
Hobbies and interests
4-H
Agriculture
Animals
Bible Study
Business And Entrepreneurship
Church
Exercise And Fitness
Farming
FFA
Genetics
Horseback Riding
Hunting
Marketing
Media Studies
Photography and Photo Editing
Youth Group
Ranching
Showing Livestock
STEM
Videography
Reading
Christianity
Young Adult
Suspense
Romance
I read books multiple times per week
McKenzie Hollie
1,205
Bold Points1x
Winner
McKenzie Hollie
1,205
Bold Points1x
WinnerBio
My name is McKenzie Hollie and I am excited to see what the future holds for me! I grew up in a small town in central Florida and I spent most of my time outdoors. I was raised in a Baptist church and I continue to put God first in my life. Growing up, I showed cattle and horses, many of which I still own today. Most of my time is spent in the barn training cutting horses and working with show cows. I am also a coach for a training program in which I teach young kids horsemanship skills. I am extremely passionate about teaching others what I know and most of all, I am passionate about sharing my faith with others. I go to New Hope Baptist Church and I help lead worship on Sunday mornings. When it comes to my education, I am pursuing a degree in Agribusiness and a minor in Marketing. My life goals are to become an agribusiness marketer and photographer. I would like to own my own business one day and be a benefit to my community. I am a hard-working student with a compassionate heart for myself and others, and I am determined to do what it takes to achieve my goals in life.
Education
Lake Wales Senior High School
High SchoolMiscellaneous
Desired degree level:
Bachelor's degree program
Majors of interest:
- Agricultural Business and Management
- Environmental/Natural Resources Management and Policy
Career
Dream career field:
Marketing and Advertising
Dream career goals:
Feeding livestock, daily care of livestock, and grounds maintenance
Hollie Ranch2021 – Present4 years
Sports
Volleyball
Junior Varsity2019 – 20201 year
Public services
Volunteering
Hollie Brewer Adaptive Rodeo — My family puts on this rodeo so I have a lot of roles. These included set up and break down, being a unified partner, and working with the contests and livestock.2023 – PresentVolunteering
Polk County Special Olympics Equestrian — I was responsible for getting the horses ready and teaching students horsemanship skills2018 – 2023
Future Interests
Advocacy
Volunteering
Philanthropy
Entrepreneurship
Lemons to Lemonade Scholarship
As a first-generation university student, I am pursuing a degree in Agricultural Business intending to give back to my community what agriculture has given to me. I believe that this generation has the responsibility of advocating for agriculture while keeping our heritage alive. Dating back to creation, our world has been built on agriculture and those who have implemented agricultural practices. Through the industry, humans have evolved and gained knowledge about the land around them. Without trees, there would be no homes or businesses. Without lakes and waterways, there would be no water sources. Without crops and livestock, we would have no food. Without agriculture, we would be nothing. For this reason, we need to seek ways to preserve agriculture and to share with our community its importance to life. The issue is that many people of the younger generations do not know a time in which everyone relied on agriculture. Today, everything revolves around technology, industrialization, and even the fact that we could start living on lab-grown resources. This has to end, or humanity is going to. I am ever grateful that I get to live on a working ranch, and I refocus my thoughts on the value, and need, for agriculture. Just as I have been exposed to the industry, I feel that we need to expose the younger generations also. This can be done through prioritizing agricultural education, research, and participation. Another issue is that as population increases, agricultural industries decrease. Every day, more and more people move to the United States, thus leading to more housing developments being built, more food demands, and a drop in natural resources. As homes are built to support the growing number of people, builders are buying vacant agricultural land every chance they get. While it may seem that using vacant agricultural land is a smart decision and beneficial to society, other aspects must be addressed. If all the agricultural land is taken to be used for housing, there is not going to be a place to grow our resources such as livestock and crops. The good thing about this issue though, is that there are beneficial solutions that can be made through agricultural preservation. Instead of using vacant agricultural land, we should advocate for abandoned buildings and lots to be reused. Not only will this limit the loss of agricultural land, but it will also beautify our state, country, and world as a whole. One recent issue with housing developments and agricultural land was right after Hurricane Milton. Families in a housing development in Lakeland woke up to find their homes flooded and their neighborhood completely underwater with no way out. What most people do not realize is that this was the result of the neighborhood being built on top of an old sinkhole. Where the issue lies for me, and many community members, is that a few years prior, agricultural families were not allowed to build on this land because it was not approved due to the sinkhole. So, we are not able to use the land for agricultural purposes, but an entire housing development can be built upon it? This is where we must draw the line and become advocates. To conclude, I have seen the impacts that time is having on agriculture, and it hurts to say that these impacts are negative. However, I will not let these issues go on and I am going to stand up for preserving agricultural land and agricultural life. By receiving this scholarship, I will be able to obtain my Agricultural Business degree and advocate for the industry that shaped me.
Ventana Ocean Conservation Scholarship
As a first-generation university student, I am pursuing a degree in Agricultural Business intending to give back to my community what agriculture has given to me. I believe that this generation has the responsibility of advocating for agriculture while keeping our heritage alive.
Dating back to creation, our world has been built on agriculture and those who have implemented agricultural practices. Through the industry, humans have evolved and gained knowledge about the land around them. Without trees, there would be no homes or businesses. Without lakes and waterways, there would be no water sources. Without crops and livestock, we would have no food. Without agriculture, we would be nothing. For this reason, we need to seek ways to preserve agriculture and to share with our community its importance to life. The issue is that many people of the younger generations do not know a time in which everyone relied on agriculture. Today, everything revolves around technology, industrialization, and even the fact that we could start living on lab-grown resources. This has to end, or humanity is going to. I am ever grateful that I get to live on a working ranch, and I refocus my thoughts on the value, and need, for agriculture. Just as I have been exposed to the industry, I feel that we need to expose the younger generations also. This can be done through prioritizing agricultural education, research, and participation.
Another issue is that as population increases, agricultural industries decrease. Every day, more and more people move to the United States, thus leading to more housing developments being built, more food demands, and a drop in natural resources. As homes are built to support the growing number of people, builders are buying vacant agricultural land every chance they get. While it may seem that using vacant agricultural land is a smart decision and beneficial to society, other aspects must be addressed. If all the agricultural land is taken to be used for housing, there is not going to be a place to grow our resources such as livestock and crops. The good thing about this issue though, is that there are beneficial solutions that can be made through agricultural preservation. Instead of using vacant agricultural land, we should advocate for abandoned buildings and lots to be reused. Not only will this limit the loss of agricultural land, but it will also beautify our state, country, and world as a whole.
One recent issue with housing developments and agricultural land was right after Hurricane Milton. Families in a housing development in Lakeland woke up to find their homes flooded and their neighborhood completely underwater with no way out. What most people do not realize is that this was the result of the neighborhood being built on top of an old sinkhole. Where the issue lies for me, and many community members, is that a few years prior, agricultural families were not allowed to build on this land because it was not approved due to the sinkhole. So, we are not able to use the land for agricultural purposes, but an entire housing development can be built upon it? This is where we must draw the line and become advocates.
To conclude, I have seen the impacts that time is having on agriculture, and it hurts to say that these impacts are negative. However, I will not let these issues go on and I am going to stand up for preserving agricultural land and agricultural life. By receiving this scholarship, I will be able to obtain my Agricultural Business degree and advocate for the industry that shaped me.
Dennis L. N. Yakobson Scholarship Fund
As a first-generation university student, I am pursuing a degree in Agricultural Business intending to give back to my community what agriculture has given to me. I believe that this generation has the responsibility of advocating for agriculture while keeping our heritage alive.
