Roberto Le-Fort and Dolores Howard farm a diverse number of crops just north of San Luis Obispo in the town of Creston, California, including apples, peaches, four varieties of basil, carrots, tomatoes, a multitude of herbs and spices, as well as summer and winter squashes and gourds, just to name a few. Le-Fort is a grant recipient from CDFA’s State Water Efficiency and Enhancement Program (SWEEP), which supports producers to reduce their on-farm greenhouse gas emissions and improve water efficiency.
With SWEEP funding, the Le-Fort farm is implementing the use of soil moisture and temperature sensors to assist with the timing of irrigation and a solar array to offset the energy used by irrigation pumps. Although soil management practices were not funded by SWEEP, the farm uses cover-cropping, mulching, and compost to support soil health and water retention in soil as part of its overall climate-smart ag practices.
1. What does this drought mean to you and what are you doing to adapt to it?
This drought and temperature increase affect all of us, but especially the people who must work in these extreme conditions. We are progressing towards changes in daily practices, such as careful monitoring of irrigation leaks and irrigation timing, using water multiple times, intense mulching, and experimenting with new crops that can be successful in these conditions.
Over the last several years, installing a high-efficiency micro irrigation system, native plant hedgerows, a riparian buffer strip, shade hoop houses, and more use of cover crops and mulches have all helped us to increase soil health, attract beneficial insects and diversify crops.
2. What is your advice to others for reducing water use and improving efficiency?
These incentives get you doing the practices; by the time you’re done, it’s just the way you do things. Having your data all in one place makes planning easier. Apply compost and other organic materials. Use irrigation timers and other helpful technology. Explore new options for crops and learn from others (new strategies and wisdom of elders).
CDFA is proud to have invested more than $123 million in grant awards for 1,111 projects by producers to upgrade their water efficiency infrastructure and reduce their greenhouse gas emissions. Overall, this program has saved an estimated 47.1 billion gallons of water annually, enough to fill 70,000 Olympic-size swimming pools. Further, these projects have reduced the equivalent of 93,000 metric tons of CO2 annually, representing 20,300 cars taken off the road for one year.
Alyssa Louie, a senior environmental scientist at CDFA, has been with the agency for seven-and-a-half years and currently works on the Dairy Digester Development and Research Program (DDRDP) and the Alternative Manure Management Program (AMMP), both of which reduce greenhouse gas emissions in California, with the digester program also generating renewable energy.
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How did you get interested in working for CDFA on climate-smart ag?
I’m a large animal and herd health focused veterinarian by training, and early on was drawn to ways in which our profession could be engaged with animal, public, and ecological health, food safety and security, and at the juxtaposition of agriculture with humans and wildlife. Working for the State of California and being exposed to its numerous and ambitious climate actions and goals, I developed a strong interest in climate change and its impacts on animal agriculture – how climate smart practices could work to mitigate greenhouse gas emissions, as well as help agriculture adapt to challenges brought on by climate change and thrive sustainably in tandem with the community and as stewards of the environment. The opportunity to work with cattle (well, their manure at least) and climate smart agriculture was something I couldn’t pass up.
What about this work do you find fulfilling?
Advancing climate smart agriculture practices in California allows me to support animal agriculture and livestock health and work to combat climate change. To do so in a fairly direct manner by awarding grants and seeing the results in new equipment, composting areas, barns that have increased efficiency of manure handling, nutrient management, animal health and comfort, and water use on these operations a year or two later can be gratifying and unique. The kind words of appreciation for the program and our efforts from grant recipients and supporters of California’s diverse cattle industry, hearing about their proactive commitment to sustainability, and getting to see cows eating, romping, and lounging during project verification definitely doesn’t hurt. Did I mention I really like cows?
What do you hope CDFA’s methane emissions reduction programs can accomplish in the next year?
The Alternative Manure Management Program is constantly striving to evolve and improve to help achieve the methane reduction goals of the State, and to aid with California dairy and livestock operators. Along with its sister programs and efforts in methane reduction (Dairy Digester Research and Development Program, organic waste composting, and short-lived climate pollutants), we’re hoping to expand goals to better integrate nutrient management in addition to methane reduction, improve access to technical assistance for application and project implementation, see projects awarded in new regions, and support research validating existing methane reduction strategies and exploring new ones such as addressing enteric emissions.
