The Taos News

Rebuilding an agricultur­al rural economy

NIFA awards grant to UNM-Taos new workforce, training program

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Framed by a dearth of regional large-scale agricultur­e in Northern New Mexico, and supported by the Taos Valley’s foundation in the centuries-old practice of farming using acequias (manmade communal water courses diverted from natural tributarie­s), UNMTaos and UNM-Taos HIVE (Hub of Internet-Based Vocations and Education) are partnering with Not Forgotten Outreach (NFO) and the Taos County Economic Developmen­t Corporatio­n (TCEDC) to create the RARE workforce training certificat­e program, which will support the local food and smallscale farming economy in Taos.

“The recent developmen­t of the HIVE program and its focus on economic developmen­t, as well as the economic focus of NIFA, seemed to provide a natural fit to include other topics of study into the program,” stated Louis Moya, J.D. UNM-Taos director of developmen­t. “And we refined the more general concept of including agricultur­al curriculum and are including economic/business skills in the program. It, then, was natural to consider the necessity of including cultural elements.”

The RARE program will train two separate cohorts of 15 student participan­ts (30 total prospectiv­e farmers, ranchers and food producers, recruited from underserve­d and veteran population­s) through an immersive curriculum of farming practices, safe and healthy food production, and the small business/entreprene­urial skills required to create and enhance local industry, and the next generation of small-scale sustainabl­e farmers, ranchers and food producers in Northern New Mexico.

The part-time curriculum is 18 total credit-hours offered over 12 months (Spring, Summer and Fall semesters beginning July 1, 2021, through June 30, 2024) that provides industry-recognized stackable certificat­ions; a focus in traditiona­l, sustainabl­e and droughtcon­dition farming methods; as well as entreprene­urial training from small business profession­als and innovation experts at UNMTaos HIVE, and commercial and industrial food producers at the TCEDC’s commercial kitchen with opportunit­ies for internship and apprentice­ship at local farm sites or food-based businesses. Participan­ts will receive a technical certificat­ion allowing for entry into a modern, rural agrarian economy through employment or entreprene­urship.

“Community colleges provide significan­t workforce developmen­t nationwide,” said NIFA director Dr. Carrie Castille. “These awards will help students earn a two-year degree or an industry-accepted credential that will create better job opportunit­ies and fuel the talent pipeline needed in the food and agricultur­al sector.”

Other organizati­ons involved in the project are Taos Land Trust, Alianza-Agricultur­a, Taos Valley Acequia Associatio­n, Taos Entreprene­urial Network and Taos Community Foundation. UNMTaos program co-coordinato­rs are Moya, and Profession­al Skills and Community Engagement Dept. Chair Victoria Santisteva­n Gonzales.

“This program is a dream come true for me,” Santisteva­n Gonzales said. “As a product of a farming and ranching family, keeping our land-standing tradition of working our lands and self-sustainabi­lity is important, and we are responsibl­e for passing this knowledge on.”

To learn more about NIFA’s impact on agricultur­al science (searchable by state or keyword), visit nifa.usda.gov/impacts. For more informatio­n about UNMTaos, visit taos.unm.edu.

 ?? RETRIEVED FROM THE LIBRARY OF CONGRESS ?? Chamisal, New Mexico, farmers tend to vegetables in this July 1940. Lee Russell photograph.
RETRIEVED FROM THE LIBRARY OF CONGRESS Chamisal, New Mexico, farmers tend to vegetables in this July 1940. Lee Russell photograph.
 ?? RETRIEVED FROM THE LIBRARY OF CONGRESS ?? Collier, John, Jr., photograph­er. Los Córdovasar­ea sheep rancher Blas Chavez, Feb. 1943.
RETRIEVED FROM THE LIBRARY OF CONGRESS Collier, John, Jr., photograph­er. Los Córdovasar­ea sheep rancher Blas Chavez, Feb. 1943.

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