USDA grapples with modern-day equivalent of "40 acres and a mule"
Monday, August 30, 2004 at 02:17PM
TheSpook
Two black farmers are suing the Agriculture Department,
claiming the agency has discriminated against them by failing to live
up to a deal to give them access to federal loans and subsidies.The
lawsuits have targeted not just the agency but also the USDA's top
civil rights official, whom the farmer's lawyer calls "the most
powerful black man in the Bush administration." Assistant Secretary for
Civil Rights Vernon Parker was appointed by President Bush to
straighten out the agency's civil rights office. But James Myart, Jr.,
the civil rights attorney behind the lawsuits, calls Parker a "joke"
among black farmers -- accusing him of not doing enough to settle
discrimination claims against the Agriculture Department. "Vernon
Parker is the most powerful black man in the Bush Administration -- that
is because he has power of the pen and government's checkbook to
resolve the problem," Myart said. The Black Farmers and
Agriculturalists Association cited census figures showing that in 1910
black farmers owned about 16 million acres of land, buying about 8
percent more real estate between 1900 and 1910 on a per capita basis
than their white counterparts. Today, it is estimated that blacks own
fewer than 2 million acres. [more ]
Article originally appeared on (http://brownwatch.com/).
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