Welcome to blogs.villagevoice.com
Blogs
  • News
    • » Daily News
    • » Runnin' Scared - News Blog
    • » Tom Robbins
    • » Wayne Barrett
  • Music
    • » Top Picks
    • » Find a Bar or Club
    • » Pazz & Jop
    • » Down in Front
    • » Sound of the City
    • » Siren
    • » Submit an Event
    • » Jukebox
    • » Join Music Newsletter
    • » Entertainment Ads
  • Calendar
    • » Calendar Home
    • » Top Picks
    • Valentine's Day Events
    • » Comedy Events
    • » Fitness Health & Beauty Guide
    • » Submit an Event
    • » Entertainment Ads
  • Restaurants
    • » Restaurant Guide
    • » Restaurant Reviews
    • » Sietsema's Counter Culture
    • » Find a Bar or Club
    • » Fork in the Road (column)
    • » Fork in the Road (blog)
    • » Sponsored Online Menus
    • » Choice Eats Tasting Event
    • » Join Dining Newsletter
    • » Restaurant Ads
  •  
  • Arts
    • » Calendar
    • » Books
    • » Theater
    • » Art
    • » Dance
    • » Obies Theater Awards
  • Films
    • » Now Showing
    • » Movie Showtimes
    • » Reviews
    • » Join NY Film Club
    • » Movie Ads
  • The Ads
    • Ad Index
    • Flip Book
    • Media Kit
  • Classifieds
    • Personals
    • Sexy Black Book
    • Free Online Classifieds
    • Place an Ad (print)
    • Career Fair
    • Real Estate for Sale/Trulia
    • Personals Blogs
    • Real Estate For Rent
  • Blogs
    • » Runnin' Scared
    • » Sound of the City
    • » La Daily Musto
    • » Fork in the Road (blog)
    • » All City
  • Columns
    • » La Dolce Musto
    • » Tom Robbins
    • » Sex
    • » Horoscope
  • Best Of
    • » Arts & Entertainment
    • » Bars & Clubs
    • » Food & Drink
    • » People & Places
    • » Shopping & Services
    • » Sports & Recreation
    • » Best of Ads
  • Bars/Clubs
    • » Bars/Clubs Home
    • » Bars/Club Ads
  • Archives
  • Reader Recommendations
  • Promotions
    • Street Team
    • Join The Street Team
    • Contests & Promotions
    • Text Alerts
    • Buy Village Voice Merchandise
    • Supplements Archive
  • Site Map

Top

blog

Stories

  • Somebody Got Murdered

    Staten Island Slay Suspect "High As a Motherfucker"

    By Graham Rayman

    1
  • Urban Wildlife

    Coyotes Invade Columbia University

    By Roy Edroso

    2
  • Exploring the Right Wing Blogosphere

    Rightblogger Tributes to the Late John Murtha

    By Roy Edroso

    3
  • R.I.P.

    War Critic Rep. John Murtha Dies

    By Roy Edroso

    4
  • Advertising

    10 Best Super Bowl XLIV Commercials

    By Mackenzie Schmidt

    5
  • Exploring the Right Wing Blogosphere

    Rightbloggers Share Tea Party Rage at Gov't Spending

    By Roy Edroso

    6
  • Weather

    In New York, 'Sno Storm

    By Julia

    7
  • Transitions

    13-Year-Old Recruited to USC: Day of the Tweens!

    By Roy Edroso

    8
  • Fashion

    Project Runway: Ugly

    By Stacey Anderson

    9
  • Corruption

    Seminerio Gets 6 Years

    By Elizabeth Dwoskin

    10
  • Studies in Crap

    Rock 'n' Roll -- The Devil's Music!

    By Alan Scherstuhl

    11
  • Advertising

    7 Extremely Weird Political Ads

    By Roy Edroso

    12
  • Hate Crime

    Rush Limbaugh -- Assman!

