As a rancher, marketing convenience has a very different meaning for me. A convenient market, for me, means a place where I can sell a high volume of product, at retail prices (or close to it), with minimal time commitment on my part. Convenience, by my definition, has a great deal to do with efficiency. As a rancher, I can't afford to go to more than one or two farmers markets per week – let alone seven!
In many parts of the country, communities have turned to the concept of a food hub as a way to increase marketing efficiency for producers and convenience for consumers. In the food hub model, producers can sell higher volumes and close-to-retail prices to the food hub. The hub then distributes the produce to chefs, retailers, and even directly to consumers. The Community Alliance with Family Farmers (CAFF) says,
“Many stakeholders in local food systems work have looked to the emergence of food hubs as the missing infrastructural link that will enable greater access to markets for small farmers and greater access to fresh, local food for communities. The USDA definition of a food hub is a “business or organization that actively manages the aggregation, distribution, and marketing of source-identified food products primarily from local and regional producers to strengthen their ability to satisfy wholesale, retail, and institutional demand.”[1]
From my perspective, a food hub operates like a locally-focused produce distributor – like a middleman that facilitates the sale of locally grown fruits, vegetables, meats, etc. within a community or region.
Food hubs differ from conventional distribution middlemen, in my opinion, primarily by lack of a profit motive. Food hubs – at least those with which I'm familiar – are motivated by a desire to serve community needs (e.g., access to healthy, local food and increased viability of local small farms), rather than by a desire to generate profit. Like many farmers, however, food hubs often discover that profit is vital to their survival – without profit, a food hub can't pay overhead expenses, let alone the farmers and ranchers it supposed to serve. At the other end of the supply chain, food hubs can't serve community customers if they aren't economically sustainable.
CAFF puts it like this:
“As a result of our efforts over the last decade, CAFF concludes that new, stand-alone facilities and aggregation hubs, unless farmer owned and operated, are not viable enterprises in California. These third party food hubs add on an extra layer of costs to the supply chain, duplicate existing efforts/infrastructure, and struggle financially without subsidy. In our view, a more effective strategy for local food system development is achieved not by establishing a stand-alone food hub as described above, but rather by working collaboratively to modify existing infrastructure and fostering supply chain values among a broad set of food system stakeholders while also educating the community about local food and engaging them in the movement. Ultimately, CAFF hopes that our findings and experience will help advance the theory and practice of local food system development and inform future decision-making processes around the need for new food hubs in California.”[2]
Food hubs can be subsidized in various ways. Growers can donate time and facilities to these hubs, or they can take lower prices or deferred payments. Similarly customers can pay higher prices, or likewise donate time and facilities. In the long run, however, such subsidies are not sustainable.
What's the answer, then, to this conundrum? How do we match the needs of local consumers (for markets that are time- and location-convenient) with the needs of farmers and ranchers (for markets that are efficient and fair in terms of price and volume)? As CAFF suggests, perhaps we need to work within the existing aggregation and distribution infrastructure. In this scenario, consumer demand for locally grown food would carry back through the supply chain, from the retailer to the distributor to the producer. At the same time, a small family farm's need for higher prices could carry through this same set of middlemen to the retailer (and ultimately to the consumer). For me, the key to these issues is that we need to discuss our local food system as a community. Too often, farmers talk amongst themselves without including the rest of the food system. Sometimes (believe it or not!), we even complain that profiteering in the processing, distribution or retail sectors comes at our expense as farmers! Similarly, local food advocates often leave the idea of profit (within any segment of the system) out of their discussions. It's time we all talked together!
[1] “Making the Invisible Visible: Looking Back at Fifteen Years of Local Food Distribution Solutions (October 2014), p. 5.
[2] Ibid., p. 3.