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Rally
to Save the Department of Agriculture
State
House, April 1, 2008
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April
13, 2008 --
A
hugely misguided attempt to eliminate the Department of Agriculture
is the spark which has lit an angry fire which took over West State
street recently as an unlikely combination of farmers with goats,
pigs, tractors, and horses, CWA Local 1034 union members, labor
leaders and politicians joined forces at one big statehouse rally
to keep the “Garden” in the ‘Garden State’. One ‘Future Farmer of
America’ student held a piglet donning a t-shirt that read “Butcher
me, not the Department of Agriculture.” Another held a piglet adorned
with a shirt which read “Cut the Pork, not Agriculture.”
Eliminating
the Department of Agriculture (NJDA) does not make sense and Governor
Corzine should reverse course. The
agriculture and food complex
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is one of New Jersey's largest
industries, and at $82 billion dollars, follows only pharmaceuticals
and tourism in the economic benefits it brings to New Jersey. The
Agriculture department is dominantly federally funded, with only
$26.7 million of its $354 million budget coming from the state.
Closing the department, which efficiently and effectively serves
that industry, fails to save significant, if any, money.
Closing the doors of the NJDA
sends the terrible and exceptionally disrespectful message to the
farming community that they are an anachronism and it will drive
the development of cherished open space. New Jersey has invested
more than a billion dollars in farmland preservation over the past
25 years with farms now representing half of the remaining open
space in our state. Minimizing agriculture’s stature or importance
by eliminating the agency which the farming community relies on
will drive more “asset rich and income poor” farmers to ‘throw in
the trowel’ and sell off their ‘open spaces’ to developers. Keeping
farms operating as farms is critical to maintaining open space and
improving the quality of life for all NJ citizens. Less farms equals
more development equals lower home values and higher property taxes
for all.
Destroying
the Agriculture department will endanger an industry which contributes
several billion dollars a year to our state’s economy, only to save
a few hundred thousand dollars. Closing the NJDA imperils federal
funding and grants to numerous well-run programs at the agency.
And critically, it jeopardizes services that protect the public
health, such as food and meat inspection, and monitoring of public
health issues such as the avian “bird” flu.
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and pasting Agriculture’s successful ‘functions’ will be destructive,
not productive. The Department of Agriculture is a small 260-person
agency but it has wide ranging responsibilities including agricultural
advocacy, animal health inspections, plant disease control, soil conservation
and environmental programs, fertilizer testing, farmland preservation,
child and school nutrition programs and securing federal USDA grant
funding, protects New Jersey from invasive plants and pests, inspects
nurseries, manages programs that feed schoolchildren, distributes
surplus federal foods to needy citizens, conserves soil and water
resources, promotes the state's commercial fishing industry, oversees
the state's organic farms, and administers the complete program of
agriculture, food and natural resource education. These programs are
interdependent and many rely on the umbrella of an Agriculture entity
to be able to continue to receive federal or grant funds. Tacking
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sophisticated equine program
onto one in another agency which licenses cats and dogs will simply
not work. Agriculture staffers who work directly with the farm community
have built one-on-one relationships with the farmers and constituents
they serve. Other programs, like the hugely successful Jersey Fresh
program, have staff with twenty-year long first-name relationships
with produce buyers and supermarket retailers. Their efforts cannot
simply be easily duplicated in another agency. The Jersey Fresh
staff personally visit more than 700 supermarkets each summer to
market Jersey Fresh produce and provide produce managers with point
of sale materials to keep the program alive and they set up mutually
beneficial working relationships between farmers and chefs. Agriculture
staffers have also worked hard to develop the agri-tourism industry
which contributes at least $56 million directly to our state’s economy.
The public may indeed be clamoring
for ‘cuts’ but responsible leadership requires the Governor and
the Legislature to present a budget, including one with cuts, that
actually makes sense. The unwarranted closing of treasured state
parks, the elimination of good government agencies like Agriculture
and Commerce, and layoffs of state workers for the sake of a head
count fail to save real dollars. These cuts will, however, have
seriously harmful effects on the workers who will face unemployment,
on the middle class in our state that use the parks for pleasure,
on the farming community and the public generally. The unintended
(or intended) negative consequences of such politically motivated
cuts, will far outweigh any short term ‘savings’. This little piggy
should just stay home.
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