Date: Fri 01-Nov-1996
Date: Fri 01-Nov-1996
Publication: Bee
Author: KAAREN
Quick Words:
agriculture-Ferris
Full Text:
w/photo: State Ag Commissioner Takes A Broader View Of Agricultural Issues
B Y K AAREN V ALENTA
When Shirley Ferris travels out of state, she makes it a point to stop at
dairy farms and talk to the farmers.
"I ask about the price of diesel fuel and feed, about how their operations
compare with those of dairy farmers in Connecticut," she said. "It's amazing
how much more expensive it is to run a dairy farm in Connecticut."
Knowing what concerns farmers in other states is important to Mrs Ferris, who
has been a Newtown dairy farmer since she married her husband, Charles, more
than 30 years ago. Currently completing her second year as the state's
commissioner of agriculture, Mrs Ferris recently was named to the board of
directors of the National Association of State Departments of Agriculture. She
is president of NASDA's Northeast Region which includes the New England states
plus New York, Pennsylvania, New Jersey and Delaware.
"There are four regions in the country so the board of directors consists of
the four regional presidents and a slate of officers," she said. "I'm one of
only four women commissioners in the country - the others are from Illinois,
California and Kansas."
NASDA's official mission is to support and promote the American agriculture
industry - while protecting consumers and the environment - through the
development, implementation, and communication of sound public policy and
programs.
"In layman's terms, or at least mine, it is a group of commissioners,
secretaries and directors - states call us different things - who work within
the governmental structure to promote agriculture while protecting the
environment and consumers," Mrs Ferris said. "We do some of what the Farm
Bureau does. But while that organization works as volunter
farmer-to-government, NASDA can participate within the system."
New Strategic Plan
The commissioner said that NASDA has, within the past half-dozen years or so,
undergone some changes that moved it from "a good old boy operation to one
that has credibility, integrity and influence in developing agriculture policy
on a national level."
"NASDA adopted its new strategic plan in September - the organization is that
new in its current philosophy," Mrs Ferris said. "In the plan, NASDA will be
working closely with the Governors' Association."
"So you can see why I'm so happy to be a member of the national board of
directors at this juncture in the organization's life. I have the unparalleled
opportunity to exchange ideas with my fellow commissioners and to help shape
policy on the national level."
Mrs Ferris said the 1996 Farm Bill may be the first in the country's history
to encompass programs that are useful in the Northeast.
"Historically USDA programs are designed for the massive farms and ranches in
the Midwest and further west. This time it speaks to smaller businesses, the
kind most common in New England."
NASDA also provides a good exchange of ideas that can be used on the state and
local level. "It's a chance to see what other states are doing," Mrs Ferris
said. "Connecticut's agriculture department doesn't have the manpower that
other states have, so we have to be creative. We're looking to tap into
federal funds, grant programs, corporate funding - whatever might be
applicable to the kind of (agricultural) business we do in Connecticut:
farming close to our neighbors, farming in an area that lies in the lucrative
New York/Boston corridor, farming in an area where the cost of production is
higher than anywhere else in the country."
A Big Business
Commissioner Ferris said that 75 percent of the open land in Connecticut is
used by dairy farmers. If the land is swallowed by residential development,
there would be a major impact on the tourism industry and the quality of life
in the state, she said.
"Ninety-nine percent of the cash receipts generated by Connecticut agriculture
stay in the state," Mrs Ferris said. "Agriculture is a big business - it has a
$2.1 billion a year impact on the state's economy - it's viable and
profitable, not a dying industry."
In Connecticut, the agriculture department staff has been cut 50 percent in
the past six years and there have been four different commissioners in that
same period of time. Another 10 percent cutback has been ordered by the
governor in all state departments, including agriculture, in the 1997-99
biennial budget.
We're working hard to come up with some creative ways to cut so that we don't
impact our important programs," Mrs Ferris said. "Every expenditure is
scrutinized and evaluated. I pay my own expenses when I go out of state for
meetings like NASDA, something I'm sure other state's commissioners don't do."
Agriculture is viewed differently by different states, as reflected in how the
commissioners are selected and the tasks which they are assigned to do, she
said. One third of the commissioners are elected by the public, one third are
selected by some governmental group, and one-third are appointed by the
governor.
In some states the agriculture department has an expanded role. In Wisconsin,
it is the Department of Agriculture, Trade and Consumer Protection; Vermont
has the Department of Food, Agriculture and Markets; Mississippi, the
Department of Agriculture and Commerce. In Indiana, the lieutenant governor is
the commissioner of agriculture.
"You can see that states look at the work their ag department does
differently," she said. "It reflects, I guess, the role of agriculture in the
state - that is, how important agriculture is to the economics of that state.
The commissioner from Illinois is currently accompanying her governor on a
tour of Asia - looking at the ag export/import market there!"
Through her role in NASDA, Commissioner Ferris intends to promote the future
of Connecticut agriculture.
"We have a window of opportunity here that may not come our way again for a
long while. I am committed to making the most of it," she said.
