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Health & Wellness

Plant a Garden, Get a Tax Break?

By Roger Doiron, AlterNet. Posted April 11, 2008.


We give tax breaks to encourage people to put solar panels on their roofs, so why not offer incentives for healthy food production in their backyards?
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From times immemorial, gardeners throughout the world have endured hardships of all kinds: floods, droughts, blights, swarming locusts, and, in the case of Dutch growers, centuries of uncomfortable footwear.

As a gardener from Maine, I have my own share of climate-related issues. Scientists have been noting that spring arrives earlier each year in the Northeast, a phenomenon I've been observing in my own yard. Last year, for example, spring started in Maine on May 2, almost two weeks earlier than usual, and ended on May 7.

For those of you who haven't been to Maine before, we have a fifth season -- mud season -- which is sandwiched between winter and spring and which helps explain why babies here are born wearing miniature LL Bean boots instead of pink and blue booties. Summer begins in Maine with the arrival of the first mosquito or out-of-state tourist, whichever comes first, and officially ends when all of them, tourists and stinging insects, have left.

I've been thinking a lot these days about the seasons and how I and others can gently coax more food out of them. An article in the British paper the Guardian last summer captured the enormity of the task ahead. In order to feed a projected population of 9 billion people, we will need to grow more food over the course of the next 50 years than has been grown over the course of the past 10,000 years combined. That's a lot of rutabagas.

My job as a sustainable foods advocate is to convince people that family farms and gardens not only can feed the world, they're the only thing that can in the long run. Big, industrial agriculture has enjoyed quite a ride over the past 60 years and has put a lot of food on a lot of tables, my own included. This bounty would not have been possible, though, were it not for the cheap and easily obtained inputs on which industrial foods depend, the most important of which is oil. It has been estimated that our highly industrialized food system in the United States requires 5-10 calories of fossil fuel energy to create 1 calorie of food energy. With oil and food prices now at historic highs and many reputable geologists claiming that we have reached peak global oil production, that ratio is sounding less and less palatable.

In recognition of planting season and the intersecting geopolitical crises now upon us, I am proposing that home growers finally catch a break. Not from bugs, weather, or clunky garden shoes, but from taxes. It's not as silly an idea as it may sound. We give tax breaks to people to encourage them to put hybrid cars in their garages and solar panels on their roofs, so why not offer incentives for solar-powered, healthy food production in their backyard?

It wouldn’t be the first time that our country encouraged its citizens to grow some of their own food. The government’s wartime “Victory Garden” campaign was a success by every measure. By 1943, 20 million gardens were growing 8 million tons of food (an amount comparable to that of the nation’s farms), and Americans were eating more healthy fruits and vegetables than ever before.

More home gardens would offer us victory not only over rising food and health care costs, but also foreign oil dependency and climate change. Researchers estimate that locally grown foods use up to 17 times less climate-warming fossil fuels than foods from away. And when it comes to local foods, it doesn’t get any “localer” than one’s own yard.

There are different breaks that local, state and federal governments could offer home gardeners. Sales taxes on seeds, seedlings, fruit bushes and trees could be removed. Better still, an income tax break could be administered as is done with home offices where people measure and deduct the square footage of their houses used for business purposes. The bigger your garden, the better the tax break. Those with no yard could deduct the rental fee for a community garden plot.

Tax break or not, I'll soon be outside fighting climate change, rising food prices and mosquitoes in my own modest backyard. Last year, my family and I converted our $85 seed order into six months' worth of delicious, fresh vegetables. This year, if we're lucky, that should take us right into winter, which in Maine starts in mid-November, except for those years when it comes early.

Digg!

See more stories tagged with: tax breaks, taxes, food production, gardening, gardens, food

Roger Doiron is founding director of Kitchen Gardeners International, a nonprofit network of 5,200 gardeners from 90 countries and is currently a Food and Society Policy Fellow.

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dutch footwear
Posted by: Benjaminsjw on Apr 11, 2008 12:42 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Okay, let's digress. I, as a Dutchman, would like to say a thing or two about our footwear. Wooden shoes (I guess that's what you are referring to) are actually not really uncomfortable. It all depends on the socks. And they are very practical: They don't stay wet for long, so you can easily clean them inside and out (which is convenient if you have been mucking about in sticky clay all day).
In other words: very convenient footwear for gardening. I own a pair myself. They are still quite common in Holland.

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Best way to get fresh veggies is to grow 'em yourself...
Posted by: Cooltruth on Apr 11, 2008 4:58 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Transporting food is going to get expensive so if you can raise a vegtable garden you'll be able to eat better food without going broke at the grocery store. When your potatoes start to sprout eyes these can be cut into chunks, put on rich dirt, lightly cover with dirt & add a layer of straw over that. A few months later & you'll have potatoes under there. Places with weather extremes have somewhat narrower choice available of what they can raise. Some veggies can be raised just about anywhere. Find seeds in something tasty you bought to eat? Planting these might get you a decent harvest of good eating. Raising gardens could replace shopping as a favorite national pass-time. Fresher food right outside your door beats having to drive to the grocery store to buy something shipped in from who knows where! It won't be sprayed with ag chemicals unless you spray it, another good reason to raise your own garden. Waiting for the rain to break before planting anything else in my garden. Winter just went straight into the rainy season here...

