Local Duck Endorses 600 Million Dollar Food Policy. Treasury Still Considering the Data.

Exclusive Release for Tasmanian Times
Grow Small Feed All Campaign

Across Australia and within Tasmania, food resilience has become a popular phrase accompanied by strategies, discussion papers, roundtables, advisory boards and well formatted reports that circulate between departments, consultants and funding bodies, often with sincere intention yet limited material impact in the paddocks, kitchens and small businesses that constitute a living food system. Millions of dollars have supported planning processes, mapping exercises and future scenarios, while many small farmers continue to close their gates, young growers struggle to access land, and public institutions purchase food from distant supply chains despite our capacity to grow it here.

Photography by Ness Vandeburgh, Launceston based photographer. 

Photography by Ness Vandeburgh, Launceston based photographer. 

Grow Small Feed All proposes a structural change rather than another document.

The campaign calls for a $600 million redirection toward local procurement, cooperative processing infrastructure, farm gate activation, regional distribution, and institutional food programs anchored in Tasmanian soil. This proposal has not emerged from abstraction. It has formed over seven years through a mycelium network of Tasmanian farmers, designers, educators and community organisers working within the lived constraints of the current system and asking a simple question: what would happen if we redirected existing expenditure into local circulation rather than continued import dependency.

The movement is expanding because the arithmetic is clear and the appetite for change is practical.

At a recent photographic gathering at Magical Farm, families, growers and volunteers assembled behind the campaign banner. During the process, Simon the resident farm duck stepped onto the Grow Small Feed All sign and remained there, still, for over twenty minutes, as if guarding the proposition. With no training or prompting, he insisted on perching on top of the banner above the word "Grow"! He simply had a grounded presence that seemed to grasp the seriousness of the moment.

The symbolism is lighthearted. The policy is not. Tasmania has the capacity to redesign its food economy from the ground up. The question is whether we continue to fund abstraction or choose to circulate value locally with intention and courage.

To contribute or participate, contact the campaign team at Regen Era Design Studio at emily@regeneracommons.org

Full campaign and policy details are available at the deisgn studios website:
https://regeneradesign.org/grow-small-feed-all


Photography by Ness Vandeburgh, Launceston based photographer. 

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