FFA's DC team mulls issues as members convene in Indianapolis
WASHINGTON, Oct. 19, 2016 - As thousands make the trip to
Indianapolis this week for the 89th annual convention of the National FFA
Organization, a pair of issues that might not be discussed at the four-day
event are keeping FFA’s DC team busy.
More than 60,000 people are expected at the convention,
including thousands of FFA members clad in their distinctive blue jackets as
well as advisers, sponsors and guests. Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack is
expected to address the gathering Thursday morning, one of the last major
conventions he’ll speak to as secretary.
Riley Pagett, a former Capitol Hill staffer who served as
National FFA’s president five years ago, heads FFA’s DC office. He said that
among other things, they’re focusing on reauthorizing a critical piece of
education funding and fighting for recognition of ag career diversity in the
administration.
In September, FFA (formerly, the Future Farmers of America)
sent a letter to Capitol Hill asking lawmakers to support the reauthorization
of the Carl D. Perkins Career and Technical Education Act. The House has
already cleared the reauthorization under the legislative vehicle of the Strengthening
Career and Technical Education for the 21st Century Act (H.R.
5587), which authorizes about $7.1 billion in funding through fiscal 2022.
A bill has yet to clear the Senate Committee on Health,
Education, Labor, and Pensions, and FFA and other career and technical student
organizations are hoping that will happen in the lame-duck session.
“If we’re wanting to get something signed by the end of this
year, then that will need to happen pretty quickly, and days are running out,”
Pagett, National FFA’s director of advocacy and government relations, said in
an interview with Agri-Pulse.
Pagett said they aren’t running into opposition to the
funding itself – allocated as grants for a wide variety of career and technical
education (CTE) endeavors – but rather some technical differences that need to
be resolved between the House and Senate bills.
In addition to FFA, the push is also supported by the
Association for Career and Technical Education and Advance CTE (which
represents state directors of CTE) as well as other CTE organizations like the
Family, Career and Community Leaders of America (FCCLA) and SkillsUSA.
Pagett said that the groups are carrying the message that “if
we really are serious about this, and we’re serious about education for all of
our students in every state, this is a way that we can show that.”
In addition to a push for Perkins reauthorization, Pagett
said National FFA and a host of other groups are also working to realign an
agriculture career definition within the Department of Labor. DOL’s Bureau of
Labor Statistics’ Standard Occupational Classification (SOC) of agricultural
workers includes those who “maintain the quality of farms, crops, and livestock
by operating machinery and doing physical labor under the supervision of
farmers, ranchers, and other agricultural managers.” Pagett says National FFA
sees that definition as “extremely limited in scope.”
“Quite frankly, our organization would cease to exist if
that was the case,” he said. “We believe in preparing young people for a vast
number of what we deem are agriculturally related careers . . . There are a
number of careers that we boast pretty proudly every year that we are preparing
young people for.” For example, Pagett pointed out this definition would
exclude something like a rural accountant, a food scientist, and even an
agriculture educator. While such a discrepancy could easily be downplayed as a
difference of opinion, Pagett said FFA and other CTE stakeholders are concerned
that the limited definition could lead to CTE programs being shut down in favor
of more targeted educational approaches to in-demand careers. In addition to National FFA, four state FFA
affiliates, the American Farm Bureau Federation, CoBank, and several other
groups submitted comments expressing concern about what that language could do
to CTE classrooms. Those comments were being submitted for a 2018 revision to
the SOC manual.
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