U.S. Rep. Bobby Rush
Rush rips USDA over plight of black farmers
‘House is on fire,’ congressman says
From staff reports
U.S. Rep. Bobby L. Rush (D-1st) recently questioned U.S. Department of Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack about what Rush called “the dire prognosis of black farmers in the U.S. and the steps USDA is taking to help minority farmers.”
“As you well know, our nation’s black farmers are in desperate need of assistance,” Rush said. “In 1920, there were almost one million black farmers — of which my grandfather was one — accounting for 14 percent of farmers at that particular time. In 2017, there were less than 50,000 black farmers, making up only 1.4 percent of the farming population.”
The congressman claimed that without action, “the situation will only get worse. It was recently reported that direct loan applications are significantly more likely to be rejected for black farmers than white ones, and even when approved, the loans for black farmers are for far less than loans for white farmers. Moreover, black farmers all too often still feel as though they are unwelcome in their local USDA field offices.”
Vilsack told Rush that when he saw the statistics concerning the decline of black farm applications, he “asked the team to take an in-depth look at the reason. And what we found was that oftentimes, in some cases, the application was withdrawn, in some cases, the application was incomplete, in some cases, the application just simply didn’t have the cash flow that made sense — a lot of different reasons.
“But I think the fundamental concern and the fundamental challenge is that folks do not have the technical assistance to be able to understand precisely how to access USDA programs,” Vilsack continued. “And for that reason, under the American Rescue Plan, we are using resources to provide assistance to create cooperating groups that can connect with those African American farmers, those black farmers, to provide the technical assistance, the financial planning, the business planning, the development of applications so that there is more success. So, the first order of business here is to get folks the kind of technical assistance they need. And the USDA has expanded significantly efforts in that regard, and we’re going to continue to expand efforts.”
Rush, whose grandfather was a farmer in Albany, Ga. has been an advocate for black farmers — especially since joining the House Agriculture Committee at the beginning of the 117th Congress. In a letter to Vilsack in December, Rush wrote that “for black farmers, the house is on fire” and “Black farms are struggling and going bankrupt, due to rejection, ineptitude and even hostility from [USDA] field offices.”
Rush also raised the issue of underused agricultural potential in Chicago and its surrounding areas, saying that “Chicago was at one time, and it still is, a hub for the railroads that connect our nation for the purposes of agriculture. It is indeed a place where there is a lot of vacant properties, vacant land that can be used specifically for vertical farming… For decades, Chicago was the flower capital, the pickle capital… and the celery capital for our nation. I think that once again, Chicago has the potential to be significant in the agricultural sector.”
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