OPINION:
Small family farms are the backbone of our nation. Throughout our history, they have secured the promise of liberty made by our founders, and they are the indispensable foundation of democratic civics and republican virtues. As Thomas Jefferson wrote to James Madison in 1785, “Small landholders are the most precious part of a state.”
On Monday, I kicked off the Make Agriculture Great Again Initiative at Ohnoutka Family Farm in eastern Nebraska with Gov. Jim Pillen. This policy initiative at the U.S. Department of Agriculture will address a series of issues within food, agriculture and rural America but will focus specifically on challenges faced by small family farms.
We know these challenges, such as labor costs and availability, are not easy to address, but we are committed to focusing on the needs of Americans who operate small farms because of their patriotism and commitment to their land.
As secretary of agriculture, I have met with family farmers facing too many obstacles as they work to maintain or start operations.
For example, many small farms lack reliable access to capital. At USDA, we are reforming the Farm Service Agency loan program to streamline delivery and increase program efficiency.
The acquisition of land for new farmers has become increasingly difficult amid high costs and real estate development. That’s why we’re using prioritization points and regulatory action to disincentivize the use of federal funding for solar panels on productive farmland. We’re expanding the permitting of unused or underused federal land for long-term leases to small farms and streamlining the federal land leasing process so the program works better for farmers and adjacent landowners.
We are also aware that many new farmers lack access to infrastructure such as cold storage and processing facilities. To address this disparity, we are working to provide state-level grants for infrastructure tied to the needs of new farmers. By the end of the year, we will ensure that applications for every farmer-focused program are available for electronic submission.
Finally, we are working with governors and state legislators across the country to find solutions to the challenges small farms face. We recently signed a memorandum of understanding with the National Association of State Departments of Agriculture to find areas of collaboration between USDA and the states, which are the laboratories of democracy.
Earlier this month, we hosted a roundtable with small-farm operators at the USDA headquarters in Washington. We had the privilege of welcoming hog farmers from Ohio, third-generation local producers from Virginia, first-generation dairy farmers from Mississippi, Amish and Mennonite farmers from Pennsylvania and many others who have devoted much of their lives to the land and their customers.
The founders did not chart our nation’s path so USDA bureaucrats could look over the shoulders of law-abiding American citizens.
As I was reminded by those who visited USDA, the department was founded so every farming mother and father could raise their children, work their land and spend time with their families and their God.
This is the mission of USDA, and now, under the leadership of President Trump, is the time to return to the fundamental work that will restore rural prosperity in forgotten communities across the nation.
Based on feedback from the hundreds of small family farmers I have met and talked with over the past 90 days, USDA is now making tangible changes to our policies to ensure family farmers can continue to work their land and new farmers can take on this way of life without obstruction.
Although the USDA has many programs to assist farmers, we know it takes government entities, nonprofits and the private sector to improve the viability and longevity of small family farms.
We were honored to announce this policy initiative in Nebraska. The existence and work of small farms are too central to our nation’s history, cultural heritage and food supply to be allowed to slowly disappear from our landscape. To steer clear of a problem that every American wants to avoid, it is imperative that federal and state governments provide proactive intervention so these small operations can preserve their inheritance for generations to come.
• Brooke L. Rollins is the 33rd secretary of agriculture.
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