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The Honest Weight Food Co-op (HWFC)
was
established as a buying club in 1976 to provide natural foods at low
cost to its members. On March 1, 1977, a store at 112 Quail Street in
Albany, New York, opened as a community-owned and -operated retail food
store, and provided products to the general public. At a general
membership meeting on May 16, 1977, an official Food Policy was
adopted. When the Bylaws for the HWFC were adopted in 1980, the Food
Policy was incorporated into the Bylaws. For many years, with small
adjustments and interpretations by referendum, the Food Policy
continued to guide buying practices.
In 1995, HWFC moved to a much larger
store
at 484 Central Avenue, Albany, and within four years became a $4
million business. A committee of members tasked to update the bylaws in
1999 felt that the natural foods industry had changed so much that the
food policy was no longer sufficiently detailed to provide generally
agreed upon guidelines. The store had expanded sales far beyond its
original core constituencies. New and dubious agricultural and food
preservation practices such as biotechnology and food irradiation
threatened the availability of basic food products. Natural foods had
become a growth industry and mainstream food manufacturers with lower
standards rapidly absorbed many of the original producers. The food
distribution system consolidated in the same way. By 2001, almost all
of the cooperative warehouses had closed and retail co-ops were
purchasing from a single publicly-traded company.
In response to this changing
environment,
the food policies in the revised Bylaws adopted in 2003 were reduced to
core concepts. The Bylaws stipulated that a "Food and Product Manual"
be written for approval by the Membership. The concepts are grounded in
a number of governing documents including HWFC's "Mission Statement",
the "Bylaws", and the "Statements of Purpose." Although these core
concepts form the basis of the manual, the task is made more difficult
when the various mandates conflict when evaluating a product on an
individual basis. The food and product selection guidelines listed at
left are used to inform buyers when making difficult decisions
regarding the product line.
Continue to Section 2: Mission
Statement
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