翱丑颈辞鈥檚 could have an impact on the state鈥檚 food banks.
The announcement last week that the state would sell the farms to concentrate on other prisoner-rehabilitation programs was a surprise to LisaHamler-Fugitt. The head of the , says that鈥檚 because the farms have provided more than 800,000 pounds of vegetables to the state鈥檚 food banks since 2008. About 220 inmates work on the prison farms at peak-season, andHamler-Fugittsays agriculture can still be a viable career for ex-offenders despite what prison officials cited last week as the reason for selling the farms.
鈥淔ood is grown by farmers, commodity producers, ranchers, livestock producers [and] we always need more workers in those industries. And agriculture is 翱丑颈辞鈥檚 #1 industry.鈥
Hamler-Fugitt says the partnership has worked well for inmates and for the one-in-six Ohioans who rely on a food bank.
鈥淲e purchase all of the seeds, fertilizer, supplies, equipment, anything that they need for the inmates to plant not only vegetables but also cash-commodity crops.鈥
Hamler-Fugitt says she鈥檚 meeting with officials this morning to stress the importance of the partnership with the foodbanks.
The state has about 12,500 acres of prison farmland, including nearly 3,000 acres in Lorain County and Warren County.
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