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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Papen
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
01/27/07
01/31/07 HB
SHORT TITLE
Services for Small Farmers
SB 235
ANALYST Hanika Ortiz
APPROPRIATION (dollars in thousands)
Appropriation
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY07
FY08
$200.0
recurring
general fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Response Received From
Higher Education Department (HED)
NMSU/College of Agriculture and Home Economics
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
Senate Bill 235 and the NMSU Small Farm Initiative (SFI) seeks an appropriation of $200
thousand directed to NMSU’s Cooperative Extension Service for the development of an
integrated teaching, research and extension facility on the NMSU campus to support small and
limited-resource farms and ranches, and sustainable agriculture teaching, research and extension
activities in New Mexico.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The appropriation of $200 thousand contained in the bill is a recurring expense to the general
fund. Any unexpended or unencumbered balance remaining at the end of FY08 shall revert to the
general fund.
This request was not on the list of priority projects submitted by NMSU to the HED for review
and was not included in the Department’s funding recommendation for FY08.
pg_0002
Senate Bill 235 – Page
2
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
NMSU reports that the SFI will help carry out teaching, research, and extension activities that
focus on the needs of small farmers and ranchers. Particular emphasis will be placed on
increased profitability through improved business management practices, the development of
new markets for small growers, and field research in sustainable agriculture practice and
technologies. The Institute will be located in Las Cruces, but its mission is statewide.
NMSU reports the bill will provide funding for a small greenhouse, cold storage, small scale
agricultural equipment and implements, and multipurpose rooms for lab, teaching and outreach.
Many of the small farmers and ranchers lack the skills of farm business management practices
and record keeping due to their traditional custom of barter and lack of focused educational
programs in past years.
Native American communities have the highest high school drop out rate in the country and also
lead the nation in juvenile suicide rates and substance abuse. The same is true in traditional
Hispanic communities where families have been displaced from the farms and ranches. Rio
Arriba County leads the nation in heroin addiction and deaths attributed to overdose. The
custom and culture of the Native American and Hispanic People is very much tied to the land
and agriculture in general. If agriculture is lost in these rural communities; custom, culture,
tradition and their language may also be lost in the next few generations.
PERFORMANCE IMPLICATIONS
This proposal does not indicate how the Small Farm Institute will determine measures for
successful outcomes
.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
NMSU will administer the funds.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
NMSU has the following comments;
Today, there are nineteen Indian Pueblos, two Apache Nations and the Navajo Nation that are
located in New Mexico, with about 4000 small-scale farmers and ranchers. Most of these Native
American farmers and ranchers have not had access to USDA programs and have been severely
undercounted by USDA in the past Agricultural Census including the 2002 Census which
claimed that there were only 403 Native American farmers and ranchers in New Mexico. USDA
also claims there are 4,499 farms and ranches owned and operated by Hispanic small-scale
producers; as many as 8,000 have already been identified in Northern New Mexico through other
programs. Over 50% of these Hispanic and Native American farmers and ranchers have never
participated in any USDA programs due to a lack of effective USDA outreach efforts.
Agriculture is the core of culture, custom, tradition and language of New Mexico farmer and
ranchers and continues to be a vital economic component to the state.
Individual Native American farmers and ranchers living on their reservations, until the 1990
Farm Bill, were not eligible for USDA programs due to each Indian Reservation, regardless of
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Senate Bill 235 – Page
3
size, was counted as only one farm by USDA. Outreach efforts, past and present by USDA have
not been effective due to a lack of technical and educational support at the community level.
Basic agriculture educational programming is non-existent due to the loss of Bureau of Indian
Affairs (BIA) extension contracts over twenty years ago. Local county extension agents do not
have the resource or manpower to cover the large land base within their counties, which include
several of these Pueblos.
ALTERNATIVES
Seek federal grants or private or public funds elsewhere to fund this initiative.
WHAT WILL BE THE CONSEQUENCES OF NOT ENACTING THIS BILL
Small sustainable agriculture farmers may be adversely impacted and economic benefits to the
state may be lost.
AHO/nt:mt