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Farm Bill Expired: Michigan Local Food Movement Uncertain

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Monday, October 1, 2012   

ANN ARBOR, Mich. - A growing number of Michiganders get fresh meat and produce directly from farms in their area. The newest CSAs, consumer-supported agriculture farms, face an uncertain future because the Farm Bill expired Sunday.

In Ann Arbor, the local food movement got a jump-start two years ago from the township, which provided land, private funding, and a development grant from the Beginning Farmer and Rancher Development Program, which is part of the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Township Clerk Rena Basch says the money funded the Tilian Farm Development Center that trains CSA farmers in a "residency" program, and provides locally-grown food.

Now, with no Farm Bill, Basch says, the thriving program might have to slow down.

"It was our understanding that that development grant was just the beginning, and that the full grant proposal could be funded in the future. You know that's really put a kink in things, I think, looking forward."

Basch says several young people have started their own farms after a residency at Tilian, giving a boost to the local food movement and the economy. With demand for locally-grown food getting stronger in Michigan, Tilian backers had hoped to expand the program. Without a Farm Bill, they may have to reconsider.

Basch says a lot of the young people who enter the two-year residency program come from Michigan State University's Organic Farmer Training Program. She says as they learn how to grow healthy food, they help grow a healthy local economy.

"We have five farmer-incubator businesses operating out there, plus the farmer residency program. And that's created, I'm going to guess, I think it's eleven new agriculture jobs in just two years."

Basch says these are not temporary seasonal jobs, either.

"They're not just picking vegetables. They're starting a new farm."

She says one young couple graduated from Tilian, purchased 64 acres of land and started their own family farm business. Another has started a meat CSA, and others grow produce for local restaurants.

Agriculture is Michigan's second-largest industry, and Senator Debbie Stabenow says that, with the Farm Bill's expiration, technically the law automatically reverts back to policies developed in 1949. No one is sure what that will mean for food prices, or for Michigan's local food movement.

More information is at tiliancenter.wordpress.com.




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