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What is CFA?
Community Farm Alliance is a statewide grassroots
organization of persons committed to family-scale farming as the most
efficient and sustainable form of producing the best quality food, while
protecting the environment and strengthening rural community life.
What is CFA's Vision?
We believe that family-scale farming and people
working together lay a foundation for community life. Family scale
farming has been eroded so significantly that we need to create a new
system of agriculture that keeps people on the land. We seek to ensure
the health and well being of rural communities by advocating rural
economic development whose first priority is the protection of
family-scale farming.
We believe that American society is best served by family-scale
agriculture, and that corporate control of agriculture endangers our
land, food, and communities. Family farmers best protect soil and water
resources: family farmers are the most reliable producers of nutritious,
reasonably priced food; and family farmers sustain thousands of rural
communities.
We believe that all laborers and the farmer, too, must be allowed a fair
return. Price for farm products need to be adequate for farm families to
make a living and care for their farms.
We believe that all farmers and rural people, regardless of race,
gender, age, nationality or economic level, need to work together for
better policies and more prosperous communities.
What Are CFA' s Goals?
Community Farm Alliance seeks:
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To assist local communities identify
their own long-term needs and act on those needs;
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To help local leadership acquire the
skills of organizing, advocacy, and democratic participation;
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To build an organization that represents
the interests of rural people in renewing the prosperity and quality of
life of their communities;
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To build alliances between rural and
urban organizations and individuals around food, land, and economic
justice issues.
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To promote agricultural diversification
projects that offer viable alternatives to tobacco and demonstrate
needed policy changes; and
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To make institutions accountable to
develop policies and programs that reflect the needs and priorities of
our rural communities.
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