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Sonoma County opens vacant land to ag production

The Sonoma County Board of Supervisors voted yesterday to open county land — including parts of parks, open space parcels and vacant lots in residential areas — to community gardeners and small commercial farmers, according to the Santa Rosa Press Democrat.

The initiative is designed to make land available for agricultural production in an area where high land values make it nearly impossible to farm.

UC Cooperative Extension in Sonoma County will conduct an inventory to identify suitable land for the project. The researchers will consider property owned by the county water agency and land controlled by the general services department, the article said. The study and plans for application and training will be be completed in June.

“We've got this land. How do we go about giving people access to it?” the article quoted Stephanie Larson, director of UCCE in Sonoma County.

The program was praised by health advocates — who believe more local farming and gardening could ease the county's obesity rate — and small-scale farmers.

“There are a lot of young farmers who want to get into business,” Santa Rosa small farmer Wayne James told reporter Brett Wilkison. “(The county) should really be doing more of this.”

Small farms and gardens to spring up in Sonoma County.
Small farms and gardens to spring up in Sonoma County.

Posted on Wednesday, February 16, 2011 at 9:13 AM
Tags: farm (2), garden (38), Stephanie Larson (7)

Comments:

1.
This is incredible news! I will use this to shame our local governments into doing the same. Why doesn't this ever hit the prime-time news?

Posted by Mike Taylor on February 19, 2011 at 7:22 PM

2.
Thanks for the useful information, I 'm just wondering if I can rewrite and publish this article hey I like your skill of writing keep posting. Land is the passive factor in production. As such, land simply exists. To make the gifts of nature satisfy our needs and desires, human beings must do something with the natural resources; they must exert themselves, and this human exertion in production is called labor. Everything that people do, to convert natural opportunities into human satisfactions -- whether it involves the exertion of brawn, or brains, or both -- is labor, to the economist. The initiative is designed to make land available for agricultural production in an area where high land values make it nearly impossible to farm. Great information thanks for sharing this with us. In fact in all posts of this blog their is something to learn. Good luck. Regards

Posted by Adirondack real estate on April 11, 2011 at 10:10 PM

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