President-elect Joe Biden’s choice of former Iowa Gov. Tom Vilsack as his U.S. Department of Agriculture Secretary should bode well for Mississippi farmers whose agriculture production value was $7.35 billion in 2020.
As a former mayor, state legislator, governor, and dairy industry advocate, Vilsack brings a wealth of experience to the job. He served eight years as the head of USDA during the administration of President Barack Obama. The Biden appointment will position Vilsack to become the second longest-serving USDA secretary since fellow Iowan James Wilson headed the agency from 1897 to 1913.
Vilsack, 69, is no stranger to Mississippi.
During
his prior tenure at the helm of USDA, Vilsack toured the devastation of
the 2011 F5 tornado that slammed Smithville and other Mississippi and
Alabama
communities. Vilsack joined then-Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour, former
Department of Human Services Secretary Janet Napolitano, former Federal
Emergency Administrator Craig Fugate, Small Business Administration
head Karen Mills, and Housing and Urban Development
Secretary Shaun Donavan.
Vilsack
in 2013 inspected several U.S. Department of Agriculture research
projects being conducted on the Starkville campus of Mississippi State
University
and joined MSU President Mark Keenum for a press conference after the
tour. Vilsack also met with students from the Division of Agriculture,
Forestry and Veterinary Medicine during his MSU visit.In 2013, Vilsack
met with members of the National Center for
Appropriate Technology Gulf States Region office at the Mississippi
Agricultural and Forestry Museum in Jackson. Vilsack spoke to the need
for funding for small farmers and agricultural research, the U.S. Farm
Bill, and financing for farmers and health needs
in the Mississippi Delta.
Vilsack announced grants for the Miss. Association of Cooperatives, the Miss. Meat Goat Producers, among other grower cooperatives, and qualified producers under the Disadvantaged Producer program.
In
2015, Vilsack announced 53 grants totaling more than $18 million to
support research, teaching, and extension activities in 1890
historically Black land-grant
colleges and universities through USDA’s National Institute of Food and
Agriculture. Alcorn State University received just over $1 million.
Mississippi remains deeply involved with the agriculture industry. Despite the state’s poultry and forestry industries taking a substantial hit from COVID-19 issues, flooding, tornadoes, and other impacts, the state’s economy remains dependent on agricultural production and further processing.
Vilsack’s nomination met with criticism from the political left and one leading Biden supporter who either wanted new blood in the position or who felt it was time for a qualified member of the Black community to lead the agency.
U.S. Rep. James Clyburn of South Carolina, whose endorsement of Biden in South Carolina was critical to Biden’s resurgence in the Democratic primaries, is one of those voices.
“I’m
sick and tired of people saying that rural America is only Nebraska and
Iowa,” Clyburn told The New York Post recently. “Rural America is South
Carolina;
it’s Mississippi, it’s Alabama. It’s Georgia,” Clyburn said of southern
states with a vast number of rural Black residents.
But strong voices across the agriculture industry, particularly trade groups, praised Vilsack’s selection – saying his experience in leading the sprawling agency is vital in the time of the COVID-19 pandemic.
While leading USDA, Vilsack appointed Keenum to the Foundation for Food and Agricultural Research (FFAR) board of directors that Keenum now chairs. FFAR was created by Congress in the 2014 Farm Bill to connect farmers, researchers and funding sources through public-private partnership.
Keenum, a former USDA undersecretary for Farm and Foreign Agricultural Services who was closely involved with crafting U.S. farm policy during his Capitol Hill days before taking the helm at MSU, said he believed Vilsack is “an excellent choice at a challenging time.”
Sid Salter is a syndicated columnist. Contact him at sidsalter@sidsalter.com.
10 comments:
Sid failed to mention Visak's push to put a tax on Christmas trees-look it up.
Looks like Roundsaville exited his State USDA post just in time..... people like him always turn up "with a high paid post".
Globalist.
Biden's people will turn our agriculture industry into government farms, completely controlled by the feds. Venezuela/Cuba here we come.
You fuck heads who voted for Biden can bend over and grab your ankles, and get used to it. Squeel!
8:50 You are so so correct. Now, Bennie will be back in control of handing out highly paid federal positions in Mississippi to political cronies on the other side. It is the spoils of victory to the winner. And, of course all positions will be awarded based on education, experience, skill, etc. (NOT!).
@10:57 AM: "It is the spoils of victory to the winner. And, of course all positions will be awarded based on education, experience, skill, etc. (NOT!)."
Yes, so different from the Trump administration, which valued education, experience, skill, .....wait a minute..... (NOT!)
@10:48 AM
You talk like it’s a bad thing. Don’t knock it until you try it!
Why always mention Cuba and Venezuela?
Perhaps they will recreate the successes in Vietnam and China? Communism has been incredibly successful in both nations. Vietnam even defeated the USA in war.
Meanwhile, capitalism in the USA has done nothing but provide a continuously declining way of life with a regular boom/bust cycle that never seems to affect the elite ruling class or central bankers. Only an ignorant American who has never been abroad truly believes that Americans have the highest standard of living in the world.
11:12,
America has the highest standards of corn syrup and ethanol subsidies in the world! Taxpayers hand over more money per farmer and per acre than any nation on this planet! And food prices still rise! You name an industry and it is socialized. Oil? Subsidized. Banking? You better believe that the profits are private and the loses are public! And Big Tech? You bet your ass the US Government pays Amazon billions to use their AWS servers and meanwhile intelligence agencies pay for the privilege to mine social media data.
@11:12, funny how you communists would get real capitalist if I were to load my pants up with organic, fair trade, blue mountain coffee at Cups and try to walk out without paying
Why is it illegal in this state to buy or sell frog legs, bass, bream, crappie or buffalo? There's a huge market being purposefully ignored and it all falls under Ag.
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