Dating back to creation, our world has been built on agriculture and those who have implemented agricultural practices. Through the industry, humans have evolved and gained knowledge about the land around them. Without trees, there would be no homes or businesses. Without lakes and waterways, there would be no water sources. Without crops and livestock, we would have no food. Without agriculture, we would be nothing. For this reason, we need to seek ways to preserve agriculture and to share with our community its importance to life. The issue is that many people of the younger generations do not know a time in which everyone relied on agriculture. Today, everything revolves around technology, industrialization, and even the fact that we could start living on lab-grown resources. This has to end, or humanity is going to. I am ever grateful that I get to live on a working ranch, and I refocus my thoughts on the value, and need, for agriculture. Just as I have been exposed to the industry, I feel that we need to expose the younger generations also. This can be done through prioritizing agricultural education, research, and participation.
Another issue is that as population increases, agricultural industries decrease. Every day, more and more people move to the United States, thus leading to more housing developments being built, more food demands, and a drop in natural resources. As homes are built to support the growing number of people, builders are buying vacant agricultural land every chance they get. While it may seem that using vacant agricultural land is a smart decision and beneficial to society, other aspects must be addressed. If all the agricultural land is taken to be used for housing, there is not going to be a place to grow our resources such as livestock and crops. The good thing about this issue though, is that there are beneficial solutions that can be made through agricultural preservation. Instead of using vacant agricultural land, we should advocate for abandoned buildings and lots to be reused. Not only will this limit the loss of agricultural land, but it will also beautify our state, country, and world as a whole.
One recent issue with housing developments and agricultural land was right after Hurricane Milton. Families in a housing development in Lakeland woke up to find their homes flooded and their neighborhood completely underwater with no way out. What most people do not realize is that this was the result of the neighborhood being built on top of an old sinkhole. Where the issue lies for me, and many community members, is that a few years prior, agricultural families were not allowed to build on this land because it was not approved due to the sinkhole. So, we are not able to use the land for agricultural purposes, but an entire housing development can be built upon it? This is where we must draw the line and become advocates.
To conclude, I have seen the impacts that time is having on agriculture, and it hurts to say that these impacts are negative. However, I will not let these issues go on and I am going to stand up for preserving agricultural land and agricultural life. By receiving this scholarship, I will be able to obtain my Agricultural Business degree and advocate for the industry that shaped me.
Jennifer and Rob Tower Memorial Scholarship
As a first-generation university student, I am pursuing a degree in Agricultural Business intending to give back to my community what agriculture has given to me. I believe that this generation has the responsibility of advocating for agriculture while keeping our heritage alive.
Dating back to creation, our world has been built on agriculture and those who have implemented agricultural practices. Through the industry, humans have evolved and gained knowledge about the land around them. Without trees, there would be no homes or businesses. Without lakes and waterways, there would be no water sources. Without crops and livestock, we would have no food. Without agriculture, we would be nothing. For this reason, we need to seek ways to preserve agriculture and to share with our community its importance to life. The issue is that many people of the younger generations do not know a time in which everyone relied on agriculture. Today, everything revolves around technology, industrialization, and even the fact that we could start living on lab-grown resources. This has to end, or humanity is going to. I am ever grateful that I get to live on a working ranch, and I refocus my thoughts on the value, and need, for agriculture. Just as I have been exposed to the industry, I feel that we need to expose the younger generations also. This can be done through prioritizing agricultural education, research, and participation.
Another issue is that as population increases, agricultural industries decrease. Every day, more and more people move to the United States, thus leading to more housing developments being built, more food demands, and a drop in natural resources. As homes are built to support the growing number of people, builders are buying vacant agricultural land every chance they get. While it may seem that using vacant agricultural land is a smart decision and beneficial to society, other aspects must be addressed. If all the agricultural land is taken to be used for housing, there is not going to be a place to grow our resources such as livestock and crops. The good thing about this issue though, is that there are beneficial solutions that can be made through agricultural preservation. Instead of using vacant agricultural land, we should advocate for abandoned buildings and lots to be reused. Not only will this limit the loss of agricultural land, but it will also beautify our state, country, and world as a whole.
One recent issue with housing developments and agricultural land was right after Hurricane Milton. Families in a housing development in Lakeland woke up to find their homes flooded and their neighborhood completely underwater with no way out. What most people do not realize is that this was the result of the neighborhood being built on top of an old sinkhole. Where the issue lies for me, and many community members, is that a few years prior, agricultural families were not allowed to build on this land because it was not approved due to the sinkhole. So, we are not able to use the land for agricultural purposes, but an entire housing development can be built upon it? This is where we must draw the line and become advocates.
To conclude, I have seen the impacts that time is having on agriculture, and it hurts to say that these impacts are negative. However, I will not let these issues go on and I am going to stand up for preserving agricultural land and agricultural life. By receiving this scholarship, I will be able to obtain my Agricultural Business degree and advocate for the industry that shaped me.
Raise Me Up to DO GOOD Scholarship
As a first-generation university student, I am pursuing a degree in Agricultural Business intending to give back to my community what agriculture has given to me. I believe that this generation has the responsibility of advocating for agriculture while keeping our heritage alive.
Dating back to creation, our world has been built on agriculture and those who have implemented agricultural practices. Through the industry, humans have evolved and gained knowledge about the land around them. Without trees, there would be no homes or businesses. Without lakes and waterways, there would be no water sources. Without crops and livestock, we would have no food. Without agriculture, we would be nothing. For this reason, we need to seek ways to preserve agriculture and to share with our community its importance to life. The issue is that many people of the younger generations do not know a time in which everyone relied on agriculture. Today, everything revolves around technology, industrialization, and even the fact that we could start living on lab-grown resources. This has to end, or humanity is going to. I am ever grateful that I get to live on a working ranch, and I refocus my thoughts on the value, and need, for agriculture. Just as I have been exposed to the industry, I feel that we need to expose the younger generations also. This can be done through prioritizing agricultural education, research, and participation.
Another issue is that as population increases, agricultural industries decrease. Every day, more and more people move to the United States, thus leading to more housing developments being built, more food demands, and a drop in natural resources. As homes are built to support the growing number of people, builders are buying vacant agricultural land every chance they get. While it may seem that using vacant agricultural land is a smart decision and beneficial to society, other aspects must be addressed. If all the agricultural land is taken to be used for housing, there is not going to be a place to grow our resources such as livestock and crops. The good thing about this issue though, is that there are beneficial solutions that can be made through agricultural preservation. Instead of using vacant agricultural land, we should advocate for abandoned buildings and lots to be reused. Not only will this limit the loss of agricultural land, but it will also beautify our state, country, and world as a whole.
One recent issue with housing developments and agricultural land was right after Hurricane Milton. Families in a housing development in Lakeland woke up to find their homes flooded and their neighborhood completely underwater with no way out. What most people do not realize is that this was the result of the neighborhood being built on top of an old sinkhole. Where the issue lies for me, and many community members, is that a few years prior, agricultural families were not allowed to build on this land because it was not approved due to the sinkhole. So, we are not able to use the land for agricultural purposes, but an entire housing development can be built upon it? This is where we must draw the line and become advocates.
To conclude, I have seen the impacts that time is having on agriculture, and it hurts to say that these impacts are negative. However, I will not let these issues go on and I am going to stand up for preserving agricultural land and agricultural life. By receiving this scholarship, I will be able to obtain my Agricultural Business degree and advocate for the industry that shaped me.
David Hinsdale Memorial Scholarship
As a first-generation university student, I am pursuing a degree in Agricultural Business intending to give back to my community what agriculture has given to me. I believe that this generation has the responsibility of advocating for agriculture while keeping our heritage alive.
