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NYT on USDA Secretary-select Vilsack |
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Written by Stumo
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Friday, 19 December 2008 |
December 19, 2008
EDITORIAL
Fixing Agriculture
Tom Vilsack, President-elect Barack Obamas choice to lead the
Agriculture Department has the merit of being unsatisfactory to both
extremes of the farm-policy debates.
Zealous advocates of sustainable agriculture question his support of
biotechnology, while partisans of the status quo find him
insufficiently loyal to the system of farm subsidies. That leaves him
with a very large center of support. Hell need it to move this
countrys broken agricultural policy in a new direction.
During his days as governor of Iowa, Mr. Vilsack embraced innovation encouraging the use of farmland to produce energy from ethanol and wind power, while promoting better treatment of migrant workers. He has the additional advantage of having governed a state where small, innovative farms are emerging.
The department he will inherit, while responsible for extraordinary gains in research and productivity, has long favored the biggest farmers. That has produced a sterile landscape of factory farms, broken towns and endless miles of row crops like corn and soybeans.
Last years terrible farm bill left the old subsidy system essentially intact. But Mr. Vilsack can prepare the ground for the next one. He should endorse a modest cap on price supports so that they would benefit small farmers. He also has expressed a welcome desire to end the vertical integration in the packing industry that allows giant meatpackers to own the animals they process.
He also must take an impartial look at corn ethanol. Congress has mandated a big increase in production as a prelude to more advanced biofuels. But first the country needs an honest assessment of corn ethanols pluses and minuses, its effect on climate change and food prices and its reliability as a source of income for farmers.
The Agriculture Department also houses the Forest Service, which means Mr. Vilsack will be responsible for the national forests. The Bush administration has waged an eight-year assault on President Bill Clintons roadless rule, which offered permanent protection from commercial development to about 60 million roadless acres. Mr. Vilsack should reaffirm that rule and expand its protections to include Alaskas Tongass National Forest.
The departments programs influence many critical issues conservation, nutrition, rural development and, through the food-stamp program, the well-being of lower-income Americans. These are powerful tools for change and equity. The next secretary must use them wisely.
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