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What a Great Idea!
Posted by: djnoll on Apr 11, 2008 6:11 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I have advocated gardening for many years as part of an overall plan for sustainable communities, but I never thought about the tax break idea! Not only do gardens provide a great, healthy source of food, but they are also great exercise, not only for adults, but for children. Since we as a society have allowed much of our agricultural land to be destroyed, gardening on a home-scale level may be the only way to grow enough food in the future, replacing many of the items lost with the loss of the family farm.

I do not know how many of the readers have noticed the increasing number of articles on the food riots that are now occurring around the world. (For those planning on attending the Olympics, be aware that they are rationing rice in many areas of the country and the government is facing some problems over it.) It is a preview of a show coming soon to this country as the cost of basic necessities exceed the ability of our poorest citizens (and perhaps many in our middle class) to pay for them. By acting now to encourage the development of vegetable and fruit gardens on a community wide level - both public gardens and private - maybe we can help to avoid such political upheaval.

We are a nation in crisis, so if communities work together to help meet the needs of the local citizens, perhaps we can not only feed ourselves, we might actually come up with better ways of creating change than violence. It is worth thinking about. Gardens have been used to create jobs; educate our children; combat gangs and drugs; create better water management and climate change impacts; improve the health of people...and on, and on, and on.

Not everyone has a green thumb, this is true, but in a garden that is 20 ft by 40 ft, for example, a family of 4 can provide food for a year. In smaller areas, you can produce food year-round for a couple or just for your children. You can also produce food in smaller quantities just to get you through a season or two, cutting your food bill during those times. If you are not a talented gardener, help those who are in exchange for part of the production, or get a book, a good mentor from the Master Gardener programs at the local soil conservation district or college, and start by growing some of your food in either a community garden (where you can get lots of help) or in containers (which are also viable for people in apartments or small yards in rental units).

Then once you have the chance, start lobbying your state officials for state income or sales tax breaks, like the article suggests, and if you and your neighbors and communities put enough pressure on elected officials, you might actually see such changes in your tax laws, which could give you more money for seeds. Garden organically, and you will save even more money over time and you will conserve water as well. Good gardening and good luck.

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» RE: What a Great Idea! Posted by: sasquuatch55
» Sounds pretty unfair to me Posted by: setterwoman
Tax breaks for solar? Don't forget the stipulations and BIG OIL's stifling influence.
Posted by: maxpayne on Apr 11, 2008 6:45 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
First of all, let's dividing ourselves like this. Solar and growing one's own garden are supposed to be united. You should have instead said, "Instead of giving more tax breaks to gas guzzling SUVs, why not divert those subsidies to tax breaks for those who grow their own gardens?"

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I love this idea!
Posted by: ebishirl on Apr 11, 2008 7:43 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What a great proposal: one that would actually benefit "regular" people rather than corporations and the wealthy.

And, to anyone who hasn't yet checked out Kitchen Gardeners International, I highly recommend a visit to their Website. It's wonderfully informative.

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» RE: I love this idea! Posted by: fringedweller
Three Cheers!!
Posted by: Andie927 on Apr 11, 2008 9:01 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
My neighbor thinks I'm nuts, I just put in two new gardens for veggie's this week here in Florida. If the house doesn't sell I still get the Veggie's!

We're moving to Virginia, where I'll plant a much bigger garden! Went up in Nov. and planted 14 fruit trees.

Here in Florida, I planted grape vines, Mullberry Tree, and Lemons. All including the Veggie gardens are in my front yard! My back yard has the clothes line!

What we can't use, I give away! You'll frequently find Tomato or Pepper plants in my flower beds! I plant sun flowers for the birds, and Butterfly Bushes, for the Butterfly's. I gave my God-Child one I started from a cutting, for her Confirmation! She loves it. So I try to feed, other things (birds, butterfly's, and the soul) at the same time!

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You missed the point of a tax incentive
Posted by: dkm on Apr 11, 2008 9:09 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
A tax incentive is just that, an incentive to people to do something that otherwise would be unaffordable. Planting a garden is hardly something that is unaffordable. You spent $85 on seeds. I spend around $8.50. I reuse my spade, hoe and rake. So anything that reduces my cost isn't going to amount to very much, and I suspect that the same applies to most gardeners. Tax incentives are to reduce costs. The major factor inhibiting gardening is the work involved, not the cost.

