By Ryan Hanrahan
Reuters’ Leah Douglas reported Wednesday that “the U.S. Department of Agriculture said on Wednesday it has issued $2 billion of financial assistance to more than 43,000 farmers, ranchers and forest landowners who experienced past discrimination in the agency’s farm lending programs.”
“The Inflation Reduction Act allocated $2.2 billion for the discrimination payments. For decades, Black farmers and other under-represented groups in farming have alleged bias in the agency’s farm loan programs,” Douglas reported. “The recipients of the payments include more than 23,000 people who have or previously had a farming operation, and another 20,000 who reported they were unable to have a farming operation because of discrimination in USDA’s loan process.”
“Farm loans from the USDA are often considered a last resort for farmers who have difficulty accessing credit from traditional banks,” Douglas reported. “Examples of types of discrimination faced by farmers could include receiving higher interest rates, having a loan approved too late in the farming season, or a lack of assistance from loan officers, Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack told reporters on a conference call.”