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    « New Zealand's green farmer awards | Main | Carpeting linked to adult asthma »

    EWG president sets record straight on "emergency" subsidies

    By Matthew

    November 6, 2006

    ken.jpgAre weather-related complications, such as droughts, really 'disasters' if they seem to happen year after year? Many farmers who receive these payments seem to think so, but EWG President and farm policy expert Ken Cook challenges that notion with his response to a poorly-researched Aberdeen American editorial.

    Taxpayers have a right to take a hard look at the flawed system their money supports. There are good reasons we don't grow grapefruit in South Dakota. Perhaps we should consider the viability of some of the other crops we grow there if the weather causes a "disaster" every other year. The way to fix the problem, according to Cook, is to “press politicians to explore new approaches to agriculture, resource use and disaster aid where growing conditions are so challenging that praying for an annual Act of Congress is standard business practice.”

    As for the ill-informed editorial that spurred Cook's response, Cook reminds the American’s editors that:

    • Environmental Working Group (EWG) is the only Washington-based conservation and environmental organization to have formally and repeatedly supported aid this year for farmers and ranchers who have been hit with weather-related crop and livestock losses;

    • The paper would have served its readers better and more truthfully had it taken 30 seconds to fact check its fantasy piece about the "big city, metropolitan institution."

    Read Ken’s full editorial:
    National environmental group setting facts, records straight (5 Nov 2006)

    Ken Cook is president of Environmental Working Group, a public interest research and advocacy organization known for its Farm Subsidy Database (and not so much for its Enviroblog). The author of dozens of articles, opinion pieces and reports on agricultural, public health and environmental topics, "[Cook's] fingerprints can be found on nearly two decades of U.S. farm law" (Omaha World Herald).

    « New Zealand's green farmer awards |