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Tag: APP Agriculture

  • Making farm fresh products more accessible and affordable

    Making farm fresh products more accessible and affordable

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    CHATHAM COUNTY, N.C. — Customers at the Pittsboro Farmers Market can now pay with tokens from the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program.

    A new sign greets customers at the Pittsboro Farmers Market letting them know they can trade SNAP/EBT benefits for market tokens. (Rachel Boyd/Spectrum News 1)


    What You Need To Know

    • Vendors at the Pittsboro Farmers Market are accepting SNAP and EBT
    • SNAP and EBT can be turned in for one-dollar and five-dollar tokens
    • This is the first market in Chatham County to accept the benefits

    The Pittsboro Farmers Market has been around since 1997, but for the first time, vendors can now accept SNAP and EBT benefits.

    The farmers market is the first in Chatham County to accept SNAP and EBT, increasing access to a variety of fresh local vegetables, fruits, meats and breads.

    “It is so nice to be able to get it on the tables of everyone, regardless of income,” Mackenzie Withington, a vendor from Lilly Den Farm, said. “Throughout all these years, people asking if we accepted Snap, EBT and we always had to tell them no.”

    Eggs from Lilly Den Farm are one of the things customers can purchase with SNAP/EBT tokens (Rachel Boyd/Spectrum News 1)

    The push to bring SNAP and EBT to the market first started three years ago, while Patricia Parker was the market manager.

    Although it didn’t come to fruition during her tenure, she’s excited as a current vendor to accept the one-dollar and five-dollar tokens for her produce.

    “It’s really cool to finally have a farmer’s market that accepts EBT,” Parker said. “People are looking for healthy food, fresh food and food that they can believe in, that they know who’s growing it.”

    SNAP and EBT can be used on meat, eggs, fresh produce, baked goods and more at the market. 

    “It’s not about just our family, it’s actually about our community,” Emily Fuller, of Heart Song Farm, said. “And it’s time to cultivate a healthier situation for everybody.”

    The market is currently working on a dollar-matching program so that SNAP beneficiaries can double-up on the amount they have to spend. The market takes place year-round each Thursday from 3 p.m. to 6 p.m. at The Plant in Pittsboro.

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    Rachel Boyd

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  • Researchers, farmers work with alternative crops to fight climate change

    Researchers, farmers work with alternative crops to fight climate change

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    Katrina Cornish spends her days raising dandelions and desert shrubs. She harvests the stretchy rubber substances they produce and uses special machines to dip them into condoms, medical gloves and parts for trachea tubes. And she thinks those products could forever alter the landscape of agriculture in the United States.


    What You Need To Know

    • Many companies, philanthropic organizations and national and international entities tout the promise of alternative crops to fight climate change
    • They fund initiatives promoting crops like sorghum and cassava, declare the “year of the millet” or give grants to researchers working on dandelions that could one day replace rubber
    • But while some of the researchers and farmers on the other side of that funding are optimistic about the potential of these crops and say they are important in certain parts of the world to fight hunger, they also say drastic changes would need to happen before we ever see fields full of these out-of-the-box plants

    Cornish, a professor at The Ohio State University who studies rubber alternatives, isn’t the only one pouring energy into alternative crops like that desert shrub, guayule or the rubber dandelions that bloom with yellow petals in the greenhouse where Cornish works. In Arizona, too, guayule thrives amidst drought, its blue-green leaves set apart from dry dirt at a research and development farm operated by the tire company Bridgestone. And in Nebraska and other parts of the central U.S., green grasses of sorghum spring up, waving with reddish clusters of grains.

    They’re not the corn, soybeans, wheat or cotton that have dominated those areas for decades. Instead, they’re crops that many companies, philanthropic organizations and national and international entities tout as promising alternatives to fight climate change. But while some researchers and farmers are optimistic about the potential of these crops, many of which are more water-efficient and important in certain parts of the world to fight hunger, they also say drastic changes would need to happen in markets and processing before we ever see fields full of these out-of-the-box plants or many products in stores made with them, especially in the United States.

    Most rubber processing happens overseas, and the U.S. isn’t prepared to process rubber domestically. But Cornish also says the threats of disease, climate change and international trade tensions also mean that it would be a smart investment to work on growing and processing domestic alternatives.

    With sorghum, too, grown for people to eat as well as for farm animals or even pet food, processing would need to be scaled up, said Nate Blum, chief executive officer of Sorghum United, an international non-governmental organization focused on spreading awareness about sorghum. Though the U.S. is the world’s largest producer of sorghum, it still represents only a small fraction of acres grown compared to commodity crops like corn and soybeans. And though corn and soybeans are heavily incentivized in the U.S., Blum is hopeful that consumer demand will encourage more investment in the sorghum and millets industry.

