Answering reader questions with our report, "Rebuilding America’s Economy with Family Farm-Centered Food Systems"

July 2010

Here at Farm Aid, we receive many questions from individuals wanting to know how they can help farmers close to home. Others want to know how to advocate for local and regional food systems in their communities. Still others are concerned that family farmers are being overlooked as policymakers aim to fix our economy.

In a time of great need in our nation, we created a new report, Rebuilding America's Economy with Family Farm-Centered Food Systems, to respond to these concerns and call for revitalization of our national economy through an investment in family farmers. Below is an introduction to the report, which we hope you find informative, helpful, and inspirational.

We've all been rocked by the economic stories dominating headlines the last few years: Banks that were "too big to fail" in utter failure and needing bailouts. The mortgage crisis. A tanked auto industry, leading to yet another bailout. Nail-bitingly high unemployment rates. Skyrocketing healthcare costs. Trillions of dollars of debt that plague our nation with no clear end in sight. The picture, in short, has been pretty bleak.

"Now is the time for our country to recognize and call on family farmers' ingenuity, strength and value to our past and our future. We can have strong local economies, green energy, a clean environment, healthy citizens and good food—all of these start with family farmers."

— Willie Nelson, Farm Aid President

As federal lawmakers spent billions attempting to stitch our economy back together, we at Farm Aid called attention to a critical source of hope and prosperity for our country: our nation's family farmers and ranchers.

As Farm Aid President Willie Nelson has always said, family farmers are the backbone of the nation and the first rung of our economic ladder. When family farmers thrive, Main Streets thrive. With Willie's inspiration, we authored our new report, Rebuilding America's Economy with Family Farm-Centered Food Systems, as a call to action for investing in family farmers to jumpstart the country's fragile economy.

We found ourselves drafting this report at a critical crossroads. The very farmers and ranchers best positioned to turn our economy around are the same ones most threatened by trends of corporate consolidation and industrialization in agriculture. Hence, the report begins by recounting the true costs of our industrial food system to rural economies and communities, and the ripple effects felt when we lose our family farmers and ranchers from the land. It makes clear that the industrial food system has drained health and wealth from our economy and done little to support the majority of our country's family farmers and ranchers.

The heart of the report outlines a new vision for agriculture—what we call family farm-centered food systems that spur wealth creation and job growth for our local and regional economies and deliver fresh, healthful food to community members. By capturing some of the best research modeling the impacts of these new food systems, it highlights the untapped potential of America's family farmers to rebuild our nation's economy.

Case in point? The state of Illinois recently found that a 20% increase in local food production, processing and purchasing would generate $20-$30 billion in new economic activity for the state, including thousands of jobs! Examples like this beg for our attention as we consider how to give our economy an abrupt about-face.

Rebuilding America's Economy with Family Farm-Centered Food Systems also showcases what we call Stories from the Field, the tales of trailblazers who are already investing in family farmers and leveraging their hard work to transform communities across the country. Consider the story of Woodbury County, Iowa, whose economy was built upon corporate agribusiness and industrial agriculture, particularly the meatpacking industry. When its Director of Rural Economic Development, Rob Marqusee, realized this model drained Woodbury County of $400 million each year, he crafted a visionary web of policies to promote small family farms and businesses that would re-localize and revitalize Woodbury's economy. The success of his work has been making waves across the country. We are proud to highlight successes like this as inspiration to farmers, community members, businesses, organizations, and local and state governments seeking to create thriving local and regional food systems that will revitalize America's economy.

This effort also incorporates a sister document, called Funding Opportunities for Investing in Family Farm-Centered Food Systems, that highlights pools of federal money that can be harnessed to make this vision a reality. Grants like the Speciality Crop Block Grant Program are tools to strengthen local and regional food systems by enhancing the competitiveness of fruit and vegetable production, supporting "buy local" programs, improving the efficiency of distribution systems, establishing grower cooperatives and much more! I encourage those interested in building prosperous food systems in their communities to check out this document as well.

At Farm Aid, we've been working hard to get this report into the hands of Congress, officials at USDA, food policy and economic development councils, and food and farm groups across the nation. At a time when we're all scratching our heads and scraping for solutions to the country's economic woes, family farmers—true innovators and entrepreneurs in our society—offer us real hope. As we reflect upon 25 years of standing up for family farmers, we hope you will join us in supporting food systems that work for farmers and eaters alike, and revitalize our economies locally, regionally and nationally.

Check out the report at www.farmaid.org/ES.

Check out opportunities for investing in family farm-centered food systems at www.farmaid.org/opportunities.

