American Farmland Trust
No Farms No Food
Programs and results
What we aim to solve
Our programs
What are the organization's current programs, how do they measure success, and who do the programs serve?
Farmland Protection
For more than four decades, AFT has helped to protect more than six million acres of the nation’s farm and ranch land from development. We work side-by-side with communities to plan for agriculture, fight for state and federal programs and policies that save farmland, and address the most critical issues facing the nation’s farmers and ranchers today.
Agriculture & Environment
American farmers and ranchers steward some of the most fertile farmland in the world, but they need polices and programs that help them maintain or improve their land’s productivity while providing environmental benefits like clean water and wildlife habitat. AFT’s work helps farmers protect soil health, adapt to a changing climate and remain a source of environmental solutions.
Keeping Farmers on the Land
AFT is taking the national lead on crafting innovative programs that can keep family farmers on the land—and help them pass their farmland on to the next generation. We’re finding ways to help farmers stay economically viable, supporting next generation farmers, promoting food system planning, and seeking new opportunities to help family farmers thrive.
Federal Farm Policy
Every five years, the Farm Bill provides a significant opportunity to influence agricultural activity: what is grown, where, when and how, and who benefits from this production. In the 2014 Farm Bill, American Farmland Trust advocated to move U.S. farm policy forward by strengthening policies, programs, and resources to protect farmland as a strategic national resource; promote sound environmental stewardship through advancing adoption of conservation practices; and encourage the development of a more diverse, healthy, and equitable food system consistent with thriving rural and urban communities.
State Issues and Programs
Our field offices help states and communities pass farmland protection policy initiatives and advance our work on local foods and protecting the environment. AFT empowers local leaders and farmland protection activists throughout the country.
Where we work
Awards
President's Environment and Conservation Challenge Award 1991
Office of the President of the United States
Humanitarian 2004
Bon Appetit
Newsletter - Print or Electronic: First Place 2009
American Agricultural Editors Association
Carbon Challenge Reward Award to AFT's Women for the Land Initiative 2021
Indigo Ag
Golden Halo Award: All for Farmers-Tillamook County Creamery Association/ American Farmland Trust 2021
Halo Awards
Affiliations & memberships
United Way Member Agency 2010
External reviews

Videos
Our Sustainable Development Goals
Learn more about Sustainable Development Goals.
Goals & Strategy
Learn about the organization's key goals, strategies, capabilities, and progress.
Charting impact
Four powerful questions that require reflection about what really matters - results.
What is the organization aiming to accomplish?
American Farmland Trust is the only national conservation organization dedicated to protecting farmland, promoting sound farming practices, and keeping farmers on the land. Farmland loss affects every aspect of our lives and is one of the most urgent issues of our time. The nutritious food grown on our farms has a direct impact on our health, economy, environment, and communities – and supports our connection to the vast natural and cultural landscapes that built America.
America has lost over 23 million acres of farmland in the past three decades. That loss continues at a rate of 50 acres every hour as we face emerging challenges, critical policy issues, and threats to our most valuable farmland on the edge of growing cities.
Over the next five years, American Farmland Trust seeks to accomplish the following:
• Increase permanent protection of the most valuable and most threatened farmland in the U.S.;
• Decrease conversion of the most valuable and most threatened farmland in the U.S.;
• Increase soil health and reduced nutrient runoff in the most vulnerable watersheds while helping family farmers prosper for the long-term;
• Keep farm and ranch land in production as it transitions from the current to the next generation;
• Expand economic opportunities and access to markets for family farmers and ranchers – especially those threatened by development pressures.
What are the organization's key strategies for making this happen?
Saving America’s Farmland
Saving our remaining farm and ranch land is more important than ever before. Our continued efforts to protect farmland must overcome, ill-planned development, eroding soils, declining aquifers, exponential population growth and increased local and global demand for food. AFT’s core strategies include:
• Create State of America’s Farmland, the most comprehensive national snapshot of farm and ranch land conservation ever undertaken – showing farm and ranch lands lost over the past decades and targeting the areas where future losses can be expected due to development and a changing climate.
• Advance federal farmland protection policy and reform America’s Estate Tax policies to be farm-friendly.
• Establish AFT as the go-to source of credible information on farmland protection by providing technical assistance and training.
Promoting Sound Farming Practices
Through proven conservation techniques that protect soil, water and habitat, AFT is helping more family farms provide solutions to our greatest environmental challenges. AFT’s core strategies include:
• Increase federal Farm Bill conservation funding to restore funding back to 2008 levels.
• Reduce nutrient runoff leaving farms and target funds to the most vulnerable places.
• Complete demonstration projects that achieve improved soil health and cleaner water in target watersheds (San Francisco Bay Delta, Puget Sound, Upper Mississippi, Ohio River Basin, Chesapeake Bay, Long Island Sound, and western New York);
• Participate in the world’s largest water quality trading market in the Ohio River Basin.
• Engage stakeholders in America’s food and farming system to find common ground balancing regulations and incentives.
Keeping Family Farmers on the Land
National and global food security depends on the ability of American farmers to grow food. Farmland is most vulnerable when it is passing from one generation to the next. An estimated 400 million acres of U.S. farmland will change hands in the coming years due to an aging population of farmers. Even with the wave of renewed interest in farming among the younger generation, there are many barriers to finding affordable land, accessing financial capital and making a successful living. AFT’s core strategies include:
• Help states and communities plan for the future of farming and ranching by adopting “farm friendly” land use policies.
• Train the next generation of leaders and critical thinkers and deliver graduate-level planning curriculum to 10 universities.
• Build capacity and a network of planners, local officials and stakeholder partners in 20 communities to support farm viability through local planning, policy development and public investment.
• Help landowners secure the land for the long-run through estate planning.
