Vote Anna-Ruth #1 for ASUCD Senator Winter 2011

My name is Anna-Ruth Crittenden, and I am running for ASUCD Senate.

I am an independent candidate, and have been working to build my campaign by looking to various entities on campus such as the Multicultural Center, the Women’s Resource and Research center, and the cooperative student living communities. I have attended the 2 public forums concerning the tri-coops and the domes, and am aware of the challenges facing the residents, as well as student housing’s stance in the coming transitional phase.

As senator, I hope to alter the food system on campus by advocating for a student-run food cooperative on campus, that would provide the student body with the opportunity to be more intimately involved with their food. I am passionate about food sovereignty, and I believe that locally-sourced food that is ethically grown is very beneficial to communities. The opening of the new food pantry in lower freeborn indicates a significant need on campus to provide students with affordable (in this case free) food. I have been involved with Cofed (www.cofed.org), an organization which supports students with the resources they need, to open student-run cooperative cafes on campuses all over the nation. Through Cofed (Cooperative Food Empowerment Directive) I have participated in the following workshops: finances and accounting, grantwriting, media relations, fundraising, and concept design.

If elected as ASUCD Senator, I will work to promote healthy, dynamic communities. This includes working in coordination with such student organizations as Project Compost, which empowers students to take charge of their food waste, and turn it into vital nutrients for the soil.

We are living in extraordinary times, in which the reality of climate change is putting pressure on us to adapt to rapid changes. In order to ensure that healthy, dynamic communities continue, I am a strong advocate for the cooperative communities on campus, specifically the Tri-Coops and the Domes. As senator, I hope to open new channels of dialogue between these entities, the administration, and the surrounding Davis communities in order to ensure their longevity and continued support through ASUCD.

Lastly, as Senator I hope to support creative, experiential spaces on campus. This includes advocacy for AS Papers, Associated Students Providing Alternative Publications Equal Resources, which currently lacks the support it needs to thrive. I am a strong advocate for experiential learning, because it is a chance to put thoughts and passions generated in the classroom into actual hands-on work. I have volunteered at the Student Farm, which I believe is an invaluable resource on our campus, because it provides students with a unique yet critical chance to participate in our food systems here on campus. To me, supporting creative spaces on campus means acting in coordination with various creative campus entities such as the Craft Center, the Experimental College, Sickspits Poetry Collective, the Whole Earth Festival, the Technocultural Studies Department, and KDVS90.3fm freeform radio.

As an ASUCD Senator, I will bring a new voice to the Senate, and would be honored to serve the UC Davis student body in the above specified ways.

Monday, January 31, 2011

Getting to know your possible future senator

I am a 2nd year Environmental Policy Analysis and Planning major. Last quarter (Fall 2010), I spent 3 months in Bolivia and Peru, with a study abroad program called "Where There Be Dragons".Peculiar name, right?
Well, in ancient times, when the world was being explores and the mapmakers had drawn to the extent that they knew, a dragon would be drawn beyond known lands, and they would say 'Thats where there be Dragons'

In the Andes and the Amazon rainforest, I stayed with various indigenous communities, participating in a way of life very different from what I had known living in the U.S.


Holding a mango and a banana plant, exploring the Bolivian Amazon has never been more thrilling.

My time in South America taught me that relating to people is the most important way to interact with the world, much more than the virtual dream we may be caught up in as a generation.

Studying and traveling, I focused a lot of my efforts on an Independent Study Project, which I centered around food and agricultural practices in the Andes and Amazon, in a critical analysis of food as the main building block of community.


I'd like to bring to the senate the same energy and enthusiasm that I brought to my time in the Andes Mountains and the Amazon Rainforest.























Empowering Students Through Food

Ava Lorraine and I made this video in Spring of 2010, shortly after I had first heard about Cofed, which seeks to provide support to students who want to start cooperative food cafes on their own university campus.