Part of what makes South County special is that despite the
pressures of modern society, we have not only managed to hold on to our
agricultural heritage, but have even expanded on it.
Preserving South
County agriculture,
particularly our family farms, is not simply an exercise in nostalgic
sentimentality but a practical boost to our local economy.
Each of
In South
County , we have around
400 farms on 25,000 acres that sell $30 million in product each year. Our local
farms tend to be larger at an average of 69 acres than the average sized farm
in the rest of the state.
Of course, agriculture also contributes to our quality of
life. Well-run, sustainable farming provides significant environmental benefit
and nothing beats locally grown food for flavor and nutrition.
Farmlands enhance the beauty of the land, protect natural
resources and provide habitat for wildlife.
In a state with the size and demographics of Rhode Island ,
maintaining, if not expanding, our agricultural base is challenging. Though the
national recession and real estate market’s crash has somewhat curbed the
sprawl that has devoured thousands of acres of farmland, there are still
pressures on today’s family farms.
One of those pressures is a self-inflicted state tax policy
that pushes family farms out of business. When the owner and head of a farm
household dies, under Rhode Island’s estate tax laws, the farm is assessed not
as farmland, but as if it was land to be developed as residential or commercial
property.
The average sized Rhode
Island farm is 50 acres. When assessed as a farm, it
comes in under $869,000. But under current law, the estate value of that farm,
appraised as if it was going to be developed, is $5 million dollars. The heirs
then find themselves needing to pay an estate tax bill of $400,000, and that
often forces them to sell off all or part of the farm just to pay the tax bill.
As Rhode Island
Farm Bureau Director Al Bettencourt put it, “If we continue to tax farmland as
house lots, they will become house lots.”
That’s why we sponsored House bill 7969 which would change Rhode Island ’s tax law
so that the estate tax on farmland is based on its actual use, not its
potential use.
While H 7969 will mean the state foregoes collecting some
tax revenue, keeping farmland as farmland is actually a very cost-effective
approach. Farms only require about forty cents in public services for every
dollar in taxes that they pay. By contrast, house lots cost $1.25 in city and
town services for every dollar in taxes they generate.
Working farms pay their way.
This one change to the state tax law could keep thousands of
acres of farmland in production for the benefit of us all.