Tag: farms

Networking tools for Farmers, Planners and Activists

Networking tools for Farmers, Planners and Activists

One of the best ways to preserve farmland is for family farmers to understand and use market opportunities to support agricultural production.

In November of this month,  Mike Hogan, an Extension Educator and Professor at OSU presented at the 12th Annual Ohio Farmland Preservation Summit and shared some tools and ideas to help  support Ohio farmers, planners and activists.  He is the Ohio Coordinator for the USDA’s Sustainable Agriculture Research and Education program, and he specializes in sustainable agriculture and small farm issues including direct marketing, local food systems and alternative crop and production systems.

Hogan promotes the idea that farmers shouldn’t get hung up on the definition of “local,” and that different buysers define buying locally different.  Sometimes it can be home county, but it often can be expanded into neighboring counties or being statewide.  There might be a demand outside of what you think is “local” yourself.

Hogan promotes three tools that can be used by farmers, farmers market managers or other local food activists which include: Ohio MarketMaker, Ohio MarketReady and Meet the Buyers.

MarketMaker, a free on-line resource was developed as a way for Illinois farmers to gain greater access to regional markets by linking them with processors, retailers, consumers and other food supply chain participants. The site has expanded and is currently one of the most extensive collections of searchable food industry related data in the country.  It has almost 500,000 profiles of farmers and other food related enterprises in sixteen states.  On the site, a farmer can build a profile and enter information about his/her farm, crops, and livestock – and indicate what is for sale.  Buyers can set up similar profiles – but with what he/she wishes to purchase.  The site provides a networking tool, and users can map their data and searches, which provides the ability to find local, regional, or nationwide sources and suppliers.

Ohio Market Ready is a program currently managed by the OSU Extension that started Kentucky to great success and is currently getting support in Ohio.  The program is a set of workshops and tools for producers to develop their best marketing practices.  Market Ready begins with farmers analyzing their business goals and lining them up with a potential customer base. In one-day workshops,  family farmers learn the basics of marketing including subjects ranging from product selection to signage, delivery, promotion, regulatory and insurance issues and how to get to know your potential customers.  To find out about upcoming workshops or to schedule one, check out  Market Ready on the Web.

Meet the Buyers is a program that will sponsor events where institutional or wholesale buyers set up booths and displays in a trade show setup, and producers can interact with the buyers to find out more about how to sell to large food service distirbutors such as Sysco or OSU’s cafeteria system.  Currently due to budget constraints, there are fewer events and fewer buyers participating.

Starting a farm, or want to connect with others in the agriculture area?  These tools might get you started.

Image Source:
msue.msu.edu

Links:

MarketMaker

Market Ready

Ohio Farmland Preservation Summit Conference – Presentation and Podcasts

 

 

 

 

2011 Farm Bill R.I.P. – but 2012 bill is around the corner

2011 Farm Bill R.I.P. – but 2012 bill is around the corner

I’ve been reading news about the “undercover U.S. Farm Bill” being in the works the past few monthes.  The most recent news is that the 2011 Farm Bill got thrown out– since no agreements were reached.

The bill was going to cut $23 billion dollars over the next 10 years with a  $15 billion net cut in commodity programs, a little over $6 billion net cut in conservation programs, and a $4 billion slice from the largest of all farm bill programs, the SNAP or food stamp program.  This would then free $2 billion to help fund farm bill programs that lacked secured budget baseline after the current farm bill expires in 2012 and to fund new programs.

The Farm Bill impacts who can farm, how they farm, the types of food that can be grown, and the price of certain foods at the grocery store.  Farm policy is a big part of the reason fast food is cheap and healthy food is difficult to find, and the Farm Bill is a matter of concern for everyone, not just farmers.

One top issue for the next Farm Bill is whether government support programs are being used responsibly and effectively. Another issue is the USDA’s current emphasis on an approach to rural development that’s broader than just making payments to big corn and soy farms.

Some questions the Farm Bill can address include:

-Could there be more incentives for farmers to grow fruits and vegetables, and not just commodity crops?
-Could accepting food stamps at farmers’ markets help to combat obesity?
-Should sodas be banned from the food stamp program, similar to the program’s existing bans on tobacco and alcohol?
-Could a “whole-farm revenue” concept for crop insurance replace the present system that encourages production of a single crop, and instead encourage more diverse crops?
-Could an expansion of the green payments program incentivize sustainable farming rather than overproduction?

The recent concerns about the 2011 farm bill is that it was done essentially “in secrecy and ahead of schedule.  Currently the final bill that was not approved has not been released to the public.

What is going to happen to the future of food?  Get up to date information about the 2012 farm bill from the sites listed below.

Image Source:

Eco Farm

Links:

http://www.fooddemocracynow.org/

http://sustainableagriculture.net/