Dating back to creation, our world has been built on agriculture and those who have implemented agricultural practices. Through the industry, humans have evolved and gained knowledge about the land around them. Without trees, there would be no homes or businesses. Without lakes and waterways, there would be no water sources. Without crops and livestock, we would have no food. Without agriculture, we would be nothing. For this reason, we need to seek ways to preserve agriculture and to share with our community its importance to life. The issue is that many people of the younger generations do not know a time in which everyone relied on agriculture. Today, everything revolves around technology, industrialization, and even the fact that we could start living on lab-grown resources. This has to end, or humanity is going to. I am ever grateful that I get to live on a working ranch, and I refocus my thoughts on the value, and need, for agriculture. Just as I have been exposed to the industry, I feel that we need to expose the younger generations also. This can be done through prioritizing agricultural education, research, and participation.
Another issue is that as population increases, agricultural industries decrease. Every day, more and more people move to the United States, thus leading to more housing developments being built, more food demands, and a drop in natural resources. As homes are built to support the growing number of people, builders are buying vacant agricultural land every chance they get. While it may seem that using vacant agricultural land is a smart decision and beneficial to society, other aspects must be addressed. If all the agricultural land is taken to be used for housing, there is not going to be a place to grow our resources such as livestock and crops. The good thing about this issue though, is that there are beneficial solutions that can be made through agricultural preservation. Instead of using vacant agricultural land, we should advocate for abandoned buildings and lots to be reused. Not only will this limit the loss of agricultural land, but it will also beautify our state, country, and world as a whole.
One recent issue with housing developments and agricultural land was right after Hurricane Milton. Families in a housing development in Lakeland woke up to find their homes flooded and their neighborhood completely underwater with no way out. What most people do not realize is that this was the result of the neighborhood being built on top of an old sinkhole. Where the issue lies for me, and many community members, is that a few years prior, agricultural families were not allowed to build on this land because it was not approved due to the sinkhole. So, we are not able to use the land for agricultural purposes, but an entire housing development can be built upon it? This is where we must draw the line and become advocates.
To conclude, I have seen the impacts that time is having on agriculture, and it hurts to say that these impacts are negative. However, I will not let these issues go on and I am going to stand up for preserving agricultural land and agricultural life. By receiving this scholarship, I will be able to obtain my Agricultural Business degree and advocate for the industry that shaped me.
Career Test for Future Lawyers Scholarship
As a first-generation university student, I am pursuing a degree in Agricultural Business intending to give back to my community what agriculture has given to me. I believe that this generation has the responsibility of advocating for agriculture while keeping our heritage alive.
Dating back to creation, our world has been built on agriculture and those who have implemented agricultural practices. Through the industry, humans have evolved and gained knowledge about the land around them. Without trees, there would be no homes or businesses. Without lakes and waterways, there would be no water sources. Without crops and livestock, we would have no food. Without agriculture, we would be nothing. For this reason, we need to seek ways to preserve agriculture and to share with our community its importance to life. The issue is that many people of the younger generations do not know a time in which everyone relied on agriculture. Today, everything revolves around technology, industrialization, and even the fact that we could start living on lab-grown resources. This has to end, or humanity is going to. I am ever grateful that I get to live on a working ranch, and I refocus my thoughts on the value, and need, for agriculture. Just as I have been exposed to the industry, I feel that we need to expose the younger generations also. This can be done through prioritizing agricultural education, research, and participation.
Another issue is that as population increases, agricultural industries decrease. Every day, more and more people move to the United States, thus leading to more housing developments being built, more food demands, and a drop in natural resources. As homes are built to support the growing number of people, builders are buying vacant agricultural land every chance they get. While it may seem that using vacant agricultural land is a smart decision and beneficial to society, other aspects must be addressed. If all the agricultural land is taken to be used for housing, there is not going to be a place to grow our resources such as livestock and crops. The good thing about this issue though, is that there are beneficial solutions that can be made through agricultural preservation. Instead of using vacant agricultural land, we should advocate for abandoned buildings and lots to be reused. Not only will this limit the loss of agricultural land, but it will also beautify our state, country, and world as a whole.
One recent issue with housing developments and agricultural land was right after Hurricane Milton. Families in a housing development in Lakeland woke up to find their homes flooded and their neighborhood completely underwater with no way out. What most people do not realize is that this was the result of the neighborhood being built on top of an old sinkhole. Where the issue lies for me, and many community members, is that a few years prior, agricultural families were not allowed to build on this land because it was not approved due to the sinkhole. So, we are not able to use the land for agricultural purposes, but an entire housing development can be built upon it? This is where we must draw the line and become advocates.
To conclude, I have seen the impacts that time is having on agriculture, and it hurts to say that these impacts are negative. However, I will not let these issues go on and I am going to stand up for preserving agricultural land and agricultural life. By receiving this scholarship, I will be able to obtain my Agricultural Business degree and advocate for the industry that shaped me.
Resilient Scholar Award
As a first-generation university student, I am pursuing a degree in Agricultural Business intending to give back to my community what agriculture has given to me. I believe that this generation has the responsibility of advocating for agriculture while keeping our heritage alive.
Dating back to creation, our world has been built on agriculture and those who have implemented agricultural practices. Through the industry, humans have evolved and gained knowledge about the land around them. Without trees, there would be no homes or businesses. Without lakes and waterways, there would be no water sources. Without crops and livestock, we would have no food. Without agriculture, we would be nothing. For this reason, we need to seek ways to preserve agriculture and to share with our community its importance to life. The issue is that many people of the younger generations do not know a time in which everyone relied on agriculture. Today, everything revolves around technology, industrialization, and even the fact that we could start living on lab-grown resources. This has to end, or humanity is going to. I am ever grateful that I get to live on a working ranch, and I refocus my thoughts on the value, and need, for agriculture. Just as I have been exposed to the industry, I feel that we need to expose the younger generations also. This can be done through prioritizing agricultural education, research, and participation.
Another issue is that as population increases, agricultural industries decrease. Every day, more and more people move to the United States, thus leading to more housing developments being built, more food demands, and a drop in natural resources. As homes are built to support the growing number of people, builders are buying vacant agricultural land every chance they get. While it may seem that using vacant agricultural land is a smart decision and beneficial to society, other aspects must be addressed. If all the agricultural land is taken to be used for housing, there is not going to be a place to grow our resources such as livestock and crops. The good thing about this issue though, is that there are beneficial solutions that can be made through agricultural preservation. Instead of using vacant agricultural land, we should advocate for abandoned buildings and lots to be reused. Not only will this limit the loss of agricultural land, but it will also beautify our state, country, and world as a whole.
One recent issue with housing developments and agricultural land was right after Hurricane Milton. Families in a housing development in Lakeland woke up to find their homes flooded and their neighborhood completely underwater with no way out. What most people do not realize is that this was the result of the neighborhood being built on top of an old sinkhole. Where the issue lies for me, and many community members, is that a few years prior, agricultural families were not allowed to build on this land because it was not approved due to the sinkhole. So, we are not able to use the land for agricultural purposes, but an entire housing development can be built upon it? This is where we must draw the line and become advocates.
To conclude, I have seen the impacts that time is having on agriculture, and it hurts to say that these impacts are negative. However, I will not let these issues go on and I am going to stand up for preserving agricultural land and agricultural life. By receiving this scholarship, I will be able to obtain my Agricultural Business degree and advocate for the industry that shaped me.
John Young 'Pursue Your Passion' Scholarship
As a first-generation university student, I am pursuing a degree in Agricultural Business intending to give back to my community what agriculture has given to me. I believe that this generation has the responsibility of advocating for agriculture while keeping our heritage alive.
Dating back to creation, our world has been built on agriculture and those who have implemented agricultural practices. Through the industry, humans have evolved and gained knowledge about the land around them. Without trees, there would be no homes or businesses. Without lakes and waterways, there would be no water sources. Without crops and livestock, we would have no food. Without agriculture, we would be nothing. For this reason, we need to seek ways to preserve agriculture and to share with our community its importance to life. The issue is that many people of the younger generations do not know a time in which everyone relied on agriculture. Today, everything revolves around technology, industrialization, and even the fact that we could start living on lab-grown resources. This has to end, or humanity is going to. I am ever grateful that I get to live on a working ranch, and I refocus my thoughts on the value, and need, for agriculture. Just as I have been exposed to the industry, I feel that we need to expose the younger generations also. This can be done through prioritizing agricultural education, research, and participation.
