Morgantown Talks Urban Agriculture Policy

A group called the Morgantown Municipal Green Team will host a Community Dialogue on Urban Agriculture next week.

Morgantown is taking a note from Charleston which recently revamped their urban ag policies.

The goal of the urban agriculture dialogue is to gather stakeholders and citizens interested in local production of agricultural products, and to review city regulations of agricultural activities within the City of Morgantown. It was initiated largely by Morgantown City Council members who visited the Charleston area and learned about their city’s agriculture initiatives.

Market Manager of the Morgantown and Westover Farmers Markets, Lisa Lagana, says urban farmers already exist in Morgantown, and there’s plenty of data to suggest growing interest. She hopes the discussion ultimately shapes policy that will serve the specific needs of her community. Possible items to discuss might include raising chickens or livestock, beekeeping, and composting.

The benefits of urban agriculture include everything from encouraging healthier lifestyles, to a more robust local economy, and reductions in vandalism and crime.

The Urban Ag round table will take place 6:00–7:30pm at the downtown public library (373 Spruce Street).

For more information, contact Pamela Cubberly at 703-218-5417 or Lisa Lagana, Market Manager of the Farmers Market, at 304-993-2410.

1st National FFA Officer from W.Va. in 40 Years: Wesley Davis

“Future Farmers of America” was founded in 1928 with a mission to prepare future generations for the challenges of feeding a growing population. They teach that agriculture is more than planting and harvesting– it’s a science, it’s a business and it’s an art. There are about 5,000 members of the Future Farmers of America organization in the state of West Virginia, and almost 600,000 across the country. One of the organization’s leaders today is a young man from Point Pleasant.

Meet Wesley Davis. He goes by Wes. He’s 19 and this guy has a story.

Finding a Chicken

He grew up in Point Pleasant around lots of agriculture. He also spent a lot of time with his grandmother who was has an entrepreneur’s spirit. For years he worked at her flag store. One way or another, he inherited that spirit because by the seventh grade, his wheels started turning after a bunny mishap.

“I had thought that we had gotten two females, but it ended up we had a male and a female. Of course you know what rabbits do; they have a lot of babies. So they had a litter of babies—had about 10 rabbits and I decided, you know what? I’m gonna go into the rabbit business. I’m going to start selling these and make millions of dollars. By the time I sold all these rabbits, my parents were like, ‘Absolutely not, it’s just not happening.’”

But Wes wasn’t convinced his parents appreciated the possibilities, so he bided his time and looked for different avenues of approach. The county fair was, of course, the next day.

“So I start into the fair grounds and the first place I go—into the rabbits and poultry barn and start looking around. And of course I find one in the back corner and it’s got these beautiful little loppy ears and I’m thinking, ‘I’m gonna buy this rabbit.’”

His mother had different ideas. He pleaded and argued and pointed out the cuteness, to which she replied:

“’It’s not happening. You’re not bringing anything home with a heartbeat except your brother. It’s just not happening,’” Wes says she said.

This is when Wes gets his brother involved…  By the end of the week—all prices reduced! 5 dollar rabbit? Now 3 bucks. Wes approaches his little brother who, he knew, would do anything for him:

“I asked him, ‘Zack, can I have three dollars to get a drink?’ And he’s like, ‘Yeah, sure!’ So he gives me the three dollars and I go running toward the rabbit and poultry barn and I’m buying this rabbit. When I get the cage where it had ‘3$,’ it had a big X through it and it said, ‘SOLD.’ I was so disappointed. They already sold my rabbit. So head sulking, walking around, I went over to the poultry side of the barn and started looking around and I found this chicken for a dollar. I’m thinking, ‘I can get this chicken, I can get the drink, I didn’t technically lie to him!’”

So that’s what he did. He bought the chicken, he bought the drink, and he endured the wrath of his mother. That’s how Wes found his chicken. From there it’s history. Wes was in the Chicken and Egg business.

“By the time I was a senior in high school I had 350 [birds] and was selling [eggs] to 100 homes, 9 schools, and 10 restaurants. Also had a compost operation so all the litter from the poultry themselves—it actually was composted so that was a third of the revenue itself. So it wasn’t just selling the eggs, it was also selling the compost.”

Wes made $45k in revenue his senior year. On 2 acres.

Help

With some help from the USDA in the form of a five thousand dollar Young Farmer loan he bought his first brooding house to start a group of chicks and he soon had 50, then 350 birds. The USDA also offers grants through what’s called the Natural Resources Conservation Service. The NRCS looks for ways to protect the environment through agricultural ventures.

“A lot of people see poultry waste as waste that you throw away. But I could get this grant where I had no investment in this facility, and then take that litter, process it into a product, and sell it!”

