
They have reason to boast. Even the largest operations โ Healthy Living, City Market/Onion River Co-op, Hunger Mountain Food Co-op, Brattleboro Food Co-op and The Co-op Food Stores in New Hampshire โ go to great lengths to weave together a patchwork of sources for local foods from hundreds of area farmers and vendors.
But even at the height of the growing season, only as much as 30 percent of the foods available come from regional vendors.
Most organic products sold at Vermont co-ops and natural food stores are not local. In fact, some organic food is not domestic, and thatโs because, co-op managers say, they are dependent on large distributors for products, and they simply donโt have access to domestic products in certain categories.
Fresh organic vegetables and fruit have never been readily available in winter from local sources, but now even some bulk and frozen foods come from overseas.
Several multinational companies, including Frontier Natural Products Co-op and United Natural Foods, Inc., which are dominant purveyors of organic foods in the United States, have recently started shipping products from as far away as China, India and South America to Vermont co-ops and natural food stores.
According to Jon Fogarty, a project manager for Iowa City-based National Co-operative Grocers Association, 70 to 90 percent of organic foods sold at co-ops in the United States are distributed by UNFI, which has 12 warehouses located throughout the country, including one in Chesterfield, N.H. Fogarty says UNFI is the largest independent distributor of organic foods in the U.S., second only to Wal-Mart. Repeated attempts to reach UNFI officials were unsuccessful.
Many of the products now grown in China for the U.S. organic market, such as garlic, used to be commonly grown in the United States, according to co-op managers. Bulk bin items listed on the UNFI Web site, including pine nuts, pumpkin seeds, black beans, soybeans, adzuki beans and mung
beans, are all sourced from China.
In addition, most natural foods stores and co-ops offer frozen foods from Woodstock Farms, a house brand owned by UNFI, that distributes imported Chinese broccoli, asparagus, spinach, peas, mushrooms, edamame and peppers. Some frozen foods from Cascadian farms, including the companyโs California mix (cauliflower, broccoli and carrots), are also from China.
Certain foods — organic nuts, produce, frozen vegetables, meat and seafood — must be labeled under the new country-of-origin labeling law known as COOL, but origination information for other organic foods is optional. With the exception of nuts, bulk bin labels at area food stores rarely list the country of origin.
Thatโs because, co-op managers say, itโs difficult to maintain the signage for bulk foods.
City Market in Burlington doesnโt provide country-of-origin information on most bulk bins, according to Clem Nilan, the general manager. The store offers organic black beans from several different sources, including UNFI and Butterworks Farm in Westfield. โItโs not that weโre trying to hide anything,โ Nilan says. โThe way Vermont agriculture goes, we only have black beans for a couple of weeks. We search out very diligently the local sources.โ
Kari Bradley, manager of Hunger Mountain Co-op in Montpelier, says his store doesnโt make a special effort to identify the country of origin for bulk foods because they are unbranded commodities.
โI know from produce, itโs a challenge to maintain the signage,โ Bradley says. โYou might be getting things from different countries, two different bags on the same day. Maybe if people knew more about it, theyโd call for it. We havenโt had a lot of interest in that on the bulk side.โ
Bradley says the Chinese now dominate the fresh garlic market. Hunger Mountain is working with a local source of garlic, he says, but the co-op is not able to source it from Vermont year-round yet. โIf youโre a grocer without a local source of garlic, like weโre fortunate to have, you donโt have a lot of options at this point,โ Bradley says.
Fogarty says the NCGA is not actively pressuring UNFI to seek more domestic sources for organic food. The trade association is working on โthe policy levelโ in Washington.
โEach one (member) is free to choose whatever they want to sell, and theyโre going to sell what their consumers purchase,โ Fogarty says. โThe best way to go about making these changes is for consumers not to purchase those products.โ
When asked how consumers can boycott products if stores and food manufacturers donโt notify consumers of the country of origin, Fogarty said labeling is โa situation that varies from store to store.โ
Nilan says there isnโt a national movement to ensure access to domestic organic foods, though co-ops in the Northeast are coming together to identify regional organic food sources. โI think there would be support from the national organization, but the effort to grow things locally will come from local organizations,โ Nilan says.
Nilan says 29 percent of the City Marketโs food came from local vendors in October, and he prefers to buy local conventional foods over foreign organic products. โOur business model is around local food, and so our buying strategy, should all things be equal, the local product is better,โ Nilan says. โThat means thereโs no price differentiation or nothing qualitatively different, like one is organic and one is conventional.โ
The source of ingredients for processed foods is even more opaque, according to Vermont store managers. COOL labeling doesnโt come into play for packaged food products with UPC bar codes such as sauces, snack foods and soy products. Nilan says โwe frankly donโt knowโ where the ingredients
for soup mixes and other products come from.
โWeโre not sure where the ingredients are sourced from, and we donโt have access to that information,โ Nilan says. โItโs not posted on the UNFI web site. When they tried to sell a private label to us, one of the things the co-op insisted on was transparency in knowing where these things come from. If weโre going to put our co-op label on things, we want to know where things are from.โ
Eli Lesser-Goldsmith, manager of Healthy Living in South Burlington, says his store works hard to find local and domestic organic food, but it isnโt always easy to find U.S. sources, particularly for frozen foods. Healthy Living carries the Woodstock Farms label.
โThe entire frozen supply chain is even more complicated and even more limited than the regular supply chain,โ Lesser-Goldsmith says. โFrozen foods are incredibly difficult to handle. If something gets warm for 15 minutes, itโs not salable (anymore). If it were up to me, I would tell everyone to just eat fresh foods. I donโt back frozen foods at all. Itโs not what weโre all about at Healthy Living. I want people to eat fresh breads, fresh vegetables.โ
He says he hasnโt heard a single complaint from a customer about the independent natural food storeโs products from overseas.
โPeople are pretty trusting of our store and the products that we pick,โ Lesser-Goldsmith says. โWe really take care in choosing all of our products and make sure they stick to our guidelines, for cleanliness, health benefits, environmental impact. Not everything is going to be a beautiful tomato from Hinesburg that was grown on an organic farm.โ
