Sign Up

Sign up here for our
Free NNN Weekly Newsletter

Email:
Your privacy assured.

NNN is Rhode Island's own online magazine about your environment -- the news and info you need to explore it, have fun outside, keep up with local issues, live greener, and get involved.

This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it


Add Your Event to the Calendar

Calendar provided by What Grows On in Rhode Island.

Search

Login Form

Your privacy assured.





Lost Password?
No account yet? Register

Green Jobs & Free Classifieds

Click here for all jobs & classifieds or to submit an ad.

Support NNN - Buy a Book

Be an N3 Supporter

Polls

Tell us what you think of our new look.
 

Support Our Sponsors

Ask the Experts

Got a question about the greener life?

This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it

Who's Online

We have 1 guest online

Syndicate

Jun 13
Op-Ed: The Bond is Dead, Long Live the Farm Print E-mail
Friday, 13 June 2008

by Stu Nunnery, director of the Rhode Island Center for Agricultural Promotion & Education
 
State business leaders like to point to our quality of life as a pillar of economic development. They understand that part of what will attract the high paying jobs and cutting edge industries they covet are those natural and historic assets that make us who we are.

Remember that.

The Rhode Island House Finance Committee has killed an important bond issue and we are about to run out of money to preserve farmland and open space. The budget deficit will be blamed but simply, some members of the assembly no longer believe that agriculture’s contribution to the State is enough to merit the investment.

Not enough?

Click on "More..." for the rest of Stu's analysis on this important topic.

We can argue what are Rhode Island’s best assets, but we cannot argue that foremost among them are farms and the open spaces they protect and preserve. Along with our beaches and nautical activities, people live and work here to experience many of the things that our lands provide. They in turn, provide direct economic activity and tax revenues to the state.

Rhode Island agricultural activity generates one hundred million dollars annually. Some nine hundred farms represent twenty diverse  agricultural specialties, we rank second in the nation in per farm direct sales of fruits and vegetables while recognized as a leader in the region in turf grass and nursery stock production. Agriculture is also our local foods and greenery, farm stands and farmers’ markets, corn mazes, u-pick operations, farm stays, and more.

For our small size, we enjoy a unique diversity of farm landscapes and settings, wildlife habitats, woodlands and waterways – all protected by the conservation practices of farmers and land owners that impact Rhode Island positively not just in place, but elsewhere down wind, downstream and down the block.

Rhode Island’s farmers are not pulling their weight? Here as in most NE states, our farmers and/or their spouses not only work the land, but may also hold off- the-farm jobs that provide services – some of them essential - to the rest of us. Rhode Island’s farmers are doctors and nurses, teachers and professors, school bus drivers, builders and contractors, lawyers and landscapers, even state representatives and senators. Their passion for growing things, managing natural resources and trying to earn a living from them, does not come cheap and their contributions cannot be overestimated.

The timing could not be more out of synch with trends nationally. The recently passed Farm Bill includes far reaching victories for conservation, beginning and minority farmers, local food systems, sustainable biomass energy production, organic agriculture and even public health – all of which reflect closely Rhode Island’s agriculture. USA Today notes that many states facing weak tax revenues, are nevertheless boosting spending on open space while trimming other programs as “an investment in the long term.”

Investment is being made here as well. The farm viability initiative launched in 2001 by the Chief of the Division of Agriculture, Ken Ayars, has spawned many of the projects that are growing agriculture’s assets and profile. Many municipalities already recognize working farms as economic engines that encourage tourism - the state’s second-largest industry - and as counter balance to the ever-expanding infrastructure and service costs associated with residential development.  Town councils in 20 municipalities adopted resolutions endorsing the bond issue.  

Along with those providing matching dollars for farmland preservation, non-profits, foundations and others are investing in Rhode Island’s farms and farmers. RICAPE, the RI Economic Development Corporation, the RI Division of Tourism, the Small Business Development Center, the RI Farm Bureau, Farm Fresh RI, Kids First, the USDA Natural Resource Conservation Service, the University of Rhode Island and others are assisting farmers to develop new business enterprises, explore energy efficiency technologies, promote agritourism, run farmers markets, produce and process local food products, and expand distribution to restaurants and schools.

Can we afford to waste all that investment? If not, why the resistance from the state assembly?

For one, agriculture is undervalued and measuring our commodity output like the big farm states do is deceptive. The majority of Rhode Island farms are small in size (less than 70 acres) and production (less than $250,000 gross sales) and most of our farmers engage in direct to consumer marketing and sell at retail rather than at wholesale to distributors. We do not receive large crop subsidies, but leverage significantly less “specialty crop” money to ensure diversity in our agricultural practices, enterprises, goods and services.

Secondly, while RI’s agriculture touches many other sectors - tourism, hospitality, retail, recreation among them - we do not assess what economic benefits accrue from these multiplier effects to capture the true value of it to our health, food, quality of life, as well as to the economy.  

Third, preservation has become a dirty word. While no state can afford preservation for preservation sake, Rhode Island is not any state. Preservation is what we do. It is what we’re good at. Newport alone occupies much of the economic high ground in Rhode Island and many believe that our farms and open spaces have value to our communities commensurate with the mansions to Newport.
Finally, the perception of agriculture as a charity case is partly self-inflicted. Farmers and those of us who work with them have not resisted strongly enough the notion that “Save the Farm” is a cry for help - when farmers are not victims waiting to be saved and agriculture is not a disease waiting to be cured.

So how can we make good on our business credo while maximizing some of Rhode Island’s best assets?

Make farmland and open space protection a permanent line item in the state’s budget. Establish a five-year plan for agricultural business development and gather better data about it. Develop tax policies that encourage on the farm generational continuity. Establish town ordinances that encourage agricultural business activity. In addition to providing matching dollars for farmland preservation, the philanthropic community can invest in those organizations that help farmers develop new business skills, start new enterprises and broaden their markets.

One can imagine the counter scenario a few years hence if we instead dismantle the very assets upon which our quality of life rests: empty residential towers, abandoned industrial parks, and few new jobs or businesses to fuel the economy – all because those who might have come here simply didn’t want to live in a state that forgot who it was.

for more info:
This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it
www.rifarmways.org
www.childrensgardennetwork.org

 

Add comment



Security code
Refresh

< Prev   Next >