
Governor pushes for more water storage
December 13, 2006

Speaking by video uplink, Gov.
Schwarzenegger shares a light moment with, right to left, CFBF
President Doug Mosebar, 1st Vice President Paul Wenger,
Secretary/Treasurer Joe Peters and 2nd Vice President Kenny Watkins.
By Dave Kranz and Christine Souza
Speaking from his office and surrounded by
California-grown farm products, Gov. Schwarzenegger thanked family
farmers and ranchers for their continuing support and outlined plans for
the future.
"Thank you to all of you for your great
help," he said during a Dec. 6 address to the California Farm
Bureau Federation Annual Meeting in Anaheim, delivered via an Internet
video uplink from Sacramento. "The Farm Bureau has been there from
the beginning."
As he prepares for his second term, the governor said
projects to store and move water must be a priority in the state's next
set of public-works bonds.
Schwarzenegger hailed voters' passage last month of
$42 billion in bonds to rebuild roads, schools and other public
facilities. He told the Farm Bureau gathering that he will insist that
water facilities be a priority in future bond measures.
"Even though I want more infrastructure and to
have more bonds approved, it would never happen unless above-the-ground
water storage is part of this package and unless we also have
conveyance," Schwarzenegger said.
The governor said he will work to continue a spirit of
bipartisan cooperation in Sacramento after what he called one of the
most successful legislative years in decades.
"In the Capitol there is a great mood with
Democrats and Republicans," he said. "I think we will do a
good job of following through and continuing this kind of bipartisan
cooperation and getting things done."
Schwarzenegger pledged that he will continue to
promote California farm products both at home and abroad.
"Even though we have the best products in the
world, I think that if the world doesn't know about it then we don't
have much, so I want to continue doing this promotion," the
governor said.
As part of the general session on Dec. 4, CFBF
President Doug Mosebar welcomed Victoria Bradshaw, secretary of the
California Labor and Workforce Development Agency.
"With well over 12 years of experience in
preparing state policy in the workforce arena, Victoria Bradshaw brings
a wealth of program knowledge in the cabinet position," Mosebar
said. "On behalf of our 92,000 Farm Bureau members, we thank you
for your commitment to serving the citizens of California. We look
forward to another four years of partnership with your administration as
we identify common goals and pursue a positive change for
agriculture."
During her address to the Farm Bureau, Bradshaw shared
challenges and successes that pertain to labor in California. One of the
major challenges that lies ahead in the area of labor, she said, is
developing a stable agricultural workforce in California.
"Supply has been a major challenge in the last
couple of years. One of the reasons agriculture is having a problem is
not any different than a lot of other industries," Bradshaw said.
"For agriculture though there is a major competitor out there and
that is the expanding construction industry. It is growing at a very
rapid pace, some in the infrastructure, some in residential housing, but
there is a huge demand for labor and they are offering higher wages and
long-term employment."
Another challenge she highlighted is training people
to work in agriculture. Unless California's farmers and ranchers do not
build careers and vocations in agriculture, Bradshaw said, they will be
left with an aging workforce and not a replenishing workforce.
"The reality is now if you let workers go on
unemployment you make them free agents and you may not get them back.
Our mission is to create a workforce plan that will help you as an
industry develop full-time or as nearly full-time employment as
possible," Bradshaw said. "What we are trying to get people to
do is to look at agriculture as not just a job, but as a vocation."
To aid agricultural employers to build a stable
workforce, Bradshaw announced funding opportunities available such as
the federal Workforce Investment Act.
"We think we can develop with you a great
workforce development plan that can help stabilize the workforce for you
while you either mechanize portions of it or work on immigration,"
Bradshaw said.
As she concluded her presentation, Bradshaw invited
questions and comments from the audience. Several Farm Bureau members
expressed interest in educating the next generation of agricultural
workers.
Stanislaus County rancher John Herlihy, who sits on an
agriculture advisory board for the local community college district and
for the California State University agricultural department, praised the
governor's support of vocational technical education.
"We've lost a generation because our Legislature
felt that you were going to have to go to college and that is the only
way that the youth of today could succeed. So we basically told that
generation that they were of little worth to the people of
California," Herlihy said. "I'm so proud of Gov.
Schwarzenegger for standing behind vocational ag and I can't say enough
to these students to show them that they have worth and that they can be
valuable citizens to our state and to our nation."
Bradshaw offered to work to develop an organized
effort in the area of vocational technical education.
"We've lost a good portion of our skilled labor
by eliminating vocational technical education out of our high schools
and out of the educational system as a whole," Bradshaw said.
"Over the course of the last 30 years, I think we marginalize the
number of our kids who had no intention of going to college or couldn't
get onto college. But the school system was set up where you either went
on to college or you were declared a failure. The governor doesn't
believe that is the case."
If farmers and ranchers want additional funding spent
on agricultural vocational technical education, Bradshaw suggested that
pressure be put on local school districts and community colleges to make
this a priority. She suggested that people share statistics that show
how economically valuable agriculture is to the local area.
When asked to comment on the administration's position
on guest or temporary workers, Bradshaw agreed that the issue is an
important one and needs to be resolved, not ignored.
San Diego County tomato grower Luawanna Hallstrom, who
chairs the CFBF's Labor Advisory Committee, suggested that passing of
the federal AgJOBS legislation coupled with a workforce program would be
a great benefit to California agriculture.
"If for instance we are fortunate enough to see
solutions in the near future like AgJOBS legislation, the workforce
would stay in agriculture for 35 years," Hallstrom said. "So
perhaps by partnering with your workforce program we can keep them in
agriculture for the long term."
Bradshaw was the first woman to serve as the
California Labor Commissioner and served as director of the California
Employment Development Department and Deputy Chief of Staff and cabinet
secretary to Gov. Pete Wilson.
California Department of Food and Agriculture
Secretary A.G. Kawamura, who is also a farmer in Orange County, also
addressed delegates. He said he wants the state to play a larger role in
developing the new federal farm bill.
"We'll be involved in putting together a farm
bill that is California-friendly," Kawamura said. "We will try
very hard through grassroots efforts to educate Congress with a
blueprint of what a California farm bill should look like, also a farm
bill of the nation. This nation cannot afford a shrinking pie farm bill,
can't back off the investment the nation makes in its food supply and
energy supply as well."
(Dave Kranz is media services manager for CFBF. He
may be contacted at dkranz@cfbf.com.
Christine Souza is a reporter for Ag Alert. She may be contacted at csouza@cfbf.com.)
Permission for use is granted, however, credit must
be made to the California Farm Bureau Federation when reprinting this
item.
Source:
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