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I love it!
Posted by: LeeAnnG on Apr 11, 2008 9:57 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What a great idea! Here in West Virginia, more than half the people I know would get a subsidy.

And for the above poster who said that tax breaks should be for something that costs money - where does that come from? Gardening might not cost huge amounts of money (although it does cost pretty much when you are growing enough to get through the winter), but it's certainly labor intensive. When did time stop having value?

Right now, I have lettuce, spinach, peas, sugar snap peas, and herbs coming up outside. I have cabbage, tomatoes, 3 kinds of peppers, and basil (family heirloom) that I started from seed in containers inside. I've got potatoes, carrots, onions, and radishes planted but not yet up. I put in horseradish roots, several new blueberry bushes and blackberry starts, and I have strawberries in raised beds, raspberries not yet putting out leaves, and asparagus just about to send up shoots. I have to nurture and water the indoor plants to get them to the point where they are ready to go outside in May.

I usually have an overabundance of plants, so I share and trade with my friends. I save some seeds from year to year, and this is a time consuming task, too. Just finding places to keep them and ensure that they are viable is a consideration.

Gardening season has just begun. In the next two weeks, I'll get broccoli, brussels sprouts, and more tomato plants from a local grower. Many of my seeds are still in packages with some waiting for the last heavy frost. There are 10 pounds of potatoes on my porch waiting for an hour of my time, and there's another 5 pounds on order that should arrive any day. I can put in more carrots, onions, and red beets any time. Then I need to plant corn, string beans, more basil, more herbs, and some beans for drying.

After that, the real work begins. I'll need to weed, mulch, thin, and side dress my plants. Once everything is established and the mulch is in place - which means very little weeding - I'll be ready to begin harvesting.

I'm almost 61 years old and I work full time. I grew up in a city, so I'm still learning how to garden well. For example, I had two flats of cabbage started, but they got too leggy and somehow I managed to kill them all and had to replant the seeds.

My garden feeds me, my husband, and our frequent guests. I always give away huge amounts of lettuce and other fresh produce, along with the sauerkraut, salsa, canned tomato products, frozen green beans, and other items I've processed.

Oh - and I also have a huge flower garden, helping to beautify the world, create a haven for many kinds of birds, and establish a pesticide free environment.

Imagine how much fuel could be saved - and how healthy our citizens would be if far more people could find the time to do it. But it is a lot to expect with the hectic lives we live. So, if all of this work isn't worth a tax break, I don't know what is.

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I already get a tax incentive on my vegetable garden
Posted by: kellysgarden on Apr 11, 2008 12:05 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Every bit of food I harvest from my property comes to my table tax-free. To make it even more appealing, I didn't have to purchase that food from the store where there is a sales tax applied.

Perhaps the tax incentive ought to come on the purchase of gardening items like rototillers, which could be exempt from sales tax.

I think the author intends for a tax break to ENCOURAGE more home gardening. I think the higher cost of food is already doing that.

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» Great observation! Posted by: LeeAnnG
Gardening Tax Breaks
Posted by: kendallj on Apr 12, 2008 1:13 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Think it's a darn fine idea.
Up here in the wilds of Northwestern Ontario in Canada
we just are getting over a rather nasty blizzard.
Our gardens don't even get planted outdoors till the
last couple of weeks in May.
A nice tax deduction for an intensive veggie garden sure sounds good.
The machinery is already in place for inspections for verification from our local energy audit teams.
I'll run it up the green flagpole and see if anybody salutes.

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Gardening can be heartbreaking too
Posted by: JERSEYDAN on Apr 13, 2008 4:24 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If you live in the older suburbs like I do, you have limited space and are forced to use the same plots every year. It isn't long before leaf spots and other blights invade your garden and destroy all the tomatoes, peppers, and eggplants. In a new plot last year somehow wilt was introduced to my eggplants. I still had a crop, but that plot is finished. Squash vine borers and powdery mildew keep me from having any cucurbits, though I managed 3 nice butternuts last year and one zucchini. To top it off, I had a groundhog take up residence under my shed ( I am in the NYC metro area and it is quite developed )despite my entire yard being surrounded by solid vinyl privacy fence, and he happily ate as much as he could. it took weks to trick him into the have a heart trap.

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gardening is hard work
Posted by: whealeydj on Apr 13, 2008 10:56 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
and the payoff is the food. if only suburbn lawns were turned into mini farms. we first have to get rid of lawn mentality and laws prohibiting food grdens and compost piles.t.

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Just hope that agribusiness' doesn't take over the seed.
Posted by: nightgaunt on Apr 15, 2008 1:39 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There are so many places that omnipresent agribusiness can interfere in even this private endevor. I suspect more people will find themselves setting up their own survival gardens to compensate for the high cost of living. As food distribution is less important it will lessen the pollution caused by the global crossings of ships and continental crossings of trucks.
A positive all around. Unless you count corporate farms which will lose money.

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