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Pictured breaking ground at the UGA Tifton AgrAbility Farm are (from left) Bennie Branch (KMC-Tifton), Karen Milchus (Georgia Tech), Charles Griffin (Georgia Pork Producers Association), Laura Jolly (UGA Family and Consumer Sciences dean), Don Mcgough (Georgia Farm Bureau), Joe West (UGA dean in Tifton) and Glen Rains (AgrAbility Georgia director, UGA Tifton).
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Published November 19, 2009 10:14 pm -

AgrAbility Farm breaks new ground


By Brad Haire, The University of Georgia

TIFTON — Farmers with physical disabilities are often a little too self- reliant to ask for help or don't know where to find it. But help is out there. Soon, they’ll have an entire farm dedicated to equipment and training designed to help them get back to farming more comfortably.

The groundbreaking for the AgrAbility Farm took place Wednesday at the University of Georgia Tifton Campus.

Once complete, it will be open to the public and available for school groups to visit and for health care and rehabilitation professionals to attend trainings targeted to help disabled agricultural workers. The farm will be virtually available for people to see and interact with online, too.

“The goal for this farm is for it to become a place where farmers with disabilities can come, scheduled or unscheduled, to try equipment or tools that may be of interest to them or that they may not even know about to improve their ability to farm,” said Glen Rains, Georgia’s AgrAbility director.

According to the Department of Labor, in Georgia, it is estimated that as many as 35,000 individuals living in an agricultural household have a disability.

AgrAbility is a national, free program funded by the U.S. Department of Agriculture. It is charged to promote independence for members of the agricultural community who have disabilities. In Georgia, the UGA Cooperative Extension in the College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences and the Institute on Human Development and Disability in the College of Family and Consumer Sciences jointly manage the program.

"We'd like for farming to stay a vocation for people as much as possible," Rains said. "This program is one way of keeping farmers farming who don't want to be rehabilitated into another job. We want to help them do it."

AgrAbility is a service that can link someone in Georgia to a chain of Cooperative Extension educators, disability experts, rural living professionals and volunteers across the state and the country, he said.

Anyone who works or wants to work in agriculture and has a physical, cognitive or illness-related disability is eligible. This includes many things like amputations, arthritis, cancer, heart problems, diabetes or mental illness.

To learn more about the AgrAbility program or farm, visit the Web site www.farmagain.com.



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