• Reform policies that put farmland at risk during land transition.
• Train 1,000 farmland advisers to help the next generation of family farmers.
What are the organization's capabilities for doing this?
American Farmland Trust has a strong, experienced, nationally respected team of leaders working across the country to make a difference at all levels – from planning round-tables in small towns to advancing policy reform on Capitol Hill.
Headquartered in Washington DC, AFT’s seven regional offices cover some of the most threatened agricultural landscapes and watersheds in the country.
A key component of AFT’s approach involves partnering with national, regional and local organizations to leverage outcomes and engage broader audiences. Key partners include USDA, in particular its Natural Resources Conservation Service and its local offices; National Association of Conservation Districts and its county district offices; and Land Trust Alliance and many local and regional land trusts. AFT also partners with a variety of other institutions: agricultural groups, universities, local governments, sustainable agriculture groups, land trusts, environmental groups, and many others.
What have they accomplished so far and what's next?
Over three and a half decades, AFT helped permanently protect more than five million acres of farm and ranch land. Our work across the country continues to make progress on many fronts. However the critical need for American Farmland Trust’s work continues today. The following are several key initiatives that tackle the challenges facing America’s farmland, water, soil, farmers and food today.
State of America’s Farmland – American Farmland Trust has launched one of its most ambitious projects to date. In addition to analyzing data-driven trends, the project will show what is working to protect farmland nationally and what communities can do to change the status quo.
Estate Tax Policy – It is critical that the U.S. Congress adopt common-sense reforms to alleviate unintended consequences of the Estate Tax. AFT is a leading advocate for federal policy reform that will ensure no family farm is taken out of production and sold for development to pay estate taxes.
The Next Generation of Family Farmers – American Farmland Trust is helping the next generation of family farmers get access to land and care for it for the long-term. Women farmers and landowners are increasingly taking ownership of farm and ranch land in America. American Farmland Trust is developing tailored information and assistance to help them transition to leadership roles in agriculture and achieve their goals of building successful farms. AFT is engaging women landowners through Conservation Learning Circles to bring local groups of women landowners together for facilitated discussions on conservation issues in agriculture.
Conservation on the Farm – AFT has boots-on-the-ground helping advisers, farmers and landowners adopt conservation practices to protect soil, water and habitat. Our accomplishments in this area have positioned AFT at the critical intersection between farm viability and environmental protection.
Communications and Outreach – AFT has doubled its membership ranks in the past three years alone, and is rapidly expanding its reach. Through our communications strategies, media relations, grassroots advocacy efforts and social media, AFT will continue rally support for farmland protection and make it national priority.
In addition to these accomplishments, AFT is continuing to increase our capacity to reach more threatened areas across the country, encourage and support smart planning for agriculture, advance sound policies at all levels of government and work with family farmers to keep their land in farming for generations to come.
Financials
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Operations
The people, governance practices, and partners that make the organization tick.
Connect with nonprofit leaders
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Connect with nonprofit leaders
SubscribeBuild relationships with key people who manage and lead nonprofit organizations with GuideStar Pro. Try a low commitment monthly plan today.
- Analyze a variety of pre-calculated financial metrics
- Access beautifully interactive analysis and comparison tools
- Compare nonprofit financials to similar organizations
Want to see how you can enhance your nonprofit research and unlock more insights? Learn More about GuideStar Pro.
American Farmland Trust
Board of directorsas of 09/15/2023
Mr. Grant Winthrop
Managing Director, Douglass Winthrop Advisors, LLC
Mr. William Boehm
Retired Senior VP and Officer, The Kroger Co
William Boehm
Retired Senior VP and Officer, The Kroger Co
Gina Gallo
VP of Winemaking - Estate Wines, Ernest and Julio Gallo Estate
Grant F Winthrop
Managing Director, Douglass Winthrop Advisors
Robert E Egerton, Jr
Retired President, Eastern Division of the Agribusiness Banking Group, CoBank
Lillian Alexander
Executive Director, Black Family Land Trust
Lynn Clarkson
Chairman and CEO, Clarkson Grain Co
Jennie Turner Garlington
Trustee, Turner Foundation
James Moseley
Former Deputy Secretary, USDA
Ea'mon O'Toole
Co-Owner and Manager, Ladder Livestock Co, Salisbury Livestock Co, Banjo Sheep Co
Manya K Rubinstein
CEO, The Industrious Spirit Company
Cannon Michael
CEO, Bowles Farming Co
Emily Broad Leib
Director of the Harvard Law School Food Law and Policy Clinic, Deputy Director of Harvard's Center for Health Law and Policy Innovation
Helen Dillard
Dean, College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences, University of California, Davis
Otto Doering
Emeritus Professor, Agricultural Economics, Purdue University
Ralph Grossi
Rancher
Board leadership practices
GuideStar worked with BoardSource, the national leader in nonprofit board leadership and governance, to create this section.
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Board orientation and education
Does the board conduct a formal orientation for new board members and require all board members to sign a written agreement regarding their roles, responsibilities, and expectations? No -
CEO oversight
Has the board conducted a formal, written assessment of the chief executive within the past year ? Yes -
Ethics and transparency
Have the board and senior staff reviewed the conflict-of-interest policy and completed and signed disclosure statements in the past year? Yes -
Board composition
Does the board ensure an inclusive board member recruitment process that results in diversity of thought and leadership? Yes -
Board performance
Has the board conducted a formal, written self-assessment of its performance within the past three years? Yes
Organizational demographics
Who works and leads organizations that serve our diverse communities? Candid partnered with CHANGE Philanthropy on this demographic section.
Leadership
The organization's leader identifies as:
Race & ethnicity
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Gender identity
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Sexual orientation
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Disability
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