Back to Leopold Letter Spring 2007
The Leopold Center has awarded grants for 26 new projects that support a wide range of activities from custom grazing and grass-based dairies to the financial and technical challenges faced by farmers interested in accessing niche food markets.
The 26 new projects total $549,456 for the first year of work, and were selected from 69 preproposals submitted to the Center in August 2006. The Center also has renewed or is in the process of renewing grants for 20 multi-year projects that are in progress.
“These projects show the Center’s response to emerging issues and trends in agriculture and represent a rich diversity of ideas and projects throughout Iowa,” said Director Jerry DeWitt.
DeWitt said the Center’s call for project ideas included an emphasis on the growing interest in grass-based and organic dairies. “We wanted to address the production, infrastructure and policy aspects of these systems, which can help protect the land as well as supply the demand for products in these new markets,” he added. “I think we’ll have some excellent work to showcase in this area.”
The Center is funding three dairy projects that will provide technical assistance for new and beginning grass-based or organic dairy farmers throughout the state. In southern and southwest Iowa, the Leopold Center is funding work through a collaboration including the Iowa Institute for Cooperatives, Clarinda Economic Development, ISU Extension and the GROW Iowa Foundation. The Iowa Valley RC&D will coordinate dairy efforts in southeastern Iowa, and ISU Extension dairy field specialists will work with dairy farmers in northeast Iowa.
The 2007 grants also include 16 new projects in the Marketing and Food Systems Initiative. Three of the new projects will develop business models for food distribution and processing, while another project will research and test a web-based food-purchasing template for use by farmer networks. Other projects include development of an on-line Iowa Grassland Products Calculator, cash flow and profitability analysis for small meat processors, and a feasibility study for an organic education program in northwest Iowa.
Seven new grants are part of the Ecology Initiative, including two research projects on changing land use and custom grazing. One project will investigate effective ways to contact out-of-state landowners to explore land use options for their property. In a second project, Practical Farmers of Iowa in conjunction with ISU Extension will review custom grazing contracts and host a series of workshops and field days to discuss successful models for custom grazing in Iowa. They also will develop an Iowa Custom Graziers Directory with additional information for farmers.
Other Ecology Initiative projects include preparation of a white paper exploring policy options for CRP and other types of land retirement, research on the potential for perennials to remove nitrate from groundwater in streamside buffers, development of winter triticale cultivars for forage and biomass production, and low-external-input cropping systems.
NEW PROJECTS IN 2007
New Grass-based/Organic Dairy projects [more details on dairy projects]
New Marketing and Food Systems Initiative grants [more details on marketing projects]
New Ecology Initiative grants [more details on ecology projects]
Back to Leopold Letter Spring 2007