Brittany Anderson and her husband Bodhi have had great success turning 10 acres of former industrial farmland on the Big Island into a thriving ecosystem.
鈥淚t was completely devoid of life but in four years with this kind of diversified pasture management we have grass, we have birds, we have worms,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 just jammin鈥.鈥
The Andersons sell organic, pasture-raised beef, chicken, lamb and pork from their pasture in Honomu. Restoring their land and making a living has been a challenge, but it鈥檚 nothing compared to how hard it鈥檚 been to navigate the bureaucracy surrounding housing.
As part of our Hawaii Grown series, we鈥檙e exploring solutions and ideas that could help small farmers in the state produce more local food. While affordable housing is a problem across the state, it鈥檚 especially difficult for farmers who make thin profit margins and for farm workers who many times have to work multiple jobs or live in unpermitted housing to make ends meet. Our latest installment of the Hawaii Grown podcast looks at one proposal to help farm owners afford housing and another to provide affordable housing for farm workers.
Challenges With Building
The Andersons wanted to live on their Honomu property, not only to deter agricultural theft, but to avoid commuting to-and-from Hilo. Because their land is classified as dedicated agricultural land, there鈥檚 a tax break for keeping it in production. Now that there鈥檚 a house on the property, that tax break went away.
鈥淚鈥檓 all for using taxes to support roads and schools but I’m producing an awful lot of food and it would seem like my property taxes should still be a little bit lower,鈥 she said.
It was also going to cost almost $80,000 to bring electricity to their property, so they鈥檙e 100% solar-powered.
鈥淣ot by choice, but by necessity,鈥 she said.
Megan Fox has been trying to find a solution for these challenges for more than five years. As the executive director of a food sustainability nonprofit, she often asks farmers what would help them make more money to grow local food.
鈥淔arming is a full time job and right now many new farmers are having to work another full time job on top of starting a business in order to keep a roof over their heads,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a challenge that鈥檚 very difficult to overcome.鈥
The nonprofit sketched out an idea for a community of small houses and an apartment complex adjacent to active farmland. Instead of every farmer building a house on their own land, grouping the homes together would cut down on infrastructure costs like electrical poles and sewer systems and allow the farmers to take advantage of every last acre of land.
鈥淲e were looking to do it small, affordable and replicable,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hat way it’s something that can be put in multiple places on multiple islands.鈥
Fox had funders who were willing to invest in the development if she could find a landowner who could provide at least a 30-year lease to justify the cost.
鈥淟andowners either don’t want that kind of development put onto that land, don’t want to make the long term commitment or — I’m not really sure what all of their reasons are — but there was a lot of pushback from pretty much any option that we looked at,鈥 she said.
She reached out to the state Agribusiness Development Corporation to pursue a private-public partnership, but she said her phone calls and emails were never returned.
鈥淭here’s a million barriers in your way and we were close to getting a lot of those out of the way,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e just could not find the land.鈥
Malama Kauai ended up getting a 15-year-lease in Moloaa, but they had to abandon their plans for housing. There are about 70 commercial farmers leasing land surrounding the property and a food hub should be up-and-running soon. But it’s still hard for Megan to hear how farmers she works with are struggling to find affordable housing.
鈥淚t’s rare that you’re going to find enough people to pull this off to even feed our island,鈥 she said. 鈥淣ever mind feed our economy beyond Kauai.鈥
Fox wants the state to offer incentives to landowners to provide more long-term leases to farmers who want to build houses on their land. And she thinks nonprofits and private companies would be more likely to invest in dedicated housing for farmers if the state offered up some if its land for development.
“I think that kind of private-public partnership should be something that could be explored and developed further as a model,” she said.聽
Building Houses For A Farm Economy
Once the Andersons successfully navigated the long and expensive process to build their own home, they realized their business had grown enough to justify hiring some employees.
鈥淎 lot of people hire WWOOFers,鈥 Anderson said, referring to a program where people volunteer on organic farms in exchange for housing. 鈥淎griculture has this image problem where people don’t really value the farmer or the farm worker, and I want to change that and have people that come work on the farm make money.鈥
Anderson wants someone who sees farming as a career, and she knows that expecting someone to volunteer means Hawaii residents are shut out of agricultural work. But when she looked into the process to build a farm dwelling, she was shocked at how complicated it was.
“Hawaii has become so accustomed to farmworkers living in poverty.” -Brittany Anderson, Sugar Hill Farmstead
The application requires a lot of personal information, and requires the farmer to outline the specific job duties and exactly how many hours the employee would work. Anderson said this removes her ability to be flexible and for the position to grow and evolve over time.
鈥淚 don’t want to put myself in a situation where I filled out the application and now I either have someone that is in line for a position that can’t exist without a dwelling or I had it built and then maybe the job changes,鈥 she said.
Anderson said she now understands why more small and mid-sized farmers don鈥檛 bother to provide housing, but low wages combined with a lack of affordable housing means farm workers suffer.
鈥淗awaii has become so accustomed to farmworkers living in poverty,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hat application is a huge barrier.鈥
Are Tiny Homes An Answer?
Marcy Montgomery also knows many farm workers who live in unpermitted housing or lie and say that their mobile home is actually a recreational vehicle.
鈥淭hey need to not be living in fear,鈥 she said.
Montgomery is the executive director of , a nonprofit that owns an organic farm on the Big Island and advocates for farmers in Hawaii, California and Washington.
In 2016 One Island started bringing together farmers and farmworkers to brainstorm how to provide more affordable housing in rural areas.
鈥淯p to 100 people would show up because there was such a lot of interest at the time,鈥 she said.
The stakeholders came up with streamline the farm dwelling application and permit process to specifically allow tiny homes. These small dwellings are larger and more permanent than an RV, but can still be moved easily.
Montgomery said many farm owners like the idea of tiny homes because the units are solar-powered and have composting toilets, so they could avoid building expensive power lines and septic systems.
What Should We Cover Next?
Hear directly from farmer Brittany Anderson and Marcy Montgomery of One Island in the latest episode of “Hawaii Grown” and tell us what solutions you’d like to see featured on the podcast.
The group helped write a bill, which also included financial support for farmers to buy and build the units. It had broad support, and passed both chambers of the Hawaii State Legislature in 2017.
But Governor David Ige that year, saying that because zoning laws already allow for farm dwellings, there was no need to change the permitting specifically to allow mobile tiny homes.
Montgomery said the existing laws prioritize large farmers with existing capital.
鈥淭he county of Hawaii has a certain amount of extra dwellings that you’re allowed to put on your land based on the number of workers that you have but that鈥檚 for somebody who’s already grown a business to the scale (that) can qualify for that,鈥 she said. 鈥淭here is no fast-track or small scale mechanism like we were proposing to help the small farmer, and this is what I think the governor did not understand.鈥
The group introduced similar proposals in 2018 and 2020, but the momentum was gone.
鈥淲e’re kind of waiting to see who becomes the next governor,鈥 she said.
Now One Island is working with small farmers living on the San Juan islands, an archipelago in the pacific northwest near British Columbia. She hopes if she can point to a successful implementation of her idea, Hawaii lawmakers will consider changing the regulations.
鈥淚f we want local food, we have to be willing to invest in it,鈥 she said.
“Hawaii Grown” is funded in part by grants from the Ulupono Fund at the Hawaii Community Foundation, the Marisla Fund at the Hawaii Community Foundation, and the Frost Family Foundation.
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