I was
recently asked to set up a table to display Winkelman Farm at a charity bazaar
in Switzerland. The point of the Bazaar
is to raise awareness and fundraise for charities. I was asked to join because
friends presenting at the Bazaar know that I also support Winkelman Farm. I instinctively hesitated to participate
because our cause of farmland conservation in Western New York State pales next
to the other causes: schools and
orphanages in developing countries.
Charity is
about helping those in need, so Winkelman Farm is there to address a need in
Western New York to keep farmland in farming.
Winkelman Farm is also about justice, that is, fair play and
equity. Is it fair that the farmer who
takes care of the open spaces we all enjoy is not compensated for that service? By “farmer” I mean the small family farmer
that treats the land as the inheritance of her children. This
farmer stretches pennies to keep things working, to provide food for our
tables, to ensure that crops are rotated for our drive-by viewing pleasure, and
to conserve the spaces for wildlife to thrive in our watersheds and wooded
areas.
In this
case, charity is righting a wrong: it is an injustice that the people that work
their backs off to feed us cannot afford to keep the land that we enjoy,
open over generations. They are not in a position, in
their retiring years, to make gifts - even tax-deductible ones - to the public of
scenic fields and forested land. We, the
public, do not pay enough for our food to give them this luxury, even as our
food is transported further and further from the field to our tables.
Winkelman
Farm addresses this injustice by using charitable funds to purchase
conservation easements on farmland so that retiring farmers can comfortably
hand the land down to their children, or sell it to another farmer, so that the
land produces benefits for all of us forever.
So, no, I
will not present Winkelman Farm at the charity Bazaar in Switzerland. I will go and support the children who need
help in Nicaragua, Sri Lanka, Nepal and South Africa. At the same time, I will continue to support
Winkelman Farm because I believe that farming communities are important to our
children’s future in Western New York.