After considerable thought, I have concluded that the effort to save Ag land in Snohomish County is destined to fail. The evidence reflecting the actions of government regulators does not indicate that saving farmers is a priority. In my mind, without farmers you don’t have farms. If we are serious about preserving Ag land but not farmers, what is our actual goal?
Preserving Ag land is not my primary focus; preserving farmers is my priority. If we can create an environment where farmers can thrive, the Ag land issue will take care of itself.
Snohomish County will be holding its annual FOCUS ON FARMING Conference later this month. Instead of holding the conference at the Evergreen Fair Grounds, it has been moved to the Lynnwood Convention Center. In my mind, that move to Lynnwood is a message in itself.
The Agriculture Advisory Board is advocating that farmland be down zoned from ten acre minimum site size to forty acre minimum site size. Their solution is to make the land parcel size drive the solution. How many farms can we think of that are less than forty acres? I mean how many “did we used to know” that were less than forty acres?
If we want to FOCUS ON FARMING, the solution needs to be worked out by reviewing the factors that drive farmers out of business and work back from there. Market forces, debt, available labor force and government regulation are all factors that affect farmers. There are many other variables as well. Most of them are not problems government can play a part in solving.
As an advocate for a government, I would recommend we develop an Agriculture Impact Statement we could use to test the various effects of existing and proposed regulations on financial and operational aspects of farming.
From a regulatory standpoint, I would be looking at ways government infringes on a farmer’s right and ability to farm. If we can make it easier for a farmer to make a living while he grows something we all need, how can we go wrong? What does it cost us?
THE SAD REALITY
Being in the heart of an urban county, Snohomish County’s Ag lands are at risk from a variety of forces. Pressures from urban growth clearly pose a challenge in our county as they do in other urban counties. County Planning Commission members and County Council members are given the task of determining where it is appropriate for growth to occur. Ag land that is not being farmed suggests that agriculture does not pay well enough to risk a crop. This very visible fact is hard to ignore.
Does it make sense that land designated for Industrial use be held in reserve forever even if there is no demand for that use. Economic return does need to be considered when we look at land use designations. In most cases, we look at alternative uses for underutilized land. Should that be different with regard to agriculture land?
If you listen to the “no net loss of Ag lands” arguments, it is suggested that if you convert Ag land for some other purpose in one place you have to replace it with two times that amount somewhere else. If Ag land is so limited, how can we just conjure up new Ag land to replace lost land? If we have spare Ag land it should already be inventoried, right? I guess I am just too dim to understand how that works.
There are several locations in Snohomish County where Ag land has been sold to environmental groups with the intent to (convert) turn the land into swamps and wetlands. The Biringer Farm south of Marysville is now owned by the Port of Everett and will be flooded to mitigate the loss of critical areas on the Everett waterfront. Preserving Ag land certainly was a priority there wasn’t it? How do we reconcile the loss of that Ag land?
I am confused about the intent of our county when we talk about “preserving farm land” because what I see is just “preventing the land from being used for urban uses”, but certainly not preserving it for farming purposes.
ECONOMIC VIABILITY
Farming does need to be economically viable. The reality of the farm land issue is simple. If you can’t work the land, grow a crop or raise a critter to sell for more than it cost to do the task, you will stop and look for a better use of the land. The fact that it has been used for farming purposes for many years does not insure that it will forever. There still needs to be a profitability component.
For me, the only way we can assure that there will be farming is to be sensitive to the government regulation that slowly chokes to death small farmers in urban counties. If the Department of Ecology regulations force farmers to address pollution discharge issues without considering what complying will cost to small farmers, how is preserving the land a value?
Federal and State regulations rarely consider the negative impacts they create. Federal and State regulators rarely care about the negative impacts they create. Their preferred regulatory ecosystem will be the death of others. Environmentalists have sued the government to force them to regulate discharges into rivers and streams where the levels of certain chemicals exceed a particular level. In many cases that affects farmers in seriously bad ways. If the threat of lawsuits drives the regulatory process, how can there be a positive outcome for farms?
