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msgadget Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Apr-27-06 01:25 AM
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Black Farmers Protest


Seven years ago, black farmers won a historic settlement from the USDA for discriminatory practices.

Ever since, they've been saying they're still not getting treated fairly.

In what has become a yearly occurrence, the disgruntled farmers, following the lead of the National Black Farmers Association, will make their way to Washington, D.C., April 26 to voice their displeasure with the Pigford v. Johanns settlement.

“In 1999, black farmers were awarded a settlement from the USDA for discrimination,” Mississippi Chapter President Leroy Smith said. “USDA agreed to pay the settlement, but a lot of farmers haven't received it.”

...

A stipulation in the settlement set a deadline for filing a claim to enter the class, a deadline the National Black Farmers Association feels wasn't properly advertised to potential litigants, thereby cutting off more than 70,000 of them.

...

USDA public spokesman Ed Loyd said the agency is in no way shirking the responsibilities set forth in the settlement and respects their right to be heard.

“We have moved pretty clearly in saying this is something important we want to live up to. If there is an instance where there is some kind of dispute, its something we want to know about.”




Ten years ago, black farmers began demonstrating in Washington, charging discrimination by the U.S. Department of Agriculture. That led to a class-action lawsuit and a settlement worth millions of dollars. But on Wednesday, demonstrators are coming to Washington to say too many people were left out, and Congress needs to help.

This month, a study by the Government Accountability Office noted problems, but the USDA shows no inclination to revisit the claim.



A group of black farmers rallied Wednesday outside the Agriculture Department to press their claim that thousands of people were left out of the settlement of a discrimination lawsuit.

Seven years ago, the department agreed to pay farmers who could show they were discriminated against. The settlement provided for payments of $50,000 in most cases but allowed for unlimited payments in extreme cases.

As of January, the government had paid around $900 million to settle 14,300 claims. An additional 8,100 claims were denied; many are under review by a court-appointed monitor.

''We want full restitution ... so black farmers can move on with their lives,'' John Boyd, president of the National Black Farmers Association, told a crowd of about 100 people.

Boyd, a Virginia farmer who organized the event, brought two mules and a wagon, a reminder of the Civil War reconstruction order giving 40 acres and a mule to each freed slave.

More than 60,000 other people submitted claims but missed the filing deadline. Black farmers' groups have been lobbying to let those claims proceed.

A bill in Congress would allow the claims and stall government loan foreclosures until they are decided.

''In effect, the federal government has broken its promise,'' said Rep. Artur Davis, D-Ala., the bill's sponsor. ''The promise was to provide a fair and clean process for black farmers who were victims of discrimination.''

Davis' bill also calls for a more aggressive outreach campaign.

A department spokesman, Ed Loyd, said officials have not reviewed the bill but that the issue goes beyond the sole authority of the department.

Under the original settlement, there were 44 commercials aired on Black Entertainment Television cable network and 18 spots CNN. In addition, quarter-page ads ran in 142 newspapers in 18 states over a two-week period. There was also a full-page ad in TV Guide and a half-page ad in Jet Magazine.

Not everyone at the rally wanted the settlement reopened. There was plenty of word of mouth about the lawsuit, said Georgia farmer William H. Miller.

''Ignorance is no excuse, as they say,'' Miller said.



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