-Caveat Lector- >From www.defenders.org/fbp01.html {{<Begin>}} Farm Bureau vs. Nature by Vicki Monks Fall 1998 Part 1 Vicki Monks, a freelance writer in Santa Fe, New Mexico, reports frequently on wildlife and environmental issues. Out in the Apache National Forest on the Arizona-New Mexico border, Mexican wolves reintroduced last March are already running into trouble. "The wolves are threatening people," Eric Ness of the New Mexico Farm and Livestock Bureau (NMFLB) charges. It seems that some visitors to a guest ranch in the area heard the wolves howling somewhere off in the forest. That scared these people? "If a wolf is howling outside your door, that's threatening enough for me," Ness says. Ness's characterization of this incident as a threat is typical of the hyperbole favored by many of the Farm Bureau activists who have made fights against wolf reintroduction their cause célèbre. NMFLB is an affiliate of the American Farm Bureau Federation, which filed a 1994 lawsuit seeking to block reintroduction of gray wolves in Yellowstone National Park. That case resulted in a recent court order requiring removal of reintroduced Yellowstone wolves. The government, Defenders of Wildlife and others are appealing the order. Meanwhile, NMFLB has sued to force removal of the Apache wolves. A search of the Farm Bureau's web site brings up some wild rhetoric. In an essay, Montana Farm Bureau Executive Vice President Jake Cummins argues that environmental leaders "don't care whether the wolves live or die." Environmentalists just want "to expand federal land use control . . . [in order to] redistribute wealth by consolidating power in the federal bureaucracy," Cummins writes. He suggests that such people still admire "the Communist ideal." Cummins's grandiloquence may sound over the top, but make no mistake, the Farm Bureau is far from the political fringes. Although most people may be only vaguely aware of the organization, an examination of the American Farm Bureau Federation (AFBF) and its affiliates reveals that this nonprofit organization is a powerful, persistent and wealthy opponent of environmental protection and wildlife conservation - an advocate of right-wing causes that sometimes have little to do with agriculture and at other times may work to the detriment of the family farmers that AFBF claims to represent. In a Fortune magazine survey published last December, the American Farm Bureau Federation ranked 17th among the 25 most powerful special-interest groups in Washington, just below the Veterans of Foreign Wars of the United States and just above the Motion Picture Association of America. It also bested the American Legion, the National Governors' Association and the International Brotherhood of Teamsters. The Farm Bureau stood out as one of the best at manipulating the laws by which we live, the survey said. With more than 4.7 million members and with affiliated organizations in all 50 states, AFBF wields enormous political power, from Congress to state legislatures and county commissions. "They are an incredibly powerful lobby," says Sam Hitt of Forest Guardians, a Santa Fe, New Mexico, environmental group. Hitt has run up against the Farm Bureau time and again on such issues as wolf reintroduction and protection of streamside ecosystems. "Legislators seem to go google-eyed when they see them walk through the door, and that's caused the loss of a lot of our wildlife heritage," Hitt says. Defenders of Wildlife biologist Bob Ferris says, "County supervisors in almost all rural areas have some connection to the Farm Bureau. That's where a lot of the decisions about land use and the sorts of things that affect wildlife are made." The Chamber of Commerce in Binghamton, New York, set up the first county farm bureau in 1911 to act as a sponsor for an extension agent provided by the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA). From that time through the 1950s, a cozy relationship developed between the private farm bureaus and USDA agents - a relationship so close that many farmers mistakenly believed the farm bureaus and the government were one and the same, according to a history of the Farm Bureau written by A.V. Krebs. In 1954 USDA ordered an end to its agents' practice of accepting free office space and gratuities from farm bureaus, but close connections between the two remained. Ironically, it was this association with the federal government - and the consequent access to federal crop programs and technical information - that helped establish AFBF's dominance as a farmers' organization. These days, AFBF rails against the intrusiveness of the federal government and especially against environmental regulations, which AFBF claims are overly burdensome to farmers. The Endangered Species Act, wetlands laws, the Clean Air Act, the Safe Drinking Water Act and many other laws have pushed American agriculture to the breaking point, according to AFBF. AFBF's President Dean Kleckner aims particular criticism at the Food Quality Protection Act, which directs the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to set standards for pesticide residues in food at levels low enough to protect the health of infants and children. "Sane people do wonder what these kids will eat . . . when the government closes the produce department at our grocery stores," Kleckner wrote in a newspaper column in which he suggested that EPA's "bureaucratic madness" would