THE INDEPENDENT

The Latest

Humane Pork Now Served at Fort Lewis College

By Becca Day

Author: Bodine, James/Saturday, March 31, 2018/Categories: Home, Campus

Rate this article:
No rating

Humane pork is the latest Real Food Challenge Vote Real item that students selected at Fort Lewis College.

 

Humane food is about the humane treatment of animals that are used for meat, Rachel Landis, coordinator of the Environmental Center, said.

 

“It's everything from how they're raised, to how their slaughtered, to how they’re processed, and ensuring that we're doing all that we can for the welfare of that animal in its life,” she said.

 

Humane meat products, including humane pork, will be featured in several upcoming Real Meals, Landis said.

 

The Real Meals are a piece of the Real Food Challenge, which is an initiative that FLC agreed to, and the Environmental Center helps make happen, Gina Rios, general manager of Sodexo at FLC, said.

 

According to the Real Food guide, humane meat allows animals to express natural behavior in a low-stress environment and be raised with no added hormones or non-therapeutic antibiotics.

 

According to the Real Food guide there are four main aspects of Real Food; it must be local, fair, ecologically sound, or humane.

 

Local food can be sourced to nearby business which are locally owned and operated, fair food deals with the conditions in which workers who process the food are treated, and ecologically sound food is sustainable according to the Real Food guide.

 

The Real Meals the San Juan Dining hall will be serving features Real Food, including the humane pork, Landis said.

 

The Real Food Challenge works with the budget that FLC has for dining expenses, Landis said.

 

As of the 2016 to 2017 year the Real Food Challenge is at 7 percent Real Food, she said.

 

The goal of the Real Food Challenge is to have 20 percent of the food in the cafeteria be Real Food by 2020, Landis said.

 

In order to buy the more expensive but more humane products, the Environmental Center takes steps to be more cost effective in the dining hall, Landis said.

 

One of these initiatives is to eliminate waste and thus excess spending, she said. If Sodexo wastes less food it doesn't have to purchase as much food, Landis said.

 

Sodexo started using smaller plates in the dining hall to encourage students to get smaller portions, Landis said.

 

Having small plates helps create less waste because students grab less food, which allows Sodexo to buy less food, Landis said.

 

The Environmental Center also runs the Vote Real initiative, which allows students to participate in the Real Food Challenge, Rios said.

 

Vote Real allows students to share their voices and vote on items that the Environmental Center is considering to implement in the dining hall, she said.

 

The Environmental Center puts out the Vote Real poll online, and, this year, students had the option to choose between Niman Ranch Humane Pork and Wallaby Organic Yogurt, Landis said.

 

Ellie Ferguson. a freshman Public Health and Sociology major. is vegan and has been for 4 ½ years, she said.

 

“I don’t think I’ll ever really eat meat again because I’ve read too much and I've seen too much so it's hard, but I think we're moving in a good direction, as a society, but also with the whole Real Food Challenge,” she said.

 

Serving humane meat in the dining hall is one of the steps that FLC can take to create an environmentally friendly campus, Landis said.

 

“We're going to continue to eat meat as a society and at Fort Lewis College,” Landis said. “So how can we do that in the most responsible way possible?”

 

Real Meals Served at FLC

  • Niman Ranch Pork and local beans served on March 27

  • Campus Board Dinner in the Student Union on April 13

  • Late Night meal leading into Finals Week on April 16

  • Niman Ranch Pork carnitas on April 18

 

Print

Number of views (2769)/Comments (0)

Please login or register to post comments.

All News

Vibrant Voices

Kiiyahno Edgewater

The past, present and future of representing diversity on campus.

Nearly half of Fort Lewis Colleges’s student population is Native American and Alaska Native, and students of color make up 59%. With such a large percentage of students with diverse voices from all corners of the world, how does FLC manage to represent every unique voice while maintaining all else?  Vice president of Diversity Affairs, Heather Shotton, came to FLC because of the...

The Hidden Cost

Story by: Matthew Claeson and Zara Tucker

Investigating Meal Swipes and the New Food Provider at Fort Lewis College

Fort Lewis College announced on Apr. 9 that Fresh Ideas will be taking over Fort Lewis College’s food service and dining contract, a place that has been filled by Sodexo for the past 15 years. This article takes a look into Sodexo’s food service system for students.  Skycards and Meal Swipes When it comes to skycards here at Fort Lewis College, they are a student’s...

The Coming Storm

Scout Edmondson

Lessons learned from the ‘22/‘23 winter and what could come with the looming El Niño.

  At the end of the 2023 winter, the San Juan Mountains, just north of Durango saw a record-breaking snowpack.  According to the National Resource Conservation Service, a branch of the US Department of Agriculture that tracks historical snowpack data, the snowpack in The San Juans topped out at 31.5 inches of snow-water equivalent (SWE) in mid-April. Purgatory Ski Resort,...

Crying Wolf

Scout Edmondson

Colorado's wolf reintroduction has become so emotional, so political, that it's no longer even about the wolves. 

Cover photo courtesy of Colorado Parks and Wildlife. Wolf 2306-OR runs into the wild after being released by CPW on Dec.19, 2023.  Grand County is a land of wide open skies, snowy mountains that hunch against the biting wind blowing off the plains of Wyoming, and miles and miles of prairie, pine forests and meandering trout streams. It’s home to the headwaters of the Colorado...

A New School is Coming to Fort Lewis College

Julian Zastrocky

Mountain Middle School capitalizes on the "empty" space behind Animas High School.

Fort Lewis College approved Mountain Middle School's request to build a new building next to the recently built Animas High School location. It approved a 420 million dollar budget to help with the building process.  Tom Stritikus, president of Fort Lewis College, is slated to release an email tomorrow announcing the decision formally to the student population. “We are so...

123468910Last