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A love for agricultural policy and a belief
in the benefits of agricultural research have sent Joe Coffey
back to the nation's capital as secretary-treasurer of the
National Coalition forFood and Agricultural Research
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Coffey helps brew ag lobbying
effort
By CHRIS SIGURDSON
As a young man hand milking the six cows on his grandparents' dairy farm near Martinsville, Ind., Joe Coffey, BS '60, knew there had to be a better way.
While wired for electricity and phone, the small farm still relied on horse power for some of the field work. A militia of volunteer corn had to be uprooted one at a time. A modern cow could outproduce the entire dairy on a daily basis. Christmas vacations were spent gleaning fields Ñ walking the rows in winter coats and picking up the ears of corn left behind by the early mechanical harvesters.
The difference between then and now is what's made Coffey a believer in the benefits of agricultural research.
"I've seen science-based technology change the face of farming," Coffey says. "Mechanization, hybrid corn, weed killers, feed supplements, I've personally witnessed the changes in agriculture and how they've benefited producers and consumers."
He should know. In the 40-some years since he left Martinsville, Coffey has looked at agriculture from all possible angles. With an undergraduate degree earned at Purdue University and advanced degrees from North Carolina State University, his jobs have included academic counselor to students in Peru, economic analyst to Earl Butz's U.S. Department of Agriculture, assistant professor of ag economics at Berkeley, and ag econ department head at Virginia Tech. From 1981 to 1999, Coffey was the chief economist for Southern States Cooperative, helping grow the enterprise from $400 million to $2 billion.
In his spare time he also served as national president of the Council for Agricultural Research, Extension and Teaching, a grassroots group comprised of community leaders who support land-grant universities. The position allowed him to combine a love for agricultural policy and a belief in agricultural research while working with people he admired. He says he regretted stepping down, but he believes strongly that organizations need fresh blood and a fresh perspective.
"There are tremendous individuals in CARET, but there is also a need
for an independent stakeholder group supported by the major food and
agricultural organizations," Coffey says. When he was asked to help
develop a national coalition of commodity, farm and food groups to lobby
for and help direct federal food and agriculture research programs,
Coffey took his suit and tie out of the closet and headed back to Washington,
D.C. As secretary-treasurer of the nascent National Coalition for Food
and Agricultural Research, Coffey is in charge of recruiting new members,
coordinating Congressional testimony, and creating conversations between
members of Congress, producers, consumers and scientists.
"It (N-CFAR) had the most potential of any organization I've ever
seen to do something at the national level," Coffey says. "There is
a place for big and small organizations, for a broad cross-section of
people to work together."
Coffey says the organization's goal is to double in five years the
federal dollars invested in food and agricultural research, Extension
and education. The challenge is twofold, too. A successful effort will
require that a largely urban Congress understand the payoff and that
farm and consumer groups see they'll all benefit from additional public
research and education.
Coffey tries to maintain his ties to agricultural research and education
by continuing to teach. A professor in Purdue's Executive MBA in Agricultural
Economics, Coffey gets to test his theory that the Internet is the next
best thing to classroom instruction. The computer-mediated classes allow
him to pass on policy insights from wherever he happens to be to students
around the world.
"I've enjoyed the diversity of the students and I've always gravitated
to teaching adult students," Coffey says. "And our Internet discussion
groups come very close to a lively classroom discussion."
And it's a long way from gleaning corn.
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