Posted by
RuralAuthorBrendaJErvin on Friday, November 07, 2008 10:46:37 AM
~ The Economic Research Service of the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Ralph E. Heimlich and William D. Anderson
Near Pinckney in Livingston County, general crop farmer Art Rentz farmed all his life operating the farm his father established that now contains 300-plus sheep. Rentz's son, William and wife, Kathy, help maintain the prime real estate in the picturesque Livingston County. “We’re trying to hold on to the land as long as we can,” says Kathy Rentz, farm-businesswoman and shepherd. In their weathered-basement barn, she sits in her corner office holding two orphaned baby lambs, and talking over the farm with her father-in-law. “It’s been building up all over this area for sometime. We turn away real estate people all the time.” While Kathy is talking an SUV raced down the dirt road in front of their farm. “We can’t believe how many people are moving in this township,” says, 71-year old Rentz. Another concern for the Rentz’s are escalating taxes, “My taxes are so high I can’t afford to pay them. So, I went to the township, but they said they couldn’t do anything about them. How can anyone farm with when taxes are so high?” Lawmakers are agreeing and supporting farmers, including a state-governmental task force called, Michigan Land Use Leadership Council, comprised of business and civic leaders, as well as President of the Michigan Farm Bureau, Wayne Wood. According to The Great Lakes Bulletin News Service, the council members are working very hard to hold back urban sprawl and to “curb Michigan’s wasteful patterns of development.”
"We don't own the land, we just take care of it." Jefferson Filler, Barry County farmer.
©Excerpted from Brenda Ervin's "Barns of Michigan" to be released in 2010 by Rural America Books.