South Ripley schools pilot meat program
Partner with local providers
Mary Margaret Moorhead - Staff Writer
Believed to be the first in the United States,
South Ripley Community Schools are piloting a program in which
farmers in Ripley County provide meat to the elementary and
high school cafeterias for student consumption.
"Everything happens in one county," said Bud Beesley,
vice president of the Jennings County Growers Co-op, who is
assisting with the project in Ripley County.
Beesley, along with Richard Adrian, president of the Jennings
County Growers and a member of the Jennings County Farm Bureau
Board; Paul Anderson of the Ripley County Farm Bureau; and
Dennis Stockdale, assistant superintendent of the South Ripley
Community School Corporation, met recently to announce the
new program through the media.
The program actually got underway on Thursday, September 22,
when pork produced by Irvin Harmeyer and processed at the Westport
Locker was delivered to the school cafeterias. This past Monday
the schools received a processed beef from Paul Anderson's
farm.
Since receiving the processed pork and beef, the school corporation
has purchased hogs from the Paul Kessens family and the Geisler
farms.
"The meat is locally produced, locally processed, and
locally consumed," said Anderson. "Tax dollars stay
within the county. The meat is identity preserved and is traceable.
Trace-ability is the key word. The origin is identified and
won't require government labeling."
Noting that the corporation is fully supportive of this pilot
program, Assistant Superintendent Stockdale said, "When
you can keep tax dollars in the community, improve school nutrition,
and work with local growers, it is a good thing. Even our FFA
gets involved."
Prior to becoming involved in the program, South Ripley Corporation
studied laws, regulations, and interpretations and received
approval on Tuesday, August 30, from the Indiana Department
of Education and from Region 5 of the United States Department
of Agriculture.
Along with the Ripley County Farm Bureau, the corporation
worked with Elizabeth Foland, school nutrition representative
of the Indiana Department of Education, and Debra Tropp, marketing
agent for the USDA in Washington, D.C.
Because the Westport Locker had worked with the Jennings County
representatives, the first hog and beef were processed there.
However, the partners agree that eventually all of this will
be done in Ripley County
According to Stockdale, corporation representatives will meet
with other food service people in the county to enlighten them
on the process. "Prices are competitive or maybe a little
lower," said Stockdale.
In addition to providing meat for the school's food service,
the science classes will also be able to use organs from the
animals for educational purposes, Stockdale pointed out.
Although Jennings County has not begun the purchase of meat
for their schools, their Growers Co-op and Farm Bureau have
provided produce of various kinds and have assisted with the
investigation and installation of the pilot program at South
Ripley.
In summing up the new program, Richard Adrian said, "Ripley
County Farm Bureau and the South Ripley school system have
been very forward looking in getting meat products which are
produced locally into the school. It's a credit to their working
together to keep nutrition within the county."
