In the turmoil of the unprecedented economic crisis in rural America,
farmers and their families are losing their homes, farms and sense of
dignity. The independent family farmers of America call on farm leaders
to institute farm policies which stabilize economics of the family farm
and rural America by enacting the following measures:
Initiate farm policies to:
Insure the economic solvency of the family farm by:
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regulating the predatory practices of corporate agribusiness
interests;
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investigating antitrust violations in the agribusiness
marketing and input sectors;
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investigating corporate and non-profit abuses of the
Capper-Volsted Act;
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requiring mandatory price reporting; and
-
developing a "Bill of Rights" for producers in
contract production.
Dismantle the failed "Freedom to Farm" domestic farm policy
and institute policy that:
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develops a mechanism that balances supply with demand;
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reestablishes a farmer-owned grain reserve with fair storage
payments;
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increases market prices to producers by setting a floor price
of loan rate at farmers’ cost of production;
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supports the development of "direct marketing" plans
to help producers deliver goods to consumers; and
-
returning the federal crop insurance program to the FSA and
eliminating the costly administrative fees given to private
insurance companies.
Stopping the trend towards irresponsible globalization by:
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withdrawing support for presidential "fast-track
authority;
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stabilizing domestic markets before increasing globalization;
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adopting policies that make America’s own markets more
available to our nations farmers;
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requiring labeling on foods imported in the U.S.; and
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supporting "buy-local" programs which "recirculate"
money in rural economies and build food security.
Ensure the economic viability and environmental health of America’s
farmlands by:
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creating subsidies for organic production equal to those of
chemically intensive production;
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immediately publishing a national organic standard;
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factoring and assessing the "total" costs to the
environment, economy, public health, and culture of concentrated
animal feeding operations;
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recognizing the family farm unit as "multifunctional"
providing many benefits to the rural area which can be
economically quantified;
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encouraging sustainable farm practices that increase the
richness of nutrients and organic material in soil without harming
surface water quality; and
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protecting cultivar species whose genetic adaptations are
compatible with low input, high yield production agriculture.
Adopt policies to deal with climate change by:
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accepting the scientific consensus that unstable weather
patterns caused by global warming pose a major threat to
production agriculture;
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encouraging the development of management tools that reduce the
impact and production of carbon emissions; and
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investigating the creation of incentives to encourage
"carbon-sink" agriculture practices like green-cropping
that trap carbon, and build soil friability for future
generations.
Adopt polices that reflect the philosophies of family farmers by:
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understanding that the interests of the marketing and input
sectors of agribusiness compete with the interests of family and
independent producers; and
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developing policy creation that eliminates deceptive
agribusiness manipulation of the "image of the family
farmer" to advance policies which erode the competitiveness of
the family and independent producer.
Recognize that the majority of family farmers consider themselves
environmentalists who:
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believe farmers should be good stewards of "God’s
creation";
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support legislation to protect clean water, air and set aside
parkland for future generations; and
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believe it important to continue the Endangered Species Act
that works to protect threatened biodiversity.

Vote Family Farm
If you would like more
information, or a supply of Vote Family Farm buttons for your
organization or event, contact:
Scotty Johnson - (520) 623-9653
sjohnson@albq.defenders.org
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