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Farm Aid News and Views July/Aug 1997



FARM AID NEWS & VIEWS
July/August 1997
Volume 5, No. 7
__________________________________________
Headlines:

-  FARM AID '97 COMING TO DALLAS, TEXAS OCTOBER 4, 
1997
-  FARM AID SUPPORTS TEXAS FARM PROJECTS
-  FARMER TO FARMER HAYLIFT GIVES HELPING HAND TO 
TEXAS FARMERS
-  FARM AID SUPPORTS INNOVATIVE TEXAS FARMERS' 
MARKETS
-  TEXAS FARM FACTS
-  FARM AID SUPPORTS DISASTER-STRICKEN FARMERS IN 
THE NORTHERN PLAINS
-  DEADLINE FOR SUBMISSION OF FUNDING PROPOSALS 
TO FARM AID

__________________________________________

FARM AID '97 COMING TO DALLAS, TEXAS OCTOBER 4, 1997

The Farm Aid T97 benefit concert for the American family farmer 
is headed for Dallas, Texas on October 4, 1997 at Texas Stadium.  
The all-day musical event will feature Farm Aid founders Willie 
Nelson, Neil Young and John Mellencamp, as well as Dave 
Matthews Band, John Fogerty and the Allman Brothers Band.  It 
will also include special performances by John Conlee, Ricky 
Skaggs, Joe Ely, Asleep at the Wheel and Jimmie Dale Gilmore.  
Additional artists will be announced.

"Farm Aid is proud and grateful for the support of these talented 
artists in the struggle to save America's family farmers," said 
Farm Aid president Willie Nelson.  "Farm Aid T97 will offer 
music fans a unique opportunity to see top artists from a variety 
of musical styles playing together on the same stage."

Tickets for the show will go on sale Saturday, Aug. 9 at 10 a.m. 
CDT.  Tickets are $50, $30 and $17.50 (plus a service charge) and 
will be available through  local Ticketmaster outlets. 

TNN: The Nashville Network will air Farm Aid '97 as a live six-
hour special from 5 p.m. to 11 p.m. CDT on Saturday, October 4.

Farm Aid was founded in 1985 by Nelson, Mellencamp, Young 
and Conlee to raise public awareness about the plight of the 
American family farmer and to provide assistance to those 
families whose livelihood depends on agriculture.  In the past 12 
years, Farm Aid has granted more than $13 million to over 100 
farm organizations, churches and service agencies in 44 states.

FARM AID SUPPORTS TEXAS FARM PROJECTS

Since 1985, Farm Aid has granted $353,000 to farm and rural 
projects in Texas.  Funding has been geared toward both 
emergency relief for farm families in need and the development 
of long-term solutions to promote a family farm system of 
agriculture.  Here are a couple of examples of Farm Aid funds in 
action:

FARMER TO FARMER HAYLIFT GIVES HELPING HAND TO 
TEXAS FARMERS

In the summer of 1996, thousands of Texas farmers were pushed 
to the brink of financial ruin by a devastating drought.   Katie 
Worthy, an 89-year-old dairy farmer from Corsicana, Texas was 
one of them.  Last fall, with winter fast approaching, Worthy was 
faced with a ruined hay crop and no ability to feed her herd of 
100 dairy cows through the winter.

On the day before Thanksgiving, farmers from Kentucky rolled 
up to Worthy's farm with two truckloads of donated hay, part of 
Farm Aid's Farmer to Farmer haylift effort.  Farmers from across 
the country donated over 200 tons of hay to help more than 100 
Texas farmers like Katie Worthy feed their cattle and hold on to 
their farms.

Farm Aid teamed up with farm and service organizations in 
Texas to make sure the hay reached those families who needed it 
most.  Farm Aid identified farmers in other states with hay to 
donate and arranged transportation of the hay to Texas, with the 
help of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters.  Texas 
Farmers Union set up a hay hotline for farmers to call to request 
donated hay or other emergency assistance.  Lutheran Social 
Services of the South coordinated the delivery of hay when it 
arrived in Texas, ensuring that the hay reached the neediest 
families first.

FARM AID SUPPORTS INNOVATIVE TEXAS FARMERS' 
MARKETS 

The Sustainable Food Center, based in Austin, Texas,  promotes 
community food security by developing direct marketing 
projects that link local farmers with restaurants, groceries, and 
farmers' markets.  With a little ingenuity and a lot of hard work, 
the Sustainable Food Center has developed five successful 
farmers' markets in low-income neighborhoods in Austin.  

According to Kate Fitzgerald, Executive Director, there are 
multiple goals of the program. "We aim to provide affordable 
foods in the neighborhood and to create jobs that provide an 
opportunity for young people to get out of the rough track 
they're in.  We are also setting an example for urban planners 
that farming can work in the city, and providing a model of a 
financially viable small-scale farm."

