Jerry Harvey

Promise City, IA

Jerry Harvey & Jasper Harvey
Jerry Harvey with one of his grandsons, Harvey

Jerry Harvey, an Iowa dairy farmer, has recently become a grassroots organizer, pulling together dairy farmers in the fight for their livelihoods.

Born and raised in Iowa, Jerry Harvey has worked on a dairy farm for all of his life, working his way up from relief milker to owner. When the owner of the dairy he worked at for 13 years passed away and the family decided to sell the farm, Jerry reluctantly took a job in town. But he didn't like it and it wasn't long before he went to the bank, got himself a loan and bought that farm, which he owns and operates with his sons Jamey and Jeremy today. Harvey Family Dairy milks about 70 Holstein and Holstein-crosses farming on close to 250 acres in Wayne County, Iowa.

Jerry and his boys acknowledge dairying is a sacrifice; as Jerry explains, "Cows give milk seven days a week, 365 days a year--there's no day off in dairying." But as Jerry puts it, "It's a sacrifice worth making because we're working to build something together. This is a family farm--it's our way of life."

With the help of his sons Jamey and Jeremy, part of the family works together (Jerry and his wife Carol have five children, three of which work off the farm, and seven grandchildren) and they all enjoy some time off together. Jamey and Jeremy share milking duties and Jerry is back in his role as relief milker, taking a few shifts so that each of the men gets one day off a week. In between the morning and evening milkings, all three men are busy fixing fences and equipment, baling hay, hauling manure, and running the in and outs of the family farm. Jerry says, "There's always something to do."

But lately there's been even more to do. In January, Jerry picked up the phone and called Farm Aid. "I'm a dairy farmer in Iowa and times are tough," he began. "I'm calling to find out what I can do to help other dairy farmers because I know I'm not alone in this."

Farmers being the kind of people they are, Farm Aid occasionally gets these kinds of calls. The farm movement that started during the 1980s grew out of this sentiment -- this desire for folks going through a hard time to not just throw up their hands and give up but instead to dig in, get involved, and help others through it too. Jerry is one of those people.

We gave Jerry a couple local resources to start with--Farm Aid-funded groups who would be helpful to him as he got to know the issues around dairy pricing and why farmers have seen their milk checks cut in half over the past year. Joel Morton, Farm Aid Hotline Coordinator, and Jerry have been talking regularly ever since. Since that first call, Jerry, with the help of his sons and fellow Iowa farmers Chad Tiffany and Andy Nagel, as well as farm advocate Dave Knipper, have organized a dairy rally in Des Moines, appeared in print, and on radio and tv, gotten to know their congresspeople, and have planned the next rally, which takes place Saturday, May 30, 2009 in Manchester, Iowa, and includes dairy farmers from Iowa, Wisconsin, Minnesota, New York and Pennsylvania.

You may have seen Jerry on the news… he's an eloquent farmer speaking about what's close to his heart. But as he explains it, "I don't know all the reasons behind what's going on right now--I just know there's something wrong. This isn't just happening to the small dairies; it's not an issue of, you know, this is the way business works and we're weeding out the weak ones and the strong will survive. This dairy crisis is weeding out thousands of farmers. And we can't afford that."

Jerry never thought he'd be doing this kind of advocacy work. He says, "I'm not really built for this. I'm a country boy--I want to do my work, go fishing, and have fun. I'm no politician. But if we don't do something, we're not going to have any dairy farms left." He enumerates the benefits that dairy farmers bring to their communities: providing a strong tax base, supporting other local farmers who raise hay and grain for animal feed, spending money at the lumber store and hardware store, investing in the local bank, providing jobs for haulers who transport feed and milk, and more. But for Jerry the point is that dairy farming is a way of life he and his family enjoy.

"We want to stand up for what we believe in and that's that everyone deserves a fair chance. Not everyone will be a success in business and we're not saying they should, but when all dairy farmers are facing this 50% drop in their milk checks, checks that can't even cover half the bills, there's something wrong with the system and there's got to be a better way."

To join Jerry and other farmers on Saturday, May 30 at the rally for a fair price for milk, click here: www.farmaid.org/rally

To urge Secretary Vilsack to act now to keep dairy farmers on the land, click here: www.farmaid.org/dairyfarmers

Date: 5/28/2009


Comments:
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Anonymous @ 6/8/2009 6:38:58 PM 
We need to come together to do what is right for our families and our country. The family farm is the back bone of our country, however it is dying out faster and faster. The large corporate dairy farms are taking over so the small farmer cannot survive. They employee illegal immigrants to work on the farm, eliminating jobs for others trying to make a living. This is negatively impacting our economy as well other contributing factors. The operating costs associated with farming are through the roof. The price of milk is leaving bills unpaid. I do not know how we are staying afloat. We are having a hard time keeping food on the table for our family and are approaching bankruptcy. We have a one month old boy, who is the fourth generation on our family farm. More than likely, our son will not have the opportunity to grow up on our dairy farm due to extremely low milk prices and extremely high operating costs. How can we continue to farm with the increased cost of living, however
Anonymous @ 6/3/2009 9:39:05 AM 
I don't know why there is not more media coverage about the plight of the American farmer--Every day we hear about the automoblie industry, but not about the farmers and their 50% reduction of income..More Farmers need to speak out--and those involved in agribusiness. They must be hurting too when farmers are unable to pay their bills.
Farmers are at the mercy of those who set the prices--processors are making a killing. It's not fair! Help the American farmer!
Anonymous @ 5/29/2009 3:54:24 PM 
I can't tell you the amount of folks that would buy milk from us raw. We are so scared of all the laws and rules and the rigamarow you have to go through to do it, it just isn't worth it. Also Farmers NEED to work together somehow someway. We have been here 44 years and my husband was born and raised on a dairy farm. We have raised six kids here and they all live on this land with their families. We farm as conservatively as we can. If farmers would stop pitting themselves against each other we might have gotten somewhere in the last 50 years. As it is it has been a slow painful tortureous death for many. We have worked with ALL the farm organizations in trying to save family farms. Most of them turned into insurance companies. Jeanne Rohl former NFO, NFU, AAM, Wisc Farm Unity, Groundswell family farm organizer. I am willing to work again, although I am getting old now, to try anything.
Anonymous @ 5/29/2009 1:15:53 PM 
I`ll sign the letter when I hear that the FAMILY FARMERS who want HELP are standing AGAINST D.FIENSTEINS ag-worker--> ILLEGAL ALIEN AMNESTY BILL.
I`m a former farmer-carpenter (now just a homeless vet.)but I know that ILLEGAL IMMIGRATION has hurt our country and that thousands of FARM JOBS are being done by ILLEGALS - THIS MUST END ! I cannot count the no. of jobs ILLEGAL ALIENS have STOLEN from me .+ my tools - A car - my identity affordable housing etc.
numbersusa.com - americanpatrol.com - capsweb.org
So are FAMILY FARMERS AGAINST D.FIENSTIENS - AMNESTY ?
Anonymous @ 5/29/2009 12:48:23 PM 
Raw milk is the ONLY milk our family drinks! wwww.realmilk.com. Please consider selling raw milk. I pay six bucks a gallon in MA and 4.50 a gal in FL. It's worth every penny!

Thank you for ALL that you do.

Jackie & Arlo Guthrie
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