    By Roy Edroso

    13
  • Q&A

    Parks and Recreation's Aziz Ansari

    By Araceli Cruz

    14
  • Democracy

    Poll: Paterson Hated (Not Because He's Black, Though)

    By Roy Edroso

    15
 
Citystate

With Rising Food Costs, Councilman Seeks Ethanol Waiver for NY

By John DeSio, Tuesday, Jun. 10 2008 @ 3:11PM
Comments (10)
Categories:

It was not all that long ago that ethanol, the natural alcohol made from organic material, was being hailed as a major step forward in the creation of environmentally-friendly replacements for fossil fuels. Typically made of corn in America, government looks on ethanol so fondly that Congress has passed major tax credits for ethanol producers and mandated that it be mixed in with your car’s gasoline.

Roughly 25 percent of corn grown in the United States today is used to produce ethanol, which makes less corn available for food production and contributes to rising food costs here and elsewhere. Queens City Councilman Eric Gioia is set to introduce a resolution that will call on the federal government phase out the use of food crops for fuel production while at the same time urging Governor David Paterson to petition the Environmental Protection Agency to give New York State a waiver on federal ethanol mandates.

Both measures are being hailed by hunger activists as good steps towards lowering the ever rising cost of food. Joel Berg, Executive Director of the New York City Coalition Against Hunger and a supporter of Gioia’s resolution, said the City’s poor are facing a food crisis that using food for fuel is only making worse.

“The only bright spot for poor people in America over the last few decades was that food prices were relatively low compared to western Europe and other developing countries,” said Berg. “Now we’ve lost that.”

Critics of corn ethanol like Berg note that evidence suggests it takes more energy to produce such fuel than it generates.

They also note that the heavy government subsidies on corn ethanol—51 cents a gallon—has turned ethanol production into a corporate welfare program. Archer Daniels Midland, one of America’s largest ethanol producers, has been attacked by left, right and center for having grown fat off of taxpayers while doling out generous contributions to Democrats and Republicans alike.

“It really drives up food prices by taking food out of consumption of people and putting it into energy,” said Berg. He noted that other factors have also played a role in food cost increases, such as the consolidation of agriculture businesses and a burgeoning middle class in countries like India and China. “But ethanol certainly contributes to that, and is one of the most pointless contributors to it.”

And the City’s poor are feeling the pinch. Their own food dollars have been stretched, as have the value of their food stamps. On top of that the food pantries that many rely on to make up the difference are seeing their own purchasing dollars lose power, all of which combines for less food in your cupboard. “It really is a triple whammy for poor people in New York,” said Berg.

In announcing the resolution, Gioia noted that the stated intentions of ethanol mandates were to reduce our dependence on foreign oil. Instead, they have driven the cost of necessities like bread and milk higher than many Americans can bear. “With high food prices on top of the outrageous price of gas, New Yorkers are getting hit by a one-two punch,” said Gioia. “By freezing ethanol mandates and moving towards advanced biofuels instead, we can put policies in place that will help us save money at the gas station and the grocery store."

Berg admitted there is no guarantee that ending corn ethanol mandates would lead to a decrease in food prices. But even if it meant that food would only see small increases, he said, it would be worth it to New York’s poor.

“Given the crisis for low income New Yorker, any marginal help they need is something we would support,” said Berg.

Comments (10) Write Comment
Share

Related Content

  • Hydrogen's Dirty Details December 30, 2003
  • If Tomato Blight Wasn't Bad Enough... August 31, 2009
  • Jersey Denies Being Source of Maple Syrup Smell February 6, 2009
  • Gourmet Says We Should Pay More for Food--Do You Agree? May 21, 2009
  • Spoon-Feeding Poison July 8, 2003

More About:

  • Eric Gioia
  • Joel Berg
  • Materials Sector
  • Manufacturing Sector
  • Food Security and Hunger

Comments (10)

iowa corn farmer says:

Do you know that out of 56 pounds of corn there is 32 lbs of by products that are feed to livestock-
Did you know that if the corn price doubles it raises the price of a box of corn flakes 6 cents yes 6 cent.
Why are you upset with the farmers when it big oil to blame???????

Posted On: Tuesday, Jun. 10 2008 @ 7:37PM
Dalio says:

The Gas prices are the major cause of food prices and everything else going up. The transportation of food and other products need fuel. No one has figured out how to create oil yet, so prices oil will always be increasing. We can always create more farms that make corn. And by paying corn farmers you keep the money circulating in the U.S.. Maybe by producing more corn producing farms, we can create more jobs, beat the Arabs, and the oil producing companies, and bring down the cost of fuel.

