Over jet lag...finally.
The guys did a great job. Everything is fine on the farm.....except the bugs will not die. Arrrgh.
One of the things I read on vacation was Isaacson's biography of Apple founder Steve Jobs. Did you know Apple has 7000,000 employees in China? 30,000 are engineers. Can you imagine what it would do for California's economy if only half of those jobs were here in the state. Jobs argued with President Obama that there are too many regulations for manufacturers to produce here in the US. Even Apple gets it. It is not just farmers complaining about over-regulation.
Unlike Apple farmers cannot just move their operations overseas. We are kind of attached to their land. The answer isn't moving anyways. We need safe and sane rules, not this silliness we have now.
Farmers and Paperwork
By Paul H. Betancourt
Copyright August, 2011
It is no
secret that farmers hate paperwork. Do you know why? Because we make our living
growing things, not filling out forms.
Have you
noticed we have this huge cadre of intelligent, educated people in this country
whose job is to regulate the producers. I understand that we have to have
regulations. But, do you see my point, we have some of our brightest and best
who spend their days not helping us be productive, but actually slowing us down
from what we do best- produce food and fiber for the rest of you.
My favorite
example was when I called to find a poster the state wanted me to post at our
work site. The guy who answered the phone didn’t have one, couldn’t mail me
one, but he wanted me to shut down the farm until we had his form posted. Am I
the only one who thinks this is crazy?
I know we
need regulations. But filling out forms is not an end in itself. Let me and my
neighbors do what we do best – grow food.
Isn’t It Ironic?
By Paul H. Betancourt
Copyright January 2013
Isn’t it ironic? Everyone says they
support family farms, but environmental and government policy are squeezing out
family farmers.
I make my living producing food and
fiber, not going to meetings or filling out forms. But, thanks to government
agencies and our environmental friends I get to spend time doing both when I
should be out in the field or the shop.
Large farms can afford to hire
environmental compliance officers. I have a friend that does that for a large
operation south of here. It works pretty well for them. He takes care of the
environmental paperwork, and it is a full time job. But, he works for the same
kind of large farming operation everyone says we want to avoid.
I am not saying that these things
are bad. What I am trying to say is that some of our government regulations and
some of our environmental friends are making it harder and harder for family
farms to survive. Just keeping the farm going can take everything you’ve got.
Adding new stuff to make paper pushers happy can push smaller farmers over the
edge. The land will still be farmed- but now it will be by larger operations. Isn’t
that ironic?
In case you are wondering- the photo is of me in the Hagia Sophia in Istanbul.
No comments:
Post a Comment