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DESCRIPTION:\n\nRevolutionary Fairfax store an institution 40 years later\nRob Rogers 
 IJ\nPosted: 08/13/2009 11:13:31 PM PDT\n\nMark Squire, a partner at Good 
 Earth health food, shows off heirloom tomatoes at the Fairfax store, which 
 is planning a 40th anniversary gala for this weekend. (IJ photo/Jeff 
 Vendsel)\nWhen Mark Squire and his partners decided to open an organic 
 health food store in 1969, they had two problems: no one could agree on 
 what “organic” meant, and many people had a very different idea of what 
 a “health food store” was.\n\n“The popular image of a health food 
 store was a pill shop,” said Good Earth Natural Foods co-founder Squire, 
 who had sold vitamins and health supplements at just such a store in 
 Connecticut before coming to Fairfax. “At the time, it was a revolution 
 to have a store that had natural, organic foods predominantly. But this was 
 the ‘60s. There was a lot of questioning of paradigms.”\n\nForty years 
 later, Good Earth – which will celebrate its anniversary with an outdoor 
 festival on Saturday – has become “an institution,” according to 
 Marin Organic Executive Director Helge Hellberg. Fairfax Mayor David 
 Weinsoff calls it a local landmark.\n\n“Nothing complements the month 
 that brought us Woodstock better than to recall the opening of Good Earth 
 in the same month 40 years ago,” Weinsoff said. “And no business 
 symbolizes Fairfax more than Good Earth.”\n\nDespite these accolades, 
 Squire still considers himself a radical, and sees the store’s 40-year 
 history as merely a good start.\n\n“The amount of our food we’re 
 growing now that’s organic is only 4 percent,” Squire said. “My goal 
 is for us to be up to 100 percent. There’s no reason why we shouldn’t 
 be there.”\n\nInspired by environmentalist pioneer Rachel Carson – 
 whose image hangs in his office – and macrobiotic\nAdvertisement\ndiet 
 founder George Oshawa, Squire and his partners saw Good Earth as a 
 front-line outpost in the battle to reclaim food from the processes used by 
 industrial agriculture, from pesticides in crops and antibiotics in 
 chickens to genetically modified seeds and plants.\n\n“A lot of people 
 read (Carson’s) ‘Silent Spring,’ and felt we really needed to change 
 our food system. We could not let corporations dictate what we ate,” 
 Squire said. “I learned the basics from George Oshawa: eat local, 
 seasonal, whole grain, whole foods. That’s a theme that goes through our 
 whole system.”\n\nGood Earth became one of the first Marin retailers to 
 specialize in locally grown organic produce, lending support to local 
 farmers and laying the groundwork for what would later become the slow food 
 movement.\n\n“Good Earth really was in the vanguard of bringing organic 
 produce into stores in a consistent way,” said Warren Weber, whose 
 Bolinas farm began selling its organic vegetables to Good Earth in 1974. 
 “Over the years, Mark Squire has been instrumental in working to get the 
 state to adopt some sort of standard (for organic foods). Those were 
 broadened over the years into federal standards.”\n\nDuring those early 
 days – the “Wild West of foods,” according to Squire – the store 
 worked closely with growers throughout the Bay Area and California to reach 
 a consensus on what “organic” meant.\n\nThe store also worked to 
 educate its customers about organic foods, though Marin Organic’s 
 Hellberg believes the process often went both ways.\n\n“The community in 
 Fairfax and the customers of Good Earth are a pretty educated bunch 
 themselves and involved in many political, food, policy issues,” said 
 Hellberg, who said the store’s success has been “the result of Good 
 Earth having a very good ear on the retail level and a receptive 
 audience.”\n\nNot every innovation the store has championed has 
 succeeded, Squire said. In the mid-’80s, when the store highlighted 
 products made from naturally existing, heirloom varieties of crops – 
 which Squire called at the time “ancient varieties” – sales flopped, 
 he said, though he believes a similar campaign could succeed 
 today.\n\nWeber, for one, wouldn’t bet against him.\n\n“I would say 
 they’ve succeeded because of good management, and producing what the 
 community wants,” Weber said. “They’re close to the 
 community.”\n\nIF YOU GO\n\nGood Earth Foods will celebrate its 40th 
 anniversary from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday with a free outdoor festival 
 featuring local organic foods, reggae and children’s music, a bike raffle 
 and a 40 percent-off sale on 40 popular items. The event will take place at 
 1966 Sir Francis Drake Blvd. in Fairfax.\n\nRead more Fairfax stories at 
 the IJ’s Fairfax section.\n\nContact Rob Rogers via e-mail at 
 rrogers@marinij.com\n\n\n\nput up\n\nhttp://network.greenchange.org/me 
 or\n\n\nhttp://digitaldaq.deviantart.com/gallery/\n\n\n\n\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2009/08/14/18615851.php
SUMMARY:Fairfax:Good Earth Foods will celebrate its 40th anniversary
LOCATION:get on sir francis drake from 101 and stay on it, dont get confused at the 
 san a. hub - and your there -  a block Fairfax theater on other side road 
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2009/08/14/18615851.php
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