One of the biggest problems for residents in the Eastside 
neighborhoods has been lack of access to stores which sell fresh 
produce.  The farmers' markets have been very successful on 
many fronts -- supporting local agriculture, supplying healthy 
and nutritious food to the community and providing 
opportunities for inner-city youth.

The farmers' markets are supplied with produce grown on local 
farms, including the Food Center's own farm.  The markets 
provide an outlet for the farmers to sell their produce while also 
providing residents with a convenient place to purchase fresh 
vegetables.  Teenagers work on the farm and help with the 
management of the farmers' markets. 

One of the key factors in the financial success of the program, 
says Fitzgerald, is diversified marketing.  In addition to the 
farmers' markets, the Food Center sells some of its more exotic 
produce, such as squash blossoms and Japanese eggplant, to local 
upscale restaurants.  The sales of higher-priced produce allow 
the farm to keep the price down for the low-income residents.


TEXAS FARM FACTS

Farm numbers
*Texas has approximately 205,000 farms.

*Since 1992  the number of farms with over $10,000 in sales has 
dropped from 76,000 to 72,000 -- a loss of 19 farms each week.

*Texas has 127 million acres of farm land which is 75% of the 
total land area in the state

*Texas has lost 3 million acres of farm land since 1992.

Farm Characteristics
*90% of Texas farms are owned and operated by families or 
individuals.

*90% of Texas farms have sales of less than $100,000.

*The average Texas farmer is 56 years old.

Major Crops
*Cattle and calves account for half of the state's agricultural 
receipts.  Cotton accounts for 12.5%.

*149,000 of all farms in the state are cattle operations.

*Texas ranks among the top 5 states in the production of fresh 
market vegetables.

Farming and Jobs
*In 1993, farming and related industries accounted for 28% of 
employment in Texas rural areas.

Poverty Rate
*In 1990, 23.4% of Texas rural residents lived below the poverty 
line.

Sources
*1995 Texas Agricultural Statistics, Texas Agricultural Statistics 
Service
*Texas Fact Sheet, April 1997, Economic Research Service, USDA


FARM AID SUPPORTS DISASTER-STRICKEN FARMERS IN 
THE NORTHERN PLAINS

Images of the flooding in North and South Dakota dominated 
the news last spring as thousands of families saw their homes 
and possessions swept away before their eyes.  As fall approaches, 
the TV cameras are gone and families are trying to rebuild their 
lives.

Farm Aid has stepped in to provide assistance to farm and rural 
families whose plight was largely overlooked by the national 
media.  In South Dakota alone, more than 350,000 head of 
livestock died due to blizzards and flooding, while 2.5 million 
acres of crop land were flooded.  A disturbing number of suicides 
involving farm and ranch families have also been reported.

Thanks to the outpouring of public support, Farm Aid was able 
to raise and distribute $40,000 to provide emergency assistance 
and long-term support to flood-ravaged rural areas.  After Fox 
After Breakfast and The Today Show publicized our 1-800-FARM 
AID number, hundreds of people called in to donate to our 
Family Farm Disaster Fund.  

The money has been distributed through farm and service 
organizations in North Dakota, South Dakota and Minnesota to 
ensure that the funds reach those families most in need.  In 
addition to emergency assistance, Farm Aid supports mental 
health hotlines to help farm families deal with the emotional 
stress caused by the disaster.  Farm Aid funds will provide 
funding for volunteer efforts to put up new fencing and repair 
farm buildings.   

James Barclay, President of Lutheran Disaster Response in South 
Dakota, says, "Lutheran Disaster Response is grateful to have 
Farm Aid as a partner in providing relief for farm and ranch 
families in South Dakota.  Together, with donors and volunteers 
from across the country, we can provide hope and support 
during their long road to recovery." 


DEADLINE FOR SUBMISSION OF FUNDING PROPOSALS TO 
FARM AID

Following the October 4 concert, there will be a grant round for 
all proposals pending at that time.  

If your organization would like to be considered for funding in 
the post-concert grant cycle, the deadline for submission of grant 
proposals is Friday, September 12, 1997.   You will receive a letter 
acknowledging receipt of the proposal and requesting any 
information necessary to complete the application. 

If your group received a grant from Farm Aid in 1996, you must 
include with your 1997 proposal a narrative and financial report 
on the 1996 grant.  We will not consider proposals from any 
organizations with outstanding grant reports.

Decisions on our post-concert grant round will be made in early 
November.  

If you do not have a copy of Farm Aid's grant guidelines, call the 
Farm Aid office and we will send you a copy.

Please do not send proposals by fax or e-mail.

________________________________________
Farm Aid News & Views is produced by Farm Aid.  Editors 
Harry Smith and Lynn Rosenbaum.  We encourage the 
reproduction of Farm Aid News & Views.  Comments and 
suggestions welcome. Farm Aid (617) 354-2922.  Fax: 
(617) 354-6992. Email: Farmaid1@aol.com.