Combined, CDFA has awarded 232 projects through the AMMP and DDRDP programs, resulting in a reduction of more than 22.1 million metric tons of greenhouse gas over the expected lifespan of the projects.
CDFA Secretary Karen Ross (center-left) joined USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) chief Terry Cosby (to Secretary’s left), NRCS State Conservationist for California Carlos Suarez (to Secretary’s right), and Denise Mullinax of the California Dairy Research Foundation for a news conference today at CDFA headquarters to discuss an investment of more than $100 million by the USDA for dairy greenhouse gas reduction projects other than dairy digesters that also improve water quality. The California dairy investment is part of a $2.8 billion commitment announced last week by the USDA.
This week, CDFA will highlight the many ways the agency is addressing the climate crisis and finding solutions together with California’s farmers and ranchers.
In the video below, Secretary Karen Ross discusses CDFA programs available to
Reduce greenhouse gas emissions, including potent methane
Increase carbon sequestration to improve soil health
Support water and irrigation energy efficiency
Establish pollinator habitats
Provide technical assistance for farmers and ranchers, including communities that have been historically underserved
Three Sisters Farm founder Alfred Melbourne examines an ear of corn on one of his four urban farms in West Sacramento in 2020. His produce is part of the “farm-to-school” movement making its way through the Sacramento region and California. Jason Pierce/Sacramento Bee file
Alfred Melbourne tromped through Three Sisters Gardens’ half-acre urban farm on a recent Friday morning dressed in black Ray-Ban sunglasses, cut-off shorts and a black tank top showing off his lean build and many tribal tattoos. Hummingbirds flitted through bean plants in West Sacramento’s Broderick neighborhood, next to rows of tomatoes and eggplants poking out from tangled vines. There were bell and serrano peppers, purple and Thai basil, two types of melons and patches of cilantro.
Some of that produce, planted and harvested by volunteers as young as 11, will end up on West Sacramento school lunch trays. It’s part of the “farm-to-school” movement making its way through the Sacramento region and California as a whole, one Melbourne wants to see grow. “We want the kids to see where their food comes from. We want them to actually connect with the land,” said Melbourne, a Hunkpapa Lakota tribe member. “Being native, we know that the land, the mother, has healing properties, so just making contact and seeing (how) a handful of seeds can turn into a whole field of food growing … we want them to be a part of that magic.”
As downtown Sacramento’s annual Farm-to-Fork Festival draws approximately 150,000 visitors throughout September, the city’s children finally seem to be inching toward healthier meals at school. The days of Sysco chicken patties and freezer-burned raw broccoli could slowly be on the way out thanks to a new state-of-the art central kitchen in Sacramento, shifting state politics and growing relationships with local farmers.
Longtime farm-to-school proponents received a boost from California’s first couple, particularly First Partner Jennifer Siebel Newsom, who’s made the movement one of her priority issues. After years of slow progress, millions of dollars are flowing toward locally sourced school lunches, helping offset some of the costs associated with higher-quality food.
The 2022-23 state budget included $60 million in farm-to-school grants, up from $8.5 million in the inaugural program two years ago and well beyond the $12 million the USDA doled out nationwide last year. Gov. Gavin Newsom also approved $600 million in school kitchen upgrades, visible in the new combination ovens coming to every campus in the Sacramento City Unified School District.
“I think we have an opportunity to heal our state and our country through our emphasis on farm-to-school,” Siebel Newsom said. “There’s only an upside if we do this right.” BIG INVESTMENTS The United States was just starting to push its way out of the Great Recession in November 2012 when Sacramento voters overwhelmingly approved a $414 million bond package centered on the city’s schools.
Measure R, as the smaller of the bond package’s two elements was known, included $68 million to fix up playgrounds, improve school safety and fund construction of a central kitchen to feed the district’s children.
Ten years later, Sacramento City Unified has transformed a former dumping ground for unneeded desks and books into a 50,000-square foot industrial kitchen in Tahoe Park. It has another 50,000 square feet of warehouse storage, plus parking and gas for a fleet of delivery trucks.
