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On Sunday, May 23, 2021, 5:39 PM, Louis Proyect <[email protected]> wrote:

     
You Can Feel the Tension’: A Windfall for Minority Farmers Divides Rural America

A $4 billion federal fund meant to confront how racial injustice has shaped 
American farming has angered white farmers who say they are being unfairly 
excluded.
   
Shade Lewis at his cattle farm in La Grange, Mo., on Friday. Mr. Lewis has 
spent the past decade scratching out a living as the only Black farmer in his 
corner of northeastern Missouri.Credit...Neeta Satam for The New York Times

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By Jack Healy

   - NYT, May 22, 2021

LaGRANGE, Mo. — Shade Lewis had just come in from feeding his cows one sunny 
spring afternoon when he opened a letter that could change his life: The 
government was offering to pay off his $200,000 farm loan, part of a new debt 
relief program created by Democrats to help farmers who have endured 
generations of racial discrimination.
           
It was a windfall for a 29-year-old who has spent the past decade scratching 
out a living as the only Black farmer in his corner of northeastern Missouri, 
where signposts quoting Genesis line the soybean fields and traffic signals 
warn drivers to go slow because it is planting season.
 
But the $4 billion fund has angered conservative white farmers who say they are 
being unfairly excluded because of their race. And it has plunged Mr. Lewis and 
other farmers of color into a new culture war over race, money and power in 
American farming.
 
“You can feel the tension,” Mr. Lewis said. “We’ve caught a lot of heat from 
the conservative Caucasian farmers.”
     
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The debt relief is redress set aside for what the government calls “socially 
disadvantaged farmers” — Black, Hispanic, Indigenous and other nonwhite workers 
who have endured a long history of discrimination, from violence and land theft 
in the Jim Crow South to banks and federal farm offices that refused them loans 
or government benefits that went to white farmers.
 
The program is part of a broader effort by the Biden administration and 
Democrats in Congress to confront how racial injustice has shaped American 
farming, which is overwhelmingly white. Black farm advocacy groups say that 
nearly all the land, profit and subsidies go to the biggest, most powerful farm 
operations, leaving Black farmers with little. But in large portions of rural 
America, the payments threaten to further anger white conservative farmers.

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The plans have drawn thousands of enraged comments on farm forums and are being 
fought by banks worried about losing interest income. And some rural residents 
have rallied around a new slogan, cribbed from the conservative response to the 
Black Lives Matter movement: All Farmers Matter.
 
Mr. Lewis is part of a new generation of Black farmers venturing back into 
urban plots and small rural farms, driven by a desire to nourish their 
communities with healthy food and create wealth rooted in the land.
 
Growing up in LaGrange, a city of 950 along the Mississippi River, Mr. Lewis 
would scoot a toy John Deere tractor through his mother’s apartment and pretend 
he was farming the carpet. He joined 4-H, farming and business groups in high 
school. He started farming at 19, with a few cows and dreams of ending the day 
with his own dirt on the soles of his boots.
   
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“I worried about him,” said his father, Kevin Lewis. “I watch him and shake my 
head and say, Is it worth it?”
 
It can be a tough, lonely life. In 1920, African-Americans owned some 14 
percent of the farms in the United States. But after a century of racial 
violence, foreclosures, migration into cities and farm consolidation, there are 
just under 49,000 left, representing 1.4 percent of American farmers. Most are 
concentrated in the Southeast and Texas.
 
These days, Black farmers have forged online networks that function as their 
own digital homemade farm bureaus. They celebrate first turnip harvests, ask 
whether fertilizer made from fish can revive wilting plants and commiserate 
about navigating government programs and the isolation of being the only Black 
farmers in their counties.
                Image The program is part of a broader effort by the Biden 
administration and Democrats in Congress to confront how racial injustice has 
shaped American farming, which is overwhelmingly white.Credit...Neeta Satam for 
The New York Times     
“You don’t have a network. You don’t have an infrastructure. There’s nothing,” 
said Sandy Thompson, who started an online directory of Black farmers in 2019 
after abandoning a three-year quest to convert a five-acre plot outside San 
Antonio into a vegetable farm.
 
