Planting Seeds - Food & Farming News from CDFA

Recognizing Cesar Chavez Day

March 31st is a state holiday to remember the commitment of Cesar Chavez to respect and honor the work of farmworkers and their contribution to California agriculture. Today and every day, we thank farmworkers for all they do to bring food to our tables. Since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, CDFA has played a role supporting our #essentialfarmworkers through food access, PPE distribution, and support in cases of quarantine due to COVID.

Cesar Chavez Day Flier

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California Association of Food Banks Partners with Certified Farmers’ Market Producers to Provide Fresh Produce to Seniors — Bid Process Opens Today

The California Association of Food Banks (CAFB) is now accepting bids from farmers and third parties to provide food boxes to low-income senior citizens as part of the Senior Farmers’ Market Nutrition Program (SFMNP).

The CAFB request for proposals is available here. Bids will be accepted until April 30, 2021.

Traditionally, the SFMNP has provided vouchers to eligible senior citizens to redeem for fresh produce at Certified Farmers’ Markets. With the arrival of COVID-19, the program was modified to create a partnership between the CAFB and local producers, allowing for the bulk purchase of fresh and nutritious food from farmers, and providing for its distribution to eligible seniors through food box deliveries.

This program is supported through the joint efforts of the USDA, the California Department of Food and Agriculture and the California Department of Social Services.

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Son of immigrants urges peers to embrace changing Ag opportunities – from Western Farm Press

Photo of Miguel Gomez
Miguel Gomez is a full-time student at California State University, Monterey Bay while also working in sales and operations for Taylor Farms.

By Tim Hearden

The son of immigrants, Miguel Gomez knows a thing or two about seizing the future.

After growing up watching his father work 60 hours a week as a leafy greens foreman in California’s Salinas Valley while attending night school at a local community college, Gomez is taking a similar path.

He works full-time in sales and operations for vegetable processor Taylor Farms while taking 16 units at California State University, Monterey Bay in pursuit of a bachelor’s degree in agricultural plant and soil sciences.

With his experience, and with a goal of working toward a doctorate in plant pathology, Gomez could be a face of the next generation of agricultural workers – those with humble backgrounds as traditional laborers who are gaining the knowledge and skills necessary to participate in the budding technology revolution.

Gomez urges his peers to be self-motivated, learn good communication and “people” skills and learn how networking works.

“Don’t fear change,” he said March 18 during a virtual conference. “Always raise your hand and say, ‘Here, I’ll do that.’ Above that, you have to be willing to learn.

“You don’t have to get it right” in the beginning, he told about 400 high school students watching on video. “You just have to get it going.”

Gomez made his remarks as a featured speaker during an evening online reception to open the two-day Salinas Valley Ag-Tech Summit (earlier this month), which focused on the importance of education for tomorrow’s workforce.

His talk inspired California Food and Agriculture Secretary Karen Ross, who was seen smiling on video as Gomez spoke.

“It is such an exciting future,” Ross told the student. “I can tell by the way you talk that you already know that.”

Read more on Western Farm Press web site

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Coming in April and May – virtual regional workshops on state conservation goals

The California Natural Resources Agency has announced upcoming dates for regional workshops to engage the public on Governor Newsom’s Executive Order on Nature-Based Solutions (N-82-20).  

Registration and participant information will be shared publicly and available on the Nature-Based Solutions webpage in early April.

Save the Date Flier

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Did You Know? CDFA Bee Safe Program protects essential hives

Bees Safe Infographic

Read the report here

Learn more about pollinator protection here

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CDFA’s Alternative Manure Management Program Reaches Milestone of Completed Projects

Cows at a dairy

CDFA’s Alternative Manure Management Program (AMMP) provides financial assistance for the implementation of non-digester manure management practices on California dairy and livestock operations, which will result in reduced emissions of methane, a greenhouse gas (GHG) 25 times more potent than carbon dioxide in its potential to warm the atmosphere.

Eligible practices for funding through AMMP include: pasture-based management; alternative manure treatment and storage (such as compost bedded pack barns); and solid separation or conversion from flush to scrape in conjunction with some form of drying or composting of collected manure.

In March 2021, all 35 projects funded by the AMMP in the 2018 round have been completed. Collectively, these projects will reduce GHG emissions by 296,060 metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalents (MTCO2e) over the project life of 5 years. Some of the 2018 AMMP recipients include Art Silva Dairy, Den-K Holsteins, Frank Coelho & Sons Dairy, and SBS Ag Dairy.

