Congresswoman DelBene Listens

DelBene with CSA box

Congresswoman DelBene receives a sample CSA share from Local Roots Farm

There are a myriad of laws and policies at all levels of government which affect agriculture. Unfortunately, it’s easy for farmers to feel disenfranchised from engaging in advocacy because the issues are complicated, numerous, and shrouded inside the complicated systems that create policy.

To provide an opportunity for local farmers to connect to key legislative issues affecting agriculture, Tilth Producers of Washington, the Washington Young Farmers Coalition, the Northwest Farm Bill Action Group, and Local Roots Farm collaborated to host a listening session with Congresswoman Suzan DelBene on April 13th. We were fortunate to have twenty farmers and concerned eaters turnout on the coldest day of the month, and to have Siri Erickson-Brown and Jason Salvo, owners of Local Roots, and their employees Rawley Johnson and Sam Bowhay as great hosts for the tour.

Congresswoman DelBene is a great listener. Northwest Farm Bill Action Group Student Intern Danielle Gilmour reflected, “This was my first time meeting a congressperson, and I am so glad it was Congresswoman DelBene. She is approachable, attentive, and articulate.”

Sam talks

Local Roots employee Sam Bowhay welcomes Congresswoman DelBene to the farm alongside Siri Erickson Brown, farmer and co-owner of Local Roots Farm

After the event, we got further proof that the Congresswoman was listening: she has now signed on as a cosponsor of the Local Farms, Food, and Jobs Act. She also introduced her own piece of legislation asking Congress to include support for fruits and vegetables (a.k.a. specialty crops) in the next Farm Bill. We are delighted and grateful to see her step out and show support for local food systems this way.

If you would like to extend your own thanks to Congresswoman DelBene, you can reach her DC office at (202) 225-6311, her Bothell office at (425) 485-0085, or send her an online message here.

Congresswoman DelBene poses with 21 farmers and eaters at the farm policy Listening Session at Local Roots Farm, April 13, 2013

Congresswoman DelBene poses with 21 farmers and eaters at Local Roots Farm Listening Session, April 13, 2013

The listening session, modeled after last year’s Urban Farm Tour with Congressman Adam Smith, was organized in response to Congresswoman Suzan DelBene’s recent appointment to the House Agriculture Committee.

The event provided an opportunity to reach the Congresswoman and hear her views on four primary issues of concern to all the convening organizations. Each priority was illustrated with a stop at a relevant site on the farm. A summary of each issue follows.

Prep station

Tilth Producers Policy Coordinator Ariana Taylor-Stanley discusses policies which help rebuild local food systems in the processing shed

Local Food Systems

The tour began with a peek into the processing shed where fresh produce gets washed, bunched, and boxed to go to market. We discussed the need to rebuild local food systems and Farm Bill programs, including the Farmers Market Promotion Program, Organic Cost Share Program, Value-Added Producer Grants, Specialty Crop Block Grants, and the Organic Research and Extension Initiative. Many of these programs are included in the Local Farms, Food, and Jobs Act, which we asked the Congresswoman to co-sponsor (to great success!).

Conservation Programs

Congresswoman DelBene and Farmer Siri Erickson Brown in front of Local Roots' new greenhouse, which is still under construction

Congresswoman DelBene and Farmer Siri Erickson Brown in front of Local Roots’ new greenhouse, which is still under construction

Next, we looked at Local Roots’ new greenhouse, which was paid for in part by a Natural Resource Conservation Service grant, and discussed conservation programs. Farmer Siri pointed out that while many conservation programs like that one do help farms, others, like the Wetland Reserve Program which helps farmers conserve wetlands by paying them not to farm in wetland buffer areas, can take significant amounts of farmland out of production.

This moveable chicken tractor is part of a business run by Rawley Johnson, Crew Leader at Local Roots, which is helping prepare him to start his own farm

This moveable chicken tractor is part of a business run by Rawley Johnson, Crew Leader at Local Roots, which is helping prepare him to start his own farm

Beginning Farmer and Rancher Issues

We next explored Crew Leader Rawley’s laying hen side-project, which is helping him develop the means to start his own farm. Rawley wrote the business plan for this project in the WSU Extension’s Cultivating Success: Agricultural Entrepreneurship class (which many of the meeting participants had attended as well). This program is a great model for new-farmer training, and is the kind of program supported by the Beginning Farmer and Rancher Development Program (BFRDP). The BFRDP also provided a low-interest loan which helped Jason and Siri to buy the property which comprises Local Roots Farm.

Amelia Swinton, Garden and Nutrition Educator at Solid Ground's Lettuce Link program, discusses food security and the Farm Bill

Amelia Swinton, Garden and Nutrition Educator at Solid Ground’s Lettuce Link program, discusses food security and the Farm Bill

Food Access

Local Roots sometimes grows more food than they have time to harvest. Right now, the over-wintered kale plants are producing an excess of kale “raab” or flowers. The farm works with an Americorps program which sends volunteer gleaners out to harvest excess produce to donate to local food banks. We didn’t get to see the kale raab as we hurried into a greenhouse to warm up, but we did get to talk to the Congresswoman about other Farm Bill programs which help urban consumers access healthy food, such as access to SNAP at farmers’ markets, the Senior Farmers Market Nutrition Program, and Community Food Project grants.

The event concluded with a question and answer session during which Congresswoman DelBene continued to engage with constituents, and spoke to other issues, including genetic engineering, food safety, and subsidy reform.

We appreciate Congresswoman DelBene’s support for sustainable agriculture and local farms. We are grateful she could join us for this event, and so happy to see her already taking steps to support our growers in Congress.

Congresswoman DelBene answers questions in the greenhouse

Congresswoman DelBene answers questions in the greenhouse