And, for more information on what you can do to rebuild America's economy and support family farm-centered food systems in your own community, check out www.farmaid.org/whatyoucando.


Your thoughtful comments are encouraged, but all comments are held for moderation to protect against spam. Farm Aid does not censor or refuse comments for content unless they are spam or a personal attack.



Comments:
Anonymous @ 7/27/2010 11:06:39 AM 
I would like to see farm aid really go after Farm Bureau particularly here in Ohio as they promote industrial livestock operations with regulations that do not address the difference between these operations and family farms. The laws in Ohio were written back in the 20's and now we have industrial farms moving in on folks, destroying the value of their homes and their health due to the power of Farm Bureau in Ohio. They promote the need to feed the world instead of promoting teaching the world how to feed itself. It is all about greed!
Anonymous @ 7/27/2010 1:33:13 PM 
I have noticed in the grocery stores lately that there are not as many plentiful fruits and vegetables. Is this because of the global climate changes taking place or just more bad management of the economy from the headquarters in Washington, D.C.?

Can you give specific information on how average Americans can help. Because most Americans are financially strapped right now.

Thanks!
Anonymous @ 7/28/2010 1:04:21 AM 
John Kasich is running for governor in Ohio. He should see this report, because he is always talking about creating jobs and fixings Ohio's rusted economy. I'll. send him a link
Anonymous @ 7/28/2010 9:57:20 PM 
Maybe we should tap President Obama,right now he is busy acquiring money for small businesses, which he says keep our econmy afloat ... maybe he just forgot the small farmer ??? I still have my copy of Farm Aid, A Song For America, 2005. If I may, I'd like to recommend a paperback I bought at farmlab.org , a project I volunteer in Los Angeles: "STUFFED & STARVED", The Hidden Battle For The World Food System, By: Raj Patel, it is a very indepth expose about the world's controlled food distribution chain, and very relevant to the work that Farm Aid does. If inappropiate, just delete and/or edit. Thank you,
Pedro V. Natividad
Anonymous @ 7/31/2010 12:31:10 PM 
I love farm aid but 95% of farms in the US are family-owned and not just farmers selling produce from 10 acres that are hurting but all farmers. In spite of comments about Farm Bureau, it is a VOICE. We are six generations and just getting by, esp. in CA, which is anti-agricultural right now. We raise natural beef and stay on the cutting edge but worry if there will be a ranch for our grandkids. If CA lawmakers win, they'll eliminate the Williamson Act, which taxes on what land produces not its value on the market. With inheritance taxes eliminated, we will pay AGAIN just to farm. That our son returned after getting his college degree was a vote of confidence but he made more working part-time as a carpet layer than ranching. Every woman in this family works just to help. Consumers don't understand economics or contributions we make to the environment. More than 75% of waterfowl are preserved by ranches on the Flyway. If only the media and extremists would give us a break!
Anonymous @ 8/2/2010 12:29:26 PM 
I would love to see more grocery stores buy from the local farms and farmers in western PA. Quit buying food from overseas or foreign countries. Lets keep the American Farmers in business and know where our food is coming from and that it is a healthy product we the american people are eating.
Anonymous @ 8/5/2010 10:07:27 AM 
Bring Josh Thompson, country singer to Wisconsin Farm Aid, this is his State. He'll draw additional attention to the cause. Also,Josh's Grandfather operated a small family farm of three generations.
Anonymous @ 8/11/2010 7:47:23 AM 
My daughter and her husband are dairy farmers. They struggle every day of their lives to survive. She gets up early to feed the young stock, goes to an office job 40 hours a week, then comes home to make supper, then helps to feed and milk cows. Weekends all summer she is working in the fields. She and her husband do all the work themselves. They pay some high school or college kids to help load hay into the barn in the summer, but can't afford to hire regular help with other chores. How exactly does farm aid help them???
Anonymous @ 8/21/2010 1:14:50 PM 
I've read a lot of controversy lately over the associations Farm Aid and founders Willie and Neil have with Tyson. I am struggling to understand how FarmAid can be both pro-family farm and pro-Tyson. Doesn't Tyson represent the things that Farm Aid stands against?
Anonymous @ 8/25/2010 1:16:39 PM 
Dear Anonymous,

Thanks for your comment of 8/11 about your daughter and her husband and their daily struggle to maintain their dairy farm. Your description echoes what I've heard from many, many dairy farmers around the country over the last year and a half. Please don't hesitate to be in touch with me directly, or ask your daughter or husband to contact me, and I will try my best to help out.

Sincerely,
Joel
farmhelp@farmaid.org
1-800-FARM-AID

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