Farms Depend on Our Tax Dollars
US government cancels Climate Smart grant funding.

by Foxtrot Farm –
Last month, Foxtrot Herb Farm and hundreds of other small farms were informed that we would not be getting grant funding that had already been allocated by Congress for Climate Smart practices.
Many of us were counting on this money for the next four seasons. Foxtrot Farm was planning on receiving $35K this coming year.
Farmers make their budgets, hire their crew, and order supplies in late fall/early winter. It’s very hard to have the rug pulled out from under you this close to spring—especially from the government to whom we pay taxes.
This money would have funded a number of practices that are common sense: fences to keep out deer, perennial plantings to block wind, grass in waterways to prevent erosion, etc.
They are called “climate smart” practices because they are helpful in adapting to extreme weather events, which—whether or not you believe the widespread scientific consensus around human-caused climate change—any farmer can tell you are getting more and more common and severe every year.
In short, these practices could save farms, livelihoods, and the whole food system. This funding would have provided some financial support in implementing climate smart practices, paying farmers for materials, and a small amount to do the work.
Climate Smart practices have been targeted by the current administration as “green new deal social engineering.” When they say, “green new deal social engineering,” they are talking about this farm, and almost every other small organic farm in our community. They are talking about the underpaid advisors who support us and the trees we want to plant and the practices we want to implement to protect our shared environmental resources—like clean water, healthy forests, and breathable air.
When they say, “marxist gender ideology” they are also talking about me, because some of the people I love the most in this world are trans, and I use whatever pronouns for them that they most prefer, because I love them and I want them to feel seen and appreciated for who they are.
When they say, “DEI,” they’re also in a way talking about this farm, because we try to create a welcoming farm environment for everyone who comes here—employee, customer, or visitor. This means that we offer sliding scale pricing. We give a reparations discount to Black and indigenous people, because so many of these medicines come from their healing traditions, which they were legally prohibited from practicing for decades.
And, by the way, when they talk about the leeches on Medicaid, they’re talking about me too. I paid myself $12K to farm last year, but I paid my crew above industry standard. We grew thousands of pounds of plants, offered sliding-scale pricing, and made 30 CSA shares available to food-insecure members of our community. I ensured that 100 acres of farmland and forest remained undeveloped and in agricultural protection. I did so in a way that protected watersheds and fed pollinators. I truly do not know if I can afford to do this without a Medicaid program.
These terms are codes for people you know and love who are trying to do good work in the world. When you hear them, don’t picture some vague sinister figure, picture me and the work I do.
For those who are curious, here’s some of the text from the email we received from the PA Sustainable Ag Association, our grant administrator:
“One existing external constraint that does impact our ability to continue work as planned is that, at this time, we are not able to support new practice installations that require a CPA52 approval for environmental review. Those practices include the following: Alley Cropping, Contour Buffer Strips, Fences, Field Borders, Filter Strips, Forest Farming, Grassed Waterways, Hedgerow Planting, Herbaceous Wind Barriers, Livestock Pipelines, Pasture & Hay Planting, Riparian Herbaceous Cover, Silvopasture, Tree & Shrub Establishment, Vegetative Barrier, Windbreaks, and Watering Facility.”
But the most infuriating part of the email?
“We know that this is extremely disappointing, but the newly created Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) recently canceled its contract with the third-party CPA52 reviewer, even though there is no cost saving to the federal government to do so.”
For those who don’t know, CPA52 environmental review makes sure that you’re not destroying vulnerable habitats like wetlands when you implement a climate practice.
The most infuriating thing about all of this is that it is clear that DOGE—despite having no congressional approval to do so—is nominally tasked with “cost saving,” yet has taken no time to learn how complex bureaucratic systems work and is slashing at will. From my vantage point, it feels like an intentional tactic to instill terror and uncertainty over the people it resents—civil servants, scientists, teachers, queer folks, people of color, disabled people, and millions of other good people who do work in sectors like climate change, agriculture, restorative practices, etc.
Anyway, I guarantee you that nearly every farmer you’ve ever bought eggs or produce from survives, to some degree, on funding that comes from our shared tax dollars. We’re not OK, and we need your support more than ever.
Support Foxtrot Farm at www.foxtrotherbfarm.com/store. Find local farms and farmer’s markets by going to asapconnections.org.