American Farm Bureau Federation
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In 1919, a small group of farmers from 30 states gathered in Chicago and founded the American Farm Bureau Federation (AFBF). Their stated goal was to speak for themselves through their own national organization. AFBF soon became the most prominent voice of agriculture at the national level, with an affiliate in each of the 50 states.
Farm Bureau is an independent, non-governmental, voluntary organization governed by and representing farm and ranch families united for the purpose of analyzing their problems and formulating action to achieve educational improvement, economic opportunity and social advancement and, thereby, to promote the national well-being. Farm Bureau is local, county, state, national and international in its scope and influence and is non-partisan, non-sectarian and non-secret in character.
The purpose of Farm Bureau is to make the business of farming more profitable, and the community a better place to live. Farm Bureau should provide an organization in which members may secure the benefits of unified efforts in a way which could never be accomplished through individual effort. – Statement originally approved by Farm Bureau members in 1920.[1]
The American Farm Bureau Federation relocated its headquarters from Park Ridge, Illinois to Washington, D.C. in 2003.[2]
[edit] Personnel
- Bob Stallman, President
- Bob Young, Chief Economist
- Mark Maslyn, Executive Director, Public Policy
- Don Lipton, Director, Public Relations
[edit] See also
- Kentucky Farm Bureau
- Farm Bureau Historical Highlights, 1919-1994
- Link to state Farm Bureaus
- The American Farm Bureau Federation Web site