The Central Kitchen produced daily meals for 4,000 students this summer. That’s a gargantuan feat in its own right, but the end goal is much larger: feeding all 43,000 Sacramento City Unified students freshly prepared free meals from The Central Kitchen in the next three to five years.
That means giant sous-vide cookers preparing tender chicken breasts and thighs to be sliced for soups, salads and enchiladas. Chef Tom Lucero, formerly the corporate executive chef over Sienna Restaurant and Land Ocean American Grill, will eventually oversee more than 30 cooks processing produce and baking bread, muffins and pizza dough.
A roving food truck will also make use of those fresh ingredients, serving junior high students breakfast 45 minutes before class begins. The district wants to make school meals appealing enough — cool enough, really — that kids will seek them out, said Sacramento City Unified Executive Director of Nutrition Services Diana Flores.
“A lot of students do not even participate in school meals because they don’t either like the taste, they don’t like the stigma associated with eating school meals or they’re frankly just too busy socializing at lunchtime,” Flores said. “We want to have a meal that’s so great that we’ll bring them in to eat, so they do better in the classroom.”
The Central Kitchen now sources from more than 45 area growers, purchasing directly when possible to cut out distributors’ costs. It buys out Rancho Cordova-based Soil Born Farms’ entire lettuce crop, purchases Perry & Sons watermelons from Manteca and gets tomatoes, squash and cucumbers from Root 64’s one-acre farm just down the street in Tahoe Park.
Rice comes from SunWest Foods in Yuba City, while Sierra Sun Fruit Marketing supplies peaches from outside Fresno and Miller Citrus Grove hooks the district up with Penryn mandarins.
Statewide farm-to-school efforts began building since the mid-2000s, but typically lacked funding, district Assistant Director of Nutrition Services Kelsey Nederveld said. Sacramento voters helped remedy that with Measure R in 2012, and the state has prioritized it as of late.
New this year as well: free breakfast and lunch for all California public school students regardless of family income, thanks to a budget bill Newsom signed into law in July 2021.
A bounty of studies indicate students’ diets are a major factor in their academic performance. Nourish the stomach, nourish the mind, Siebel Newsom said — with the climate-friendly appeal of local sourcing a cherry on top.
“We have this huge opportunity in front of us to benefit not just children’s health and well-being and academic prowess, but also climate change by reducing transportation, reducing emissions through a circular economy,” Siebel Newsom said.
GROWN BY KIDS, EATEN BY KIDS
Melbourne’s story has become famous in local farm-to-fork circles. After serving 18 years in prison, he turned to gardening as a form of therapy. With support from the West Sacramento Urban Farm program, he eventually founded the nonprofit Three Sisters Gardens on the corner of 5th and C streets in 2018.
Three Sisters has since expanded to four urban farms, including one across the street from Elkhorn Village Elementary School, all with a holistic approach meant to benefit the earth and community. Melbourne eventually wants 50 farms in West Sacramento, part of a “land back” approach he says Native Americans need to flourish.
“We want to give them a sustainable food system in our own community using the land that we have available to us,” Melbourne said.
Three Sisters donates 40% of what it grows to local food banks or community members, and sells much of the rest at area farmers markets. The Natomas Unified School District was its only wholesale client up until the beginning of summer.
But Natomas isn’t as close as Melbourne would like, despite being just a 15-minute drive from the main farm. He’s ended that contract and beginning another one with Washington School District in West Sacramento, hoping to keep his produce as close to his historically-underserved community as possible.
“We’re working in the communities where the help is needed the most,” Melbourne said. “We’re trying to show people how to grow their own food at the same time as we’re giving food to the community … showing them how to fish as opposed to just giving them a fish.”
Eight California horses have tested positive for West Nile Virus in recent weeks, as far north as Tehama County and as far south as Kern County. Two of the horses are deceased, six were unvaccinated, and the vaccination status of the other two is unknown.
Horse owners are encouraged to have their animals vaccinated to make sure they are maximizing protection against the disease. And once vaccinations occur, horse owners should be checking regularly with their veterinarians to make sure they stay current.
Californians can also do their part to prevent the disease by managing mosquitoes that carry West Nile Virus. Here are some tips:
Draining unnecessary standing water found in wheelbarrows, tires, etc.