Wes explains that it all folded back into making himself marketable. He tapped into the local food market, and when people found out his was an environmentally responsible business, they were even more likely to support him.

Now he’s touring the country and even making trips abroad as a national officer of the FFA—the first from West Virginia in 39 years. Wes attributes a lot of his success to the training and encouragement he got through the FFA. He’s been visiting industry partners and officials, but the next 8 months will be dedicated to what he calls a marathon of classrooms and state FFA conventions, and meeting with state and local leaders.

Wes is also enrolled at West Virginia University studying agribusiness management and agriculture education. He says after his year as an FFA officer, he’ll start his quest for meaning. He has big ideas about ways to improve his home state, and he wants to see more successful businesses diversify West Virginia’s economy. He’s developing those ideas and obviously becoming an effective communicator. He talks about the 3 P’s of successful business: Product, People, and Process.

He says people in West Virginia are “just awesome.”

“I go around the country and I see a lot of places, but the people from WV are different. They want to help you, they’re encouraging. They’ll work as hard as they need to get the job done.”

“It’s the process in West Virginia that I think we’re lacking a lot of the time. We have great products, great ideas for products. I want to one day come back and help develop that process and see how is it that we can continue to have success, not only in entrepreneurship, but also in education and in our government and in the things that really help to advance our state.”

Wes doesn’t have a clear idea of what or where he’ll end up next. All he knows for sure is that he wants to do something helpful in the world.

“Because I really think we’re meant to help other people any way that we can. So if I’m in business or education or wherever, I want it to be something where I’m helping people,” he says.

Three cheers for Future Farmers, right?

Raw Milk in W.Va.? Farmer Says SWEET, DHHR Says SOUR

A petition being passed around West Virginia through the Change.org web site is pushing legislators to change Raw Milk laws in the state. “Consumers…

A petition being passed around West Virginia through the Change.org web site is pushing legislators to change Raw Milk laws in the state. “Consumers should have the right to eat and drink foods they believe will benefit them,” the petition reads. Not everyone agrees.

Farmer Says Sweet

Tinia Creamer is a young farmer in the Huntington area who is outspoken about the issue of milk.

Creamer raises dairy goats and miniature Derby cows, and she’s the Huntington area chapter leader for the Weston A. Price Foundation an international non-profit food advocacy group and one of the most vocal promoters of raw, or “real” milk.

  1. “Real” Nutritious

The Weston Price Foundation is leading a global campaign, circulating information about the benefits of not just raw, but “real” milk. “Real” meaning raw milk produced by cows (or other lactating animals) fed green grass in Spring, Summer and Fall; stored dry hay, silage, and root vegetables in Winter.
Benefits of Raw/Real milk? Butterfat.

According to the Weston A. Price Foundation, raw milk is rich in unprocessed butterfat which contains vitamins A and D—necessary components to aid in the digestion and absorption the calcium and protein in the water fraction of the milk. According to their research, this butterfat is also rich in short- and medium chain fatty acids which protect against disease and stimulate the immune system, and it contains something called glyco-spingolipids which prevent intestinal distress. It also contains something called conjugated linoleic acid which has strong anticancer properties.

  1. Freedom

Creamer grew up in rural Lincoln County. Her father was a grocer who would sell a local woman’s milk and butter and with great demand. She thinks it’s unjust that today only those capable of keeping goats or cows are allowed to have access to their milk. She says the most important issue for her at hand is one of food freedom.
Creamer also says she’s aware of the risks just as she’s aware of the risks posed by eating raw oysters and sushi and steak tartare.

“We allow the public access to tobacco, alcohol, and pharmaceuticals that are over the counter with known side effects,” Creamer says. “And we say, ‘Use this at your risk.’ And then turn around and say, ‘But you can’t have milk. It’s too dangerous.’”

  1. Economics

Creamer also extols the potential economic benefits raw milk sales could have in the state for small farms. She says there’s a place in the growing sustainable food movement for the product that sells for $8-$10/gallon.
She’s hopeful that the issue will be taken up in the upcoming legislative session.

DHHR Says Sour

Meanwhile, health officials at the Department of Health and Human Recourses aren’t buying the idea that health benefits of raw milk outweigh the risk to public health.

“West Virginia has been exceptionally proactive in protecting her citizens from raw milk sales,” says Dr. Letitia Tierney, Commissioner of the Bureau for Public Health and State Health Officer. She’s proud of West Virginia’s record as one of the states with the strictest regulations regarding the sale and distribution of raw milk. She says raw milk has been illegal since 1968 when the state adopted Section 9 of the Federal Pasteurized Milk Ordinance.

Not only is it illegal to buy or sell, since 2005 it’s also illegal to collectively own a cow and share the milk she produces, and just in case anyone would try to sell or buy raw milk under the guise that it’s for a pet or livestock—for the past three years that’s been illegal, too. Penalties for being caught exchanging money for milk include fines and misdemeanor charges. Tierney says it’s all in the name of public health.

