This CBC editorial by Elbert van Donkersgoed appeared in the daily Canadian Farm Business Management newsletter:
When Americans want something, they’ll usually try to buy it. That’s long been true in agriculture, even when it comes to things like buying markets for wheat, corn, and other grains.
Now they’re expanding that “buy-it” concept to farmland protection. The 2002 Farm Bill includes nearly $1 billion in new funding for a program that will purchase development rights on farmland to ensure that the land will remain permanently in agriculture. This has become a priority for the U.S.: each year they are losing more than one million acres of farm and ranch land to urban sprawl.
The situation is just as urgent north of the border. Here in Ontario, the 22.4 million acres we used to farm have ratcheted down to 13.5 million. Our best soil with the best climate is in the Greater Toronto Area and we’ve lost just over half of that land.
Farmers and consumers alike want to protect the best farmland.
Agriculture needs only a little more than ten percent of Ontario's land base. There is a lot of room for both farming and urban development, but we need to keep the best soils for agriculture. Only the most productive lands will pay for modern technology.
We have this notion that farm families will protect the land. I've often heard the argument: “Save the farmer and you will save the farmland.” But I’ve yet to see it work in practice.
The difference between farm value and one last crop of houses is just too great – sooner or later, the pressure to give in and take the money can no longer be ignored.
It is just not reasonable to expect farm families to protect the best farmland as long as the market forces are given free reign to decide the future of land uses all around them.
Like the rest of the Farm Bill, the Americans’ “buy-it” approach to
farmland conservation may be a little rich for us. But if society wants orderly urban development and countryside enhancement, it will need to provide a counter to these market forces.
Farmers need partners that will encourage this to happen.
_________
What are your thoughts on this? Here in the county of Red Deer in Central Alberta, they did try to get some motions table regarding the use of farmland, but they've withdrawn them for now in favor of going to people and having a bunch of sessional meetings for input.
How do we balance all of these competing needs?
When Americans want something, they’ll usually try to buy it. That’s long been true in agriculture, even when it comes to things like buying markets for wheat, corn, and other grains.
Now they’re expanding that “buy-it” concept to farmland protection. The 2002 Farm Bill includes nearly $1 billion in new funding for a program that will purchase development rights on farmland to ensure that the land will remain permanently in agriculture. This has become a priority for the U.S.: each year they are losing more than one million acres of farm and ranch land to urban sprawl.
The situation is just as urgent north of the border. Here in Ontario, the 22.4 million acres we used to farm have ratcheted down to 13.5 million. Our best soil with the best climate is in the Greater Toronto Area and we’ve lost just over half of that land.
Farmers and consumers alike want to protect the best farmland.
Agriculture needs only a little more than ten percent of Ontario's land base. There is a lot of room for both farming and urban development, but we need to keep the best soils for agriculture. Only the most productive lands will pay for modern technology.
We have this notion that farm families will protect the land. I've often heard the argument: “Save the farmer and you will save the farmland.” But I’ve yet to see it work in practice.
The difference between farm value and one last crop of houses is just too great – sooner or later, the pressure to give in and take the money can no longer be ignored.
It is just not reasonable to expect farm families to protect the best farmland as long as the market forces are given free reign to decide the future of land uses all around them.
Like the rest of the Farm Bill, the Americans’ “buy-it” approach to
farmland conservation may be a little rich for us. But if society wants orderly urban development and countryside enhancement, it will need to provide a counter to these market forces.
Farmers need partners that will encourage this to happen.
_________
What are your thoughts on this? Here in the county of Red Deer in Central Alberta, they did try to get some motions table regarding the use of farmland, but they've withdrawn them for now in favor of going to people and having a bunch of sessional meetings for input.
How do we balance all of these competing needs?
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