advertisement indicator
City Bites
City Bites

EXCLUSIVE: The Red Apron pulls out of Feast of Fields due to Loblaws Sponsorship

Feast of Fields sells out?

The organizers of the upcoming Feast of Fields, a celebration of locally-produced organic food in the region, ruffled some feathers last month when it announced that Loblaws would be its “presenting sponsor.”

That means, for (a measly) $5000, Loblaws gets to plaster its logos prominently across all of the event’s marketing materials as well as having the opportunity to participate in the festival itself with a chef-run cooking demonstration.

Apparently the Canadian Organic Growers Ottawa Chapter doesn’t see any conflict in bringing on-board the conglomerate behind supermarket chains Real Canadian Superstore, Loblaws and Your Independent Grocer. But Feast of Fields participants Jennifer Heagle and Jo-Ann Laverty do. As co-owners of The Red Apron, a home catering business dedicated to sourcing ingredients from local farms, producers and small family enterprise, the pair have been happy to donate their time and the cost of the food required to participate in the Feast of Fields for the past three years.

“Loblaws does not belong at this event,” says Heagle. “This event is supposed to celebrate the other side of the food chain.”

The Red Apron partners made the decision to pull out this year but they are not looking to influence others to follow their lead, thereby causing the event to unravel. “There’s a lot of hard work that goes into it by volunteers, but we find it strange that the organizers chose to risk offending them,” she said. So far Red Apron is the only drop-out but she says other participants she has spoken to are “on the fence”.

The folks at COG have done little to defend their decision, save for a mass email sent out to the participants stating: “… Partnering with Loblaws, who carry a large organic line, enables the teams to include even more organic ingredients in their featured dishes. It also offers an opportunity for consumers to tell Loblaws they want to see not only more organic food but also more local food.”

The other line of justification relates to the issue of cash. The email states: “In 2009, our expenses totalled $37,000 and ticket sales were about $20,000. So we all need to realize that sponsorships and grants are a big part of Feast of Fields.”

I doubt that anyone would argue that COG shouldn’t seek corporate sponsors for Feast of Fields, but why must its choice of one be so ethically incompatible? Again COG’s email offers no apologies.

“The concern of our farmers about the choice of sponsors signals that we need more involvement from farmers and restaurants in Feast of Fields planning in the future. We will certainly remember that!”

Post Categories: City Bites  |  Post Tags: , , , , ,

Neither the author nor Ottawa Magazine necessarily agrees with the comments posted below. Editors will not correct spelling or grammar. Ottawa Magazine reserves the right to edit or delete comments entirely.

  • Conflict-of-Interest

    Has anyone EVER heard of COG requesting funds for Feast of Fields? Hey, I know…try LOCAL first.

  • One of Ottawa’s Real Foodies

    Maybe instead of using a 25% discount for the ticket as incentive to buy early, there could be another perk that has value to the festival goer but doesn’t take $$ from the event. Say a ‘fast pass’ through the line-ups. Maybe then revenue concerns aren’t so tight that Loblaws starts to look attractive. I understand the temptation but I am not sure having them as a sponsor makes the event stronger. It may actually keep people away if others now think the event is ‘less pure’. The event symbolizes the blood, sweat and tears of our local producers to bring quality products to us locally at this time of harvest. This is not the image that embodies Loblaws in the eyes of consumers despite Galen Weston standing out in fields. I understand why Red Apron pulled out and I give them credit (and business) for acting with the courage of their convictions. It really is too bad it had to come to that.

  • J.Garlough

    It is always difficult to see a brand you hold near and dear go mainstream and that seems to be what’s happening with the Feast of Fields.

    Participants like the Red Apron and the farms they have paired with have invested FAR MORE than “(a measly) $5,000″ to build up the Feast of Fields brand. Over the past few years the participants HAVE INVESTED HEAVILY in money and in kind by volunteering staff, energy, advertisements and food in order to make the Feast such a popular event.

    After investing so heavily in the brand, it is no surprise that many feel COG has misstepped by involving Canada’s largest food distributor (and a leading provider of drugstore and financial products) to be the “Presenting Sponsor” by doing NO work and contributing 00.00076% of their annual profits.

    Math: $5,000 divided by $656 Million (Loblaws Corp. net profit in 2009)
    Reference: http://www.just-food.com/market-research/loblaw-companies-limited-swot-analysis_id92120.aspx

  • Riverglen Farm

    Riverglen Farm also withrew their support for similar reasons. See full comment on the thread: EXCLUSIVE: Feast of Fields chooses Loblaws and loses The Piggy Market

advertisement indicator