Ms. Thompson spent $20,000 on equipment only to have her mower get stuck in the 
sandy soil. She called university extension offices, a vital source of guidance 
for farmers, but said she never got any help.
 
“We are not competitive with white farmers,” she said. “We need any help we can 
get.”
 
Nonwhite farmers, who make up about 5 percent of farmers, say they struggle 
disproportionately to get loans and government grants. They received less than 
1 percent of the billions of dollars in subsidies that flowed into farm country 
last year under former President Donald J. Trump to compensate farmers hurt by 
the coronavirus pandemic and the trade war with China.
     
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Mr. Lewis said he spent years struggling financially and searching for credit 
as he built his cattle herd from a few cows on rented ground to about 200 cows 
and calves on more than 100 acres of his own land. At first, he said, farm 
agents did not return his calls. Banks scoffed at his plans. Some days, he 
could not afford to gas up the red pickup truck that would stall out as he went 
to fix fences and spread manure in his alfalfa fields. Like many farmers, he 
works a second job, on power transmission lines.
 
Getting his government loan paid off now could change everything: He said he 
could pay down other loans on his livestock. Expand the patchwork of fields he 
owns to compete against established farmers. Get financing to build a home so 
he and his wife can escape their one-bedroom apartment.
 
“It’ll open up a whole lot of doors,” he said. “Maybe these local banks that 
didn’t have time for minorities will open up to us.”
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But several of his white neighbors in Lewis County, where 77 percent of voters 
supported Mr. Trump in November, see it differently.
 
Now, raw conversations about discrimination in farming are unfolding at 
farmers’ markets and on rural social media channels where race is often an 
uncomfortable subject.
 
“It’s a bunch of crap,” said Jeffrey Lay, who grows corn and soybeans on 2,000 
acres and is president of the county farm bureau. “They talk about they want to 
get rid of discrimination. But they’re not even thinking about the fact that 
they’re discriminating against us.”
 
Even in a county that is 94 percent white, Mr. Lay said the federal 
government’s renewed focus on helping farmers of color made him feel like he 
was losing ground, a sign to him of the country’s demographic shifts.
     
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“I can’t afford to go buy that 5,000-acre piece of ground,” he said. “Shade 
Lewis, he’d qualify to get it. And that’s fine. That doesn’t bother me. But I 
can’t.”
                Image     Jeffery Slay, President of Lewis County Farm Bureau, 
at his farm in La Bella, Mo., on Thursday.Credit...Neeta Satam for The New York 
Times     
Mr. Lewis senses the tensions when he swings into the gas station to get a 
Mountain Dew before feeding his cows in the morning and when he scans comments 
on Facebook or the news on RFD-TV, a kind of CNN for rural America. 
Conversations with white farmers around LaGrange become strained when they veer 
from corn prices to the challenges of being a Black farmer in a white industry.
 
“You can sit here and talk about race and things you’ve been through,” Mr. 
Lewis said. “They don’t understand. They’ll never understand.”
 
Many farmers of color have welcomed the debt relief, which was tucked into the 
$1.9 trillion coronavirus relief act, as well as even more ambitious measures 
proposed by Democrats to grant plots of up to 160 acres to Black farmers.
 
The Agriculture Department has a longstanding series of programs to serve 
socially disadvantaged farmers, and estimates that nearly 16,000 will have 
loans paid off that were made or backed by the government. The agency has sent 
thousands of letters to eligible farmers, and expects that money could start 
flowing by early June.
     
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But rural residents upset with the repayments call them reverse racism.
 
