America’s farmers and
ranchers are again being asked to take part in the 2012 Census of Agriculture.
The census is conducted every five years by the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s
(USDA) National Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS). The census is a
complete count of all U.S. farms, ranches and those who operate them.
General sarcasm is
expressed by farmers as every census roles around. Many farmers don’t think the
census does much good for them because politicians aren’t known for basing
decisions on facts, especially ones supplied by the farm minority of voters.
But many in the ag industry point out that there is a definite need for farmers
to provide accurate information. Federal law requires all agricultural
producers to participate in the census and requires NASS to keep all individual
information confidential.
“It is important that
all growers, state farmers, women farmers and ranchers respond,” said Mike
Duffy, Iowa State University Extension economist. “Census information is your
voice and helps to shape the farm future as farmers. The Census of Agriculture
is the only opportunity to know the state of U.S. agriculture. The census data
can be used for research projects, general information on trends, basis for
policy decisions and a host of other activities. Farmers benefit from completing the census as
completely and accurately as possible because the information is used in a
variety of ways that can affect them directly. Agriculture, especially
production agriculture, is changing dramatically. Every five years, farmers are
given the chance to be sure we understand and know what is happening in
agriculture. If we don’t know the true situation in agriculture, we have to
rely on anecdotal evidence.”
Renee Picanso,
director of NASS’s Census and Survey Division, says the census data is vital.
The census looks at land use and ownership, operator characteristics, production
practices, income and expenditures and other topics. This information is used
by all those who serve farmers and rural communities from federal, state and
local governments to agribusinesses and trade associations. She contends that
legislators do use the data when shaping farm policy, agribusinesses factor it
into their planning efforts and rural service providers use it in planning
community improvements.
The most up to date
data being passed along by NASS is based on the 2007 census when 2 million farms
existed that totaled 922 million acres. This was a 4 percent increase in the
number of U.S. farms from the previous 2002 census, but the increase was
basically hobby farmers or farmer market suppliers.
It will be
interesting to see if this farmer market farming trend has continued with even
more of these extremely small-scale operations that are classified as farms but
have very little in common with the ever-increasing commodity crop farming
operations. This will be the indication of what influence all the recent talk
about growing local has had in the U.S.
NASS is to have all
the census forms out by the end of December. Completed forms are due by Feb. 4,
2013. Producers can fill out the census online via a secure website, www.agcensus.usda.gov, or
return their form by mail.
For more information about the Census, visit www.agcensus.usda.gov or call 1-888-4AG-STAT (1-888-424-7828).
(by Rich Keller, Iowa
State University)
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