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Sunday, October 13, 2013

Morning In Maryland? Not For farmers

The State of Maryland has gone too far with regulations imposed on farmers. The phosphorus regulations that the special interests and their state apparatus would now like to force on the farming community are only the latest on a long list. These new regulations will make it illegal for farmers to apply almost all organic fertilizers, compost, manures and many other natural products to the land if the soil contains above certain level phosphorus. The law will mandate farmers to surrender the self-sufficiency of traditional organic practices and become entirely dependent on much greater quantities of the highly soluble chemical fertilizers (environmentalists, think "run off" when you hear highly soluble) of the petrochemical industry. As an organic farmer, I will have to stop dealing with my local organic fertilizer provider and ship in expensive products from other regions. My family will lose a substantial portion of the income that we rely upon as this will more than double our fertilizer costs. It will force me to waste much money and entire days of my time driving to Lancaster, Pennsylvania in dangerous and heavy summer traffic to bring back fertilizer. All of this at precisely the time of year that I need to be on my farm with a watchful eye 24hrs a day and 7 days a week. Also, I will no longer be legally allowed to use compost, one of the main engines of fertility on almost all organic farms. 

Our small region here on the lower peninsula is particularly vulnerable because of the natural characteristics of our soil, and the outdated manure application practices that were at one time encouraged by the same class of society that now seeks to abolish the modern improved ones. The chemistry of phosphorus in our soil is such that it's quantity is abundant but it is not available as plant food. For instance, last year I performed a tissue nutrient analysis and a soil nutrient analysis in my vegetable fields. The results were that the soil phosphorus levels were high, yet the tissue analysis showed that the plant was starving for phosphorus. If the phosphorus is not available to the plant, it must be applied in small quantities to grow a marketable crop. 

As hard as the new regulations will be on me and many others, I hesitate to even imagine the hardship that will be imposed upon the most vulnerable farmers and agricultural businesses. What right does the state's ruling class think that they have to be able to take these actions and inflict these hardships on those who provide the people's sustenance? Are the few of us in the agricultural community merely expendable political bargaining chips in Annapolis so that politicians can get the environmental vote? Does a person still maintain enough property rights to be self-sufficient on the land? The answer is no we do not. Those who rule us, whether directly or indirectly, claim to know what is best for us. They claim to know what is impossible for them to know.

In the October 9th Daily Times, there is an op-ed titled "Morning in Maryland, if not America". I know the individual who penned it, and he has always seemed to be a well-meaning fellow, and certainly polite. However, as a "sustainable" farmer myself, I can readily identify that the author has no idea of the devastation that the regulations he is cheerleading will have on sustainable farming, and the local food economy. He praises "savvy environmental measures", "innovative storm water management system", and "progressive land-use legislation" that will "promote sustainable agriculture". Yet it is exactly these policies to which he refers that will crush the small independent farmers, beginning farmers, and the other vulnerable agricultural businesses. I know from experience. I am a "sustainable farmer" and the "progressive land-use legislation" has destroyed my families' opportunities in the state of Maryland.

My wife and I own and operate a growing farm business that produces organically grown vegetables, pasture-raised beef and poultry, and free-range pork. We sell almost everything we grow locally in our CSA, farmers' markets, and our on-site farm-stand. We also buy all of the products for our stand from local farmers, and like ourselves, most of those farmers rely on our farm stand sales as a significant source of revenue. The stand we have now is not on a main road, we do not advertise, yet we do good amount business. If we were on a main road, and were able to custom build a new stand exactly to our needs, we would do much better amount of business, and that would be good for numerous local farmers and farm businesses. 

A little over a year ago, my wife and I were given a once in a life time opportunity to purchase the adjoining farm. The neighboring farm is located on a busy road and my wife and I were very excited about being able to plant more acreage and build a new produce stand there. Ringed by giant walnut and pecan trees, along with old barn and sheds, there is a site that is perfect for a new stand to sell our produce. We wouldn't even have to disturb new ground or pave over farmland because we could just build in the same place the old farm house used to be. 

