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GOOD MINDS THINK ALIKE #1
The Farmland
Stewardship Initiative (FSI)
is 100% consistent with the Farmland Stewardship Program
Now the Two
Programs are One!
Here's a description of the FSI from the Christian Science Monitor
Rewarding farmers as 'stewards'by
Allen Olson and Brad Crabtree The Christian Science MonitorNovember
14, 2000 BISMARCK,
N.D. -- Election-year
politics and a persistent farm crisis have elevated
national discussion of farm policy to a level not seen since
drought, debt, and low prices struck America's heartland in the 1980s.
This
year's multibillion-dollar emergency-spending bills for agriculture only
intensified an ongoing battle in Congress, where opponents of traditional
farm subsidies squared off against supporters of an expanded federal
safety net for farmers and ranchers. Soon,
the new president and Congress will begin preparations for the 2002 farm
bill, the most important opportunity in a decade for major reform of
agriculture policy. One
proposal on the table, the Farmland Stewardship Initiative, could unite
warring factions in Washington by building a stronger safety net for our
nation's farmers, while providing many benefits for the tax-paying public.
Instead
of paying farmers and ranchers to produce (or not produce) particular
commodities, they would be paid for land-management practices that reduce
flooding, improve water quality, enhance conservation, promote local
recreation and tourism, and reduce the buildup of greenhouse gases. FSI
emerged in response to years of repeated and devastating flood losses in
the Dakotas, Minnesota, and the Canadian province of Manitoba. Faced with
billions of dollars in damage, the US Federal Emergency Management Agency
(FEMA) and Manitoba launched the International Flood Mitigation Initiative
(IFMI) to develop basin-wide strategies to deal with future floods. IFMI
formed a working group of government, agriculture, and conservation
interests to identify ways to foster flood mitigation on private lands.
Following the conclusion of their efforts last year, the group presented
the Farmland Stewardship Initiative to Congress and FEMA. FSI
starts with the premise that farms and ranches produce much more than
food, fuel, and fiber. They also provide land-stewardship services - flood
mitigation, protection of water quality, management of wildlife habitat
and biodiversity, outdoor recreation, and tourism, to name a few. These
services benefit all Americans, yet the market undervalues such services.
As a result, agricultural commodities are in surplus, while producers'
essential services of land stewardship are in deficit. FSI would
compensate farmers and ranchers directly for their stewardship of private
lands. Given
limited federal discretionary spending and diminishing public support for
farm subsidies, the initiative optimizes taxpayer dollars. FSI would
support practices that store, slow, or absorb water on the land to help
reduce flood damages downstream. These include no-till production,
restoration of grasslands, wetlands, woodlands and riparian areas, and
construction of small-scale water-storage and retention areas. FSI's
benefits would not end with flood-damage reduction. Measures that manage
runoff from snowmelt and rainfall also improve water quality, reduce soil
erosion, conserve habitat, and create local recreation, tourism, and
economic development opportunities. They can even enhance the capacity of
soils and woodlands to capture carbon that would otherwise add to
greenhouse gases. To
prevent the adverse economic impact on farm communities of taking good
land out of production, the initative targets unproductive and flood-prone
land first. FSI would pay farmers who voluntarily place marginal,
unprofitable land into alternative uses such as wetlands, woodlands, or
grasslands. Farmers
could then focus time and resources on their most productive farmland.
This approach, known as multifunctional or conservation agriculture,
provides producers and the public with a better return on investment. Federal
farm programs have evolved into a complex patchwork of overlapping and
often conflicting objectives and requirements. This
alphabet soup of programs increases costs and administrative burdens, and
creates unnecessary confusion and paperwork for the producer. It also
makes it difficult to tackle problems like flooding which extend beyond
individual farm and ranch operations. FSI
would therefore test a watershed approach for cooperating farmers and
ranchers. It would also reduce complexity and increase flexibility through
"one-stop shopping," combining multiple programs into a single
plan for the producer. FSI
can serve as a model for the 2002 farm bill. FEMA Director James Lee Witt
and a bipartisan group of seven senators have recognized FSI's potential
to shape national agricultural, disaster, and conservation policy and have
lent their support. FSI
marries sound public policy with smart politics. By linking federal
payments to services that benefit the whole tax-paying public, FSI can
build a political constituency among suburban Americans who look to rural
areas for recreation, open space, and other amenities. FSI
can also transform a landscape that now helps feed the world into one that
also reduces flood damages, safeguards environmental quality, increases
recreation and tourism opportunities, and reduces the risk of climate
change. Allen
Olson, a former Republican governor of North Dakota, serves on the
International Flood Mitigation Initiative. Brad Crabtree is program
coordinator of the Consensus Council, which facilitated development of the
Farmland Stewardship Initiative. (c)
Copyright 2000 The Christian Science Monitor.
All rights reserved. Click
here to email this story to a friend: http://www.csmonitor.com/cgi-bin/send-story?2000/11/14/text/p9s1.txt
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