Another issue is that as population increases, agricultural industries decrease. Every day, more and more people move to the United States, thus leading to more housing developments being built, more food demands, and a drop in natural resources. As homes are built to support the growing number of people, builders are buying vacant agricultural land every chance they get. While it may seem that using vacant agricultural land is a smart decision and beneficial to society, other aspects must be addressed. If all the agricultural land is taken to be used for housing, there is not going to be a place to grow our resources such as livestock and crops. The good thing about this issue though, is that there are beneficial solutions that can be made through agricultural preservation. Instead of using vacant agricultural land, we should advocate for abandoned buildings and lots to be reused. Not only will this limit the loss of agricultural land, but it will also beautify our state, country, and world as a whole.
To conclude, I have seen the impacts that time is having on agriculture, and it hurts to say that these impacts are negative. However, I will not let these issues go on and I am going to stand up for preserving agricultural land and agricultural life. By receiving this scholarship, I will be able to obtain my Agricultural Business degree and advocate for the industry that shaped me.
Global Girls In STEM Scholarship
As a first-generation university student, I am pursuing a degree in Agricultural Business intending to give back to my community what agriculture has given to me. I believe that this generation has the responsibility of advocating for agriculture while keeping our heritage alive.
Dating back to creation, our world has been built on agriculture and those who have implemented agricultural practices. Through the industry, humans have evolved and gained knowledge about the land around them. Without trees, there would be no homes or businesses. Without lakes and waterways, there would be no water sources. Without crops and livestock, we would have no food. Without agriculture, we would be nothing. For this reason, we need to seek ways to preserve agriculture and to share with our community its importance to life. The issue is that many people of the younger generations do not know a time in which everyone relied on agriculture. Today, everything revolves around technology, industrialization, and even the fact that we could start living on lab-grown resources. This has to end, or humanity is going to. I am ever grateful that I get to live on a working ranch, and I refocus my thoughts on the value, and need, for agriculture. Just as I have been exposed to the industry, I feel that we need to expose the younger generations also. This can be done through prioritizing agricultural education, research, and participation.
Another issue is that as population increases, agricultural industries decrease. Every day, more and more people move to the United States, thus leading to more housing developments being built, more food demands, and a drop in natural resources. As homes are built to support the growing number of people, builders are buying vacant agricultural land every chance they get. While it may seem that using vacant agricultural land is a smart decision and beneficial to society, other aspects must be addressed. If all the agricultural land is taken to be used for housing, there is not going to be a place to grow our resources such as livestock and crops. The good thing about this issue though, is that there are beneficial solutions that can be made through agricultural preservation. Instead of using vacant agricultural land, we should advocate for abandoned buildings and lots to be reused. Not only will this limit the loss of agricultural land, but it will also beautify our state, country, and world as a whole.
One recent issue with housing developments and agricultural land was right after Hurricane Milton. Families in a housing development in Lakeland woke up to find their homes flooded and their neighborhood completely underwater with no way out. What most people do not realize is that this was the result of the neighborhood being built on top of an old sinkhole. Where the issue lies for me, and many community members, is that a few years prior, agricultural families were not allowed to build on this land because it was not approved due to the sinkhole. So, we are not able to use the land for agricultural purposes, but an entire housing development can be built upon it? This is where we must draw the line and become advocates.
To conclude, I have seen the impacts that time is having on agriculture, and it hurts to say that these impacts are negative. However, I will not let these issues go on and I am going to stand up for preserving agricultural land and agricultural life. By receiving this scholarship, I will be able to obtain my Agricultural Business degree and advocate for the industry that shaped me.
A Security Insurance Agency Scholarship
As a first-generation university student, I am pursuing a degree in Agricultural Business intending to give back to my community what agriculture has given to me. I believe that this generation has the responsibility of advocating for agriculture while keeping our heritage alive.
Dating back to creation, our world has been built on agriculture and those who have implemented agricultural practices. Through the industry, humans have evolved and gained knowledge about the land around them. Without trees, there would be no homes or businesses. Without lakes and waterways, there would be no water sources. Without crops and livestock, we would have no food. Without agriculture, we would be nothing. For this reason, we need to seek ways to preserve agriculture and to share with our community its importance to life. The issue is that many people of the younger generations do not know a time in which everyone relied on agriculture. Today, everything revolves around technology, industrialization, and even the fact that we could start living on lab-grown resources. This has to end, or humanity is going to. I am ever grateful that I get to live on a working ranch, and I refocus my thoughts on the value, and need, for agriculture. Just as I have been exposed to the industry, I feel that we need to expose the younger generations also. This can be done through prioritizing agricultural education, research, and participation.
Another issue is that as population increases, agricultural industries decrease. Every day, more and more people move to the United States, thus leading to more housing developments being built, more food demands, and a drop in natural resources. As homes are built to support the growing number of people, builders are buying vacant agricultural land every chance they get. While it may seem that using vacant agricultural land is a smart decision and beneficial to society, other aspects must be addressed. If all the agricultural land is taken to be used for housing, there is not going to be a place to grow our resources such as livestock and crops. The good thing about this issue though, is that there are beneficial solutions that can be made through agricultural preservation. Instead of using vacant agricultural land, we should advocate for abandoned buildings and lots to be reused. Not only will this limit the loss of agricultural land, but it will also beautify our state, country, and world as a whole.
One recent issue with housing developments and agricultural land was right after Hurricane Milton. Families in a housing development in Lakeland woke up to find their homes flooded and their neighborhood completely underwater with no way out. What most people do not realize is that this was the result of the neighborhood being built on top of an old sinkhole. Where the issue lies for me, and many community members, is that a few years prior, agricultural families were not allowed to build on this land because it was not approved due to the sinkhole. So, we are not able to use the land for agricultural purposes, but an entire housing development can be built upon it? This is where we must draw the line and become advocates.
To conclude, I have seen the impacts that time is having on agriculture, and it hurts to say that these impacts are negative. However, I will not let these issues go on and I am going to stand up for preserving agricultural land and agricultural life. By receiving this scholarship, I will be able to obtain my Agricultural Business degree and advocate for the industry that shaped me.
Eco-Warrior Scholarship
As a first-generation university student, I am pursuing a degree in Agricultural Business intending to give back to my community what agriculture has given to me. I believe that this generation has the responsibility of advocating for agriculture while keeping our heritage alive.
Dating back to creation, our world has been built on agriculture and those who have implemented agricultural practices. Through the industry, humans have evolved and gained knowledge about the land around them. Without trees, there would be no homes or businesses. Without lakes and waterways, there would be no water sources. Without crops and livestock, we would have no food. Without agriculture, we would be nothing. For this reason, we need to seek ways to preserve agriculture and to share with our community its importance to life. The issue is that many people of the younger generations do not know a time in which everyone relied on agriculture. Today, everything revolves around technology, industrialization, and even the fact that we could start living on lab-grown resources. This has to end, or humanity is going to. I am ever grateful that I get to live on a working ranch, and I refocus my thoughts on the value, and need, for agriculture. Just as I have been exposed to the industry, I feel that we need to expose the younger generations also. This can be done through prioritizing agricultural education, research, and participation.