When I first applied for the building permits that I knew would be required, I was dealt with setback after setback from the officials. After jumping through hoops for nearly 3 months of repeated trips to the government office buildings, I was made aware of several new regulations. In the short time since we had built our first produce stand, codes affecting farm buildings, stormwater management, and all septic systems had been changed dramatically. Not even 4 years ago were there special requirements for stormwater catchment, septic systems were affordable, and agricultural buildings did not even need a building permit. The cost of the building was basically the cost of construction. Now, young farmers just starting out will have to pay at least $50,000 beyond the cost of construction to comply with Maryland codes if he or she would like to try to sell their produce from their own farm in a weatherproof and secure facility. Others I have spoken with have calculated the costs to be over $90,000. Most of that cost is from forcing farmers to comply with stormwater regulations and in the cost of the new mandatory yet marginally effective septic systems. If these laws had been in place when we started farming, we would never have even considered a career in farming, it would have cost too much to start.
Needless to say, my wife and I could not justify the squandering of at least $50,000 to address stormwater and septic problems that do not even exist on our farm. Our hopes were crushed; the prospects for the local farmers who supply us were crushed as well. This was a huge blow, especially since we had already spent several thousand dollars and countless hours planning out the project and now we had a mortgage to pay with hardly any way left to increase income. We will not even be able to increase the acreage we plant because in order to do so we would have to upgrade to a larger packing facility with more refrigeration capacity, and the stormwater regulations will apply to that as well, making it cost prohibitive. We hope to be able to hold onto the new farm, but we are uncertain at this time.

I have sat and thought hard about this, and I have calculated that it would be far less expensive to move our entire farming operation to another state and start over again rather than pay for the ridiculous fees, taxes, licenses, permits and mitigations now required by the state of Maryland for our farm-stand. We are now wondering if we will ever be able to save enough money to retire on, or if selling our small farm will even provide enough money for retirement. When one touts the new phosphorus regulations, or stormwater regulations, or new septic regulations "savvy, innovative, and progressive", it is insulting. We can no longer build weatherproof and secure retail facilities on the farm, we can no longer construct farm infrastructure beyond the small amount that the state will allow, and we are now forced to squander significant sums of money on septic technologies that have will yield little improvement if any to the Chesapeake Bay. These newly implemented policies of the special interests and their state apparatus, especially the cheer leading professional "environmentalists", have severely damaged the future of small farming and local distribution in the state of Maryland.

Like myself, I imagine that all farmers take offense to being grouped into a collective labeled "polluters". Never has anyone been to my farm and done any testing to see if I am in fact contributing to pollution, so how do they get away with the accusation? I test my soil at least every year, and I know that I am not over applying nutrients by a wide margin. There are no surface waters near my farm for rain water to run-off into. They try to tell me the phosphorus is seeping down into the aquifer, yet I have tested the deeper soil for phosphorus and there is hardly any phosphorus deeper than 12 inches down. I have left buffers around my entire field to catch any loss of nutrient. I planted cover crops before Maryland had a cover crop program. Like many farmers I have taken these steps because I want to leave my small piece of earth a better place than I found it, and they make good common sense. Yet the special interests and their state apparatus do not care about us as individuals, in their eyes individuals do not have rights. To them individuals do not matter; everyone must obey regardless of whether or not one is actually a polluter, no matter what hardship it may cause. They self-impose no limits, and they will bring even more economic destruction in the future. Even with massive political action, it may be too late defend ourselves from their recklessness.

Sincerely,

Ted Wycall
Greenbranch Farm
Salisbury, Maryland.

25 comments:

Anonymous said...

Pretty soon there will be nothing freshly grown on the eastern shore because MD is going to legislate and keep on legislating until farmers like this one are going to say, ok, we're done, no more of this nonsense. Then where do we go to get strawberries, corn, squash, watermelons or whatever, fresh? Gonna be too late then and everything is gonna be coming from some foreign country where they take a dump in the fields to fertilize them - MD government, you're really going to far with
this crap, leave the farmers alone go after the huge companies that pollute the water.

Anonymous said...

Very well said, Ted. As I have said many times, until something hits one in their heart or their pocketbook, they don't understand someone else's fight. I personally am glad to see you putting your thoughts in writing to help others understand the plight of the farmer in Maryland. Best Wishes.

tom taylor said...

well said. it is time to choose a side and vote. support the people on the right side of history.

tom t

Anonymous said...

Yes, Ted. Where were you "defending'" and helping the farmers when the cluster debate was a few years ago. You were advocating for the elimination of clusters which also hurt farm land. Karma is a bad thing.

Anonymous said...

Awesome! Even though I consider myself an 'environmentalist', I'm praying for the farmers to win on this one! Too much farm land has been taken over by 'progress', too many regulations imposed, and too many new codes and fees! I seriously can not believe they really think forcing farmers to use chemical fertilizers is in anyone's best interest!?!? But then again we are talking about ignorant politicians and law makers that have no 'real' idea what they are talking about!

Anonymous said...

8:35-You are misguided. Who is most likely untimately behind this is big food who are now seeing profit margins dwindle due to the 'from farm to table' movement. If it were up to the democrats every farm would be under contract to big corportation.
People need to immediately stop kidding themselves into thinking those farmers under contract w/big corps are 'family farms.' Nothing could be further from the truth. They are 'factory farms'-PERIOD and there are NO if's and's or but's about it.

Anonymous said...

