Imperial Valley Press

Billions in aid will go to farms, but farmers say it won’t keep them afloat

- BY MANUELA TOBIAS The Fresno Bee

Ryan Indart says he may have to kill off some of the sheep at his east Clovis ranch this fall. With restaurant­s shuttered amid the coronaviru­s pandemic, he has no market for his animals. When a new flock arrives in October, he won’t have enough space in his pasture if his current flock is still there.

Gov. Gavin Newsom announced Wednesday a $3.6 million program to help farms and food banks stay afloat, coupled with a philanthro­py pledge of $15 million. That promise came on the heels of a much larger federal aid package of $ 19 billion for farmers and ranchers across the country.

But, Indart says, even if he gets the maximum amount of aid, it will only keep his ranch afloat for about two months at best. And the money wouldn’t cover his current losses.

Farmers across the San Joaquin Valley echoed Indart’s concern.

While demand at California’s food banks has risen by 73 percent during the pandemic, demand for the products of farmers and ranchers has dropped by 50 percent. Because it’s too costly to harvest and transport the food, and much of it is perishable, California growers are destroying some crops, milk and livestock.

Fresno County Farm Bureau CEO Ryan Jacobsen expects the problem to grow as the region approaches harvest season and restaurant­s and ports remain closed or barely operating. A second round of federal funding is expected, but not yet guaranteed.

The aid will help food banks, but isn’t enough to help most farmers, according to industry profession­als who spoke with The Fresno Bee.

Steve Linkhart, director of Farm to Family at the California Associatio­n of Food Banks, said the federal government “turned on a fire hose and they don’t know what they’re pointing it at.”

USDA aid package to farmers

While Newsom’s announceme­nt of help for farmers came more recently, the federal government will provide more significan­t funds. Neither will suffice to keep farmers from filing for bankruptcy, according to industry insiders who spoke with The Bee.

The $19 billion federal aid package comes in two parts -- $16 billion in direct payments to farmers, capped at $ 125,000 per commodity with an overall limit of $250,000 per farm, and $3 billion for farmers to put together food boxes for needy families.

Farmers who spoke with The Bee complained about the cap, saying it’s not enough for a small rancher like Indart, let alone the many bigger operations that dot the San Joaquin Valley, state and nation.

Individual farms in the Fresno area have already seen losses upwards of millions of dollars, according to Jacobsen. “With the issues we’ve seen thus far, it’s truly not going to be enough for them to make a difference,” he said.

U.S. Rep. Jim Costa, a Democrat from Fresno, and 126 other members of the House urged President Trump to eliminate the caps for specialty crop, livestock and dairy producers, who have been hit hardest.

The deadline for applying for the grants was Friday. The winners will be announced the first week of May, and the money will arrive in farmers’ bank accounts mid-May.

Ruth Dahlquist-Willard, a small-farms adviser in Fresno and Tulare counties, said survival has been easier for producers of certain crops or farmers who participat­e in produce delivery programs. Smaller farms that do not have staff are facing additional strains to learn about and submit the complicate­d paperwork to receive federal aid. The challenge is even more significan­t for farmers for whom English is a second language, like many in the Valley’s Hmong, Latino and Punjabi communitie­s.

Good for food banks, not good enough for farmers

Of the federal aid package, $3 billion will go to paying farmers and ranchers to put together produce, meat and dairy to feed families.

Officials at the Central California Food Bank don’t know how much of the money their suppliers will be able to access. But they said they were excited about the fuller range of products the program may offer hungry families in the San Joaquin Valley.

“We’re looking at how this could offer a different mix of products, like pre-prepared meats, and those could be game-changers for our clients,” said Jaclyn Pack, food acquisitio­ns manager.

Linkhart, who is the farm liaison for the state food bank associatio­n, said the federal government has not establishe­d a mechanism for distributi­ng the money equitably. Like the aid payments, he worries that the attempt to give a little to everyone will make little impact.

“Whoever wins, it has to be mindful of the population, the poverty, which I don’t believe they have talked about,” he said. “If you ship an equal amount to every one of them, everybody’s going to be mad. For some, it’s not enough, for some, it’s way too much.”

Additional­ly, distributo­rs were not required to work with food banks, he said. Instead, it’s up to growers and distributo­rs to get the food out, and he hopes they will partner with food banks to do so.

But more help is on the way from the state.

Newsom’s $3.6 million food bank program will get fresh fruits and vegetables from farms to food banks throughout California, as

well as to secure additional refrigerat­ion units for food banks facing capacity issues. He said that money will increase the shipment of produce to food banks to around 21 million pounds this month.

Billionair­e Kat Taylor has pledged to secure an additional $15 million in philanthro­pic funds.

Thousands of farmers in the Fresno region will benefit from the program, according to Linkhart. He said the money should be enough to meet food bank demand.

The aid still won’t cut it for farmers, though, according to Cannon Michael, president of Bowles Farming Co. in Los Banos. While they get a pick-and-pack fee, as well as a 15 percent tax credit, the price that food banks pay for produce has never been enough to cover the full costs of harvest, he said.

“It will get some out of the field, but harvesting is very expensive. No way that offsets very much. But any bit can help,” he said.

 ?? CALMATTERS
PHOTO ANNE WERNIKOFF FOR ?? Dairy producers are facing a milk surplus as the result of coronaviru­s-related disruption­s to the food supply chain.
CALMATTERS PHOTO ANNE WERNIKOFF FOR Dairy producers are facing a milk surplus as the result of coronaviru­s-related disruption­s to the food supply chain.

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