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Obama now plans to fix rural America

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Faster horses

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LLSBORO, Mo. (AP) -- Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack said Thursday that crop subsidies aren't going to be enough to help revitalize rural economies and he expects the federal government to do to more to help small town America.

Vilsack laid out the Obama Administration's plans at a summit on the rural economy, saying he aims to create jobs in rural areas by pushing for new biofuels plants, installing high speed Internet connections and bolstering tourism.

"It's a chance for us to give America a wake-up call about the challenges faced by rural America," he said.

The problems facing small town America have festered for decades, as the average age of farmers has risen, rural populations have fallen and jobs have become more scarce. But panelists at the summit said there is now a window of opportunity to turn things around.

The Obama administration supports boosting the required biofuels production from 15 billion gallons a year to 36 billion gallons by 2022, a change Vilsack said could create 807,000 new jobs in rural communities, including work building and operating the plants. At the same time, Vilsack said high speed Internet is breaking down the geographic barriers that often kept high paying jobs out of small towns.

Don Larson, a county commissioner from Brookings County in South Dakota, said the changes are already slowing population losses in his state. If given room to grow, new industries could help staunch the flow of young residents moving to big cities.

"I'm certain we'll see repopulation of our rural communities, and it's going to be technology based," Larson said.

Thursday's summit, held at a community college in Hillsboro, Mo., about 40 miles south of St. Louis, was the capstone of Vilsack's 22-state tour of rural communities. He said he heard consistent complaints in towns from Alaska to Missouri. While big farmers were making a good living -- supported in part by generous crop subsidies -- smaller growers were barely hanging on, he said.

Vilsack said about half of all farmers work more than 200 days a year on non-farm jobs.

"The way that they basically keep their head above water is the spouse works, or the farmer works. So there is now a need for a strong rural economy that is a companion -- that overlays -- production agriculture," Vilsack said in an interview. "If folks in town do well, creating opportunity, then farmers can stay on their land"

The USDA plans to build on the $28 billion it has spent on rural infrastructure projects as part of the 2009 stimulus act, he said. The agency announced Thursday it would seek applicants for $45.1 million in loans for small businesses. It also announced $22.5 million in grants will be given to people in 45 states for business development.

James Young, mayor of Philadelphia, Miss., said simple investments can change the future of small communities.

Young tries to recruit new employers to his 8,000-person town, and he said having high speed Internet access is a must in landing jobs. Without better infrastructure, rural youngsters will continue to leave for bigger cities, he said.

"The thought process is to survive," Young said. "But every now and then, we need a little help."

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He better buy some soy ink for all the worthless money he's printing. Did he ever think a few of us out in the sticks would rather be poor than have a 1000 neighbors.
 
June 3, 2010 ; Phone: 406-252-2516; e-mail: [email protected]



Group Meets to Discuss Future of Rural America





Billings, Mont. – R-CALF USA spent a week talking with its members. No flashy displays, no corporate rhetoric, just a long conversation with the heart of R-CALF USA – its cattle farmer and rancher members. Through a serious of meetings in Nebraska, R-CALF USA Nebraska Chair Louie Day, CEO Bill Bullard and Membership Services Coordinator Laurel Masterson had an ongoing dialog with R-CALF USA members throughout < st1:place w:st="on">Nebraska.



"During our four-day tour, we had two meetings in each location. The first meeting was just for R-CALF USA members, and the second meeting was open to everyone." Masterson explained. The focus of the member-only meeting was to learn what R-CALF USA members wanted their community to look like 25 years from today, and what needs to be done right now to get us there. During the public meeting, Bullard gave an extremely informative presentation on evidence of market failures in the U.S. cattle industry.



During the membership meeting, members committed to join with Day to promote R-CALF USA in Nebraska. Because of these meetings, R-CALF USA was able to strengthen the grassroots structure of R-CALF USA, ensuring the success of R-CALF USA in Nebraska. According to Day, "the meetings were a great success. I think the good Lord brought the right people to each of the meetings, and R-CALF will be strengthened because of them."



