Groups call for farm bill farm and food business technical assistance
USDA farm bill farm and food business technical assistance
The groups sent a letter to leadership of the House and Senate Agriculture Committees, calling for dedicated funding for business technical assistance and farm viability in the upcoming farm bill.
The groups include American Farmland Trust (AFT), the Agricultural Viability Alliance (AVA) and a national coalition of agricultural organizations, service providers, non-profits, businesses, lending institutions and government entities.
The organizations include Cornell Cooperative Extension Capital Area Agricultural and Horticultural Program, Fair Food Network, Berkshire Agricultural Ventures, Minnesota Farmers’ Market Association, National Sustainable Agriculture Coalition, Sustainable Farming Association and the University of New Hampshire Cooperative Extension.
Congress begins work on a new Farm Bill at a time when the agricultural economy and food system face a number of urgent, overlapping challenges, Tim Fink, AFT’s policy director, said in a news release. “From historic inequities and systemic barriers for underserved producers, to rising input costs and vanishing margins, to generational transfer of farmland – business technical assistance has proven an effective and cost-efficient way of addressing these challenges and building capacity on the ground,” Fink said in the release.
The call for dedicated Farm Bill funding builds on work that AFT, in partnership with AVA, began in 2021 requesting USDA to set aside a portion of Coronavirus relief funding for one-to-one business technical assistance. More than 110 organizations joined AFT and AVA in urging USDA to prioritize this type of technical assistance to small and mid-sized farm and food businesses.
“The entrepreneurs we serve face barriers to becoming financially viable, so we support them to develop financial management skills, access capital and land, and build resilient businesses,” Benneth Phelps, AVA’s executive director, said in the release. “We do this by providing information, training, skill-building, and capital, within a carefully crafted ecosystem of support, and funding for this work in the Farm Bill is critical.”
Business technical assistance (BTA) covers a wide range of services offered to farm and food businesses by nonprofit organizations, state agencies, private consultants, and Extension services. Customized to meet the unique needs of individual businesses, the services include coaching, skill development, and planning related to financial and labor management, marketing and business strategies, farm transfer and succession, and access to land and capital. BTA has proven effective at creating jobs and supporting local economies. This work is also critical to addressing historic and systemic barriers facing farmers and food entrepreneurs of color, who have been structurally denied opportunities to access capital, land, technical support, USDA programs, and broader professional advancement for generations, according to the release.