Although our local market runs year-round, the promotions around Local Food Week are the unofficial kick-off to spring, summer and fall market season for consumers in our area. And once people come and visit an on-farm store or a local market, this is our opportunity to introduce them to the farmer behind the product.
This means talking to them about where their food comes from, answering their questions about how we produce it, and how they’re not just shopping at a market, they’re supporting small businesses and families in their local communities.
For farmers in northern Ontario in particular, Local Food Week lets us shine a light on the challenges of growing in a cooler climate with a shorter growing season and long distances to market, and we find that more often than not, customers care about the freshness of local food and being able to support farm businesses in their communities.
Although many local food producers are considered small business, local food is a big deal in Ontario. Agriculture and agri-food contribute approximately $47 billion to the provincial economy annually and employ more than 10 per cent of Ontario’s workforce – in addition to supplying Ontarians with locally grown food.
At the Ontario Federation of Agriculture (OFA), we encourage Ontarians across the province to shop locally, and to get to know local farmers – whether at an on-farm shop, farmers’ market or local agri-tourism business.
This past spring, Perth-Wellington MPP Matthew Rae introduced the Growing Agritourism Act, which if passed, will help expand agri-tourism opportunities in our province. An OFA survey into local food and agri-tourism showed that more than 40 percent of respondents are interested in selling value-added products and providing on-farm experiences.
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