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How Can Extension Support Values Based Supply Chains? NMPAN as Case Study Kathryn Quanbeck, Program Manager Lauren Gwin, Director Oregon State University.

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Presentation on theme: "How Can Extension Support Values Based Supply Chains? NMPAN as Case Study Kathryn Quanbeck, Program Manager Lauren Gwin, Director Oregon State University."— Presentation transcript:

1 How Can Extension Support Values Based Supply Chains? NMPAN as Case Study Kathryn Quanbeck, Program Manager Lauren Gwin, Director Oregon State University

2 What is NMPAN? How was it developed What we do Who we serve What we have learned Where we are headed We bring a holistic, systems perspective to enhancing the sustainability of the food sector.

3 NMPAN Mission To strengthen and expand processing capacity, nationwide, for niche meats, to promote rural development and agricultural opportunities. www.nichemeatprocessing.org

4 What is NMPAN? Founded in 2007, based at Oregon State University National network & information hub for processors, producers, universities, agencies, & NGOs Advisory board: industry, academia, NGOs, and government. Engaged scholarship: applied research & practical guidance for small processors and the farmers, ranchers, marketers, meat buyers, and consumers who depend on them.

5 A Value-Chain Perspective Local meat and poultry value chain productionprocessingdistributionretail consumptio n

6 Our network 97 university members from 39 states + D.C. and Puerto Rico.

7 What we do Information hub: Website, webinars, newsletter, & research reports Wide range of practical information about local meat and poultry processing, featuring best practices and innovation Forum: Nationally recognized, one-of-a-kind listserv Community of practice for processors, producers, and others for peer-to-peer learning and information sharing. Targeted technical assistance : Direct consultation by staff and peer consulting network

8 Information hub Website: The go-to site for small-scale meat and poultry processing for local markets. Webinars: interactive, educational sessions. Newsletter: 10 issues a year. Relevant news items, event listings, equipment for sale, job postings and an in-depth feature article. Research: Peer-reviewed research by NMPAN leadership on challenges and solutions related to small-scale processing and the local meat sector. www.nichemeatprocessing.org

9 Forum NMPAN Listserv: 1,200+ members Ask questions, get answers, share ideas. Example: Any recommendations on using either trusscore or glassboard for kill floor and cutting room walls? Which do you prefer and why?

10 Targeted Technical Assistance Direct consultation Example: Advised a producer group on taking a custom- exempt cut and wrap facility USDA and adding an inspected mobile slaughter unit. Peer-to-peer consulting Example: Experienced Colorado processor advised Alaska Farm Bureau on next steps for state- owned processing facility.

11 What have we learned? Increased demand for sustainable meat and poultry = increased demand for relevant info from Extension Value-chain perspective is essential Mix it up: practitioners and Extension in the same learning space

12 Where are we headed? Deep expertise in one link, knowledge and resources to learn more for others. Day-to-day operations vs. special projects: time & money Future research

13 www.nichemeatprocessing.org Lauren Gwin, Director lauren.gwin@oregonstate.edu Kathryn Quanbeck, Program Manager. kathryn.quanbeck@oregonstate.edu kathryn.quanbeck@oregonstate.edu


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