Cornell Dean tours dairy farm with Rep. Brindisi, touts ag research

ITHACA, N.Y. – U.S. Rep. Anthony Brindisi met Aug. 10 with farmers and agricultural thought leaders – including Kathryn Boor, the Dean of the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences at Cornell University – for a farm tour and roundtable discussion about the importance of agricultural research. 

The event, organized by the nonprofit Farm Journal Foundation, was held at E-Z Acres dairy farm in Homer, which is owned and operated by Cornell alum Mike McMahon and his wife, Edie. 

The event highlighted how research is being applied at the farm level to help farmers become more profitable and sustainable. The U.S. farm economy faces challenges on multiple fronts – extreme weather, low prices, strained trade relationships and now COVID-19, which is wreaking havoc on farm and food supply chains.

Boor said the COVID-19 global pandemic underscores the need for increased long-term support for agricultural research.

“While the country’s short-term needs are many during this pandemic, we cannot lose sight of the long-term gains of funding agricultural research and development,” Boor said. “To achieve the sweeping, transformational changes essential to truly sustainable agricultural systems, we need a reinvestment in applied agricultural research and a reorientation of the national research portfolio to include consideration of sustainability issues.” 

At the event, Brindisi – whose legislative district covers a wide swath of the region and includes Binghamton, Cortland and Utica – announced plans to co-sponsor the America Grows Act, which authorizes a 5% increase in annual funding for the next five years to four U.S. Department of Agriculture research agencies: the Agricultural Research Service (ARS); the Economic Research Service (ERS); the National Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS); and the National Institute of Food and Agriculture (NIFA).

In particular, ARS and NIFA conduct research across a wide variety of scientific areas, including ways to prevent pest and disease outbreaks from hurting farm productivity and food supplies. Speakers noted this type of research is vital in the time of COVID-19, which has exposed how quickly diseases can spread and how vulnerable our systems can be when outbreaks occur.

“During this pandemic, our farmers have worked overtime to keep food on our shelves and our families fed,” Brindisi said. “Now more than ever, we need to be investing in ag research to make sure the farms of today are ready for the challenges of tomorrow.”

For more than 20 years, E-Z Acres has worked as a case farm for Cornell. Together with the Cornell University Nutrient Management Spear Program, E-Z Acres monitored its herd, soil and crop data and developed a plan to sustainably improve cow health, milk output and forage production – all while reducing its environmental footprint, improving soil health and protecting local water quality.

“When we first became a Cornell University case farm in 1997, our business was suffering, but the team’s research really helped us turn things around,” Mike McMahon said. “Expanded public support for the kind of research taking place at Cornell University is absolutely critical for the future of American farming, if we want to maintain our global leadership position in the years ahead.”

For additional information, see this Cornell Chronicle story. 

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