    However, farmers are more likely to plant whatever crops get subsidies, said James Gerber, a senior scientist with climate solutions nonprofit Project Drawdown. Gerber, who recently published a paper in Nature Food about which crops will continue to see yield growth and which may stagnate in the coming years, said comparing sorghum production in India and the U.S. illustrates this principle. India has invested heavily in improving sorghum yields there, but the U.S. has not, he said.

    Still, Blum thinks there are real benefits to pursue with sorghum, and perhaps more urgent benefits in other parts of the world than in the U.S. On the heels of last year, when the U.N.’s Food and Agriculture Organization declared a focus on millets including sorghum, Blum thinks there’s still much more to be done.

    “The end of the international year is not the end. It’s actually just the beginning,” he said.

    With climate change bearing down on agriculture around the world, the need for crops that can withstand extreme weather like persistent drought is especially important in parts of sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia where smallholder farmers rely on just a few acres of land. Some of the breeding programs for those crops are based in the U.S., but they are much less frequently included in the American diet or lifestyle.

    That’s why specialty markets will be critical if these crops have any hope of taking off here, Cornish said. She thinks that, just as Tesla opened up the possibility of mainstream electric cars by first marketing the product as a luxury good, premium goods like condoms, trachea tube parts and radiation-rated surgical gloves need to be made with dandelion and guayule to inspire producers to grow more meaningful amounts of either of those crops.

    “You can’t do it without going to that route because you have no economies of scale, and you do not have enough to go into markets that require a large amount,” Cornish said.

    Guayule is “clearly a specialty crop and probably always will be” in terms of acres grown, said Bill Niaura, Bridgestone’s executive director of sustainable innovation. He said that Bridgestone’s work on guayule has been strictly in the research and development realm for about the last ten years, and only within the past two years or so has the company been transitioning it into an exploratory business.

    “You’re trying to develop a new industry for the Americas that currently doesn’t exist,” he said.

    In the meantime, farmers in the U.S. rely on an agricultural economy built on scale, so they farm the crops that allow them options of where to sell, said Curt Covington, senior director of institutional business at AgAmerica Lending, a private investment manager and lender focused on agricultural land. He added that the bankers financing those farmers often don’t want to take the risk on a full switch to a crop that doesn’t have established markets. That, he said, could be a problem for the country as climate change exacerbates threats to crops like cotton and alfalfa, thirsty crops grown in the Southwest, in the future.

    Farmers in Arizona have already had to fallow land, stopping their planting altogether and sometimes struggling with or giving up on family businesses as a result of Colorado River water cuts. Though guayule only uses half as much water as cotton and alfalfa, if the economics don’t support it, that doesn’t do the majority of farmers much good.

    “Ultimately what you end up with is potential for, honestly, a lot of fallowed land, and that same crop being imported into this country from other countries,” Covington said. “And so to me that creates a security risk for this country.”

    That’s something Cornish thinks can be prevented, she says, by reimagining the United States not as a land dominated by waves of grain, but also as a dominant producer of natural rubber.

    “My job isn’t done until this is a permanent feature of the landscape,” she said.

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    Associated Press

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  • Ag Report: Limiting foreign ownership of U.S. farmland

    Ag Report: Limiting foreign ownership of U.S. farmland

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    COLUMBUS — Foreign ownership of U.S. farmland is causing concern, and lawmakers are implementing laws to limit the practice.


    What You Need To Know

    • Peggy Kirk Hall, J.D. joins this edition of the Ag Report to provide further insight into state legislation limiting foreign investment in Ohio’s farmland
    • Each week, Spectrum News 1 anchor Chuck Ringwalt and agriculture expert Andy Vance discuss an aspect of the state’s agricultural landscape

    According to a USDA report, “Foreign persons held an interest in over 43.4 million acres of U.S. agricultural land as of December 31, 2022. This is 3.4 percent of all privately held agricultural land and nearly 2 percent of all land in the United States.”

    For Ohio, that number is 2.7%.

    Peggy Kirk Hall, J.D., is the Director of The Ohio State University’s Agricultural and Resource Law Program.

    She discussed a 2023 Ohio law that limits who can purchase farmland.

    “And what that law does now is prohibit ownership of land by certain persons. So in order to know which persons cannot own land in Ohio, the Ohio Secretary of State is to prepare a registry of those persons,” she said. “And that registry contains those who would be considered to be threats to land ownership in Ohio. That registry is now up and available on the Ohio Secretary of State’s website. And any person or entity on any of those lists on that registry would be prohibited from holding on to land ownership if they obtained that land after the law’s effective date of October 23rd of last year.”

    If you have an idea for the Ag Report, a question for Chuck and Andy or you’d like to send a photo of your farm and the work you do, send an email to charles.ringwalt@charter.com. You can also follow Chuck on Facebook.

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    Chuck Ringwalt

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