This Farmer Turned Congresswoman Sees a Way out of America’s Health Crisis

Maine Rep. Chellie Pingree got her start in organic agriculture.

Courtesy Chellie Pingree

Fight disinformation: Sign up for the free Mother Jones Daily newsletter and follow the news that matters.

Many members of the US House of Representatives run businesses in their home districts. Few of those enterprises can offer you a half-dozen oysters and a glass of wine, or send you home with an array of locally grown vegetables.

But then US Rep. Chellie Pingree (D-Maine) isn’t your usual DC politician, as I learned when interviewing her for Bite, our food politics podcast. (Interview starts at 13:22 in the player below.)

As a teenager attending an experimental high school in early-1970s Maine, Pingree felt the pull of the back-to-the-land movement, under the influence of Scott and Helen Nearing’s stick-it-to-the-man homesteader manifesto, The Good Life.

Pingree soon launched her own small farm, tutored by Eliot Coleman, a pioneering maestro of organic agriculture who took over the Nearings’ land and turned it into a laboratory for churning out fresh produce with few fossil energy inputs—even during Maine’s brutal winters. These days, when she’s not wrangling bills in Washington, she still runs an organic farm with its own inn and restaurant, Nebo Lodge, on the island of North Haven in Maine.

Pingree and I discussed her entree into farming as well as the tricky politics of maintaining robust food aid for poor people in the age of President Donald Trump and House Speaker Paul Ryan, a devotee of Ayn Rand who hopes to slash the budget of the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), otherwise known as food stamps. 

Pingree told me about a project she’s pushing that would have warmed the hearts of the Nearings. She helped launch the Food as Medicine Working Group, a bipartisan confab of House members looking for innovative ways out of America’s crisis of diet-related health illnesses like Type 2 diabetes and heart disease. “When you’re just getting by, getting healthy fruits and vegetables is an expensive part of shopping,” she said.  “A lot of times people have to make the choice to buy less healthy food—starches or sugary drinks that fill you up but don’t give you the nutrition you need.”

The working group has experimented with a pilot program wherein a doctor “writes a prescription which translates into helping you buy more fruits and vegetables,” Pingree said. Early results are positive: Participants have seen their health metrics improve. Fellow Bite host Maddie Oatman wrote about similar programs here.

Such innovative programs, she added, have been “generally well-accepted and funded on both sides of the aisle”—a glimmer of hope, given the kick-the-poor proclivities of the current presidential administration. 

LET’S TALK ABOUT OPTIMISM FOR A CHANGE

Democracy and journalism are in crisis mode—and have been for a while. So how about doing something different?

Mother Jones did. We just merged with the Center for Investigative Reporting, bringing the radio show Reveal, the documentary film team CIR Studios, and Mother Jones together as one bigger, bolder investigative journalism nonprofit.

And this is the first time we’re asking you to support the new organization we’re building. In “Less Dreading, More Doing,” we lay it all out for you: why we merged, how we’re stronger together, why we’re optimistic about the work ahead, and why we need to raise the First $500,000 in online donations by June 22.

It won’t be easy. There are many exciting new things to share with you, but spoiler: Wiggle room in our budget is not among them. We can’t afford missing these goals. We need this to be a big one. Falling flat would be utterly devastating right now.

A First $500,000 donation of $500, $50, or $5 would mean the world to us—a signal that you believe in the power of independent investigative reporting like we do. And whether you can pitch in or not, we have a free Strengthen Journalism sticker for you so you can help us spread the word and make the most of this huge moment.

payment methods

LET’S TALK ABOUT OPTIMISM FOR A CHANGE

Democracy and journalism are in crisis mode—and have been for a while. So how about doing something different?

Mother Jones did. We just merged with the Center for Investigative Reporting, bringing the radio show Reveal, the documentary film team CIR Studios, and Mother Jones together as one bigger, bolder investigative journalism nonprofit.

And this is the first time we’re asking you to support the new organization we’re building. In “Less Dreading, More Doing,” we lay it all out for you: why we merged, how we’re stronger together, why we’re optimistic about the work ahead, and why we need to raise the First $500,000 in online donations by June 22.

It won’t be easy. There are many exciting new things to share with you, but spoiler: Wiggle room in our budget is not among them. We can’t afford missing these goals. We need this to be a big one. Falling flat would be utterly devastating right now.

A First $500,000 donation of $500, $50, or $5 would mean the world to us—a signal that you believe in the power of independent investigative reporting like we do. And whether you can pitch in or not, we have a free Strengthen Journalism sticker for you so you can help us spread the word and make the most of this huge moment.

payment methods

We Recommend

Latest

Sign up for our free newsletter

Subscribe to the Mother Jones Daily to have our top stories delivered directly to your inbox.

Get our award-winning magazine

Save big on a full year of investigations, ideas, and insights.

Subscribe

Support our journalism

Help Mother Jones' reporters dig deep with a tax-deductible donation.

Donate