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Don’t start competing with farmers

West Virginia Farm Bureau members recently spoke out about what they believe is misspending and overreach by the state Department of Agriculture that uses taxpayer money to put the government agency in competition with the farmers they are supposed to be helping.

Farm bureau officials pointed to a couple of examples: $34,000 for four donor cows from Oklahoma the agriculture department says will bring “superior genetics” to the Mountain State’s own herds; and the Potato Pilot Program, which, according to one farmer, produced a crop so poor last year it was not worth the cost, but would be in competition with private potato farmers if it was ever to have a good year.

For its part, the Department of Agriculture did not present any argument against the Farm Bureau’s complaints, but simply said it plans to discuss the issues with lawmakers. The only concern raised in the department’s response was that it claimed neither members nor the leadership of the Farm Bureau had contacted the department or its commissioner, Walt Helmick, to discuss the matter before speaking out.

Every department in Charleston should be looking right now for ways to save money, not spend it – particularly if spending it goes against the department’s primary mission. In the case of the Department of Agriculture, the mission used to be keeping the food supply safe and acting as an advocate for farmers. Farm Bureau officials appear to believe that should still be the department’s mission.

But buried deep at the bottom of a page on the state Department of Agriculture’s website is this gem: “Over the decades of its existence, the role and responsibilities of the WVDA have expanded to meet the changing face of agriculture.”

To them, that must mean the new face of agriculture in the Mountain State is big government. West Virginia farmers and the bureau that represents them are right to suggest that should not be the case.

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