lac ni ar er: i 9 Continued from P g 1 tat , lobbied for le restric­ tive property la; arranged for private fundin to keep land B c hands and provided legal aid for Blac ower facing property 10 . Financial problems t year forced the ELF to merge with the Federation of Southern Cooperative . EED CHANGES I LA "We can't provid money, but e can provid echnical i tanc and legal guidanc and e have h d impact;' ay Ephron Le is Sr. Blac farmer from Earle, Ark., ho is pre ident of th I nd nd f rm corpor tion. "We have b en abl to ve quite a bit of land for Blac famille in thi re . There have been orne chan e in th la in Ar ansas th t help, but they don't go far enou h." J ph F. Brooks, ho headed the ELF until 1 t year, y , "The difference been nd hen e tarted i that it eern if the environment for concern and action is b tter no . At fir were trial nd nor-didn't kno what th pro- blem . It a political ell an economic problem and hen the current crisis came into public warene ,it eemed likely Black pro- blem ould et more . co ttail.et1��:��i D pite chan la andgro of th land-Io Ar , the dec1in con­ tinu . In 1930, there were bout 80,000 Black f rrner ; by 1978 th fi ure had dropped to bout 2,000. Today, it is esti­ mated at 1,300. In 1910, about o percent of the tate's farmer ere Black; today, about 2 per­ cent are Black. The plight of Raymond illiams, 60, i typic He's a hort, chunky man ho ears W hin ton D e Cee bib ov ralls and a cap th t ys Federal Land Bank A ocia- rion. illlam inherited 40 acres from bi f th r, al a farmer, and no he gro rice, cotton, milo and yb ans on 00 acre 180 0 ned, 320 rented - ith the help of hi on, ar­ vin.'But the deb are mounting and illiams fear the ch in of f mily 0 ner hip ill b broken. "I've harve ted 38 crops, we bought our land and we've done. pretty ood in farming. But the mon y hat has ot u no . Last time I paid 11 my debt in 1979. We pend more than e make," William ay." y on ould lik to farm; he' r dy to eep oin ifhe can pay the db:' "I'd like to keep on:' arvin illiam ay, "but it doe n't 100 ood," Cotton Plant is a forlorn lit­ tle place, it main dr g peckled ith derelict buildin sand bo rded-up tore. But 30 or 0 ergo it a center of com- m rce for hundr of Black far­ mer and their f milie ho lived in urroundin Woodruff County. Cotton Plant remains bout o-thirds Black, but the erican . cmcI Ept.on Lewa Jr. on . farm 7 "Th r p rt rtry [ic Block' ucc r] nd e if th recommendation being met.... e ar tap jnt no her e ne d cl r lin of re ponsibility for thi Corneliu aid. Cornelius, a Black, . d, 'If proceed the ay e have been goin , it is re on bl to ume th re ill be no Black farmer in the future .... Our number one problem i a need to make certain th t the people who have USDA responsibility understand what the thru t i going to be, that all farmer must be treated fairly and equitably. The policy dir ction must come from the top. There isnooth r ay .... Thisreportis recognition of a problem th y didn't kno existed before. It i a start. The issue is hether e want any Black farmer left in the U.S.A.' Pendleton ys he has not een the new USDA rep rt, but adds," e ould be di ppoin­ ted if not much has be n done. Without havin en th r port-and this h s nothin to do ith my Reagani -p ople have to be treated ithout di criminatory intent .... Our c n­ cern in 1982 that farm r are farmer and that 11 b tr t d Ii e." Pendleton, ho ever, y the commi ion in 19 2 .. more of so ially oriented commission" and that, i it er reportin on the demi of th Black farmer today, it might not make the arne tron mendation for u in policy tool to encour land r tention. "I don't think enou inAm ric understand the v lu of land in commerce, period. I one iv a ay the land, he con­ trol nothin ," P ndleton y. area's Black farmer population is driftin a ay. The town, ice its present iz ,had a cinema, thr cotton gins, all manner of tore, churches a veneer plant. Cot­ ton, the money crop, su tamed the people. But markets dwin­ dled, federal irrigation subsides spurred more production in the Wes and farm mechaniz tion overwhelmed the small farmer's ability to compete. LA DLOSS "In our heyday, hen 'pro­ gre s' tarted, e had more than 2,000 p ople," y Mayor Emmitt Conley. "Then, in came the two-row planter, the fou row planter, th eight-row p ter and there as no ork for th farm p ople to do .... Small far­ mer mad a decent living around here, but their kids left for St. Louis or herever, the parents died and the kid were carele -1 t the land get away from them. Th re' no way to get it bac ." Old folks who stayed behind and then died often left "heir prop rty," land conveyed ithout ill to children and others in the e tended familie . Here in Ar n , as in m t of the re t of the South, the legal entanglements of heir property are a major contributor to Blac landl ELF tudy found that more than a fourth of all Black­ o ned parcel in t Southwest ere h ir properties, each o ned jointly by an average of eight p ople, of whom five lived outside the region. Another sugget: more . issippi land i o ned by Black in Chicago than by Black in M· . ippi. Alabama and Georgia recen­ tly h ve changed 1& s to require that family members b given first option to buy any jointly o ned roperty in. �hi�h a partner seeks a p rtltlOnmg­ that . , to ell his or her share. But in the rest of the region, including Arkansas, th e dis­ parately own d and mana ed lands are ubject to la 'S that mak them prey to the partition le or disposal for nonpay­ ment of taxes. PAATJTIO LES "We haven't been able to do hat Alabama has done. We haven't b en able to deal with the p rtition law," ys Henry Wilkins m of Pine Bluff, a Black college profe sor and state rep­ resentative. "The partition thin is the mo t important item on the agenda to me. Partition le have been notorious in eas­ ternArkan , here the bulk of our Black liv .... We hav lot oflawyer and lando ner in th legislature from ea tern Arkan- .. .. and they resist change . There i no compassion." Arkans ,ho ever, enacted legislation in 1983 aimed at end­ in candal and abuse that aro e from the sale of property for nonpayment of real e tate taxe . Tens of thou ands of poor Black and hites are believed to hav lost their land through i norance of the old law, which Bowed countie to uction off tax-deliquent land. Under the old la , pecula­ tor or neighbo could pay delinquent taxes on any pro­ perty-often unbekno nst to the 0 ner-and receiv a deed to the land after two years. In other cases, counties uctioned off delinquent properties at midnight sales or through a sys­ tem that g ve political favorites first chance at the b t land. "The abu es happened predominantly to Black . In my four years state land com­ missioner, all the contact I ever had about problems came from Blacks," ays .J. (Bill) McCune, no ecretary of state in Little Rock. "We even had orne county officials ho would rake off the be t land for them elves." The ne la puts the state, rather than the countie, in charge of the collection of delin­ quent taxe and it require more diligent effort to locate and notify absentee owner of tax debt and a minimum five-year aiting period b fore the state can sell th property. HARDTOFI D Charlie Daniels, McCune's successor, ys that the first sale of delinquent tax property i chedul d for 19 7. But, he say ,the tate's early experience 10 trying to identify and notify absentee owners has been dis­ couraging. Almost half of the certified notification letter ent by Daniels on 1 � ,000 par­ cels have been returned for lack of proper addres . In February 1982, the Com­ mission on Civil Rights sent its report on th Blac farmer and recommendations for action to John R Block, then cretary of Agriculture. Block did not re pond. The highly critical report apparently wa put on a shelf to ather du t. The report aid that r die 1 di rimination as end mic in the FmHa; that USDA' civil right office was in hambles (it hash six directors ince 1981); that FmHA did not emphasize help for small and minority far­ mers; that Blaks ere not ade­ quately represented on county-level farmer commit­ tees that decide who g t loans; that 10 n programs designed for low-income minority f rrners were helping hire farmers in disproportionate numbers. OFAR LOANS In brief, Agriculture depart­ ment policies were preventing Black farmer from getting the credit they needed either to obtain new land or to hold onto their land and continue farming. After civil rights commi ion chairman Clarence . Pen­ dleton Jr. warned in March 1983 that Black land 10 had incre- ed, Block acted. He appointed a task force, dominated by officials of agen­ cies criticized by the commis­ sion, to revie the report. In October 19 3, Block rote back to Pendleton with th pan­ el's re ponse. Itackno ledgeda duty to help II f rmer , but mad only vague recommen­ dations for addre in the com­ mission's concerns . Block ord red USDA a en­ cie to respond ith action plans, and he named Samuel J. Cornelius to over ee progre . Last December, th agencies were asked to report on their or. In a recent intervie , Corneliu reed th t the agen- ci s'latest response were v u and that little had b en done to meet civil ri hts commi ion concern.