One Year Later: An Open Letter from Sarah McClarty, HMC Farms
May 11, 2021, Updated Jun 10, 2021
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One year ago, The Produce Moms Covid-19 content series provided our community of consumer followers with perspectives and real-life stories from the agriculture supply chain. ย In our series, we posted a guest blog authored by Sarah McClarty, Chief Financial Officer and Co-Owner of HMC Farms. ย You can read it here.
Rooting back to 1887, HMC Farms is a multi-generation family farm located in Californiaโs Central Valley.ย HMC Farms is a leading grower in table grapes and tree fruit including peaches, plums, nectarines and plumcots.
HMC Farms is a leader in bringing fresh produce to schools.ย You can learn more about their commitment to schools at grapesforschools.com.ย And you can learn more about the family farm at HMCFarms.com.
HMC Farms and The Produce Moms have been brand partners for nearly 4 years.ย We are so passionate about what they do and the delicious fruit that they grow. Enjoy this reflective letter from Sarah, one year later.
One Year Later: An Open Letter from Sarah McClarty, HMC Farms
Twelve months ago, I wrote an open letter to give an update on how HMC Farms was dealing with the pandemic. I was asked to write a follow-up piece once everything โsettled back downโ in a few weeks, which became a few monthsโฆ fast forward to a full year removed from that letter, and things are still far from settled.
Something people often do not understand is that there is no rest in agriculture. Beyond farming being an all-consuming way of life, there is no pause button. If you are sick, the plum trees donโt prune themselves and the grapes donโt stop growing. If we miss a harvest by a window of even a few hours, we risk losing an entire block of peaches.
When you already work in an industry with no pause button and then must deal with new rules and regulations overnight, it is exhausting. Being an essential business is a privilege, but also a burden.
Over the past year, there have been several instances when a compliance deadline for a new rule or regulation was approaching with no formal guidance or FAQs from the issuing body, which meant we put our normal jobs aside to digest the new rules and create our own policies to be in compliance.
We did not have the ability to close the office for a short time to get this done. Instead, it meant working on these special projects all day (or week) and then starting in on our regular job duties when the workday would normally be ending. It also meant waking up in the middle of the night thinking about an angle that hadnโt been considered.
For the last year, owning and operating a vertically integrated farming organization has meant laughing at the idea of being able to take a day off. It has meant being tired all the time; it has meant no rest.
We, as owners and management, are not the only tired ones, so are our employees. Working in the field or a packing house is arduous work. Having to go home after a long day of work to help children do schoolwork, worry about being around vulnerable family members, and dealing with the burden of a global pandemic has weighed heavily on them too.
Our employees are our family, and not being able to give them answers or put all their worries to rest is hard. We have been able to offer them continued access to our free health care clinic, which included same-day appointments for COVID tests when everywhere else had a 3-5 day wait to get an appointment. We have also had the benefit of working with the California Farmworker Foundation to be one of the first sites in California to give on-site (literally right on the farm) vaccines to farmworkers in early February, and then again to any employees in our organization that wanted them a few weeks later. So many people left the building after receiving their vaccine smiling, thanking us for getting the vaccines to them, and in general, being able to finally put their minds at ease. In all honesty, seeing that weight lifted from their shoulders was the highlight of the past year for me.
Just like last year when I wrote the letter, we are approaching our harvest season, which again brings a lot of questions and unknowns. We have raised wages. Packaging has even longer lead times and higher costs. We are spending more money on PPE, increased sanitary measures, testing, and contact tracing; all while losing efficiencies because of the priority we put on safely distancing employees.
Most of our retail customers are not willing to pay more for our products, even though it is costing us more to produce them and the outlook for the foodservice industry is still full of question marks. Crunching those numbers keeps me up at night.
A year without rest is hard, but we believe in what we do and are dedicated to growing the best fruit we can. As always, we will get creative in the solutions we offer our customers and put our employeesโ best interests at the forefront of our decision-making. Hopefully someday soon I can write that โsettled back downโ update and take a vacation, but for now we will be doing our best to get fresh fruit on peopleโs tables all summer long.