http://www.practicalfarmers.org/assets/files/PFI_Livestock_Coordinator_Job_Announcement.pdf
Check out this great opportunity with a reputable organization.
http://www.practicalfarmers.org/assets/files/PFI_Livestock_Coordinator_Job_Announcement.pdf
Check out this great opportunity with a reputable organization.
Dear Rick Ross, Thank you for contacting the Small Farms Conservancy. On June 15 you wrote:
I work with a small farmers market in Sweet Home, OR. We would like to purchase a card reader to allow us to take Oregon food stamps, which work like a credit card. Is there a grant program that you could point us to that might grant us some funding to make this purchase?
We have researched your question and have good news for you. The machine you need is FREE.
The program is called FNS Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) from the USDA. The process is referred to as Electronic Benefit Transfer and uses an EBT card.
For online application go to www.fns.usda.gov/snap
For paper application call 1-877-823-4369
If you have questions call 1-800-894-0050 and ask to speak with someone regarding SNAP’s merchant hotline.
The program utilizes a unique machine, POS terminal, and there is no charge after acceptance of application and contract. Takes approx. 1 week to process. You will be asked for a completed application, bank details, a voided check, and a signed agreement/contract.
Your question was researched by Amy Jo Ferris of the Conservancy office.
Thanks again, Lynn Miller, vice president Small Farms Conservancy
Thank you very much for this – I appreciate the information, and your time.
However, it appears that the machine available for free requires a land line and electrical source. We are at an outdoor farmers market and require a wireless machine.
So again, is there anyone you can point us to that may write us a grant to cover some of the costs?
Thank again you for your trouble.
- Rick Ross
Salmon Brook Farms
Dear Rick;
A wireless terminal is available at no cost as well. You need to request it. If you have any questions the SNAP’s hotline (1-800-894-0050) is extremely helpful. Let them know you are from Oregon, for there are different restrictions for each state that apply.
Let us know if we can be of further assistance.
Sincerely,
Amy “A. J.” Ferris
Small Farms Conservancy
Your Small Farms Conservancy could use lots of people to help us with current projects.
SEED DETECTIVES. We need folks from each state to collect contact information for any and every independent seed company. This information will be added to our FREE seed sources listing encouraging folks to give their business to these companies which are on the front lines of the war to protect our biodiverity.
FARMER’S MARKET DETECTIVES. We need folks to send us in complete information on their local farmer’s markets; name, address, day of the week, hours, contact information. This will go into a searchable comprehensive directory of all North American farmer’s markets.
RESTAURANT DETECTIVES. We want to compile a listing of restaurants which proudly feature fresh locally-grown foods and offer this to anyone visiting the site who wishes to know what’s available in their area.
Watch here for additional needs. And thanks for caring and helping out!
The Small Farms Conservancy and the Small Farmer’s Journal are honored and excited to announce the coming arrival of a most important NEW BOOK, Paul Hunter’s One Seed to Another; The New Small Farming. A portion of the proceeds of the sale of this book are being donated to the Small Farms Conservancy. Paul Hunter is an award winning poet and sits on the board of directors of the Small Farms Conservancy.
One Seed to Another is staggering and bracing in its truths and relevance. This is straight talk from a man whose every breath is poetry and whose heartbeat is directly plugged into farming as right livelihood.
His accomplishment is our accomplishment for these words in this seminal book are at once familiar and fresh, testing and taunting. They give us ourselves.
A great and compelling book that reminds us where our new farming came from, where it is today and suggests where it might be taking us. I look forward to many opportunities to say , “what you need is to read Hunter’s One Seed to Another.”
What an honor it is for all of us to know him as our friend.
Lynn Miller
Available January 15, 2010 from Small Farmer’s Journal
1-800-876-2893
RT @sfconservancy: New content added: : Small Farms Apprenticeship Program http://www.smallfarmsconservancy.org/small-farms-apprenticesh …
RT @sfconservancy: New content added: : Agriculture: A 19th-century Industry? http://bit.ly/9qFv6t
updating our site layout…should be easy to navigate and share- tell your fellow farmers http://rokt.us/?sfc