LOCAL VISION
If the Federal and State governments are currently imposing regulations that promote the priorities of the majority of citizens in our county, we should abandon the effort to save farms and get on with a plan that incorporates acceptable economic uses for the land that fit within the restrictive regulatory framework. It can’t be too hard. We already sacrificed the upland Ag ground everywhere in Snohomish County, what is the big deal with the flood plain stuff? Where was the fight for upland Ag?
I would be interested in seeing examples of farmers who are thriving anywhere in the state. Then if it is possible, I would like to see examples of successful farmers here in Snohomish County. I would like to see if there are management practices they use that can be taught to the others. I would like to better understand why so many farmers struggle to stay alive when there are supposedly farmers that comply with regulations and make a profit. What is their secret?
Are there model farms to look at?
How about a “demonstration project” to show the farmers how to make it? Our county is always good for a demonstration project.
If on the other hand, preserving the act of farming was not your intent, then you have a wholly different situation.
If all you really want to do is prevent the land from being used for urban development, rezoning the land to mandatory open space designation would be difficult. That might be ruled a “taking”. You have to appear to champion a more appealing cause that sounds noble to people that don’t care one way or the other.
It appears to me that the agenda of the pro-farming environmental crowd is inclined to be of the “mandatory open space” persuasion. The Federal and State regulations are more often than not driven by the same folks who cry loudly about preserving farm land. What other conclusion can we come to?
Environmentally motivated restrictions on agriculture will doom farmers and farms. There has to be balanced consideration of the goals against the outcomes. Without placing a higher value on the farmers and farms, the outcome for either of them is bleak.
Focus on Farming
by Steve DanaI attended the Focus on Farming Conference at the Lynnwood Convention Center on November 20th to get a different perspective on the efforts being made to keep farming a viable enterprise.
As expected the front people were upbeat and pitched an optimistic outlook. There were two key-note speakers that addressed the attendees.
The morning speaker was Bob Gore, the acting director of the Washington State Department of Agriculture. He gave a “state of agriculture in Washington State” report that reported some positive trends, but also some consistent themes from farmers across the state that reflect real concerns about regulatory encroachment that is slowly closing in on farmers; government regulations that range from environmental issues to availability of labor.
The lunch speaker was Professor David Montgomery who spoke about how farming practices have impacted the rise and fall of different civilizations and what we can learn from them. He was talking to farmers about farming practices. That guy could talk a hundred miles an hour without taking a breath. I am not sure the majority of the crowd cared too much for his presentation. His message should not be ignored. I was interested when he referenced upland farming but couldn’t think of too many places in our county where the government has been sensitive to preserving any.
I sat through an hour session that described the process that led to the installation of the crushing and drying operation for crops that can yield biodiesel grade oil. The session raised a lot more questions than it answered. The system is not self-sustaining as far as I could tell from the presentation. If the county is committed to converting the county fleet over to biodiesel and intends to produce their own fuel supply from this process, they are not looking at competitive pricing for the end product. My concern for the farmers is long term. If they gear up to produce biofuel crops and the county pulls the plug, where does that leave them?
I listened to two presentations about how small scale farmers can either supplement their income or make a living growing high value consumer crops they sell direct. In the scheme of things, neither of them related to commercial farming.
The end of the day for me came with a discussion from a gentleman from the Department of Ecology about Water Rights as they relate to farmers. That guy was friendly and probably helpful to some, but his message was not encouraging. The government views water as currency and want to control every bit of it. The DOE will be the death of farmers.
In our county, we have long talked about “property rights” issues and how the government is taking them. This Water Rights issue demonstrates the point.
At the end of the day, I think the survival of farmers will depend on their ability to adapt to the changing regulations rather than realistically expecting the regulators to back off. I don’t have a sense of how much energy the industry has left in their tank. I can think of individual farmers that are growing weary from having to deal with Mother Nature and Big Brother. For them, the fight might be near over.
Posted in Environmental, Political commentary, Snohomish County Political Commentary | Leave a Comment »