Tucson used to be a ranching town in an agricultural state.
In today鈥檚 urbanized 蜜聊直播, though, farmer-ranchers like Stefanie Smallhouse are a rarity. Smallhouse and her husband, Andy, operate the Carlink Ranch northeast of Tucson along the San Pedro River, and she is also president of the 蜜聊直播 Farm Bureau Federation, a powerful agricultural industry group.
Despite how rare people like the Smallhouses are among 蜜聊直播鈥檚 metro-centered populace, farmers won a solid victory with the passage of the drought contingency plan last week. The plan commits to providing Pinal County farmers $9 million toward converting from Colorado River water back to groundwater pumping by 2023. That was $4 million more than the $5 million the plan contained before the Legislature amended it, almost doubling state funding for these farmers in transition.
Smallhouse and other ag representatives also pushed successfully for a separate $20 million commitment that is expected to be covered by federal grants. But it鈥檚 likely the broader solution of the Pinal farmers鈥 water-sourcing problems will also lead to more problems that need solving soon, too.
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鈥淚t鈥檚 going to be basically a continual discussion, as long as we鈥檙e in this pattern of moisture, or lack of moisture,鈥 Smallhouse told me Friday. 鈥淲hat stresses me out and what keeps me up at night is agriculture will always be on the chopping block. Because the question will always be, what鈥檚 the priority use for water?鈥
Her comments reminded me of a strange contradiction I find in 蜜聊直播鈥檚 increasingly high-stakes agricultural politics. Farmers and ranchers frequently speak of themselves as misunderstood underdogs. And in a way they鈥檙e right 鈥 city dwellers like me don鈥檛 get them and probably don鈥檛 appreciate them. But they are also far more powerful than their numbers and even their economic importance to the state would dictate.
鈥淚n general, the public cares deeply about farmers and ranchers. However, they totally don鈥檛 understand how we do our job,鈥 Smallhouse said. 鈥淲e have a powerful voice. Lawmakers do pay attention to us, because of the fact that, at the end of the day, people at some point say, 鈥楾hat鈥檚 right, that鈥檚 where we get our food and fiber. That鈥檚 important.鈥欌
Money also plays a role, of course. The Farm Bureau Federation was a significant but not overwhelming donor to legislative independent expenditure campaigns, spending about $54,000 in the last election cycle, according to the 蜜聊直播 secretary of state鈥檚 records.
For state Sen. Victoria Steele, a Tucson Democrat, the agricultural pressure this session has been excessive and overshadowed other legitimate interests.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 believe at all that they鈥檙e the underdogs,鈥 Steele told me. 鈥淲hat I saw the past three weeks since I鈥檝e been at the Legislature was a full-court press. It was all agriculture all the time.鈥
鈥淭he emphasis on the 鈥榩oor farmers鈥 got to be ridiculous,鈥 she added. 鈥淚鈥檓 not against the farmers, please don鈥檛 get me wrong. But I鈥檝e felt that everybody has been singling out agriculture and not really realizing the cities are sacrificing, too. The tribes are sacrificing, too.鈥
Indeed, agriculture is by far the biggest user of water in 蜜聊直播, using about 74 percent of 蜜聊直播鈥檚 supply, according to the Department of Water Resources. Municipalities, in contrast, use about 21 percent.
That鈥檚 where Smallhouse鈥檚 food-and-fiber argument comes into play. She says, essentially, that food production isn鈥檛 just any water use 鈥 it鈥檚 food security, even national security. So when people question agriculture鈥檚 existence in 蜜聊直播, she says the public wants it, and for good reason.
鈥淎 strong contingent of their public wants their food grown locally. 蜜聊直播 is important to the country because we can grow food year-round. We can grow a diverse group of crops.鈥
But what if the cost of growing our own food and fiber is depleting the aquifer beneath Pinal County鈥檚 farms, as farmers switch back to groundwater pumping? After all, even with Colorado River water being delivered to the farms, fissures have opened up in the ground in Pinal County and subsidence occurred as the dropping groundwater shifted the land.
Smallhouse said she鈥檚 hopeful that won鈥檛 be the case because of changes in the area鈥檚 agriculture since 1980, when 蜜聊直播鈥檚 groundwater law went into effect.
鈥淭here are fewer of them than in the 1980s,鈥 Smallhouse said, adding, 鈥淭hey鈥檝e implemented a ton of efficiencies. Those who are left are as efficient as they can be.鈥
鈥漌e鈥檙e not looking at the same picture of groundwater use that we were looking at in the 1980s.鈥
And yet, Democrats repeatedly pointed out during the debate over the plan that many Pinal County farmers grow particularly thirsty crops, like cotton. It would diminish the skepticism of many 蜜聊直播 urbanites if those farmers converted to growing less water-intensive crops.
Smallhouse, who largely raises cattle and grows forage crops, said switching crops will always cost time and money. The Smallhouses are the fifth generation of Andy鈥檚 family to run the ranch, and even this generation has diversified multiple times over the years as conditions changed 鈥 a decade ago they even started a saguaro cactus nursery in part as a hedge against a drier climate.
鈥淭hey have millions of dollars in capital investment in that crop they鈥檙e growing right now,鈥 she said of farmers. 鈥淭o transition to a different crop requires completely different equipment, different inputs, they have to learn about that crop. All of those things take time.鈥
In the Smallhouses鈥 case, the family has changed irrigation practices gradually over 20 years to use less water, she said. It took time, money and effort going from flood irrigation to primarily using center-pivot sprinklers as they do now. Drip irrigation, she found, tends to be too sensitive and costly a system for their operation, one of the few that still can use surface water from the San Pedro River.
Now that she and the rest of the agricultural sector have won Pinal County farmers public subsidies, though, I think it鈥檚 fair even for urbanites to make greater demands on them, whether it be for more efficient irrigation or switching crops or leaving more land fallow.
The farmers鈥 successful depiction of agriculture as a misunderstood industry deserving public support gives the public leverage over them to conserve more. The nonfarmers, after all, deserve a strong voice in this, too.