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Average U.S. Farmer's Age Rising, Younger People Needed In Agriculture

Posted: 04/ 4/2012 2:40 pm

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) — U.S. Deputy Secretary of Agriculture Kathleen Merrigan sees an epidemic of sorts sweeping across America's farmland. It has little to do with the usual challenges, like drought, rising fuel and feed prices or crop-eating pests.

The country's farmers and ranchers are getting older and there are fewer people standing in line to take their place.

New Mexico has the highest average age of farmers and ranchers of any state at nearly 60 years old, and neighboring Arizona and Texas aren't far behind. Nationally, the latest agricultural census figures show the fastest growing group of farmers and ranchers are those over age 65.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture is beginning work on its 2012 census, and Merrigan is afraid the average age will be even higher when the data is compiled.

"If we do not repopulate our working lands, I don't know where to begin to talk about the woes," she told The Associated Press in a phone interview. "There is a challenge here, a challenge that has a corresponding opportunity."

Merrigan, a former college professor, is making stops at universities around the country in hopes of encouraging more students to think about agricultural careers. She was in New Mexico and Arizona last week, and had stops planned this week at the University of Colorado in Denver and Michigan State University.

Aside from trying to stem the graying of America's farmers and ranchers, her mission is fueled by a recent blog posting that put agriculture at No. 1 on a list of "useless" college degrees. Top federal agriculture officials are talking about the posting, and it has the attention of agricultural organizations across the country.

"There couldn't be anything that's more outrageously incorrect," Merrigan said. "We know that we're not graduating enough qualified aggies to fill the jobs that are out there in American agriculture."

Add to that a growing world population that some experts predict will require 70 percent more food production by 2050, she said.

Matt Rush, director of the New Mexico Farm and Livestock Bureau, was in California last weekend speaking at a conference for young farmers and ranchers. He made the same point.

"I truly believe we're at a golden age of agriculture. Global demand is at an all-time record high and global supplies are at all-time record lows," Rush said. "Production costs are going to be valuable enough that younger people are going to have the opportunity to be involved in agriculture."

The aging trend has been decades in the making. Between 2002 and 2007 alone, the number of farmers over 65 grew by nearly 22 percent.

New Mexico tops the list of states with the highest percentage of older farmers and ranchers at 37 percent, followed by Arizona, Texas, Mississippi and Oklahoma.

For every one farmer and rancher under the age of 25, there are five who are 75 or older, according to Agriculture Department statistics.

While Merrigan can't explain why New Mexico is leading, she said the challenges for young people entering the industry are common across the nation — from escalating farmland values to accessing capital.

USDA has programs aimed at developing more farmers and ranchers and at boosting interest in locally grown food. In 2009 and 2010, projects in 40 states helped add thousands of new farmers and ranchers to the ranks, Merrigan said.

The National Young Farmers' Coalition has also been pushing for state and federal policy changes to make it easier for new farmers.

Rush and New Mexico farmer and rancher Pat Woods said it will take streamlining the system to make a difference.

"There are a lot of programs through USDA for young farmers and ranchers, but any of us know when you're dealing with federal programs, there's enough red tape to make the red tape blush," Rush said.

Woods started ranching in his 20s with help from his father. He's now 62 and is grooming his own son to take over the family operation.

"I'm trying to do my best with some kind of succession," he said. "I'm putting my son in the hot seat. He needs to know how to make the day-to-day decisions on feeding the cattle and farming the land and making decisions on how to get the tractor fixed and all of that kind of stuff. I'll help him on anything he needs help with, but there's a lot of this stuff he needs to do on his own to learn."

Regardless of age, Woods said farming and ranching requires determination.

Ryan Best is determined. His mission is much like Merrigan's.

As president of Future Farmers of America, the 21-year-old Best has been living out of a suitcase, traveling the country and visiting with high school students about careers in agriculture. He'll be on the road 310 days this year and plans to log 125,000 miles.

Best hopes his message — that this is a new time in agriculture — will resonate enough with the next generation to turn around the statistics.

"Never before have we had the innovations in technology which have led to agriculture in this country being the most efficient it has ever been," he said. "There's really a place for everybody to fit in."

___

Follow Susan Montoya Bryan on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/susanmbryanNM

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southingtonian
"I'm a Capricorn and you can't make me do sh*t.."
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stargazer13
To Love One Is To Love All
11:26 AM on 04/07/2012
for every one 25 year old entering into agriculture

five retire !
08:14 AM on 04/06/2012
Maybe if rural farm folk weren't always being portrayed as uneducated rednecks just maybe we could get some "young people" to get into farming.

Look in the mirror if you want to see why that'll never change.
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Chipher
07:02 AM on 04/06/2012
You have to be up there in years to have enough money to buy a country estate, plant it in xmas trees and run a few hobby cattle, so your estate can be classified 'agricultural' and avoid paying property tax. Your only other option is to start a 501(c) 3 and IRT your property to the 'foundation', which allows you to live in your house and enjoy the 'charitable trust' estate until death, both capital gains and property tax free. !!Why didn't I learn all this before the taxman got all my savings?!!
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maple shaft
Software engineer
09:11 AM on 04/06/2012
Very informative, but wouldn't starting a 501(c) 3 require you to donate so much in goods and services for charity causes?