Another issue is that as population increases, agricultural industries decrease. Every day, more and more people move to the United States, thus leading to more housing developments being built, more food demands, and a drop in natural resources. As homes are built to support the growing number of people, builders are buying vacant agricultural land every chance they get. While it may seem that using vacant agricultural land is a smart decision and beneficial to society, other aspects must be addressed. If all the agricultural land is taken to be used for housing, there is not going to be a place to grow our resources such as livestock and crops. The good thing about this issue though, is that there are beneficial solutions that can be made through agricultural preservation. Instead of using vacant agricultural land, we should advocate for abandoned buildings and lots to be reused. Not only will this limit the loss of agricultural land, but it will also beautify our state, country, and world as a whole.
One recent issue with housing developments and agricultural land was right after Hurricane Milton. Families in a housing development in Lakeland woke up to find their homes flooded and their neighborhood completely underwater with no way out. What most people do not realize is that this was the result of the neighborhood being built on top of an old sinkhole. Where the issue lies for me, and many community members, is that a few years prior, agricultural families were not allowed to build on this land because it was not approved due to the sinkhole. So, we are not able to use the land for agricultural purposes, but an entire housing development can be built upon it? This is where we must draw the line and become advocates.
To conclude, I have seen the impacts that time is having on agriculture, and it hurts to say that these impacts are negative. However, I will not let these issues go on and I am going to stand up for preserving agricultural land and agricultural life. By receiving this scholarship, I will be able to obtain my Agricultural Business degree and advocate for the industry that shaped me.
Ken Larson Memorial Scholarship
As a first-generation university student, I am pursuing a degree in Agricultural Business intending to give back to my community what agriculture has given to me. I believe that this generation has the responsibility of advocating for agriculture while keeping our heritage alive.
Dating back to creation, our world has been built on agriculture and those who have implemented agricultural practices. Through the industry, humans have evolved and gained knowledge about the land around them. Without trees, there would be no homes or businesses. Without lakes and waterways, there would be no water sources. Without crops and livestock, we would have no food. Without agriculture, we would be nothing. For this reason, we need to seek ways to preserve agriculture and to share with our community its importance to life. The issue is that many people of the younger generations do not know a time in which everyone relied on agriculture. Today, everything revolves around technology, industrialization, and even the fact that we could start living on lab-grown resources. This has to end, or humanity is going to. I am ever grateful that I get to live on a working ranch, and I refocus my thoughts on the value, and need, for agriculture. Just as I have been exposed to the industry, I feel that we need to expose the younger generations also. This can be done through prioritizing agricultural education, research, and participation.
Another issue is that as population increases, agricultural industries decrease. Every day, more and more people move to the United States, thus leading to more housing developments being built, more food demands, and a drop in natural resources. As homes are built to support the growing number of people, builders are buying vacant agricultural land every chance they get. While it may seem that using vacant agricultural land is a smart decision and beneficial to society, other aspects must be addressed. If all the agricultural land is taken to be used for housing, there is not going to be a place to grow our resources such as livestock and crops. The good thing about this issue though, is that there are beneficial solutions that can be made through agricultural preservation. Instead of using vacant agricultural land, we should advocate for abandoned buildings and lots to be reused. Not only will this limit the loss of agricultural land, but it will also beautify our state, country, and world as a whole.
One recent issue with housing developments and agricultural land was right after Hurricane Milton. Families in a housing development in Lakeland woke up to find their homes flooded and their neighborhood completely underwater with no way out. What most people do not realize is that this was the result of the neighborhood being built on top of an old sinkhole. Where the issue lies for me, and many community members, is that a few years prior, agricultural families were not allowed to build on this land because it was not approved due to the sinkhole. So, we are not able to use the land for agricultural purposes, but an entire housing development can be built upon it? This is where we must draw the line and become advocates.
To conclude, I have seen the impacts that time is having on agriculture, and it hurts to say that these impacts are negative. However, I will not let these issues go on and I am going to stand up for preserving agricultural land and agricultural life. By receiving this scholarship, I will be able to obtain my Agricultural Business degree and advocate for the industry that shaped me.
Ella's Gift
As a first-generation university student, I am pursuing a degree in Agricultural Business intending to give back to my community what agriculture has given to me. I believe that this generation has the responsibility of advocating for agriculture while keeping our heritage alive.
Dating back to creation, our world has been built on agriculture and those who have implemented agricultural practices. Through the industry, humans have evolved and gained knowledge about the land around them. Without trees, there would be no homes or businesses. Without lakes and waterways, there would be no water sources. Without crops and livestock, we would have no food. Without agriculture, we would be nothing. For this reason, we need to seek ways to preserve agriculture and to share with our community its importance to life. The issue is that many people of the younger generations do not know a time in which everyone relied on agriculture. Today, everything revolves around technology, industrialization, and even the fact that we could start living on lab-grown resources. This has to end, or humanity is going to. I am ever grateful that I get to live on a working ranch, and I refocus my thoughts on the value, and need, for agriculture. Just as I have been exposed to the industry, I feel that we need to expose the younger generations also. This can be done through prioritizing agricultural education, research, and participation.
Another issue is that as population increases, agricultural industries decrease. Every day, more and more people move to the United States, thus leading to more housing developments being built, more food demands, and a drop in natural resources. As homes are built to support the growing number of people, builders are buying vacant agricultural land every chance they get. While it may seem that using vacant agricultural land is a smart decision and beneficial to society, other aspects must be addressed. If all the agricultural land is taken to be used for housing, there is not going to be a place to grow our resources such as livestock and crops. The good thing about this issue though, is that there are beneficial solutions that can be made through agricultural preservation. Instead of using vacant agricultural land, we should advocate for abandoned buildings and lots to be reused. Not only will this limit the loss of agricultural land, but it will also beautify our state, country, and world as a whole.
One recent issue with housing developments and agricultural land was right after Hurricane Milton. Families in a housing development in Lakeland woke up to find their homes flooded and their neighborhood completely underwater with no way out. What most people do not realize is that this was the result of the neighborhood being built on top of an old sinkhole. Where the issue lies for me, and many community members, is that a few years prior, agricultural families were not allowed to build on this land because it was not approved due to the sinkhole. So, we are not able to use the land for agricultural purposes, but an entire housing development can be built upon it? This is where we must draw the line and become advocates.
To conclude, I have seen the impacts that time is having on agriculture, and it hurts to say that these impacts are negative. However, I will not let these issues go on and I am going to stand up for preserving agricultural land and agricultural life. By receiving this scholarship, I will be able to obtain my Agricultural Business degree and advocate for the industry that shaped me.
Joe Gilroy "Plan Your Work, Work Your Plan" Scholarship
As a first-generation university student, I am pursuing a degree in Agricultural Business intending to give back to my community what agriculture has given to me. I believe that this generation has the responsibility of advocating for agriculture while keeping our heritage alive.
Dating back to creation, our world has been built on agriculture and those who have implemented agricultural practices. Through the industry, humans have evolved and gained knowledge about the land around them. Without trees, there would be no homes or businesses. Without lakes and waterways, there would be no water sources. Without crops and livestock, we would have no food. Without agriculture, we would be nothing. For this reason, we need to seek ways to preserve agriculture and to share with our community its importance to life. The issue is that many people of the younger generations do not know a time in which everyone relied on agriculture. Today, everything revolves around technology, industrialization, and even the fact that we could start living on lab-grown resources. This has to end, or humanity is going to. I am ever grateful that I get to live on a working ranch, and I refocus my thoughts on the value, and need, for agriculture. Just as I have been exposed to the industry, I feel that we need to expose the younger generations also. This can be done through prioritizing agricultural education, research, and participation.
Another issue is that as population increases, agricultural industries decrease. Every day, more and more people move to the United States, thus leading to more housing developments being built, more food demands, and a drop in natural resources. As homes are built to support the growing number of people, builders are buying vacant agricultural land every chance they get. While it may seem that using vacant agricultural land is a smart decision and beneficial to society, other aspects must be addressed. If all the agricultural land is taken to be used for housing, there is not going to be a place to grow our resources such as livestock and crops. The good thing about this issue though, is that there are beneficial solutions that can be made through agricultural preservation. Instead of using vacant agricultural land, we should advocate for abandoned buildings and lots to be reused. Not only will this limit the loss of agricultural land, but it will also beautify our state, country, and world as a whole.