result in bans on all agricultural chemicals. Although AFBF calls itself the voice of the American farmer, many of the causes it champions, including less pesticide regulation, relate as much to the Farm Bureau's financial interests as to the needs of farmers. The Farm Bureau may genuinely fear that agriculture will suffer if farmers must reduce their use of chemicals, but Farm Bureau-affiliated companies own stock in corporations that manufacture pesticides, and presumably those investments might suffer as well. According to corporate documents, 63 Farm Bureau-affiliated insurance companies earn a total of more than $6.5 billion annually in net premiums. The Farm Bureaus also have investments in banks, mutual-fund companies, financial- services firms, grain-trading companies and other businesses. Many of those businesses in turn own stocks in oil and gas, pulp and paper, timber, railroad, automobile, plastics, steel, chemical, pesticide, communications, electronics and cigarette companies and even a nuclear power plant. The lists of stocks owned by Farm Bureau affiliates read like a who's who of corporate heavyweights: Philip Morris, Weyerhaeuser, Union Carbide, DuPont, AT&T, Ford Motor, Raytheon (the world's leading manufacturer of tactical missiles), CBS and many more. In a recent interview, AFBF Washington lobbyist Dennis Stolte claimed ignorance of these financial interests and insisted that the insurance and other businesses have little to do with AFBF. "That's not the Farm Bureau," he said. "Our members are farmers for the most part. They're people who are interested in promoting agriculture." Nevertheless, comparisons of the boards of directors of Farm Bureau-affiliated businesses and Farm Bureau organizations themselves show substantial overlap. In many cases, the individuals and boards controlling the businesses also control the state farm bureaus. Frequently, much of the profit earned by these businesses reverts to the farm bureaus. In one case in point, the Ohio Farm Bureau reported a profit of $11 million last year. So vast is this web of interlocking companies with interlocking boards that it is nearly impossible to estimate the true extent of the Farm Bureau's financial power. "There's an impression that this is a huge organization of farmers," says former Texas Agriculture Commissioner Jim Hightower, who now hosts a radio call-in show. "But they are no more a family farmer organization than is State Farm Insurance. Just because you have the word farmer in your name doesn't mean you really represent farmers." USDA puts the number of full-time American farmers at just over 1 million, so clearly most of AFBF's 4.7 million members must come from outside of agriculture. Numbers from the Texas Farm Bureau (TXFB) tell the story. In 1997, Harris County, which includes metropolitan Houston, had 4,675 members even though USDA listed only 551 full-time farmers there. Dallas County, with just 229 farmers, registered 2,332 Farm Bureau members. In fact, most urban members are nothing more than customers of Farm Bureau- affiliated insurance companies. The Farm Bureau requires these customers to purchase memberships in order to qualify for low-cost automobile, home, health or life insurance. These members do not necessarily support or even know about the Farm Bureau political activities that membership fees and insurance premiums are bankrolling. Chicago banker Sallyann Garner, for example, became a Farm Bureau member when she took out an insurance policy in 1991. Garner says she knew that a membership in the DuPage County, Illinois, Farm Bureau came with her policy, but she did not realize that all county members automatically become members of the national organization. Garner learned last April about AFBF's lawsuit to force removal of the Yellowstone wolves. "Wolf recovery happens to be one of my pet programs," she says. "I was extremely upset. I was appalled that I was forced to be a member of the American Farm Bureau just because of my insurance. I ought to be able to choose insurance based on the cost and the value and not unwittingly be part of a political action group that advocates policies I personally object to." A letter to DuPage County Farm Bureau president Michael Ashby brought a response saying that if Garner objected to the policy on "Wildlife Pest and Predator Control" she could vote with her checkbook and find other insurance. {{<End>}} A<>E<>R ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The only real voyage of discovery consists not in seeking new landscapes but in having new eyes. -Marcel Proust + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + "Believe nothing, no matter where you read it, or who said it, no matter if I have said it, unless it agrees with your own reason and your common sense." --Buddha + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + A merely fallen enemy may rise again, but the reconciled one is truly vanquished. -Johann Christoph Schiller, German Writer (1759-1805) + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + It is preoccupation with possessions, more than anything else, that prevents us from living freely and nobly. -Bertrand Russell + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + "Everyone has the right...to seek, receive and impart information and ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers." 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