  1. Foodborne Threats

“The reality is, raw milk contains bacteria and many of them can be harmful,” Tierney says.
Tierney lists bacteria found in raw milk such as Salmonella, E. Coli, Campylobacter, and Listeria which are responsible for causing a lot of foodborne illnesses.

“These bacteria can seriously affect the health of anyone who drinks raw milk or eats food made from raw milk, but it’s especially dangerous to people who have weakened immune systems like older adults, pregnant women, or kids—up through teenage years,” Tierney says.

Tierney  sites a 2013 raw milk outbreak in Alaska sickened 24 people, adding that the outbreak was related to a cow sharing program. She says a second outbreak at the same farm was confirmed in May 2013. Then in November 2013, an outbreak sickened nine children in Tennessee was linked to a cow sharing program. Five of the nine children, all younger than seven, required hospitalization, and three developed a severe kidney problem known as hemolytic uremic syndrome

  1. Following Leaders

Tierney says the W.Va. DHHR, the Food and Drug Administration, the Center for Disease Control, and many other mainstream and well-respected organizations are like-minded when it comes to the issue of raw milk.
She says In July 2012, CDC issued a letter to all State and Territorial Epidemiologists and State Public Health Veterinarians regarding the ongoing public health hazard of consuming raw milk. The letter urges state regulators to continue to support pasteurization and consider restricting or prohibiting the sale or distribution of raw milk and other pasteurized dairy products in their states.  In 2008, The American Academy of Pediatrics advised families against giving children unpasteurized milk in their December 2008 Newsletter.

A 13 year study of non-pasteurized dairy products recently published in the CDC journal  “Emerging Infectious Diseases,” reviewed diary product outbreaks from 1993-2006 in the US. The report compared the amount of milk produced in the US during the study period, saying that states where the sale of raw milk was legal had more than twice the rate of outbreaks as states where it was illegal. The final conclusions was that federal and state regulators should continue to enforce existing regulations to prevent distribution of non-pasteurized dairy products to consumers.

  1. Backward

Tierney says processing milk—pasteurization and homogenization—was borne out of a need to safe guard against commonly faced illness and that relaxing milk regulations would be a step backward.
“In the early 1900s mothers were boiling their milk because they had recognized that giving raw milk to their children was causing them to get sick,” Tierney says. “We’re fortunate to live when we live—in a time when we’re able to prevent diseases.”

Agriculture Dept. still deciding site of hog farm to feed inmates

A West Virginia Department of Agriculture spokesman says the agency hasn’t yet selected a site for a hog farm that would help feed state inmates.

     Last week, Mingo County Revelopment Authority director Steve Kominar told the authority’s board that the county had been chosen as a site for the hog farm.
 
     Department of Agriculture spokesman Butch Antolini said Tuesday that Mingo County is one of several locations being looked at in the southern coalfields.
 
     Agriculture Commissioner Walk Helmick says the state buys more than 100,000 pounds of pork annually from outside the state to feed inmates in state prisons. That doesn’t include regional jails and juvenile facilities.
 
     Helmick says taxpayer dollars used to feed and house inmates should be spent in West Virginia.

W.Va. agriculture chief: Shutdown won't affect operations

West Virginia Agriculture Commissioner Walt Helmick said Tuesday the partial federal government shutdown won’t affect his agency’s operations.
 
     Helmick said  in a news release that the Department of Agriculture is continuing daily inspections at livestock slaughter and processing facilities.
 
     The department also is continuing surveillance of egg and dairy products, testing poultry flocks for disease and conducting other routine activities.
 
     Helmick said the department has broad powers under the state code to conduct inspections, enact embargoes and quarantines, and to deal with any livestock disease outbreaks.
 

State Fair was fine despite bad weather, fewer visitors

The State Fair of West Virginia said this year’s event was a success, despite rain that reduced attendance.
 
State Fair Chief Executive Officer Marlene Joliffe said in a news release that the 89th annual event saw about 175,000 visitors, down from the decade’s average of about 180,000-195,000 fairgoers.
 
Rain fell on five days during the fair’s eight-day run in August in Fairlea, WV.
 
Joliffe said 67 percent of fairgoers who responded to an online survey rated their experience at the fair as above average or excellent.
 

There were an estimated 4,000 entries in the livestock, 4-H, FFA, home arts and garden competitions.

Winning exhibitors were paid a total $175,000 in award premiums.

About 20,000 concert tickets were sold, and 20,000 pounds of food collected which was distributed to six area food banks, along with cash donations.
 
Joliffe estimated the Fair had a $14 million dollar economic impact on the state.

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