The AMMP is funded through the California Climate Investments and was first launched in 2017. To date, the program has had four rounds of funding, in 2017, 2018, 2019 and 2020. For all four rounds, 114 incentive projects have been funded with a projected GHG emission reduction of 1.1 million MTCO2e over 5 years. Sixty-one projects funded in 2019 and 2020 are expected to be completed in 2021 and 2022, respectively. Eighteen projects funded in 2017 were completed by the summer of 2020.

“I am very pleased that we have reached this milestone in the AMMP program,” said CDFA secretary Karen Ross. “California dairy farmers are achieving methane reductions every day, having changed their manure management practices in significant ways. These changes will help our dairy families meet their sustainability goals well into the future.”

Lists of program-level and project-level progress of projects funded through the AMMP are available on the AMMP webpage: https://www.cdfa.ca.gov/oefi/AMMP/.

Interested stakeholders and members of the public may sign up to receive AMMP-related updates through the mailing list of the CDFA’s Office of Environmental Farming and Innovation (OEFI), home to CDFA’s numerous Climate Smart Agriculture Incentives Programs in addition to AMMP, such as the Dairy Digester Research and Development Program (DDRDP), State Water Efficiency and Enhancement Program (SWEEP) and the Healthy Soils Program (HSP). 

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Finding a balance between demand and supply to get to groundwater sustainability – from the Public Policy Institute of California (PPIC)

By Lori Pottinger

The San Joaquin Valley has begun to grapple with implementing the Sustainable Groundwater Management Act (SGMA). Figuring out the math of balancing water supply and demand in ways that cause the least economic harm to farmers and local economies is challenging, and difficult tradeoffs are inevitable. We talked with Emmy Cattani, a fifth-generation farmer from Kern County, about some options.

PPIC: Talk about ways that agriculture can reduce land fallowing in implementing SGMA.

EMMY CATTANI: More supply is critical. The biggest opportunity is to figure out how to capture water in big flood events, which are expected to become more common with climate change. More extreme storms can bring a deluge of water in a short time, and currently we don’t have the infrastructure to capture and store it for later use. Solving this will be expensive. Partnerships between farmers and cities is a good solution for sharing the costs of the infrastructure needed to move floodwaters into groundwater storage.

Related to that, we need to explore opportunities to increase groundwater banking (recharge projects that track how much water is stored underground by different parties). Expanding groundwater banking will enable us to use surface water storage more strategically, especially in light of climate change bringing more intense rain storms and less snow.  Partnering with urban water agencies can increase the supply of banked water for the agricultural sector. There are many examples of this in Kern County, where urban partners lease storage capacity in agricultural water basins, paying for that storage capacity by leaving water in the basin.

PPIC: What are the best ways to increase flexibility in water management to help agriculture adapt to SGMA?

EC: The bottom line is we must find ways to incentivize farmers with the lowest cost of fallowing and facilitate the transfer of their water to places that can use it most productively. That involves a bit of a shift in mindset for most water districts. Many districts control surface water rights and focus mostly on maximizing supply inside their district. We need them to broaden their thinking so that the goal is to make the best use of available water in whatever way makes sense for local growers, local businesses, and their communities. I think that involves a few things. First, allowing and facilitating trading between willing buyers and sellers within a district could help water move from the least-productive to the most productive lands. And districts could partner with each other. Many growers farm in multiple districts, and district boundaries are fairly arbitrary. Allowing growers to move water across these boundaries could enable growers to use their own water on their most productive ground.

At a bigger scale, we could expand district-to-district trading. While this has been going on for decades, it only accounts for a small percent of water used in California. To significantly bring the cost of SGMA down, we’ll need more trading between districts and across basins. To make more water available for these trades, districts must involve their growers, giving them the option to accept incentives in exchange for fallowing their least-productive land. And a final opportunity is for districts to provide incentives to growers who want to convert land to less water-intensive uses, such as habitat and solar. Historically, districts have provided no incentives to growers who convert lands to solar—they just lose their water rights.  We need to compensate growers for reducing water use on converted lands.

PPIC: What is needed to make the best use of lands that come out of production?