White conservative farmers and ranchers from Florida, Texas and the Midwest 
quickly sued to block the program, arguing that the promised money amounts to 
illegal discrimination. America First Legal, a group run by the former Trump 
aide Stephen Miller, is backing the Texas lawsuit, whose plaintiff is the 
state’s agriculture commissioner.
                Image     Shade Lewis with his wife Taylor Lewis and dogs at 
the Lewis Farm in LaGrange, Mo.Credit...Neeta Satam for The New York Times      
          Image     Nonwhite farmers, who make up about 5 percent of farmers, 
say they struggle disproportionately to get loans and government 
grants.Credit...Neeta Satam for The New York Times     
“It’s anti-white,” said Jon Stevens, one of five Midwestern farmers who filed a 
lawsuit through the Wisconsin Institute for Law and Liberty, a conservative 
legal group. “Since when does Agriculture get into this kind of race politics?”
 
Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack defended the debt-repayment program at a 
White House briefing this month, saying that earlier coronavirus relief had 
gone disproportionately to white farmers. He also said the government had never 
addressed the cumulative effects of years of racial discrimination against 
farmers.
 
“We know for a fact that socially disadvantaged producers were discriminated 
against by the United States Department of Agriculture,” he said. “There is a 
very legitimate reason for doing what we’re doing.”
 
The use of race in federal programs has been a subject of litigation for 
decades, with a narrow majority of the Supreme Court deciding in 1995 that it 
is permissible only if the programs are “narrowly tailored” to accomplish a 
“compelling governmental interest.” The courts have generally held that 
institutions have a compelling interest in remedying their own past 
discrimination.
 
Still, the lawsuits have sowed concern and anger through networks of Black 
farmers. Some have spent decades fighting unsuccessfully to get their share of 
legal settlements over past discrimination by the Agriculture Department. Now, 
they are worried that the money set aside for debt repayment could get delayed 
for years in legal challenges.
     
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“We’re getting the short end,” said John Wesley Boyd Jr., a Virginia bean and 
grain farmer who is also founder of the National Black Farmers Association. 
“Anytime in the United States, if there’s money for Blacks, those groups speak 
up and say how unfair it is. But it’s not unfair when they’re spitting on you, 
when they’re calling you racial epithets, when they’re tearing up your 
application.”
                Image     Mr. Lewis surveys his cattle at his farm earlier this 
week.Credit...Neeta Satam for The New York Times     
Mr. Lewis says he tries to look beyond issues of race and has a white wife, 
white in-laws and white family on his mother’s side. But ignoring race can be 
impossible in a small town like LaGrange, he said. He hunts, fishes and holds 
conservative views, and curses by saying “son of a buck.” He has voted 
Republican in past elections, but unlike most of his neighbors, he voted for 
President Biden.
 
One recent afternoon, a friend, Brad Klauser, who runs his family’s large 
cattle and grain farm, swung by Mr. Lewis’s barn to catch up. As they talked 
bills, rising fuel costs and sky-high land prices, the conversation turned to 
the debt relief that only one of them was eligible to receive.
 
“Everybody should have the same option,” said Mr. Klauser, who is white, 
leaning on the flatbed of Mr. Lewis’s pickup. “Do you think you’re 
disadvantaged?”
 
“There’s definitely disadvantages,” Mr. Lewis replied, saying that officials 
scoffed when he first tried to get a federal farm loan. “They didn’t take me 
serious.”
 
After Mr. Klauser headed home, Mr. Lewis thought about how the two friends were 
both trying to reap a profit from the land. “Everyone should have a chance at 
farming,” he said.
       
Jack Healy is a Colorado-based national correspondent who focuses on rural 
places and life outside America's “City Limits” signs. He has worked in Iraq 
and Afghanistan and is a graduate of the University of Missouri’s journalism 
school. @jackhealynyt • Facebook
    A version of this article appears in print on May 23, 2021, Section A, Page 
1 of the New York edition with the headline: Windfall for Black Farmers Roils 
Rural America. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe
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