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This Website is Dedicated to
Alvin Alexander Cheyne
January
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Anyone
Looking at the Bigger Picture?
By
Dan Keppen
Family Farm
Alliance
Published in the Siskiyou Daily News
Family
farms and ranches are experiencing a crisis in numbers. According to
Farm Aid, in the 1930s, there were close to seven million farms in the
United States
. Today, just over two million farms remain. Of the remaining
farms, roughly 565,000 are family operations, farming just over 415
million acres or 44 percent of total farmland. And 330 farm
operators leave their land every week.
One
of the most troubling aspects of the on-going farm crisis is the decline
in the number of young farmers entering the field. More than half
of today's farmers are between the ages of 45 and 64, and only six
percent of our farmers are younger than 35. Both statistically and
anecdotally, for the first time in many generations we see sons and
daughters of farmers opting to leave the family farm because of
uncertainty about agriculture as a career.
Urbanization
and competition for water supplies are driving Western farmers off the
land at a time when American food production in general is following
other industries “off-shore” in search of lower costs.
Traditional farms and ranches are disappearing, and this year our
country will actually become a net importer of food, drawing frightening
parallels to our dependence on foreign sources of energy.
Meanwhile,
according to USDA's Economic Research Service statistics for 2005,
Americans are spending, on average, 9.9 percent of their disposable
income on food. To put this into perspective, just 70 years ago, the
figure was more than 25 percent. So, while more, better and safer food
is being produced by our farmers, they continue to feel the pinch –
and it is only a matter of time before that pinch translates itself back
into the supermarket.
Ironically,
it is because Western irrigated agriculture has been so adaptive and
successful at providing plentiful, safe and affordable food that it is
now jeopardized – nobody believes there can be a problem. The last
Americans to experience food shortages are members of the so-called
Greatest Generation and their parents. For the most part, they
have left us, taking with them the memories of empty supermarket
shelves. When the issue has never been personalized, it’s easy
to be complacent.
We
have heard many anecdotal accounts from Western farmers and ranchers of
important agricultural lands being converted to residential and
commercial development and of agricultural water being used (transferred
or bought) to support these new demands. New environmental water demands
imposed by regulatory agencies or courts also first look to agriculture.
This is happening in every state, but farmers and ranchers point to some
striking examples:
-
·
A report released in April by Environment
Colorado found that, from 1987-2002,
Colorado
lost an average of 460 acres per day of ag land. The report predicts
3.1 million more acres will be lost to development by 2022.
-
·
Arizona
’s Salt River Project (SRP) is the “poster child” for
transfers of agricultural water to urban areas. In a few years, the
SRP will cease to provide water to agriculture in order to meet new
demands exerted by development.
-
·
In
Las Vegas
,
Nevada
, over 70,000 new residents are moving in every year, and Southern
Nevada Water Authority is looking to rural areas to satisfy its
growing thirst.
-
California
remains the most populous state in the nation, with over 36 million
people calling it home, and more arriving every year.
We
cannot continue long-term hypothetical processes that focus primarily on
continued conservation and downsizing of Western agriculture. The
U.S.
needs a stable domestic food supply, just as it needs a stable energy
supply. The post 9/11 world of terrorist threats makes the
stability of domestic food supply even more pressing.
Outgoing
Secretary of Health and Human Services Tommy Thompson put it bluntly
when he said, “I cannot understand why the terrorists have not
attacked our food supply, because it is so easy to do.” Further,
Thompson said he worries “every single night” about threats to the
American food supply.
For farmers
to survive; for food to be produced in
America
; a stable water supply must be available.
However, the policies of the federal government make development of that
water nearly impossible. Water
wars are being fought throughout the West simply because we have not had
the vision to develop new, environmentally sound, sources of water.
We must stop ignoring the negative implications of
reallocating more agricultural water supplies to meet new urban and
environmental water demands. At what point will too much agricultural
land be taken out of production? Do we want to rely on imported food for
safety and security? The Europeans, who have starved within memory,
understand the importance of preserving their food production
capability. They recognize
it for the national security issue that it is.
The leadership in our country also better start taking
a hard look at the bigger picture, before it’s too late.
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