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Organic Trade Association

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The Organic Trade Association (OTA) is a membership-based business association that focuses on the organic business community in North America. OTA's mission is to promote ethical consumerism by promoting and protecting the growth of organic trade to benefit the environment, farmers, the public, and the economy. OTA is a member of The International Federation of Organic Agricultural Movements (IFOAM) and The International Working Group on the Global Organic Textile Standard.At the time of its conception, the Organic Trade Association (OTA), formerly known as the Organic Foods Production Association of North America (OFPANM), was one of the few certifiers for the organic food industry. The original goals of the organization included creating a common, standardized image of organic produce in the marketplace, creating guidelines for organic foods, recommending and evaluating other certification programs, and leading the industry by example. Their biggest goal of creating a universal definition of what organic standards looked like would become highly contentious amongst grass-roots farmers and big business leaders. One issue that was tabled in 1988 was whether equitable labor was integral to organic standards. Creating a definition required synergy between science and consumer behaviors. As well as a cross-examination of previous definitions that would form a baseline.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Organic Trade Association (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

Organic Trade Association
Wells Street, Greenfield

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N 42.589464 ° E -72.605111 °
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Wells Street 60
01301 Greenfield
Massachusetts, United States
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Main Street Historic District (Greenfield, Massachusetts)
Main Street Historic District (Greenfield, Massachusetts)

The Main Street Historic District encompasses the civic core of Greenfield, Massachusetts, the county seat of Franklin County, Massachusetts. The district includes several blocks of Main Street extending roughly from Chapman Street in the west to Franklin Street in the east, as well as a number of properties facing the common along Bank Row, south of Main Street, and is architecture reflective of the city's 19th-century growth as a major crossroads and county seat. The district includes the town hall, county courthouse, several 19th century bank buildings, and three properties previously listed on the National Register of Historic Places: the Garden Theater Block, the Leavitt-Hovey House (which houses the public library), and the 1915 Post Office building. The district was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1988.Greenfield was settled in the 17th century as part of Deerfield, and was incorporated as a town in 1775. The town center was by then already established on Main Street, with a variety of businesses and residences, none of which have survived. Major travel routes, both north–south and east–west, where developed in the late 18th century that met there. The town became the shire town of Franklin County when it was established in 1811, and a series of civic buildings took shape thereafter in the Bank Row/Court Square area. Commercial development extended east from that area as the 19th century progressed, although a few older homes survived this process, including the Leavitt-Hovey House. Further development was spurred by the arrival of railroads in the mid-19th century, and the late 19th century was the town's period of greatest industrial and economic growth.