from NOW Toronto:
Trucking troubleThink your food’s local? Count up the number of trips it takes to put it on your plateBy Wayne Roberts
My first job, every Saturday was as a bicycle delivery boy for Joe Caruso’s grocery store in – I still grimace at the memory – a hilly area of Scarborough.
As it turns out, bike delivery jobs could be heading for a major revival as one the best ways to handle the trickiest of industrial transportation challenges: “the last mile,” with its extra burden of fossil fuel use.
My trip back in time was occasioned by a two-weekend assignment (for less pay than I made as a delivery boy) as the “food expert” on a panel of a dozen bold planning and design thinkers, food producers and consumer activists working to reduce heavy traffic in the food system – all under the discipline of an in-house moderator riding herd on ideas that got too grandiose.
The project, hosted by Evergreen Foundation, George Brown College’s Institute Without Boundaries and Metrolinx, kicked off coincidentally just a few weeks before November 28’s opening of the UN Climate Change Conference in Durban. Everything we discussed had powerful emissions implications. ..............(more)
The complete piece is at:
http://www.nowtoronto.com/news/story.cfm?content=184136