Testimony Before the Senate Committee on HB 1396 --
Corporate Farming
To: Senate Agriculture Committee
From: Christopher Dodson, Executive Director
Subject: House Bill 1396 - Corporations in Farming and
Ranching
Date: February 27, 2003
The North Dakota Catholic Conference opposes House Bill
1396. Farming and ranching is not merely an economic
activity. It is both a sacred gift and sacred obligation.
As such, it must be conducted within an ethical, economic,
and legal framework that fosters justice, families,
communities, the common good, and stewardship of creation.
With this in mind, the conference believes the legislature
should “support the spirit and intent of North
Dakota’s Corporate Farming Law to preserve and
maintain farm ownership and control in the hands of family
farmers.”
House Bill 1396 is inconsistent with this call. The
bishops’ support for family owned and operated
entities stems from their belief, supported by experience
and social data, that such ownership best ensures a just
system of agriculture, economically, socially, and
environmentally. It is consistent with the calls of bishops
in rural communities across the nation and the laments of
bishops and farmers in states with investor-owned farming.
Claims that the state’s current law ignores the
inevitable trends of the modern economy and hinders
efficiency reflect false ideologies concerning the economy
and progress. The economy is a human-made institution, not
an inevitable force. Although our current system falls
short of a just system of agriculture, the choice of how to
respond is ours. We should not choose to toss aside
something that will not solve the problems and has served
the people and land of North Dakota well.
Moreover, claims that investment, rather than morally just
prices, will help North Dakota agriculture, place our hopes
in “efficient” industrialization, rather than
sustainable and just economies. Such misplaced emphasis on
efficiency can unleash a “conspiracy against
life” and promote a “culture of death.”
In North Dakota, we have done -- and can do -- better.
We urge a Do Not Pass recommendation on HB 1396.