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Hispanic Farms in
US on Rise
CALIFORNIA (By
Marjorie Hernandez and Lisa
Hoffman, InsideVC.com)
September 23, 2005 —
Hector Gutierrez's teenage
years were filled with
memories of long summers
picking vegetables and
fruits under the hot
Sacramento sun.
The son of a migrant
farmworker, Gutierrez
dreamed of someday owning
his own farm. Once a ranch
manager, Gutierrez is now
one of three owners of
Otilio Farms, which has 140
acres of strawberry fields
in Camarillo and Ventura. He
joins other Hispanic farmers
in making up the
fastest-growing segment of
farm and ranch operators
nationwide.
"When you are working for
something for such a long
time, it becomes a dream of
your own," he said. "From a
very young age, I saw myself
doing this. It's the love
for the land ... and if you
work hard enough and have
faith, things can work out."
Gutierrez and his partners
lease the land but own their
strawberry farm operation.
According to the U.S.
Department of Agriculture,
the number of Hispanic farm
operators has more than
doubled in the past decade.
Every state has registered
an increase, with California
having a 117 percent
increase from 1997 to 2002,
according to Census of
Agriculture data. States
with the most Hispanic
farmers include California,
Texas, New Mexico, Florida
and Colorado.
"Historically, there have
been pockets of Hispanics
working in the fields as
migrant workers for years,
but now we are finding that
this group plays a bigger
role in the agricultural
industry," said Hector
Flores, president of the
League of United Latin
American Citizens.
To be sure, the overall
numbers cast a small shadow
on America's agricultural
map. Of the more than 3
million U.S. farmers, only
about 50,600 are Latinos.
The number of Hispanic farm
owners has reached a
sufficient size that the
Association of
Latino/Hispanic Farmers and
Ranchers was formed in
August. The new group held
its first national
conference Aug. 25-28 in Las
Cruces, N.M.
Agriculture experts cite a
number of factors that have
contributed to more Hispanic
farms, which are
predominantly family farms.
According to Ron Strochlic,
interim executive director
of the California Institute
for Rural Studies,
immigrants from Mexico and
other Latin American
countries have farming
experience.
"When the opportunity to own
their own land presents
itself, they are often more
poised and willing to take
on the risks than American
farmers," he said. "It's a
different mind-set. When you
come from an agricultural
country, that is something
you aspire to do."
Less dependent on bank
loans.
Unlike their counterparts in
other demographic groups,
Latino farmers are far less
dependent on government or
bank loans, which has left
them without the crushing
debt that has driven many
smaller operators to sell
and get out of the business.
Their farms also are family
endeavors, in which
relatives work long hours
together and pool resources,
Strochlic said.
"Family labor is also
sometimes cheaper, and they
are working harder because
they are more invested in
the farm operation,"
Strochlic said.
In some cases, longtime
Anglo farmers whose children
have left for jobs in the
city are selling their land
to the workers -- often
Hispanic -- who have labored
long and hard on the farms
for years.
After years of working as a
ranch foreman, Lorenzo Vega
jumped at the opportunity to
purchase a 65-acre lemon
orchard between Santa Paula
and Fillmore in the 1980s.
He also became a farm labor
contractor.
Vega's youngest son, Henry,
followed in his footsteps
and now owns Coastal
Harvesting, a farmworker
contracting company in Santa
Paula. Henry, 43, also helps
run the lemon farm and owns
part of the orchard trust.
He is also the first vice
president of the Farm Bureau
of Ventura County.
That is no small post in a
county that has a $1 billion
agricultural industry.
"Hispanics tend to be very
entrepreneurial. You like to
have your hand out less,"
Vega said, crediting his
father with instilling in
him a belief in the worth of
hard work.
Vega and others said Latino
farmers, who tend to have
relatively small operations,
also have a tradition of
growing diverse crops so a
price drop for one doesn't
bring doom.
They also have been
beneficiaries of the
expanding Latino population,
which has brought a booming
market for fruits and
vegetables such as those
they ate in the "old
country." Recognizing that
mainstream America's palate
also is broadening, some
Latino farmers are taking
advantage of new demand for
specialty produce and
organic products.
To help usher the growth of
Hispanic farm owners,
organizations such as the
Agriculture and Land-Based
Training Association in
Salinas is providing
training for aspiring
farmworkers who otherwise
wouldn't have the resources
to pursue small-scale family
farming on their own.
The Agriculture and
Land-Based Training
Association offers a
six-month classroom-based
program to teach farm
management, agronomy,
business management,
post-harvest techniques and
other skills. The classes
are held in Salinas, start
in October and end in March.
Last year, 17 people
graduated from the course
and went on to farm in the
110 acres that the
association owns in Salinas,
program coordinator Deborah
Yashar said.
The program has not yet
reached Ventura, Yashar
said.
Although the program is open
to all ethnicities, Latinos
make up a majority of
participants, Yashar said.
Because of the growth in
Hispanic ownership,
association President Rudy
Arredondo said, it is time
"to set an agenda for the
Latino farmers instead of
being on others' coattails."
At least 150 farmers and
ranchers are members of the
group so far.
Part of a migrant-worker
family, Arredondo as a child
picked cotton, potatoes,
sugar beets, cherries and
asparagus in a circuit
around the country.
He went on to become a
founding figure in the
United Farm Workers of
America movement and now, at
63, is turning his
organizing skills to forming
an association that can
wield influence to level the
field for Hispanics in such
critical areas as obtaining
loans and subsidies from
banks and government
programs as well as
marketing products and
securing water rights.
On another track, some
Hispanic farmers have sued
the federal Agriculture
Department, alleging they
have been victims of the
same racial discrimination
that black farmers have
endured in the granting of
loans. Black farmers won a
landmark legal settlement in
1999 when the department
acknowledged a historical
pattern of bias and vowed to
make things right.
Arredondo said his
organization aims to develop
a collegial, mutually
beneficial relationship with
federal agriculture
officials, and invited
Agriculture Secretary Mike
Johanns to the conference.
'It's the American dream'
"We would like to work with
the (Agriculture Department)
rather than take an
adversarial approach,"
Arredondo said.
Although he is proud Latinos
are taking ownership of
lucrative farms, Henry Vega
said the dream is open for
anyone with tenacity and a
good work ethic.
"It's the American dream,"
he said.
"As Hispanics, we have been
involved in the culture of
harvesting, but it is not
exclusive to one sector of
society, nationality or
background. It's the spirit
of hard work ... and
entrepreneurship."
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