Posted On: Wednesday, Jun. 11 2008 @ 7:47AM
Imnotafarmer says:

The corn used in ethanol production is field corn which is grown for livestock feed. But it isn't even good for that as cattle have a difficult time digesting the stuff.

Ethanol competes with high fructose corn syrup and corn starch. The more ethanol the less HFCS and corn starch. We would be better off using corn for energy and using cane and beet sugar for our food.

Corn starch and HFCS is not going to relieve the hunger in New York or anywhere else.

Posted On: Wednesday, Jun. 11 2008 @ 11:30AM
Concerned Former Kansan says:

I do not think the people interviewed in this article are bashing family farmers here. It seems to me that they are simply saying -- as many people in this country are -- that the humongous subsidies to multinational corn-processing corporations are both increasing hunger and not giving more money to small farmers who could actually need the help. In fact, the Coalition's web site said they have a project that helps family farmers by buying food directly from them and giving it to hungry New York citizens. (Here is the link: http://www.nyccah.org/programs/farm-fresh-initiative ) It has been proven that exhorbitant federal subsidies in the Farm Bill primarily benefit wealthy corporate agribusinesses and many people agree that is not a good thing. There are some people in Congress trying to change that...let's hope they are successful.

Posted On: Wednesday, Jun. 11 2008 @ 12:41PM
Concerned American says:

What is the deal with these farmers? They don't seem to care about the pain that the rest of the world suffers as long as they get their undeserved subsidies. I am sick of the corn-flake argument, grocery prices have sky-rocketed and if you are pulling a large portion of potential food off the market, it will have a big impact on prices (economic 101). If the corn used for ethanol is so poor, then grow a more useful product. The "The more ethanol the less HFCS and corn starch," comment is so reidiculous that it must have come out of an ethanol industry propaganda brain-storming session.

This is the bottom-line: huge amounts of land, equipment, energy, and moeny are expended to produce corn-based ethanol. It is questionable that there is an energy benefit and there are likely environmental problems with the use of water, pesticides, fertilizer, etc. To top it off, tax-payers are forced to pay farm subsidies, ethanol subsidies, higher grocery prices, and higher taxes to feed the poor.

This is horrible economic policy and the nation needs to throw out our lousy government representatives and find some that are willing to stand up against economic suicide. The free market will find a better solution than this travesty of policy.

Posted On: Thursday, Jun. 12 2008 @ 3:29PM
Pete says:

First and foremost lets get some of "facts" straight...the 51 cent per gallon "subsidy" goes to the BLENDER of ethanol NOT the ethanol plant!!! Right now BIG OIL is buying ethanol for a $1.00 a gallon LESS than gasoline plus the subsidy!!! Why you may ask??? How many ethanol plants or multi-national agricultural companies have a gas station near you??? NONE!!! Also the average length of miles for a typical American food product to land on your plate at home or resteraunt travels 1400 miles, does it travel for free??? The answer to the "corn flakes" arguement about it rising 6 cents is true but somehow they went up more, could it be that MAYBE just MAYBE the transportation cost to get it there in NYC on a truck/train went up 100% over the last 2 years??? I guess you guys in NYC are only paying more food but not gas huh???

Posted On: Thursday, Jun. 12 2008 @ 10:51PM
Concerned American says:

Pete,

I agree that transportation prices have gone up and that will affect food prices. Unfortunately, you are missing the big picture here. We need solutions, not more subsidies that accomplish nothing other than transfer money from the average to the rich. Please research some basic economic principles with this short book(http://jim.com/econ/contents.html). Then you might start to understand the destructive effect of the corn-ethanol boondoggle.

