Houston Chronicle

Climate, equality priorities meet on black farms

- By Hiroko Tabuchi and Nadja Popovich

Sedrick Rowe was a running back for Georgia’s Fort Valley State University when he stumbled on an unexpected oasis: an organic farm on the grounds of the historical­ly Black school.

He now grows organic peanuts on two tiny plots in southwest Georgia, one of few African American farmers in a state that has lost more than 98 percent of its Black farmers over the past century.

“It weighs on my mind,” he said of the history of discrimina­tion, and violence, that drove so many of his predecesso­rs from their farms. “Growing our own food feels like the first step in getting more African American people back into farming.”

Two of the Biden administra­tion’s biggest priorities — addressing racial inequality and fighting climate change — are converging in the lives of farmers like Rowe.

The administra­tion has promised to make agricultur­e a cornerston­e of its ambitious climate agenda, looking to farmers to take up farming methods that could keep planet-warming carbon dioxide locked in the soil and out of the atmosphere. At the same time, President Joe Biden has pledged to tackle a legacy of discrimina­tion that has driven generation­s of Black Americans from their farms, with steps to improve Black and other minority farmers’ access to land, loans and other assistance, including “climate smart” production.

Farms run by African Americans make up less than 2 percent of all of the nation’s farms, down from 14 percent in 1920, because of decades of racial violence and unfair lending and land ownership policies.

Biden’s promises come on the heels of a year in which demands for racial justice have erupted across America, and a deadly pandemic has exposed stark disparitie­s in health. Biden is also seeking to reverse former President Donald Trump’s unraveling of environmen­tal regulation­s.

Land trusts and other local groups, many in the South, have long sought to bring more Black Americans back to farming. Rowe acquired 30 acres of farmland outside Albany, Georgia, after training at a land trust called New Communitie­s, one of a handful around the country that have sought to help more African American farmers make a living by cultivatin­g the land.

Many of those trusts have also put sustainabi­lity front and center of their work with local farmers, tapping into the legacy of Black scientists like George Washington Carver. His work on cover crops, which are planted to help nourish the soil, sought to reverse the damage wrought by single-crop cotton farming in the South, carried out on the backs of enslaved people.

In between planting and harvesting, Rowe is pursuing a doctorate in soil health, researchin­g ways to retain nutrients, cut down on pesticides and sequester more carbon in the soil.

Voices went unheard

“There’s so much knowledge out there, both what’s been modified from our African forbearers and what’s been created in the South,” said M. Jahi Chappell, who heads the Southeaste­rn African American Farmers Organic Network, a group of Black farmers engaging in ecological­ly-sustainabl­e agricultur­e. But for a long time, he said, “The voices of African American farmers haven’t really been heard.”

It is a troubled history to overcome.

For a brief time after emancipati­on, free Black communitie­s spread across the rural South, cultivatin­g all manner of agricultur­al goods: pecans, peanuts, pork. By 1920, there were 925,000 Black farmers, a fourth of whom were able to secure their own land.

The Jim Crow era brought a violent backlash from white landowners, and Black farmers and sharecropp­ers became the target of intimidati­on, bombings and other attacks. The discrimina­tion and racist violence spurred many Black farmers to flee North, often to cities, as part of the Great Migration.

Disparitie­s in access to loans and aid, and well-documented discrimina­tion at the Department of Agricultur­e, also drove Black farmers from their land. Even as the Civil Rights era started to bring Black Americans equal rights under the law, the rural exodus accelerate­d as white citizens’ councils in the South, wary of a surge in Black voters, explicitly targeted Black farmers for expulsion from their communitie­s.

“We’ve waited year after year after year. We’ve fought for changes,” said Shirley Sherrod, a former Georgia state director for rural developmen­t at the Department of Agricultur­e and a co-founder of New Communitie­s, the land trust. “Now this agency, and this country, really needs to figure out how to do the right thing by Black people.”

Today, fewer than 35,000 Black farmers remain, according to the most recent Census of Agricultur­e. (And some experts say the number is even lower.) Land owned by Black farmers has fallen by an estimated 90 percent from the early 20th-century peak, according to the Land Loss and Reparation­s Project, even as white-owned acreage shrank just 2 percent.

Plenty of economic harm

Black farmers who lost their landholdin­gs lost more than the property itself. They also lost the ability to use it for things like collateral for loans to, for instance, send children to college. An initial estimate of the overall economic harm to Black Americans from the historical loss of rural landholdin­gs, calculated by researcher­s including Thomas W. Mitchell, a professor of law at Texas A&M University, is $350 billion.

Black farmers continue to face discrimina­tion. As recently as 2015, Black farmers obtained only about $11 million in microloans designed for small farmers in 2015, or less than 0.2 percent of the roughly $5.7 billion in loans administer­ed or guaranteed by the Agricultur­e Department that year, according to researcher­s Nathan Rosenberg and Bryce Wilson Stucki.

The most recent Census of Agricultur­e, from 2017, found that Black-operated farms tend to be disproport­ionately smaller, and just 7 percent of those farms had incomes of more than $50,000, compared with 25 percent of all farms.

Agricultur­e chief criticized

Tom Vilsack, who if confirmed will head the Department of Agricultur­e and return to a position he held under former President Barack Obama, has drawn criticism from some groups for his record on addressing discrimina­tion at the agency. During his previous stint at the department, critics say, the agency promoted misleading data to depict a renaissanc­e in Black farming, even as Black farmers continued to struggle to get federal assistance or attention for civil rights claims.

“There’s a very systemic problem of civil rights at the USDA, and Tom Vilsack is not the one to take on the issue and fix it,” said Lawrence Lucas, a former official at the agency who heads the group Justice for Black Farmers. “He was there eight years and didn’t fix it. So what makes us think he will fix it now?”

In late December, Vilsack met with civil rights groups, committing to providing assistance and “a seat at the table” to Black farmers. And the Biden administra­tion has appointed Jewel H. Bronaugh, Virginia commission­er of agricultur­e and consumer services, as Vilsack’s deputy. If confirmed, Bronaugh would be the first woman of color to serve as USDA deputy secretary.

In an interview, Matt Herrick, the agency’s top spokespers­on, acknowledg­ed a legacy of discrimina­tion in federal farming policy.

“The reality is that there are inherent legacy barriers and practices that have prevented Black farmers, and other socially disadvanta­ged producers, from getting access to programs at the Department of Agricultur­e,” Herrick said. “We’re going to do everything we can — the secretary is committed to that — to removing those barriers.”

 ?? Matt Odom / New York Times ?? “Growing our own food feels like the first step in getting more African American people back into farming,” says Sedrick Rowe of Albany, Ga., noting racism that such farmers have faced.
Matt Odom / New York Times “Growing our own food feels like the first step in getting more African American people back into farming,” says Sedrick Rowe of Albany, Ga., noting racism that such farmers have faced.

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