Only developers and farmers seem to know that enviromentalists control Maryland but it's affects everyone in higher costs.

Anonymous said...

The democrats hate the "sustainable" farm movement because it does cut into the profits of their buddies in not only the large food processors but the chemical industry and the pharmaceutical industy who sell over 80% of their antiobiotics to meat processing companies.
These so called "environmentalists" are nothing more than mouth pieces and lapdogs for Big Agribusiness.

Anonymous said...

@8:57, land developers are greedy scum, lumping them in with honest hardworking farmers is an insult. Ill take an environmentalist over a developer any day of the week.

Also, well said Ted!

Anonymous said...

8:35. I was in that fight heavily and it takes a big person to write the things Ted has written in this commentary. He and the person he refers to in this writing were on the same side with that fight. Ted has taken it on the chin and has better understanding. Wisdom comes with experience and Ted is becoming wiser by the day. Again, well written Ted.

Tiffany N said...

I hate that you are facing these difficulties. On the plus side, your business has gained a new customer. I am new to the area and your business is exactly what I've been looking for. I'll see you soon at your stand.

Anonymous said...

Beautifully written. Has given me a better understanding of the situation.

Farmers need our support. They are the life blood of our nation. I believe most farmers are conscious of the environment. Why wouldn't they be? It is the land that sustains them.

Anonymous said...

AMEN 11:12

Anonymous said...

so it's ok not to control fertilizer pollution? you're no different than a shopping mall

Anonymous said...

I will quote you Ted, at the zoning meeting you said if land is downzoned it will be cheaper so I can buy it.

Anonymous said...

2:51 This isn't about Ted. This is about what the state is doing to us. Do you disagree with what he says? If so argue with facts, not slander.

Anonymous said...

2:51 You are not quoting me, you are twisting my words. You and others claimed that eliminating the density bonus would help farmers. My argument claimed it would only help farmers who were trying to retire by selling their land to developers. It would not help farmers who were trying to continue farming on their land or trying to buy land since it would increase land taxes and make farmland more expensive. Your side won, my side lost, let' s move on.

1:15. I am not saying it is not ok to control fertilizer pollution. What I am saying is that I and many others are being regulated as polluters, yet the strongest evidence I have seen, at least on my own farm, is that there is no pollution, and that it is necessary to apply phosphorus to grow healthy plants. Also, your statement that a farm is no different from a shopping mall is absurd.

Anonymous said...

Ted, what party will you support in the next state elections?

Anonymous said...

ive never bought a good home grown tomato at any mall.....the state will not be happy till there is only the food that you grow yourself.....from an ad campaign from years ago....NO FARMS,NO FOOD

BIG MIKE

Anonymous said...

I will support whatever candidate makes a stand for god given rights and natural law. Voting along party lines and not for issues and individual candidates is not a good idea. Politics and most politicians make me nauseous.

Anonymous said...

When in the Course of human events, it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another, and to assume among the powers of the earth, the separate and equal station to which the Laws of Nature and of Nature's God entitle them, a decent respect to the opinions of mankind requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to the separation.

We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.

Anonymous said...

I will continue growing my own food for me and my family. Better to not get mixed up in all this. Prices are becoming volatile, so no thanks. Homemade.

William Parker said...

Not many people are more knowledgable and care greater about the environment than Teddy Wycall does. He is correct in saying that Maryland is over-regulating. The consequences will be fewer farmers, higher food costs, lost of farm jobs, loss to businesses who supply farmers, and loss of tax income when farmers give up and/or relocate elsewhere in other states.

Anonymous said...

8:19 - You are totally missing the point! The problem is the entire govt apparatus. They assume authority over our lives that they don't have any right to. It doesn't matter what party is in charge they both want to control us, maybe for different reasons and in different ways, but neither party has any respect for personal liberty. Conservatives want to control our personal lives and impose their religious beliefs on society all the while getting in bed with evil corporate interests to enrich themselves and impoverish us, democrats want to control our financial lives by stealing from us via taxes (they use the threat of force to take our hard earned money from us - "pay us or we will throw you in jail and take everything you have anyway"). Then they use our money to serve their agenda of getting as many people dependent on the govt teet as possible so those people are less likely to see the govt for the authoritarian monster that it is. The entire govt is based on controlling us like livestock. Voting for any of them gives them the authority to run our lives. I do not respect that authority and neither should you or anyone else. Something tells me Ted doesn't accept that false authority and I doubt he will be giving his vote to anyone who plans on imposing their authority on the people and infringing on their personal liberty.

Anonymous said...

Anonymous said...
Ted, what party will you support in the next state elections?

October 12, 2013 at 8:19 AM

That is exactly what I would like to know and I see that Ted has ignored the question. What a douche bag he is. We know which party he will vote for.