
It's
Not Just a Café
Holy
Cow, organic vegan!
BY
MEGAN MCCLELLAN
I am writing in support of Holy Cow and to
enumerate the various ways in which the decision made by EMU Food
Services Director John Costello and approved by EMU board director
Charles "Dusty" Miller was poorly made.
Holy Cow has been a university landmark for years
and provider of organic, healthy, vegan and vegetarian food. The
business is part of the reason why Eugene was voted as PETA's #2
most veg-friendly small city in America. For a lot of vegetarians
and vegans, it's the only place at which they can eat on campus
that is consistent with their ethical decision not to eat animal
products. And even students who aren't vegetarian agree that the
café serves up some darn tasty grub.
As a café with a commitment to serving organic
vegan and vegetarian food, Holy Cow is upholding Dave Frohnmayer's
April 26 Earth Day pledge to reduce the university's carbon footprint.
The café composts, recycles, uses unbleached containers and
encourages the use of reusable plates and silverware, cooks with
organic ingredients and supports local farms, businesses and products.
Holy Cow is a place like no other in terms of service, dedication,
and commitment to ethics. It's not just a café; it's a welcoming
space committed to environmental and social progress.
Furthermore, a vegan/vegetarian diet has been recommended
as a way to reduce one's carbon footprint by the National Council
for Science and the Environment. Groups such as the U.N., the National
Academy of Sciences and even the FDA and USDA have warned against
the detrimental effects of overfarming and meat production to the
environment. It's sad that a university that is so interested in
greenwashing itself and portraying an image of eco-friendliness
cannot be bothered to support local, sustainable and green businesses,
all in the name of the almighty dollar.
Laughing Planet is a great business. Holy Cow supporters
are not anti-Laughing Planet. Indeed, many of us think it
would be awesome if both Holy Cow and Laughing Planet were in the
EMU. Who says there has to be only one healthy and environmentally
conscious business? But Laughing Planet would not be a suitable
replacement for Holy Cow, despite what the director of Food Services
at the EMU may be telling us. They serve meat, for one thing, which
is not in line with that space being reserved for a "vegan/vegetarian"
restaurant. Laughing Planet is a chain and has not been a part of
our campus community for 10 years, as Holy Cow has.
In November, Holy Cow presented a petition with
380 signatures expressing their support for the cafe's continued
presence in the EMU. According to a Jan. 23 Daily Emerald
article, Costello also received 15 emails and letters concerning
Holy Cow's lease renewal. "We took note of that, but it wasn't enough
to sway us," Costello said. Callous? I think so. It's distressing
that a beloved café seems to be nothing more than a line on
a budget sheet to some folks. Is that really how we want local businesses
to be treated?
The director of the EMU board, Charles "Dusty" Miller,
was invited, along with student supporters, to the Jan. 25 ASUO
executive staff meeting. We were led to believe that this meeting
would be an opportunity to get our questions answered. We were sadly
misled. Miller did not appear adequately informed enough to answer
questions concerning the nature of the decision made by the five-person
committee to replace Holy Cow with Laughing Planet, and gave irrelevant
answers to questions concerning issues of sustainability and the
role of the vegan/vegetarian spot in the EMU food court. He repeatedly
stated that a process was applied, and that the decision was final.
It was clear that we should have been talking to the man who headed
the five-person committee and who ultimately made the final decision.
Why, then, was Costello not there answering our questions? It appeared
to many of those gathered to support Holy Cow that morning that
Costello cannot bother to answer to the students whose interests
he is supposed to represent.
The community supports the UO as much as the university
supports the community. It is sad to see that the EMU cares as little
about supporting local, sustainable businesses as it does about
its students' opinions: not at all.
Megan McClellan is a senior at the UO majoring
in anthropology and German.
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