Posted On: Friday, Jun. 13 2008 @ 12:18PM
Daniel Falcone says:

http://www.usda.gov/wps/portal/!ut/p/_s.7_0_A/7_0_1RD?printable=true&contentidonly=true&contentid=2008/05/0130.xml

The Councilman should do his research before making unsupported statements in reference to Ethanol and the cost of Food. This report was offered by the USDA on the effects of bio-fuels in relation to the cost of food. it is insulting to even consider or to compared food costs when crude oil is 140 barrel and is a 5-1 ratio on having the effect on costs of food vs. Bio-fuels. You would think an elected official would be little better informed instead of making statements because it sounds good to the public. He should be supporting Bio-fuels, if it wasn't for ethanol supplementing some of the gas that is produced we would have even higher prices then we do now. To be politically corrected doesn't allow you to be ignorant of the facts. I hope NY is mature enough to understand we need to re-invest in ourselves with renewable fuels and we will move on to 2nd and 3rd resources of feedstock to supplement food resources. But we must move forward and be mature. Bio-fuels is where we are going to start to move away from fossil fuels, foreign dependency and 140 dollar a barrel of oil.

Daniel Falcone
Vice-Chair of Policy
Bio-fuels Industry Committee
Albany, NY

Posted On: Monday, Jun. 16 2008 @ 1:27PM
Terry G says:

Round and round we go. Higher fuel prices, whether they be from hedging by speculators or a real lack of supply, have caused our food prices to go up for the whole world. Plus we have reduced food production due to rotation into biofuels with food crops. That makes other countries like Brazil cut down their rainforests (no oxygen for us) to replace the food corn and soybeans we are using for fuel. However, the Brazilians are onto something. SUGAR.
I say: lower the tariff on imported sugar ethanol from Brazil or grow sugar ourselves for fuel (it creates 7x as much energy as corn, costs less to produce, and we fatties don't need as much sugar in our diets); grow corn for our food (lower food prices); ban large engines except for real non-SUV trucks (use less fuel); promote smaller and hybrid cars (don't wait for the "market"; it will take too long.); pay farmers in other countries to grow their own food instead of wasting our money growing it here, transporting our corn thousands of miles to dump in poor countries so their farmers can't survive(if necessary, we can help with fertilizer); support our local farmers and markets; stop funding big agribusiness (corporate welfare); stop paying people not to farm or for land that is not even a farm; don't pay disaster money unless there is a disaster; make farmers in the Midwest buy disaster insurance. Let's see how all that works. Terry

Posted On: Tuesday, Jun. 17 2008 @ 5:52PM
care says:

I Say NO to Ethanol.

I am all for going "green", and not supporting the imports. But even as these are both important to me. I don't beleive Ethanol is the answer.

For one, it may be made from a plant, it is NOT GREEN.

What we need to do is to find a alternative to fuel, not another FUEL.

Put up your windmills, install your solar panels, or just turn off the lights and walk to the store.

Yes, we are going to use fuel but we need to just use less.

Don't make another fuel, use less of the fuel we have, and reuse, recycle.

Posted On: Sunday, Jul. 13 2008 @ 8:47PM

Write Comment


Comments may not show up immediately after submission. Please wait a minute after posting a comment for it to appear.

All reader comments are subject to our Terms of Use. By clicking "Post," you acknowledge that you have reviewed and agree to these Terms.

Tools

Search Runnin' Scared


Follow

Email tips to tips@villagevoice.com

SlideShows»

  • Bikini Burlesque (NSFW)
  • Brooklyn Taco Experiment
  • Idiotarod 2010
  • More Slideshows >>

Most …

  • Hiram Monserrate Expelled, 53-8
  • Hiram Monserrate to Be Expelled from the State Senate, Say Reports
  • Hiram Monserrate, David Paterson Still Hanging In There
  • Raj Rajaratnam's College Chum, Rajiv Goel, Pleads Guilty in Galleon Case; Another Pal Remains Defiant
  • Mayor Michael Bloomberg Warns of Power Outages During Snowstorm; Advises Flashlights, Milk
  • More Recent Entries...
  • Ruben Larios, Harlem Teen, Shot to Death in His Own Lobby (79)
  • James O'Keefe and Race: An Update (46)
  • James O'Keefe, ACORN and Landrieu Stinger, Ran Racist Forum Present at Race Debate (31)
  • Rightbloggers Share Tea Party Rage at Gov't Spending -- Until a GOP Senator Puts His Hand Out (17)
  • Tom Tancredo Kicks Off Tea Party Convention With Speech on Socialist Obama, Stupid Voters (15)
  • 7 Political Ads That Might Be Weirder Than Carly Fiorina's "Demon Sheep"
  • Jenny Sanford's Top Ten Reasons Her Husband, South Carolina Governor Mark Sanford, Is a Really Bad Person
  • James O'Keefe and Race: An Update
  • Rightbloggers Share Tea Party Rage at Gov't Spending -- Until a GOP Senator Puts His Hand Out
  • Obama Quotes Village Voice, Proving Treason, Fondness for Kinky Sex