Cleaning water containers at least weekly (i.e., bird baths, plant saucers)
Scheduling pasture irrigation to minimize standing water
Keeping swimming pools optimally chlorinated and draining water from pool covers
Stocking of water tanks with fish that consume mosquito larvae (Contact local mosquito control for assistance) or use mosquito “dunk” available at hardware stores.
It’s important to remember that mosquitoes become infected with the virus when they feed on infected birds. Mosquitoes then spread the virus to horses. Horses are a dead-end host and do not spread the virus to other horses or humans. For more information on West Nile Virus, please visit this link.
According to the 2017 Census of Agriculture, California has a total of 14,597 Hispanic producers. CDFA recognizes that diversity in agriculture is a critical strength and is committed to working with underserved farmers, ranchers, and farmworkers in meeting the challenges ahead to help ensure a more equitable and prosperous future. With that in mind, Secretary Karen Ross spoke with Carmen Carrasco of the agency’s Farmer Equity Program and discussed key programs at CDFA.
https://youtu.be/jZ_Gxqz6Si0
Video in Spanish with Carmen Carrasco and Artemio Armenta
The USDA is investing up to $2.8 billion in 70 projects under the first pool of the Partnerships for Climate-Smart Commodities funding opportunity, with projects from the second funding pool to be announced later this year. Ultimately, USDA’s anticipated investment will triple to more than $3 billion to help create market opportunities for American commodities using climate-smart production practices.
These initial projects will expand markets for climate-smart commodities, leverage the greenhouse gas benefits of climate-smart commodity production, and provide direct, meaningful benefits to agriculture, including small and underserved producers. Applicants submitted more than 450 project proposals in this first funding pool, and the strength of the projects led USDA to increase its investment in this opportunity from the initial $1 billion that Secretary Tom Vilsack announced earlier this year.
California agricultural interests are partnering in projects drawing nearly $800 million of this investment, for transitioning to climate-smart practices or expanding them. Commodities that are benefitting include fruits, vegetables, rice, dairy, beef, nuts and cotton. The complete California funding package may be viewed here: https://www.usda.gov/climate-solutions/climate-smart-commodities/projects
CDFA Secretary Karen Ross: “We are grateful to have a federal partner in the USDA that is focused on the fundamental challenge of sustainability, not just of agriculture but life itself on Earth. These investments are much needed and greatly appreciated, and they will strongly support our innovative efforts in California to address the climate crisis. It is gratifying to see the broad scope of projects being funded across the nation, and the emphasis on tribes and historically-underserved farmers and ranchers. I wish to add that I am very proud of the work we have done so far to lead on climate smart food and agricultural systems.”
CDFA’s State Organic Program (SOP) contracts with 54 county agricultural commissioner’s offices to conduct enforcement activities on behalf of CDFA. The enforcement activities include conducting inspections and collecting organic samples for pesticide testing.
Pictured are recent SOP organic sampling trainings of county staff at (clockwise from top right) a basil farm in San Mateo County, an apple ranch in Tuolumne County and a strawberry farm in Santa Clara County. Visit the California State Organic Program webpage to learn more about how CDFA protects the organic label through enforcement, education and outreach.
In 2021, California’s farms and ranches received $51.1 billion for their output. This represents a 3.6 percent increase compared to the previous year, according to calculations by the USDA’s National Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS), in partnership with CDFA.
California’s agricultural abundance includes more than 400 commodities. Over a third of the country’s vegetables and three-quarters of the country’s fruits and nuts are grown in California. California’s top 10 valued commodities for the 2021 crop year are:
Dairy Products, Milk — $7.57 billion
Grapes — $5.23 billion
Almonds — $5.03 billion
Cattle and Calves — $3.11 billion
Strawberries — $3.02 billion
Pistachios — $2.91 billion
Lettuce — $2.03 billion
Tomatoes — $1.18 billion
Walnuts — $1.02 billion
Rice — $1 billion
Note: California’s top 10 agricultural commodities list is updated every year in September. A comprehensive report of agricultural statistics for the 2021 crop year, including agricultural exports and organic sales, will be available in early 2023 when the California Agricultural Statistics Review is published.