One recent issue with housing developments and agricultural land was right after Hurricane Milton. Families in a housing development in Lakeland woke up to find their homes flooded and their neighborhood completely underwater with no way out. What most people do not realize is that this was the result of the neighborhood being built on top of an old sinkhole. Where the issue lies for me, and many community members, is that a few years prior, agricultural families were not allowed to build on this land because it was not approved due to the sinkhole. So, we are not able to use the land for agricultural purposes, but an entire housing development can be built upon it? This is where we must draw the line and become advocates.
To conclude, I have seen the impacts that time is having on agriculture, and it hurts to say that these impacts are negative. However, I will not let these issues go on and I am going to stand up for preserving agricultural land and agricultural life. By receiving this scholarship, I will be able to obtain my Agricultural Business degree and advocate for the industry that shaped me.
Jorian Kuran Harris (Shugg) Helping Heart Foundation Scholarship
As a first-generation university student, I am pursuing a degree in Agricultural Business intending to give back to my community what agriculture has given to me. I believe that this generation has the responsibility of advocating for agriculture while keeping our heritage alive.
Dating back to creation, our world has been built on agriculture and those who have implemented agricultural practices. Through the industry, humans have evolved and gained knowledge about the land around them. Without trees, there would be no homes or businesses. Without lakes and waterways, there would be no water sources. Without crops and livestock, we would have no food. Without agriculture, we would be nothing. For this reason, we need to seek ways to preserve agriculture and to share with our community its importance to life. The issue is that many people of the younger generations do not know a time in which everyone relied on agriculture. Today, everything revolves around technology, industrialization, and even the fact that we could start living on lab-grown resources. This has to end, or humanity is going to. I am ever grateful that I get to live on a working ranch, and I refocus my thoughts on the value, and need, for agriculture. Just as I have been exposed to the industry, I feel that we need to expose the younger generations also. This can be done through prioritizing agricultural education, research, and participation.
Another issue is that as population increases, agricultural industries decrease. Every day, more and more people move to the United States, thus leading to more housing developments being built, more food demands, and a drop in natural resources. As homes are built to support the growing number of people, builders are buying vacant agricultural land every chance they get. While it may seem that using vacant agricultural land is a smart decision and beneficial to society, other aspects must be addressed. If all the agricultural land is taken to be used for housing, there is not going to be a place to grow our resources such as livestock and crops. The good thing about this issue though, is that there are beneficial solutions that can be made through agricultural preservation. Instead of using vacant agricultural land, we should advocate for abandoned buildings and lots to be reused. Not only will this limit the loss of agricultural land, but it will also beautify our state, country, and world as a whole.
One recent issue with housing developments and agricultural land was right after Hurricane Milton. Families in a housing development in Lakeland woke up to find their homes flooded and their neighborhood completely underwater with no way out. What most people do not realize is that this was the result of the neighborhood being built on top of an old sinkhole. Where the issue lies for me, and many community members, is that a few years prior, agricultural families were not allowed to build on this land because it was not approved due to the sinkhole. So, we are not able to use the land for agricultural purposes, but an entire housing development can be built upon it? This is where we must draw the line and become advocates.
To conclude, I have seen the impacts that time is having on agriculture, and it hurts to say that these impacts are negative. However, I will not let these issues go on and I am going to stand up for preserving agricultural land and agricultural life. By receiving this scholarship, I will be able to obtain my Agricultural Business degree and advocate for the industry that shaped me.
Women in STEM Scholarship
As a first-generation university student, I am pursuing a degree in Agricultural Business intending to give back to my community what agriculture has given to me. I believe that this generation has the responsibility of advocating for agriculture while keeping our heritage alive.
Dating back to creation, our world has been built on agriculture and those who have implemented agricultural practices. Through the industry, humans have evolved and gained knowledge about the land around them. Without trees, there would be no homes or businesses. Without lakes and waterways, there would be no water sources. Without crops and livestock, we would have no food. Without agriculture, we would be nothing. For this reason, we need to seek ways to preserve agriculture and to share with our community its importance to life. The issue is that many people of the younger generations do not know a time in which everyone relied on agriculture. Today, everything revolves around technology, industrialization, and even the fact that we could start living on lab-grown resources. This has to end, or humanity is going to. I am ever grateful that I get to live on a working ranch, and I refocus my thoughts on the value, and need, for agriculture. Just as I have been exposed to the industry, I feel that we need to expose the younger generations also. This can be done through prioritizing agricultural education, research, and participation.
Another issue is that as population increases, agricultural industries decrease. Every day, more and more people move to the United States, thus leading to more housing developments being built, more food demands, and a drop in natural resources. As homes are built to support the growing number of people, builders are buying vacant agricultural land every chance they get. While it may seem that using vacant agricultural land is a smart decision and beneficial to society, other aspects must be addressed. If all the agricultural land is taken to be used for housing, there is not going to be a place to grow our resources such as livestock and crops. The good thing about this issue though, is that there are beneficial solutions that can be made through agricultural preservation. Instead of using vacant agricultural land, we should advocate for abandoned buildings and lots to be reused. Not only will this limit the loss of agricultural land, but it will also beautify our state, country, and world as a whole.
One recent issue with housing developments and agricultural land was right after Hurricane Milton. Families in a housing development in Lakeland woke up to find their homes flooded and their neighborhood completely underwater with no way out. What most people do not realize is that this was the result of the neighborhood being built on top of an old sinkhole. Where the issue lies for me, and many community members, is that a few years prior, agricultural families were not allowed to build on this land because it was not approved due to the sinkhole. So, we are not able to use the land for agricultural purposes, but an entire housing development can be built upon it? This is where we must draw the line and become advocates.
To conclude, I have seen the impacts that time is having on agriculture, and it hurts to say that these impacts are negative. However, I will not let these issues go on and I am going to stand up for preserving agricultural land and agricultural life. By receiving this scholarship, I will be able to obtain my Agricultural Business degree and advocate for the industry that shaped me.
Stevie Kirton Memorial Scholarship
As a first-generation university student, I am pursuing a degree in Agricultural Business intending to give back to my community what agriculture has given to me. I believe that this generation has the responsibility of advocating for agriculture while keeping our heritage alive.
Dating back to creation, our world has been built on agriculture and those who have implemented agricultural practices. Through the industry, humans have evolved and gained knowledge about the land around them. Without trees, there would be no homes or businesses. Without lakes and waterways, there would be no water sources. Without crops and livestock, we would have no food. Without agriculture, we would be nothing. For this reason, we need to seek ways to preserve agriculture and to share with our community its importance to life. The issue is that many people of the younger generations do not know a time in which everyone relied on agriculture. Today, everything revolves around technology, industrialization, and even the fact that we could start living on lab-grown resources. This has to end, or humanity is going to. I am ever grateful that I get to live on a working ranch, and I refocus my thoughts on the value, and need, for agriculture. Just as I have been exposed to the industry, I feel that we need to expose the younger generations also. This can be done through prioritizing agricultural education, research, and participation.
Another issue is that as population increases, agricultural industries decrease. Every day, more and more people move to the United States, thus leading to more housing developments being built, more food demands, and a drop in natural resources. As homes are built to support the growing number of people, builders are buying vacant agricultural land every chance they get. While it may seem that using vacant agricultural land is a smart decision and beneficial to society, other aspects must be addressed. If all the agricultural land is taken to be used for housing, there is not going to be a place to grow our resources such as livestock and crops. The good thing about this issue though, is that there are beneficial solutions that can be made through agricultural preservation. Instead of using vacant agricultural land, we should advocate for abandoned buildings and lots to be reused. Not only will this limit the loss of agricultural land, but it will also beautify our state, country, and world as a whole.
