Public Health.
  • Currently contracted with Verso Press/New Internationalist Publications to write The No-Nonsense Guide to Food, scheduled for publication in 2008.
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3 comments to Past Keynotes

  • Civi Jacobsen

    Conf. Mgr. response: yes, we’ve considered all that. Can I ask you to put in a workshop proposal for the 2012 Conference along this line? We got an overwhelming message from last January’s event to run ‘farmer training’ so that’s the major concentration this year (i.e. January, 2011). Our Keynote Speaker for 2011 may address some of your issues. Thanks for your ideas.

    FURTHER CONF. MGR. COMMENT, OCT. 25: I will make Tom Manley aware of your comment and will ask him and his co-presenters to address regional food networks. In fact, I know the business is currently spearheading an effort along that line in their region (eastern Ontario between Cornwall, Ottawa and the QC border). They call it Organic Central.
    •••

    Have you considered someone to speak about the bigger picture of building regionalized food distribution systems and the how to?

    This could include community gardens, CSA’s, larger farms etc. Does anyone have a picture in their head of what this could look like?

    How could we tranisition to this, in small practical steps NOW?

    Cheers,
    Civi

  • Hi Civi.

    Yes, we are a big fan of regional food systems. Our family business, Homestead Organics, running for 22 years, is all about linking local grain farmers with local grain markets, providing local farmers with organic farm supplies such as seed and feed grown and processed locally.

    A critical part that makes up local food systems is the infrastructure for processing, storage, and distribution. Without it, most farmers and consumers cannot connect. At Organic Central http://www.organiccentral.ca, we proposed to build such a shared facility in eastern Ontario.

    Tom Manley

  • Tom,
    Congratulations on been chosen as this year’s keynote speaker. You give the organic farming industry strong representation and it is clear you are a leader in your field. All else willing I would like to take the opportunity to hear you speak and share your family experience in the organic farm industry.

    G

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