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Indybay Feature

Socially Disadvantaged Farmers: Systemic Institutional Racism and the 2007 Farm Bill

by Khubaka, Michael Harris (blackagriculture [at] yahoo.com)
The 110th Congress will offer a nearly 300 Billion dollar Food and Farm Bill on the of President Bush. The notion of 40 million food insecure are being moved around the chess board in a methodology predicated upon artifical scarcity. The survival of agribusiness by people of racial and cultural ethnicity choose a strategic notion of "socially disadvantaged" presupposing that a clear understanding of centuries of systemic institutional racism would be considered by youthful staff members in the 110th Congress with the ear of our "Members Only" representational government. We celebrate progress and look to build upon successful expansion of agribusiness opportunity where hunger, job creation and technical education become a reason for community development and homeland security.
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USDA AWARDS MORE THAN $5 MILLION TO ASSIST DISADVANTAGED FARMERS AND RANCHERS

WASHINGTON, D.C. - Acting Agriculture Secretary Chuck Conner announced today that USDA is awarding more than $5 million to institutions and organizations who conduct training, outreach and technical assistance to assure increased opportunities for socially disadvantaged farmers and ranchers.

"Producers who participate in these projects tend to increase their farm or ranch income, continue farming or ranching longer, navigate through the loan process more rapidly, and they are less likely to go out of business," said Conner. "This program reaches out to producers who might not traditionally come to us and encourages diverse participation in the full range of USDA programs."

The grants are administered by USDA's Cooperative State Research, Education, and Extension Service (CSREES) as part of the Outreach and Assistance for Socially Disadvantaged Farmers and Ranchers (OASDFR) program, also referred to as the 2501 program. A socially disadvantaged farmer or rancher is one of a group whose members have been subjected to racial or ethnic prejudice without regard to their individual qualities.

OASDFR is an annually run competitive grants program and eligible recipients include institutions of higher education and community-based non-profit organizations that provide capacity-building training and assistance to local farmers and ranchers.

OASDFR grants have had many positive local and regional impacts, as program participants form production and marketing cooperatives, participate in local policy-making, improve environmental quality and improve profitability and sustainability.

Fiscal Year 2007 awards include:

Agriculture and Land-Based Training Association, CA, $297,708
Alabama A & M University, AL, $300,000
Arkansas Land and Farm Development Corporation, AR, $241,434
Coastal Enterprises, Inc., ME, $300,000
Council on the Environment, Inc., NY, $65,530
Developing Innovations in Navajo Education, Inc., AZ, $ 295,910
Federation of Southern Cooperatives, GA, $299,723
Fort Berthold Community College, ND, $104,743
Fort Peck Community College, MT, $300,000
Kentucky State University, KY, $300,000
Langston University, OK, $300,000
Mississippi Association of Cooperatives, MS $265,000
North Carolina A&T University, NC , $205,000
Operation Spring Plant, NC, $273,143
Southern University Agricultural Research and Extension Center, LA, $298,260
Tuskegee University, AL, $300,000
University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff, AR, $300,000
University of Maryland Eastern Shore, MD, $300,000
University of Massachusetts Amherst, MA, $298,749
University of New Mexico, NM, $300,000
Virginia State University, VA, $300,000

CSREES advances knowledge for agriculture, the environment, human health and well-being, and communities by supporting research, education, and extension programs in the Land-Grant University System and other partner organizations. For more information, visit http://www.csrees.usda.gov.



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