"In all four meetings, there was unity in the desired vision of the future. Everyone wants healthier rural communities, with more opportunities for young people to start farming and ranching. They also want more producer-owned operations, and fewer large corporate-owned and managed operations," Bullard described. "This vision goes beyond ranchers, it affects everyone living in the community from the kids who have to travel 20 to 40 miles to school each day to the owners of the main street businesses to those in bigger cities who want to buy their food from local farmers and ranchers, and everyone needs to get involved to change the direction we are currently headed."



Those concerned with the future of the U.S. cattle industry will soon have the greatest opportunity they ever have had, or ever will have, to change the current direction of their cattle industry by showing up at the competition hearing to be held in August 27, 2010, in Fort Collins, Colorado. According to Bullard, "never in our history have the U.S. Attorney General and the U.S. Secretary of Agriculture scheduled a meeting in the center of the United States for the express purpose of learning whether there is a need to reform U.S. cattle markets. This is the opportunity of a lifetime and we need at least 25,000 farmers and ranchers to be in Fort Collins on August 27 to demonstrate that restoring co mpetition to the U.S. cattle industry is the single most important priority for Rural America."



# # #



R-CALF USA (Ranchers-Cattlemen Action Legal Fund, United Stockgrowers of America) is a national, non-profit organization dedicated to ensuring the continued profitability and viability of the U.S. cattle industry. R-CALF USA represents thousands of U.S. cattle producers on trade and marketing issues. Members are located across 47 states and are primarily cow/calf operators, cattle backgrounders, and/or feedlot owners. R-CALF USA directors and committee chairs are extremely active unpaid volunteers. R-CALF USA has dozens of affiliate organizations and various main-street businesses are associate members. For more information, visit www.r-calfusa.com or, call 406-252-2516.
 
...so RCalf is resting their hopes of improving the conditions in rural American on meeting someone from the Obama administration.... ??? I'd stay home and pick ticks off the dog before I'd go to a meeting with this present administration. If RCalf doesn't have any more sense than to think this administration is pro-ag then they are probably wrong about all the rest of their ideas as well.
 
Can easily agree with what 'redrobin' said.....plus, where/who are the "large corporate owned and managed operations" Bullard described claims are in Nebraska????

Who is delusional enough to believe an Obama government "reform of U.S. cattle markets" will do anything other than make ALL cattle owners pawns of the government????

mrj
 
redrobin said:
...so RCalf is resting their hopes of improving the conditions in rural American on meeting someone from the Obama administration.... ??? I'd stay home and pick ticks off the dog before I'd go to a meeting with this present administration. If RCalf doesn't have any more sense than to think this administration is pro-ag then they are probably wrong about all the rest of their ideas as well.

Well Hellooooooooooooooooo!

:lol: :lol: :lol:
 
mrj said:
Can easily agree with what 'redrobin' said.....plus, where/who are the "large corporate owned and managed operations" Bullard described claims are in Nebraska????

Who is delusional enough to believe an Obama government "reform of U.S. cattle markets" will do anything other than make ALL cattle owners pawns of the government????

mrj

Go to farming country and ask about the corporate owned operations.

I would ask who is delusional enough to believe that the US cattle industry is headed in the right direction? The producer's share of the consumer's beef dollar is much less than it was, consolidation has made competition for fat cattle a part of history, hyporcitical "science based" trade policies have cost us lucrative markets, South America would be trying to knock down the door to get in here if the USDA wasn't opening it for them, "trade" has now trumped food safety and herd health.

R-CALF is trying to make ranching more profitable by tackling the above issues. I don't see the "other guys" even acknowleging anything wrong, and even helping along the demise of the independent ranching industry.
 
This statement is so TRUE Sandhusker..
South America would be trying to knock down the door to get in here if the USDA wasn't opening it for them, "trade" has now trumped food safety and herd health.


I would like to further add that this is the very reason for NAIS or should I say Animal disease traceability framework. So the USDA can further open up the borders for "trade" and to further the demise of the rural american livestock owner.
 

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