One recent issue with housing developments and agricultural land was right after Hurricane Milton. Families in a housing development in Lakeland woke up to find their homes flooded and their neighborhood completely underwater with no way out. What most people do not realize is that this was the result of the neighborhood being built on top of an old sinkhole. Where the issue lies for me, and many community members, is that a few years prior, agricultural families were not allowed to build on this land because it was not approved due to the sinkhole. So, we are not able to use the land for agricultural purposes, but an entire housing development can be built upon it? This is where we must draw the line and become advocates.
To conclude, I have seen the impacts that time is having on agriculture, and it hurts to say that these impacts are negative. However, I will not let these issues go on and I am going to stand up for preserving agricultural land and agricultural life. By receiving this scholarship, I will be able to obtain my Agricultural Business degree and advocate for the industry that shaped me.
Breaking Barriers Scholarship for Women
As a first-generation university student, I am pursuing a degree in Agricultural Business intending to give back to my community what agriculture has given to me. I believe that this generation has the responsibility of advocating for agriculture while keeping our heritage alive.
Dating back to creation, our world has been built on agriculture and those who have implemented agricultural practices. Through the industry, humans have evolved and gained knowledge about the land around them. Without trees, there would be no homes or businesses. Without lakes and waterways, there would be no water sources. Without crops and livestock, we would have no food. Without agriculture, we would be nothing. For this reason, we need to seek ways to preserve agriculture and to share with our community its importance to life. The issue is that many people of the younger generations do not know a time in which everyone relied on agriculture. Today, everything revolves around technology, industrialization, and even the fact that we could start living on lab-grown resources. This has to end, or humanity is going to. I am ever grateful that I get to live on a working ranch, and I refocus my thoughts on the value, and need, for agriculture. Just as I have been exposed to the industry, I feel that we need to expose the younger generations also. This can be done through prioritizing agricultural education, research, and participation.
Another issue is that as population increases, agricultural industries decrease. Every day, more and more people move to the United States, thus leading to more housing developments being built, more food demands, and a drop in natural resources. As homes are built to support the growing number of people, builders are buying vacant agricultural land every chance they get. While it may seem that using vacant agricultural land is a smart decision and beneficial to society, other aspects must be addressed. If all the agricultural land is taken to be used for housing, there is not going to be a place to grow our resources such as livestock and crops. The good thing about this issue though, is that there are beneficial solutions that can be made through agricultural preservation. Instead of using vacant agricultural land, we should advocate for abandoned buildings and lots to be reused. Not only will this limit the loss of agricultural land, but it will also beautify our state, country, and world as a whole.
One recent issue with housing developments and agricultural land was right after Hurricane Milton. Families in a housing development in Lakeland woke up to find their homes flooded and their neighborhood completely underwater with no way out. What most people do not realize is that this was the result of the neighborhood being built on top of an old sinkhole. Where the issue lies for me, and many community members, is that a few years prior, agricultural families were not allowed to build on this land because it was not approved due to the sinkhole. So, we are not able to use the land for agricultural purposes, but an entire housing development can be built upon it? This is where we must draw the line and become advocates.
To conclude, I have seen the impacts that time is having on agriculture, and it hurts to say that these impacts are negative. However, I will not let these issues go on and I am going to stand up for preserving agricultural land and agricultural life. By receiving this scholarship, I will be able to obtain my Agricultural Business degree and advocate for the industry that shaped me.
Julie Adams Memorial Scholarship – Women in STEM
As a first-generation university student, I am pursuing a degree in Agricultural Business intending to give back to my community what agriculture has given to me. I believe that this generation has the responsibility of advocating for agriculture while keeping our heritage alive.
Dating back to creation, our world has been built on agriculture and those who have implemented agricultural practices. Through the industry, humans have evolved and gained knowledge about the land around them. Without trees, there would be no homes or businesses. Without lakes and waterways, there would be no water sources. Without crops and livestock, we would have no food. Without agriculture, we would be nothing. For this reason, we need to seek ways to preserve agriculture and to share with our community its importance to life. The issue is that many people of the younger generations do not know a time in which everyone relied on agriculture. Today, everything revolves around technology, industrialization, and even the fact that we could start living on lab-grown resources. This has to end, or humanity is going to. I am ever grateful that I get to live on a working ranch, and I refocus my thoughts on the value, and need, for agriculture. Just as I have been exposed to the industry, I feel that we need to expose the younger generations also. This can be done through prioritizing agricultural education, research, and participation.
Another issue is that as population increases, agricultural industries decrease. Every day, more and more people move to the United States, thus leading to more housing developments being built, more food demands, and a drop in natural resources. As homes are built to support the growing number of people, builders are buying vacant agricultural land every chance they get. While it may seem that using vacant agricultural land is a smart decision and beneficial to society, other aspects must be addressed. If all the agricultural land is taken to be used for housing, there is not going to be a place to grow our resources such as livestock and crops. The good thing about this issue though, is that there are beneficial solutions that can be made through agricultural preservation. Instead of using vacant agricultural land, we should advocate for abandoned buildings and lots to be reused. Not only will this limit the loss of agricultural land, but it will also beautify our state, country, and world as a whole.
One recent issue with housing developments and agricultural land was right after Hurricane Milton. Families in a housing development in Lakeland woke up to find their homes flooded and their neighborhood completely underwater with no way out. What most people do not realize is that this was the result of the neighborhood being built on top of an old sinkhole. Where the issue lies for me, and many community members, is that a few years prior, agricultural families were not allowed to build on this land because it was not approved due to the sinkhole. So, we are not able to use the land for agricultural purposes, but an entire housing development can be built upon it? This is where we must draw the line and become advocates.
To conclude, I have seen the impacts that time is having on agriculture, and it hurts to say that these impacts are negative. However, I will not let these issues go on and I am going to stand up for preserving agricultural land and agricultural life. By receiving this scholarship, I will be able to obtain my Agricultural Business degree and advocate for the industry that shaped me.
Carol B. Warren, You are Loved Scholarship
As a first-generation university student, I am pursuing a degree in Agricultural Business intending to give back to my community what agriculture has given to me. I believe that this generation has the responsibility of advocating for agriculture while keeping our heritage alive.
Dating back to creation, our world has been built on agriculture and those who have implemented agricultural practices. Through the industry, humans have evolved and gained knowledge about the land around them. Without trees, there would be no homes or businesses. Without lakes and waterways, there would be no water sources. Without crops and livestock, we would have no food. Without agriculture, we would be nothing. For this reason, we need to seek ways to preserve agriculture and to share with our community its importance to life. The issue is that many people of the younger generations do not know a time in which everyone relied on agriculture. Today, everything revolves around technology, industrialization, and even the fact that we could start living on lab-grown resources. This has to end, or humanity is going to. I am ever grateful that I get to live on a working ranch, and I refocus my thoughts on the value, and need, for agriculture. Just as I have been exposed to the industry, I feel that we need to expose the younger generations also. This can be done through prioritizing agricultural education, research, and participation.
Another issue is that as population increases, agricultural industries decrease. Every day, more and more people move to the United States, thus leading to more housing developments being built, more food demands, and a drop in natural resources. As homes are built to support the growing number of people, builders are buying vacant agricultural land every chance they get. While it may seem that using vacant agricultural land is a smart decision and beneficial to society, other aspects must be addressed. If all the agricultural land is taken to be used for housing, there is not going to be a place to grow our resources such as livestock and crops. The good thing about this issue though, is that there are beneficial solutions that can be made through agricultural preservation. Instead of using vacant agricultural land, we should advocate for abandoned buildings and lots to be reused. Not only will this limit the loss of agricultural land, but it will also beautify our state, country, and world as a whole.
