Black farmers say decades of discriminatory practices by USDA forced many out of business

Wednesday, March 31, 2021
Black-owned farmers fight for equality, land and help
Why are Black-owned farms disappearing? In the video above, ABC13's Chauncy Glover talks about the challenges, the fight for equality and the fight for land.

BRAZORIA COUNTY, Texas (KTRK) -- Jeremy Peaches was born to get his hands dirty.

"My last name is Peaches," he said. "My grandfather worked on a plantation in Mississippi where they grew peaches."

About 50 miles outside of Houston in Brazoria County, deep in Rosharon, is the Peaches family farm and Fresh Life Organics.

"I'm primarily the head farmer," said Jeremy. "My brother is in charge of distribution as most of our farmer's markets. My mother and aunt handle most of the books and clerical aspects of it. As well as my girlfriend ... she does all the invoicing."

They are just one of a few Black-owned family farms left in the Houston area, but all across the country, Black farmers are disappearing.

According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, there were 32,000 Black-operated farms in the country in 2017, which is down 3% from just five years earlier. A total of 8,011 of those farms remain in Texas. That's the most in the United States.

ABC13's Chauncy Glover caught up with Peaches a week after February's historic winter storm.

More than 100 people died in subfreezing weather in Texas, including many of hypothermia. Many families went without water and heat for days with no indication of when the power might be restored.

"[We're] trying to salvage as much as we can," said Jeremy. "I took my last, this past year, and planted five and a half acres, and in one day, it's all gone."

The Peaches family is no stranger to weathering tough times throughout the history of their farm.

"I recall that they would beat the Black man hanging and call them the 'N word', which was disgusting," said Helen Peaches.

The family's 15 acres of land has been cultivated by three generations. Helen inherited the land from her mother and then handed it down to her daughter, Toni Peaches, who then handed it down to her son Jeremy. He said he faces some of the same problems his ancestors faced.

"It's been times I've applied for some certain loans or even grant funding and was just denied ... for frivolous reasons," he said.

Right now, Black-owned farms make up less than 2% of all farms in the United States.

For decades, Black farmers have faced unfair treatment and discriminatory practices. Many of them were robbed of their hard-earned generational wealth.

"We've been slaves, we've been sharecroppers, we survived Jim Crowe, and here I am talking to you," said president of the National Black Farmers Association John Boyd to Glover. "Another African-American man in the year of 2021 about a group of people who have been totally excluded from a large federal arm in this country. It's a national disgrace."

Boyd said Black farmers have faced all kinds of bullying tactics and have been blocked from receiving loans. He said they even had land taken away and sometimes, their crops were destroyed. Not by Mother Nature, Boyd said, but by man.

"We lost millions of acres of land at the hands of the United States Department of Agriculture," Boyd said. "The discrimination happened at the hands of Democrats, it happened at the hands of Republicans, so you can't say it's a one-party issue. It's been pervasive, and it's been going on for decades because of a county committee system, a three-member panel that's primarily made up of 99% of white men that kept Black farmers from getting loans. And when we got in trouble, they were the first ones to get the farms out of inventory."

However, help is on the way.

Through President Joe Biden's American Rescue Plan passed by Congress, farmers of color will receive $5 billion, most of which will go toward forgiving debt. It also includes funds for education, training and grants for the next generation of farmers.

Meanwhile, Boyd said he's working with New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker to push the Justice for Black Farmers Act.

The bill would grant 20,000 experienced Black farmers 160 acres of land through the year 2030.

"We wouldn't have to go through what our previous generations went through, we will automatically have at least the land, and from there, that would be on us to what we do with that land," said Jeremy.

Jeremy and his family are excited about what's on the horizon for Black farmers, saying though it doesn't make everything right, it's certainly a step in the right direction.

"Farming is hard work, but you know, we're very resilient people. We have a strong family," he said.

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