Here’s What’s on the Minds of the People Tasked with Keeping Agriculture Safe and Profitable

The sausage making behind the sausage making

Juliet Glass
Heated

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Photo: Spencer Weiner/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images

I’m going to go out on a limb and say that to most people, even food-obsessed ones, spending a day at the National Association of State Departments of Agriculture 2019 Winter Policy Conference in Arlington, Va., sounds about as fun as watching reruns of Miami Vice or Teletubbies: Pick your poison.

I am not most people. I spent a decade writing about food and another decade doing nonprofit food system work. When presented with the opportunity to report on the conference, I was excited but also a little cocky, assuming that I already had a solid grasp of the issues. What I did not realize was that attending the NASDA policy conference would be like traveling in a time machine for a sneak peek at what will be driving agricultural legislation in the upcoming years and likely, the next U.S. Farm Bill.

My past agriculture conference experience has been focused on small- to medium-scale sustainable farming of specialty crops (i.e., food), most recently the Pennsylvania Association for Sustainable Agriculture’s Sustainable Agriculture Conference. NASDA’s policy conference, a gathering of federal and state leaders, definitely has a different vibe — business casual versus…

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