EC: First, if farmers take a “go it alone” approach, fallowing could happen haphazardly and even bring negative consequences. One promising solution is to bring renewable energy development to the San Joaquin Valley. With a federal infrastructure bill on the horizon, there’s an opportunity to support increased transmission capacity. Solar will utilize the most land, but we can also expand renewable uses of agricultural and dairy biomass. Developing renewable energy on retired farmland would contribute to the economy and create jobs.

Second, we need to have water districts and groundwater sustainability agencies weigh in on planning for where lands could be retired. A lot of groups are weighing in on things like fallowing land for habitat. But people can get protective about their property rights, and it’s jarring to see your farm on someone else’s map of lands that should be fallowed, so this has to be thoughtful process. Water districts are locally run and trusted entities. They could use revenue from growers’ property assessments or groundwater pumping fees to buy land to take out of production. They have the administrative staff and internal skills to manage the conversion of fallowed lands to recharge basins, or to work with land trusts or public programs for converting it to habitat or other uses. Most growers don’t have the resources do this themselves, and I think having districts claim that role is really important for a smooth transition.

Link to interview on PPIC web site

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Ag Day 2021 – Secretary Ross chats with young Ag leaders about future prospects and resilience

Welcome to Ag Day 2021! California’s theme this year is Celebrating Resilience.

In this video, CDFA Secretary Karen Ross chats with five young Ag leaders about resilience as well as exciting future prospects in agriculture.

We are observing Ag Day virtually this year and inviting you to participate by posting content on social media platforms with the following hashtags: #AgDay21 #CaAgDay2021 #CelebratingResilience

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Welcome to Ag Day 2021!

Please join us today with social media posts using the hashtags below.

Ag Day 2021

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President Biden, USDA Secretary Vilsack recognize March 23 as National Agriculture Day 2021

BY THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
A PROCLAMATION  

On National Agriculture Day, we recognize the unique and irreplaceable value that farmers, ranchers, foresters, farmworkers, and other agricultural stewards have contributed to our Nation’s past and present. America’s agriculture sector safeguards our Nation’s lands through sustainable management; ensures the health and safety of animals, plants, and people; provides a safe and abundant food supply; and facilitates opportunities for prosperity and economic development in rural America.  

Over the last year, workers and other leaders across the agriculture sector have stepped up to ensure a stable food supply in the face of incredible challenges prompted by the COVID-19 pandemic. Farmworkers, who have always been vital to our food system, continued to grow, harvest, and package food, often at great personal risk. Local farmers helped to meet their communities’ needs by selling food directly to consumers. Small meat processors increased their capacity as demand for their services skyrocketed. Restaurants found creative ways to bring food to members of their communities. Grocers and grocery workers also navigated new models, such as curbside pickup and online sales.  

These collective efforts helped get food to the millions of adults and children in America experiencing nutrition insecurity. Programs such as the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program; the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children; school meals; and others focused on eliminating nutrition insecurity play an integral role in making sure that every family has enough food on the table.  

As we overcome the pandemic and build back better, we will advance an agriculture sector that works for everyone. When I took office, I made a commitment alongside Vice President Kamala Harris to put racial equity at the forefront of our Administration’s priorities. For generations, Black, Indigenous, and other farmers of color have contributed to sustaining this Nation. They fed their communities, gave the country new food products, and nourished communities with rich food traditions. Yet for generations they have faced the harmful effects of systemic racism. On this National Agriculture Day, I remain determined to address racial inequity and create an equitable space for all to participate in the great American enterprise of agriculture.  

I also made a commitment to tackle the climate crisis. Farmers, ranchers, and foresters play a critical role in combating climate change. From sequestering carbon in the soil to producing renewable energy on farms, we will continue to innovate and create new revenue streams for farmers and ranchers while building a resilient agriculture sector.  

NOW, THEREFORE, I, JOSEPH R. BIDEN JR., President of the United States of America, by virtue of the authority vested in me by the Constitution and the laws of the United States, do hereby proclaim March 23, 2021, as National Agriculture Day. I call upon all Americans to join me in recognizing and reaffirming our commitment to and appreciation for our country’s farmers, ranchers, foresters, farmworkers, and those who work in the agriculture sector across the Nation.  

IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand this twenty-second day of March, in the year of our Lord two thousand twenty-one, and of the Independence of the United States of America the two hundred and forty-fifth.
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