Calendar

  • Wed
    10
  • Thu
    11
  • Fri
    12
  • Sat
    13
  • Sun
    14
  • Mon
    15
  • Tue
    16
This week's best events
3 Best Things To Do on Wednesday, Feb 10
  • Cynthia MacAdams: Feminist Portraits, 1974-1977+Timothy Greenfield-Sanders: Supermodels of the '70s and '80s

    Where: Steven Kasher Gallery

    Type: Art

  • Jef Aerosol

    Where: Ad Hoc Art Gallery

    Type: Art

  • A Lie of the Mind

    Where: Acorn Theatre

    Type: Off-Broadway: Opening, Theater

  • submit an event
  • 389 more things to do today >>

Twitter Feed

Follow Runnin' Scared on Twitter

More Twitter >>

Runnin' Scared on Digg

Services

Health & Beauty

  • VADA SPA

    View Ad | View Site
  • Contemporary Dental Implant Centre

    View Ad | View Site
  • NUTRAMEDICS INC.

    View Ad | View Site
More >>

Links

  • Village Voice
  • Wayne Barrett
  • Elizabeth Dwoskin
  • Jockbeat
  • Michael Musto
  • Tom Robbins
  • Somebody Got Murdered
  • Studies in Crap
  • New York Daily News
  • New York Post
  • New York Times
  • Newsday
  • Wall Street Journal
  • Washington Post
  • YouTube
  • Salon
  • Slate
  • Gawker
  • Huffington Post
  • Daily Kos
  • Drudge Report
  • The Daily Show
  • Colbert Report
  • Politico
  • Philadelphia Inquirer
  • Associated Press
  • Fox News
  • The Onion
  • ESPN
  • CNN
  • Time
  • Forward
  • New York
  • New Yorker
  • New York Review of Books
  • New York Observer
  • ABC News
  • CBS News
  • MSNBC
  • Newsweek
  • New York Sun
  • National Review
  • New Republic
  • Harper's
  • Atlantic
  • Vanity Fair
  • The Nation
  • Radar
  • New York Law Journal
  • Columbia Journalism Review
  • Columbia Spectator
  • Washington Square News
  • News India Times
  • Women's Wear Daily
  • Amsterdam News
  • New York Press
  • Time Out
  • IRIN
  • Indymedia
  • FAIR: Fairness & Accuracy in Reporting
  • Cryptome
  • Human Rights Watch
  • United for a Fair Economy
  • International Crisis Group
  • nola.com: New Orleans Times-Picayune
  • The New Yorker:Iraq Coverage
  • Index on Censorship
  • CounterPunch
  • Center for Contemporary Conflict
  • McClatchy D.C. Bureau
  • TomDispatch.com
  • Common Dreams News Center
  • War Report — Project on Defense Alternatives
  • Power & Interest News Report
  • Selves and Others
  • Antiwar.com
  • Johnson's Russia List
  • Energy Bulletin
  • Dry Dipstick
  • IFIWatchnet
  • Al Jazeera
  • chechnya-sl
  • Bushims
  • ACLU's Torture FOIA
  • Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty
  • National Security Archive
  • Waxman Committee
  • Ethics Daily
  • Bretton Woods Project
  • Human Rights First
  • Center for Public Integrity
  • GlobalSecurity.org
  • Institute for War & Peace Reporting
  • 9-11 Timeline
  • Iraq Body Count
  • Students for an Orwellian Society
  • Center on Budget and Policy Priorities
  • whitehouse.gov
  • whitehouse.org
About Us | Work for Village Voice | Esubscribe | Free Classifieds | Advertising | Privacy Policy | Problem With the Site? | RSS | Site Map
©2010 Village Voice Media All rights reserved.