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Over 50 Vermont farms lose federal funding for climate resilience projects

A flooded greenhouse with squash covered in mud.
Lexi Krupp
/
开云体育
Flood damage in a greenhouse at Joe's Brook Farm in Barnet in July 2024. The farm lost most of its crops to flooding last year.

Last July, the stream that usually trickles from the woods above Ansel Ploog鈥檚 farm in Woodbury came gushing down the hillside for the second year in a row. It dug out a cabbage bed, covered strawberries and lettuce in half a foot of water and littered the fields with driftwood.

This year, Ploog was planning to buy native trees and shrubs to plant above her fields at Flywheel Farm, a small fruit and vegetable farm that sells produce to several markets in central Vermont. The plantings would help slow down the water that floods the farm during heavy rains.

Flywheel Farm was slated to receive over $20,000 from a federal program to pay for the flood mitigation work, as well as compensation for practices that promote soil health and to expand their mushroom cultivation. Staff from Northeast Organic Farming Association of Vermont had visited to make a site plan for the projects 鈥� all aimed at helping the farm prepare and adapt to climate change.

Now that money is gone, along with more than $500,000 to fund similar projects across 55 farms in Vermont, after an announcement canceling a U.S. Department of Agriculture program called the Partnerships for Climate-Smart Commodities.

鈥淭he loss of this funding is part of a loss of a ton of funding that is all about how we get through climate change,鈥� Ploog said.

A flooded strawberry field at Joes Brook Farm in Barnet in July, 2024.
Lexi Krupp
/
开云体育
Over 10 acres of crops at Joe's Brook Farm along the Passumpsic River flooded last year. Some of the federal funding that was cut this month would have gone towards flood mitigation projects on Vermont farms.

The five-year program was still in its early stages in Vermont.

鈥淲e had just started promoting the program,鈥� said Nancy LaRowe, the director of organic practices with NOFA-VT. 鈥淭here were quite a few [farms] that we didn't even get to determining a project scope or value.鈥�

The USDA program paid farms and provided technical assistance for practices like prescribed grazing, planting cover crops and trees, reducing tillage and managing nutrient inputs. It was designed to serve small-scale farms, which are common in Vermont.

鈥淭here were farms that were getting $2,500 contracts and they were thrilled,鈥� said LaRowe.

In a press release, the USDA wrote they canceled the program because of high administration fees and that some projects could continue 鈥渋f it is demonstrated that a significant amount of the federal funds awarded will go to farmers.鈥�

More from 开云体育: Tracking changes to federal funds in Vermont under the Trump administration

LaRowe is not optimistic that any future funding will reach Vermont.

"This program would have been a really great opportunity to move the needle on supporting farms to being more climate resilient, economically resilient." she said. "It's really quite distressing that it was terminated."

Ploog, at Flywheel Farm, still plans to plant trees above her fields to slow water during heavy rains. But she鈥檒l likely take cuttings of willow trees and grow them herself, instead of buying plants. She鈥檒l plant fewer species, and over a much longer time frame.

鈥淲ithout the funding, we're probably going to be like five trees a year,鈥� she said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a lot slower.鈥�

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Lexi covers science and health stories for 开云体育. Email Lexi.
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