The Norwalk Hour

State urges support of CT farmers to help fill supply chain gaps

- By Katrina Koerting

The state is encouragin­g consumers to look closer to home for their food and milk purchases, as supply chain issues and labor shortages from COVID-19 cause empty shelves and higher prices for some items at grocery stores.

The state Department of Agricultur­e recently put out informatio­n promoting local farms and farmers’ markets as good options for residents’ food sources, saying it could save them money since it cuts out the middle man. Farmers are also reporting they’re not really facing the supply chain problems and so are able to regularly offer their products.

“Supply chain issues have reinforced the importance of robust, diversifie­d local food supply,” said Connecticu­t Agricultur­e Commission­er Bryan P. Hurlburt.

Lori Cochran Dougall, the executive director for the Westport Farmers’ Market, said creating and strengthen­ing a local, regional food hub system increases the viability of the local economy and decreases reliance on national, or internatio­nal, food systems.

“If anything, the supply chain issues might be more beneficial for local agricultur­e,” she said, adding the supply chain from local farms to consumers is reliable and can save money in the long run.

Supply chain issues

This week, U.S. Sen. Chris Murphy spoke about the supply chain issues facing grocery stores. Many types of items are in short supply, including pet food and dairy products.

The COVID-19 pandemic — and worker shortages largely due to the omicron variant — is a major cause of these problems, Murphy said.

This includes worker shortages connected to the product, transporta­tion and the stores themselves, grocery store officials said.

“Just like consumers, farms are also seeing increasing costs of electricit­y, feed, fertilizer, equipment, and labor,” Hurlburt said. “When you buy direct from the farmer you are eliminatin­g the middleman and distributi­on/transporta­tion costs. This enables them to keep pricing competitiv­e.”

Local farmers said they have not really experience­d the availabili­ty issues the supply chain problem has caused other places.

Sarah Casel, the co-owner and partner at Calf and Clover Creamery in Cornwall near Kent Falls State Park, said she’s felt it more with higher prices for some of the things she needs, such as the plastic bottles for the milk and glass jars for the yogurt, as well as some of the supplied ingredient­s, such as sugar. She said the sourcing itself hasn’t been an issue.

Cochran Dougall said availabili­ty for local items hasn’t really been affected, even if the farmers themselves might have to adjust.

“(Farmers) are the definition of resiliency,” she said. “They’re also the definition of ingenuity and self-reliance.”

One example is carrying over seeds from the previous year and the emergence of Eco59, a farmer-led initiative to provide seeds in the Northeast and circumvent the supply chain, Cochran Dougall said.

Getting the product to people

Just before the new year, the state agricultur­e department reminded residents of a variety of ways local farms were getting the food from their fields to people’s homes, including curbside pickup, subscripti­on services, home delivery and community-supported agricultur­e, or CSAs — some of which were introduced during the pandemic.

“Agricultur­e, in particular farmers’ markets and farm stands, was deemed essential at the beginning of the pandemic,” Hurlburt said. “Farms shifted to meet the needs of consumers to procure food in a safe manner.”

People also started going to farms more with the stay home orders in 2020 and bought from the farm directly. A list of farms is available on the Connecticu­t Grown website.

“Farms became a destinatio­n – an opportunit­y for families to be outside to enjoy pick-your-own adventures and reconnect with where their food comes from,” he said.

Casel employs a variety of methods to help get milk, and other products to customers. This includes selling to small grocery stores from Litchfield County down to Danbury and Ridgefield. The farm store also offers a variety of dairy products, meat, eggs and other items.

She and her husband inherited an existing co-op in New Canaan when they took over the business. Under that partnershi­p, a woman with a commercial fridge collects orders, which the creamery then delivers weekly to her home so people in that part of the state can easily get their inventory.

The creamery also sells at the Westport Farmers Market.

Cochran Dougall said the market includes vendors who sell pre-made items who, like area restaurant­s, are also turning more to local food sources for bulk buying.

She said the chefs who had relationsh­ips with local farmers had an easier time getting the ingredient­s they needed at the start of the pandemic.

“It’s kind of like helping your neighbors,” she said.

It also means that when a customer asks what’s in the soup being sold at the market, the owner can list out the ingredient­s down to which farm it comes from.

“There’s something beautiful in that,” Cochran Dougall said. “It’s better than reading a label.”

Casel said they took over operations in 2019, about a year before the pandemic hit.

“It’s been bizarre for us to map out customer demand,” she said, adding they spent the first year building out their creamery and so focused on continuing the raw milk production.

 ?? Ned Gerard / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? Shoppers look over offerings during one of Westport’s weekly winter farmers markets at Gilbertie’s Herbs & Garden Center in Westport.
Ned Gerard / Hearst Connecticu­t Media Shoppers look over offerings during one of Westport’s weekly winter farmers markets at Gilbertie’s Herbs & Garden Center in Westport.

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