I guess if farming is your hobby rather than your sole source of income then this makes sense, but I think the requirements for a 501(c) 3 would be a little too much for a young person to be obligated to while also running a farm.
04:06 AM on 04/06/2012
Better get young people interested in farming soon or the illegals will come in and take over the industry. Imagine grocery's stuffed with dirt, tequila or crops that taste like urine - this will happen when lazy illegals take over. Best way to get young people into farming by legalizing moonshine.
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Chipher
07:06 AM on 04/06/2012
You know, I harvested crops next to 'lazy illegals' for several years, and they beat my best pace. I've never seen harder working folks, more honest and grounded in family and community as LIs.
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jimmyjack frankentoast
12:05 PM on 04/06/2012
those so called 'illegals' already have taken over the industry. they're called agricultural slaves. they get paid garbage if anything at all on top of the brutality they suffer.

http://www.aljazeera.com/programmes/slaverya21stcenturyevil/2011/10/201110108583163675.html

http://motherjones.com/tom-philpott/2011/10/film-review-the-harvest-child-farmworkers

ever heard of the bracero program? probably not. mexican immigrants built our entire agriculture infrastructure from 1942 to 1964. those 'illegals' still produce the food you take for granted.

http://www.farmworkers.org/bracerop.html
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Eryn Morris
02:47 AM on 04/06/2012
I'm certainly not at a point where I can run off and choose a career in agriculture, even if my first instinct is, "Sure! Someone just needs to buy me some land!" But I'd surely be very proud if ag is what my daughter chosen as a major and a career. I'm hoping to stick her in the 4-H program when she's old enough, so that's a start!
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Lisa Shields
Poet & Advocate For Special Needs Children
02:34 AM on 04/06/2012
Problem...more than 25,000 students will graduate with animal husbandry and farm related degrees this year...but only 18,000 job are anticipated to be available in the next decade. That suggests a HELL of a deficit for employment.
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maple shaft
Software engineer
09:15 AM on 04/06/2012
This of course is the real reason why more young people don't make it in agriculture. Agriculture has saw so many productivity advancements in the past 50 years that we simply need less and less people working the field to provide an overabundance of food for everybody.
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Melissa Ausua
Seriously, GOP? Seriously?
01:14 AM on 04/06/2012
Sign me up. I'm sick of the city and the rat race anyway. One problem, though. I'm halfway through my Master's in a completely unrelated field. Can I get the government to forgive all of that student loan debt if I quit school now, leave my current career path, and sign up for an agriculture program?
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Chipher
07:08 AM on 04/06/2012
No, but you can change your name, and work in the fields as an 'illegal alien'.
01:14 AM on 04/06/2012
I think that the probelm is that we allowed corporations to run farms and honestly the mix doesn't work. I'm not saying there was much of a choice with millions of people to feed something had to be done and a lot of consumers didn't help. We as a people kept asking for things to be faster, out of season, a certain color, etc. The price we paid for this was the death of the local farmer and now we have few choices in the type of food we buy. I firmly believe that if we bought our food with any sort of responsibility, i.e. buying locally, in season, etc. We as consumers could help bring back the local small farmer and get rid of factory farms completely. We as consumers are as much to blame as anyone.
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Chipher
07:19 AM on 04/06/2012
Unfortunately your belief flies in the face of urban farmers who have been unable to challenge the supermercados iron grip on produce, and only survive as an elite within a minority, those whose other income allows them to lease the close-in farmlands and the best booths at the taxpayer subsidized public farmer's markets.

Kind of like public radio, also an elite cadre, where the airwaves are free.

Where we live, the farmer's market happens every weekend in a vacant block on set up card tables and truck tailgates, in 5-gallon buckets and recycled grain sacks, and everyone goes, but the few who make money are the ones, again, the elite within a minority, with prime land.

Meanwhile, countering that self-limiting trend, are tax rebates and avoidance schemes which allow rich people to invest in farmland estates, but not actually farm them, just plant a few xmas trees and run a few hobby cattle, and not have to pay capital gains or property taxes, which is why prime farmland can no longer generate the upfront cost to buy it and equip it.

If you want family farms, ironically, you'll have to get rid of the hobby farmer (sic) tax breaks, because Jack and Jill can't afford to drive 240 miles each way to Sioux City every weekend, with a truckload full of sugar beets and field corn, and two kids all crammed in the front seat.
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fenom23
01:12 AM on 04/06/2012
what do you need a college degree for? and why talk to college students? talk to high schoolers, no, talk to middle schoolers, cause once kids go to college, it's too late, they're too brainwashed to settle for manual labor, no matter how incapable of anything else they are, it's going to be like construction, it's going to be all foreigners and immigrants, legal or otherwise, and all these parents who belittle manual labor aren't helping, either
12:13 AM on 04/06/2012
I didn't know there was a need, but I live in North Dakota. Most people who go to ND State University are in some sort of agriculture or engineering program.
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Eryn Morris
02:49 AM on 04/06/2012
Same here. I'm in TX and ag programs are pretty prolific around here.
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11:47 PM on 04/05/2012
i grow tomato in my backyard !
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manikajo
11:42 PM on 04/05/2012
It has become increasingly more difficult for small farmers to make a living, therefore only the large operations survive. It is really hard work with long hours. However, with the looming debt crisis and a possibility of our economy collapsing, many more people may have to learn how to grow their own food or starve.
Oginikwe
I think therefore I'm dangerous
01:00 AM on 04/06/2012
Buy local and support a small, local farmer. We can feed a lot of people.
11:36 PM on 04/05/2012
Farming = long hours/ low wages/ no vacation pay/holidays/benefits .
And people complain about the price of food !
Not a career I'd want either one of my kids to choose.
Oginikwe
I think therefore I'm dangerous
01:00 AM on 04/06/2012
It's not a career, it's a lifestyle--a vocation. Our farmers need to be left alone to do what they do best: grow, good healthy food. Agribusiness get the lion's share of the farm bill when it should go to the family farmers: the real farmers.
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Eryn Morris
02:54 AM on 04/06/2012
So families with larger farms that contract out to large companies aren't real farmers? Oh. Ok.

I'm not saying they still don't get shafted by the companies they're under contract to, but your choice of words is just off.
11:34 PM on 04/05/2012
Sign me up!