The Taos News

Native ag leaders detail farm bill priorities at U.S. Senate hearing

- By ADAM GOLDSTEIN

WASHINGTON — A roundtable of Native American agricultur­al leaders at a recent U.S. Senate hearing lobbied for increased sovereignt­y and social justice in the coming farm bill by expanding tribes’ jurisdicti­on over U.S. Department of Agricultur­e programs.

It’s called “638” authority and refers to Public Law 93-638, which gives tribes the power to manage certain federal programs that benefit their communitie­s. The authority is administer­ed via contracts and compacts, and has been used to delegate control of healthcare and infrastruc­ture services to Native peoples in past years.

It has more recently been applied to Native nutrition and wildfire management through two USDA pilot programs, created in the 2018 farm bill.

Democratic Sen. Brian Schatz of Hawaii said that the 2018 farm bill was the first in which Native communitie­s “had a meaningful seat at the table.”

Schatz said that the point of the March 22 hearing was to generate a set of consolidat­ed, bipartisan recommenda­tions to be submitted to the Senate Committee on Agricultur­e, Nutrition and Forestry by the end of March.

“The 2018 farm bill broke barriers, but more work needs to be done,” Schatz said. “The next farm bill is another opportunit­y for us to collaborat­e and build on this incredible progress, and to further advance federal agricultur­al policy that includes Native priorities.”

The Indigenous leaders also talked about investing in on-reservatio­n USDA work training initiative­s and regional meat processing, along with increasing access to credit and federal farm programs.

The farm bill is a multiyear omnibus spending law that authorizes an array of agricultur­al and food programs, including federal crop insurance, food stamp benefits and farm resource conservati­on.

The roughly $500 billion bill is renewed close to every five years, and includes mandatory spending that must be in line with previous farm bills.

Food program said to be effective

Senate committee members and speakers touted the effectiven­ess of the USDA’s Self Determinat­ion Demonstrat­ion Project, a 638 pilot program that allowed tribes to substitute parts of USDA nutrition plans for Native-procured foods. The project was set up through the Food Distributi­on Program on Indian Reservatio­ns in the 2018 farm bill.

Participan­ts in the first round of the program included eight tribes across Alaska, Michigan, Oklahoma, Mississipp­i, Washington and Wisconsin. Another round of funding for tribal nutrition projects is expected to be announced this summer.

Mary Greene Trottier, president of the National Associatio­n of Food

Distributi­on Programs on Indian Reservatio­ns, said the Self Determinat­ion Demonstrat­ion Project has been a “success story,” especially amid high demand for food during the COVID-19 pandemic.

She added that the program created training opportunit­ies to teach Native seniors how to preserve their foods through “brutal” winters.

Madeline Soboleff Levy, general counsel for the Central Council of Tlingit & Haida Indian Tribes of Alaska, said that the program has helped the Tlingit and Haida tribes expand distributi­on of culturally significan­t foods, like Tlingit potatoes and seal.

Other panelists advocated for the expansion of 638 applicabil­ity to all USDA nutrition, forestry and food safety inspection programs.

Trenton Kissee, the director of agricultur­e and natural resources for Muscogee Creek Nation in Oklahoma, said the Intertriba­l Agricultur­e Council hopes to see an expansion of 638 contracts to all USDA programs and offices. He emphasized the prospects of expanding these contracts to Food Safety and Inspection Services, given a lack of regional access to food inspectors.

In response to a question from Democratic Sen. Ben Ray Luján of New Mexico, Vincent Cowboy, the chief operations officer for the Navajo Agricultur­al Products Industry in New Mexico, said USDA inspectors have limited experience with Native crops, like blue cornmeal and sumac berries.

Cowboy added that inspection fees and a lack of access to USDA employees have been a barrier for the Navajo tribe’s domestic sales over the past six years.

Ryan Lankford of Island Mountain Developmen­t Group in Montana said tribal colleges and the Federally-Recognized Tribes Extension Program represent great opportunit­ies for integratin­g USDA work training programs, especially for food inspection and meat processing.

Kissee added that establishi­ng a tribal self-governance office in the agency could help oversee a successful expansion of the 638 program, given a lack of clarity over what services can be contracted out.

“I think if there was a touch point there,” Kissee said, “that would go a long way in affecting that change.”

Limited access to credit, programs

Democratic Sen. Tina Smith of Minnesota asked Lankford about Native access to lines of credit and risk management being complicate­d by the Bureau of Indian Affairs, given that a lot of Native agricultur­al land is held in trust by the Department of the Interior.

Lankford said that, given banks will not make loans using tribal operating land or equipment as collateral, a robust crop insurance program with high baseline subsidies remains a priority for Native farmers, as some banks will account for their insurance plans as a collateral asset on loans.

Dustin Schmidt, a South Dakota farmer and member of the Rosebud Sioux Tribe, added that there is limited tribal enrollment in risk management programs due to the cost of participat­ing.

He added that the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c drought monitor, which many programs base their payouts upon, is a “huge problem” for the functional­ity of these programs.

“We’ve been in a severe drought for two years, and we haven’t had any according to our drought monitor,” Schmidt said. “In order to enroll into those programs, we’ve got to get that fixed.”

Kelsey Scott, director of programs at the Intertriba­l Agricultur­e Council, said that it is important to note that banks can collateral­ize tribal land and equipment, but will not do so.

“I think that we could really reflect on the fact that the historical under-service and lack of access to USDA programs has helped to perpetuate that void of wealth in many of these communitie­s,” Scott said.

She pointed to the “great job” that Native community developmen­t financial institutio­ns are doing to fill this gap, and the need to develop Native-specific risk management infrastruc­ture.

Lankford and other producers also spoke to the need to get Native producers on trade missions abroad.

“That’s key to being sovereign, is that we can expand and reach out for ourselves,” Lankford said.

 ?? COURTESY ANDREA CAMPANELLA, USDA AGRICULTUR­AL RESEARCH SERVICE ?? Raramuri Criollo cattle at the ARS Jornada Experiment­al Range in New Mexico.
COURTESY ANDREA CAMPANELLA, USDA AGRICULTUR­AL RESEARCH SERVICE Raramuri Criollo cattle at the ARS Jornada Experiment­al Range in New Mexico.

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