Cornell University shares fall bounty with local food banks

ITHACA, N.Y. -- With the harvest coming in and Thanksgiving ahead, many are thinking about festivities and food-laden holidays.

For those less fortunate, more than 100,000 pounds, or 50 tons, of fruits and vegetables are being donated by Cornell University to local food banks and food distribution centers.

"We are delighted to be able to provide the local food distribution networks with healthy fruits and vegetables," says Marvin Pritts, chairman of Cornell's Department of Horticulture. "These products from our research are mostly produced with public funds, so we are returning a share back to the public as good stewards of our resources. Improving the lives of New Yorkers through education is our primary mission, but contributing in a direct, tangible way through food donations is yet another way we can make a difference."

For example, Robin Bellinder, professor of horticulture, has donated 40,000 pounds of fresh produce each year for the four past years to Syracuse and Southern Tier food banks. Horticulture faculty members such as Chris Wein, Anusuya Rangarajan and Donald Halseth have donated crops from the department's Freeville farm to the Food Bank of the Southern Tier and the local Friendship Donations Network. The bounty from their department includes sweet corn, red beets, cabbage, melons, potatoes, dry beans, lettuce, onions and pumpkins from Freeville farm research plots.

"All told, the final weight of vegetables from the Department of Horticulture was between 94,000 and 96,000 pounds last year," says Bellinder. "This produce helps the food banks in two ways: First, it's free and doesn't need to be paid for by their accounts; second, they don't have to pay for shipping. Because the source is local, the only cost is gas and driver."

Adding to the vegetable bounty were 200 bushels of apples (about 4.5 tons) and 200 gallons of apple cider donated to local food banks by the Cornell Orchards, 945 gallons of milk from the Cornell Dairy that went to the Friendship Donations Network last year and 400 bushels of high-quality, commercial-grade potatoes donated last year by the Department of Plant Breeding for local food banks through the Food Bank of the Southern Tier, says Ken Paddock, research support specialist in the department. If yields are decent this year, Paddock says they'll be able to give away 600 bushels (36,000 pounds, or 18 tons) this year.

Cornell raises a variety of crops to evaluate their response to different growth conditions. In Bellinder's case, for example, the bulk of the produce that was donated comes from a large multi-year, multi-crop rotation study with very large plots to evaluate changes in weed seedbank populations with different weed management strategies over a five-year period.

Although faculty members have been donating produce for years, in the past few years, donations have increased.

"The difference is that both the food distribution networks and our faculty have become more organized," says Pritts, who notes that he and a number of other faculty will meet Dec. 14 at Cornell with representatives from the food distribution networks to discuss how Cornell can do better by the local food banks. "This makes it easier for us to work with them, and for us not to have each individual faculty member worrying about what to do with the fruits and vegetables after the data are collected. It is more efficient for both parties now."

"I cannot tell you how excited we are to have developed this relationship with Robin Bellinder and the people at the H.C. Thompson Vegetable Research Farm through Cornell University," says Paul A. Hesler, executive director of the Food Bank of the Southern Tier in Elmira.

Cornell's donations last year filled about two-and-one-half tractor-trailer loads, adds John Lewkowicz, warehouse operations director of the Food Bank of the Southern Tier. "Volunteers at the food bank repackage these large totes into small packages for food pantries and soup kitchens across the counties we serve. Cornell has been an outstanding partner in helping us feed the hungry."

Related World Wide Web sites: The following sites provide additional information on this news release. Some might not be part of the Cornell University community, and Cornell has no control over their content or availability.

  • Robin Bellinder: http://www.hort.cornell.edu/department/faculty/bellinder/
  • Food Bank of the Southern Tier: http://www.foodbankst.org

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