California Ag Vision plan seeks
to ease regulatory load
Capital Press
December 17, 2010
SACRAMENTO -- State agriculture officials on
Thursday published a plan for guiding policy in ways that
benefit agriculture for the next two decades.
California Agricultural Vision is a document
intended to guide lawmakers, agencies and industry toward an
agreed-upon vision of how the state's food production will look
in 2030.
That vision involves easing the regulatory
load on farmers while maintaining environmental and other
standards, ensuring water supplies and increasing access to
healthy food.
Al Montna, president of the State Board of
Food and Agriculture, said the document could help sort out the
conflicting regulations that have long stymied the best
intentions of producers and conservationists on farmland
projects.
"We need smarter regulations," Montna said at
an unveiling event on the Capitol steps. "It won't happen
overnight. We still have a lot of work to do."
The document was hashed out over two years by
the ag board, Department of Food and Agriculture, nonprofit
collaborators and a large stakeholder group. Assembled by the
American Farmland Trust, it recommends a number of actions and
strategies to address farm challenges involving water, labor,
urbanization and other concerns.
"Exciting innovations out there give us the
tools to deal with these challenges," said state Agriculture
Secretary A.G. Kawamura. "But we need some kind of a roadmap to
get us to the future."
Officials said shaping state policy to fit the
recommendations will likely be a long, hard process. But the
document is not set in stone, Montna said.
"It is a living document, it is on the table
for discussion," he said.
Online
http://www.cdfa.ca.gov/agvision/
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