Government regulations regarding tiny farming operations
(my nov 25, 2014 toledotalk.com comment)
We were initial members for the Community Supported Agriculture farm called Shared Legacy Farms. That first year in 2008, the farm only had 12 members.
Our produce came from the farm dirty, which was no big deal to me, since I'm familiar with gardening in dirt, and I know how to wash lettuce in our sink. But some people are unfamiliar with the concept of dirt on carrots.
Kurt the farmer wanted to clean the produce as a service to his members, but he couldn't.
If Kurt had washed the lettuce, his then little farming operation would have been pushed into a new category, as being some kind of processing operation, which would have meant his farm would have required government inspections and fee payments.
He just wanted to wash some dirt off veggies.
Don't overlook the possibility that some government regulations that are allegedly for our health benefits are actually meant to make things more difficult for small operations. Large corporations expect positive returns for paying their lobbyists millions.
From JR's : articles
183 words - 1108 chars
- 1 min read
created on
updated on
- #
source
- versions
Related articles
Local health department idiotic behavior at the Toledo farmers market - Nov 25, 2014
Toledo can screw up lunch with politics - Sep 02, 2014
Junk food needs sin-taxed and banned - Nov 10, 2017
Tt jul 2, 2014 comment - Jul 02, 2014
Coffee issues at the Toledo Farmers Market - Oct 4, 2014 - Oct 04, 2014
more >>