Media Advisory: Oct. 29 event at UB aims to strengthen Buffalo’s support for equitable urban agriculture policy

Release Date: October 24, 2024

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BUFFALO, N.Y. – Jerome Kaufman’s son, Dan, says his dad was the best editor he’s ever had. That’s high praise given that Dan is now a contributing writer for The New York Times and The New Yorker.

Dan Kaufman will offer opening remarks at an event Oct. 29 at the University at Buffalo, where dozens of his father’s colleagues and former students will gather to honor the late Jerome “Jerry” Kaufman. Kaufman devoted his life to improving urban education and race, central city planning, gender in planning, ethics and food systems.

The event will also launch a new book in Kaufman’s honor, titled “Planning for Equitable Urban Agriculture.” The book — which was produced by more than 50 individuals, many of whom Kaufman trained and worked with — is dedicated to the memory of Jerome L. Kaufman, whom the editors note “taught [them] how to ask the right questions, seek just solutions, and act on them.”

It’s believed that Kaufman’s early preoccupation with planning ethics helped today’s planners know to ask, “Who is planning, who is being planned for, and at whose expense?”

These are among the questions that will be tackled by this group of scholars, advocates and urban growers. The gathering both celebrates Kaufman’s legacy as a mentor, scholar and practitioner, and serves as a call to action for individuals to help local governments invest in urban agriculture instead of just regulating it.

Event organizers hope that the city of Buffalo will strengthen its support for equitable urban agriculture. Many other cities – including Boston, Austin, Detroit, Philadelphia, New Orleans and Washington, D.C. – have already established supportive urban agriculture municipal policy. Representatives from Boston and Dallas will be at the event to share insights from their cities.

What: A gathering of community leaders, policy experts, and scholars that celebrates the legacy of food systems planning scholar, teacher and advocate Jerome “Jerry” Kaufman (1933-2013) with the launch of “Planning for Equitable Urban Agriculture.”

When: 4-7 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 29. The event is open to the public both in-person and via Zoom; attendees must register online. Space is limited, and only registered attendees will be admitted.

Where: 403 Hayes Hall on UB’s South Campus. See map online. Parking is available in the Townsend Lot.

Why: To honor the legacy of Jerome L. ”Jerry” Kaufman, who taught planners how to ask the right questions, seek just solutions and act on them, and with the specific hope that Buffalo will join Boston, Austin, Detroit, Philadelphia, New Orleans, Washington, D.C., and other cities that have strengthened urban agriculture policy and have already established urban agriculture departments within their city governments.

About Jerry Kaufman: An emeritus professor at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, Jerry Kaufman blended the roles of activist, practitioner, scholar and teacher throughout his professional life. He was a quintessential planner, diving into disparate questions if the answers got him strategically closer to making places work better for people, especially those pushed to the margins. Principles of fairness and justice were a central tenet of Jerry’s life and work. He wrote about ethics, food systems, race, and gender and planning, among other topics.

More information about the symposium is available on the UB Food Lab website.

Media Contact Information

David J. Hill
Director of Media Relations
Public Health, Architecture, Urban and Regional Planning, Sustainability
Tel: 716-645-4651
davidhil@buffalo.edu