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Public Act 095-0145 |
HB1300 Enrolled |
LRB095 08986 CMK 29177 b |
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AN ACT concerning agriculture.
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Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
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represented in the General Assembly:
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Section 1. Short title. This Act may be cited as the |
Illinois Food, Farms, and Jobs Act. |
Section 5. Legislative findings. |
Illinois should be the Midwest leader in local and organic |
food and fiber production. |
One thousand five hundred miles is the average travel |
distance for food items now consumed in this State, and |
agricultural products sold directly for human consumption |
comprise less than 0.2% of Illinois farm sales. |
Ninety-five percent of organic food sold in this State is |
grown and processed outside of the State, resulting in food |
dollars being exported. |
Illinois ranks fifth in the nation in loss of farmland. |
The market for locally grown foods and for organic food is |
expanding rapidly. |
Consumers would benefit from additional local food outlets |
that make fresh and affordable Illinois grown foods more |
accessible in both rural and urban communities. |
Communities are experiencing significant problems of |
obesity and nutrition, including lack of daily access to fresh |
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fruits and vegetables. |
Low-income communities that are currently "food deserts" |
lacking sufficient markets selling fresh fruits and vegetables |
would benefit from local food distribution systems. |
The State's urban communities are showing renewed interest |
in growing food in urban areas. |
Rural communities would be revitalized by increasing the |
number of families in the State that live on small properties |
and by providing fresh high-value local food. |
Farmers who wish to transition from conventional |
agriculture to local and organic food would benefit from |
training and support to diversify their farming operations. |
Food consumers, farmers, and entrepreneurs would benefit |
from an expanded infrastructure for processing, storing, and |
distributing locally grown foods. |
The capture of existing food dollars within the State would |
help to revitalize the State's treasury by creating a broad |
range of new in-state jobs and business opportunities within |
both rural and urban communities. |
For the purposes of this Act and for the retention of the |
greatest benefit from every food dollar spent in this State, |
support for local food means capturing in Illinois the greatest |
portion of food production, processing, storing, and |
distribution possible.
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Section 10. Illinois Local and Organic Food and Farm Task |
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Force. The Illinois Local and Organic Food and Farm Task Force |
("the Task Force") shall be appointed by the Governor within 60 |
days after the effective date of this Act. The Task Force shall |
be convened by the Department of Agriculture and shall include |
the following Illinois-based members: |
(a) one representative each from the Departments of |
Agriculture, Commerce and Economic Opportunity, and Human |
Services; |
(b) four organic farmers, representing different dairy, |
meat, vegetable, and grains sectors; |
(c) four specialty crop producers, representing different |
flower, fruit, viticulture, aquaculture, fiber, vegetable, and |
ornamental sectors; |
(d) two organic processors; |
(e) one organic distributor and one non-organic |
distributor; |
(f) three representatives of not-for-profit educational |
organizations; |
(g) one organic certifier; |
(h) one consumer representative; |
(i) two representatives of farm organizations; |
(j) one university agricultural specialist; |
(k) one philanthropic organization representative; |
(l) one food retailer representative; |
(m) two municipal representatives from different |
communities in the State; |
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(n) four representatives from community-based |
organizations focusing on food access,
to include at least 3 |
minority members; and |
(o) one chef specializing in the preparation of locally |
grown organic foods. |
All members of the Task Force shall be appointed for a |
2-year term.
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Section 15. Illinois Local and Organic Food and Farm Plan. |
The Task Force shall develop a plan containing policy and |
funding recommendations for expanding and supporting a State |
local and organic food system and for assessing and overcoming |
obstacles to an increase in locally grown food and local |
organic food production. The Task Force shall prepare and |
submit its plan in a report to the General Assembly by |
September 30, 2008, for consideration of its recommendations in |
the 96th General Assembly. The Plan, among other matters, |
shall: |
(a) identify land preservation and acquisition |
opportunities for local and organic
agriculture in rural, |
suburban, and urban areas; |
(b) identify farmer training and development, as |
necessary, by expanding training programs
such as Farm |
Beginnings, incubator projects such as Prairie Crossing Farm, |
urban agriculture training programs, farmer-to-farmer learning |
opportunities, or other programs; |
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(c) identify financial incentives, technical support, and |
training necessary to help Illinois
farmers to transition to |
local, organic, and specialty crop production by minimizing |
their financial losses during the 3-year transition period |
required under USDA standards and to help with recordkeeping |
requirements; |
(d) identify strategies and funding needs to make fresh and |
affordable Illinois-grown foods
more accessible, both in rural |
and urban communities, with an emphasis on creating new food |
outlets in communities that need them; |
(e) identify the financial and technical support necessary |
to build connections between
landowners, farmers, buyers, and |
consumers;
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(f) identify the financial and technical support necessary |
to build a local food infrastructure
of processing, storage, |
and distribution; |
(g) identify the financial and technical support necessary |
to develop new food and
agriculture-related businesses for |
local food and organic food production and distribution, such |
as on-farm processing, micro-markets, incubator kitchens, and |
marketing and communications businesses; |
(h) identify the financial and technical support necessary |
to expand the development of
farmers markets, roadside markets, |
and local grocery stores in unserved and underserved areas, as |
well as the creation of year-round public markets in Chicago |
and other large communities; |
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(i) research, identify, and coordinate best practices and |
opportunities for the development
of local food and organic |
food production; |
(j) identify opportunities to educate the public and |
producers about the benefits of local
foods systems and about |
the development opportunities provided through this Act; and |
(k) identify legal impediments to local food and organic |
food production, and develop
recommendations for a remedy.
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Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon |
becoming law.
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