Many farmers forced to find new careers

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MILWAUKEE - They're truck drivers, police officers, nurses and cabinetmakers.

And not that long ago, they were full-time farmers.

Increasingly, farmers are switching careers as the agricultural economy sinks to one of the worst levels since the Great Depression.

Farm foreclosures are on the rise, forcing career changes even as off-farm jobs are scarce.

Also, decades of hard physical labor have taken a toll on many farmers' health - prompting a switch to other occupations.

Loren Gebhard of Platteville, Wis., suffered back injuries from years of barn and field work. At age 50 he was told to either quit farming or risk spending the rest of his life in a wheelchair.

"It gave me enough of a scare that I realized I had better get out," recalled Gebhard, now a supervisor in a cabinetmaking shop.

Like many farmers, he struggled with the career change. The only workplace he had ever known was his family's farm - where he set his own hours and was his own boss.

"It was nerve-racking for somebody who never wore a watch to all of a sudden become a clock watcher" in an off-farm job, Gebhard said.

While he misses milking cows and field work, there are advantages of having a 9-to-5 job indoors.

"I don't mind it so much," especially in the winter, Gebhard said.

To make the transition from farming, Gebhard turned to a Wisconsin career-training program called Future Fields.

Funded with federal grants, the program ran for about 23 years and provided job counseling and training to 2,500 Wisconsin farmers. It was discontinued in June 2007 after year-to-year grants were exhausted.

Now, Wisconsin Agriculture Department officials are trying to revive Future Fields. They say the timing is right, given that a precipitous drop in farm product prices and other economic trouble have left many family farms on the brink of bankruptcy and foreclosure.

"A big challenge for farmers is they don't qualify for many social safety nets. And they don't get state unemployment benefits," said Paul Dietmann, executive director of the Wisconsin Farm Center, part of the Department of Agriculture, Trade and Consumer Protection.

When they're forced out of business, "farmers have no income and risk losing everything, including their home. So they need to return to earning a living really quickly," Dietmann said.

Gebhard credits Future Fields with giving him a shot at another career. The program helped pay the first few months of his wages, giving his employer an incentive to hire him, and it also boosted his confidence in getting his first off-farm job.

"Farming was all I knew how to do. It was all I had ever done," Gebhard said.

Mike Vondra of Platteville, Wis., also used Future Fields as a springboard to another career. He gave up full-time farming in 2001 after commodity prices tanked and left many farmers struggling to pay their bills.

With Future Fields tuition assistance, he earned a two-year degree in the electrical-mechanical program at Southwestern Wisconsin Technical College. After working two years for an electrical contractor, he switched careers again to work for a dairy equipment company.

But after farm-milk prices plummeted this year, Vondra was laid off from the equipment company. He's farming a little and waiting to be called back to his off-farm job.

"Everybody in this part of the state is basically in survival mode now," Vondra said.

Chris Kruel also quit farming during a previous recession.

Now he's a truck driver for the Town of Fennimore, Wis., a job that gave him his first paid vacation. His only connection with agriculture is renting some land and buildings to other farmers.

He misses farm work, but not the constant worries about commodity prices, the weather and other things out of his control.

"There's life after farming. You realize that once you get out," Kruel said.

Getting to that point, however, is hard for many people who have spent their entire lives on a family farm.

"They're born into farming, they're good at it, and it's all they ever wanted to do," said Beverly Loy, who managed Future Fields and is a farmer herself.

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