More than 200 farms across western and central Massachusetts started receiving checks last week from the Massachusetts Farm Resiliency Fund, which was launched by the Healey administration and United Way of Central Massachusetts after devastating flooding in July โ and the governor said Thursday that the fund will keep accepting donations to be ready to help the next time severe weather hurts Massachusetts farms.
The fundraising campaign has taken in more than $3 million through 650 donations from individuals, families, private philanthropies and businesses, Tim Garvin, CEO of the United Way of Central Massachusetts, said at Hollis Hills Farm in Fitchburg on Thursday afternoon. Gov. Maura Healey said that an initial round of relief checks started going out last week, spreading $2 million across 214 farms.
โMore than one farmer has already responded to say quote, โThis will save our farm.โ To me, this is what the Massachusetts spirit is all about,โ the governor said. โIโve talked for a long time about Team Massachusetts and Iโve called upon everybody on any number of issues to come forward and find ways to meet the moment and support, and I am grateful to all of you who answered that call, who showed the generosity, who showed and supported the resiliency of our farming community, and who really stand here all together.โ
Jim Lattanzi, owner of Hollis Hills Farm, said this was his 10th year farming in Fitchburg and โprobably the most challenging.โ
โWhether it be that frost that we lost all of our peach crop, the frost in May when we lost a lot of our apple crop and have lots of damage weโre dealing with, to the amount of rain that we fought and the amount of fungus that weโre fighting,โ he said, describing the challenges of this growing season.
โWeโre used to being able to bring the best-looking product forward, and itโs been a challenging year, and your customers that arenโt used to seeing spots on your apples or a squishy spot in a strawberry or however it was that we faced this year, itโs hard because you do all the work and we also feel that weโre letting people down because we work so hard, but the product isnโt quite right or we donโt even have the product.โ
Watching all of his farmโs hard work โwash awayโ because of severe weather โtakes the wind out of your sails,โ Lattanzi said. But knowing that the governor, legislators and businesses were ready to step in to arrange for relief โblows a little wind back in your sails,โ he said.
โYou know, we donโt choose this profession for money. We do it because we love our role, we love the land, we love our farms, we love our communities,โ Lattanzi said, adding that โmoney helps.โ โWe donโt do it alone and we know that, and so I can only speak for myself but I know that I speak for many in that weโre incredibly appreciative of the financial support, but also knowing that we have such a great community behind us.โ
Garvin has previously said the goal of the Massachusetts Farm Resiliency Fund is to reach $5 million by the middle or end of September, but Healey said Thursday that the effort โis far from overโ and that the fund could be tapped down the line if storms damage farms elsewhere in the state.
โWe continue to see adverse weather events, serious bad weather, right, in all different forms. We had nine tornadoes in Massachusetts. I donโt know that a governorโs had nine tornadoes in a summer in Massachusetts history before,โ she said. โSo a key to this is building resilience … itโs why this fund is named what itโs named, itโs why it will remain up and running, because what happened here in central and western Massachusetts, we know thereโs a threat for our cranberry growers in southeastern Mass. maybe with the next weather event. We want to find ways to support farmers and their innovations to build resilient farms, sustainable farms.โ
On Wednesday, the Healey administration announced an initial $15 million in funding from the stateโs Natural Disaster Recovery Program for Agriculture was available to Massachusetts farms that were โadversely affected by one or more of the extreme weather events in 2023.โ Financial relief is available to farmers impacted by the February deep freeze, the May frost, and July floods to assist with their recovery and resumption of growing operations.
โThese funds will help ensure our farms have the resources to salvage a difficult year and come back stronger than before. Weโre grateful to the Legislature for making these funds available to support our hardworking farmers,โ Healey said.
And last month, the U.S. Department of Agriculture designated parts of the state primary natural disaster areas following excessive rain from July 9 through July 16. The seven Massachusetts counties designated as primary natural disaster areas were Berkshire, Bristol, Franklin, Hampden, Hampshire, Norfolk and Worcester counties. Contiguous counties are also eligible, including Dukes, Middlesex, Plymouth and Suffolk counties.
Through the USDA, farmers in those counties can apply for low-interest loans and refinance existing loans, and tap into the Emergency Conservation Program, a cost-sharing program for debris and cleanup costs related to natural disasters.