One recent issue with housing developments and agricultural land was right after Hurricane Milton. Families in a housing development in Lakeland woke up to find their homes flooded and their neighborhood completely underwater with no way out. What most people do not realize is that this was the result of the neighborhood being built on top of an old sinkhole. Where the issue lies for me, and many community members, is that a few years prior, agricultural families were not allowed to build on this land because it was not approved due to the sinkhole. So, we are not able to use the land for agricultural purposes, but an entire housing development can be built upon it? This is where we must draw the line and become advocates.
To conclude, I have seen the impacts that time is having on agriculture, and it hurts to say that these impacts are negative. However, I will not let these issues go on and I am going to stand up for preserving agricultural land and agricultural life. By receiving this scholarship, I will be able to obtain my Agricultural Business degree and advocate for the industry that shaped me.
Aserina Hill Memorial Scholarship
As a first-generation university student, I am pursuing a degree in Agricultural Business intending to give back to my community what agriculture has given to me. I believe that this generation has the responsibility of advocating for agriculture while keeping our heritage alive. Dating back to creation, our world has been built on agriculture and those who have implemented agricultural practices. Through the industry, humans have evolved and gained knowledge about the land around them. Without trees, there would be no homes or businesses. Without lakes and waterways, there would be no water sources. Without crops and livestock, we would have no food. Without agriculture, we would be nothing. For this reason, we need to seek ways to preserve agriculture and to share with our community its importance to life. The issue is that many people of the younger generations do not know a time in which everyone relied on agriculture. Today, everything revolves around technology, industrialization, and even the fact that we could start living on lab-grown resources. This has to end, or humanity is going to. I am ever grateful that I get to live on a working ranch, and I refocus my thoughts on the value, and need, for agriculture. Just as I have been exposed to the industry, I feel that we need to expose the younger generations also. This can be done through prioritizing agricultural education, research, and participation. Another issue is that as population increases, agricultural industries decrease. Every day, more and more people move to the United States, thus leading to more housing developments being built, more food demands, and a drop in natural resources. As homes are built to support the growing number of people, builders are buying vacant agricultural land every chance they get. While it may seem that using vacant agricultural land is a smart decision and beneficial to society, other aspects must be addressed. If all the agricultural land is taken to be used for housing, there is not going to be a place to grow our resources such as livestock and crops. The good thing about this issue though, is that there are beneficial solutions that can be made through agricultural preservation. Instead of using vacant agricultural land, we should advocate for abandoned buildings and lots to be reused. Not only will this limit the loss of agricultural land, but it will also beautify our state, country, and world as a whole. To conclude, I have seen the impacts that time is having on agriculture, and it hurts to say that these impacts are negative. However, I will not let these issues go on and I am going to stand up for preserving agricultural land and agricultural life. By receiving this scholarship, I will be able to obtain my Agricultural Business degree and advocate for the industry that shaped me.
Mikey Taylor Memorial Scholarship
As a first-generation university student, I am pursuing a degree in Agricultural Business intending to give back to my community what agriculture has given to me. I believe that this generation has the responsibility of advocating for agriculture while keeping our heritage alive.
Dating back to creation, our world has been built on agriculture and those who have implemented agricultural practices. Through the industry, humans have evolved and gained knowledge about the land around them. Without trees, there would be no homes or businesses. Without lakes and waterways, there would be no water sources. Without crops and livestock, we would have no food. Without agriculture, we would be nothing. For this reason, we need to seek ways to preserve agriculture and to share with our community its importance to life. The issue is that many people of the younger generations do not know a time in which everyone relied on agriculture. Today, everything revolves around technology, industrialization, and even the fact that we could start living on lab-grown resources. This has to end, or humanity is going to. I am ever grateful that I get to live on a working ranch, and I refocus my thoughts on the value, and need, for agriculture. Just as I have been exposed to the industry, I feel that we need to expose the younger generations also. This can be done through prioritizing agricultural education, research, and participation.
Another issue is that as population increases, agricultural industries decrease. Every day, more and more people move to the United States, thus leading to more housing developments being built, more food demands, and a drop in natural resources. As homes are built to support the growing number of people, builders are buying vacant agricultural land every chance they get. While it may seem that using vacant agricultural land is a smart decision and beneficial to society, other aspects must be addressed. If all the agricultural land is taken to be used for housing, there is not going to be a place to grow our resources such as livestock and crops. The good thing about this issue though, is that there are beneficial solutions that can be made through agricultural preservation. Instead of using vacant agricultural land, we should advocate for abandoned buildings and lots to be reused. Not only will this limit the loss of agricultural land, but it will also beautify our state, country, and world as a whole.
One recent issue with housing developments and agricultural land was right after Hurricane Milton. Families in a housing development in Lakeland woke up to find their homes flooded and their neighborhood completely underwater with no way out. What most people do not realize is that this was the result of the neighborhood being built on top of an old sinkhole. Where the issue lies for me, and many community members, is that a few years prior, agricultural families were not allowed to build on this land because it was not approved due to the sinkhole. So, we are not able to use the land for agricultural purposes, but an entire housing development can be built upon it? This is where we must draw the line and become advocates.
To conclude, I have seen the impacts that time is having on agriculture, and it hurts to say that these impacts are negative. However, I will not let these issues go on and I am going to stand up for preserving agricultural land and agricultural life. By receiving this scholarship, I will be able to obtain my Agricultural Business degree and advocate for the industry that shaped me.
First-Gen Futures Scholarship
As a first-generation university student, I am pursuing a degree in Agricultural Business intending to give back to my community what agriculture has given to me. I believe that this generation has the responsibility of advocating for agriculture while keeping our heritage alive.
Dating back to creation, our world has been built on agriculture and those who have implemented agricultural practices. Through the industry, humans have evolved and gained knowledge about the land around them. Without trees, there would be no homes or businesses. Without lakes and waterways, there would be no water sources. Without crops and livestock, we would have no food. Without agriculture, we would be nothing. For this reason, we need to seek ways to preserve agriculture and to share with our community its importance to life. The issue is that many people of the younger generations do not know a time in which everyone relied on agriculture. Today, everything revolves around technology, industrialization, and even the fact that we could start living on lab-grown resources. This has to end, or humanity is going to. I am ever grateful that I get to live on a working ranch, and I refocus my thoughts on the value, and need, for agriculture. Just as I have been exposed to the industry, I feel that we need to expose the younger generations also. This can be done through prioritizing agricultural education, research, and participation.
Another issue is that as population increases, agricultural industries decrease. Every day, more and more people move to the United States, thus leading to more housing developments being built, more food demands, and a drop in natural resources. As homes are built to support the growing number of people, builders are buying vacant agricultural land every chance they get. While it may seem that using vacant agricultural land is a smart decision and beneficial to society, other aspects must be addressed. If all the agricultural land is taken to be used for housing, there is not going to be a place to grow our resources such as livestock and crops. The good thing about this issue though, is that there are beneficial solutions that can be made through agricultural preservation. Instead of using vacant agricultural land, we should advocate for abandoned buildings and lots to be reused. Not only will this limit the loss of agricultural land, but it will also beautify our state, country, and world as a whole.
One recent issue with housing developments and agricultural land was right after Hurricane Milton. Families in a housing development in Lakeland woke up to find their homes flooded and their neighborhood completely underwater with no way out. What most people do not realize is that this was the result of the neighborhood being built on top of an old sinkhole. Where the issue lies for me, and many community members, is that a few years prior, agricultural families were not allowed to build on this land because it was not approved due to the sinkhole. So, we are not able to use the land for agricultural purposes, but an entire housing development can be built upon it? This is where we must draw the line and become advocates.
To conclude, I have seen the impacts that time is having on agriculture, and it hurts to say that these impacts are negative. However, I will not let these issues go on and I am going to stand up for preserving agricultural land and agricultural life. By receiving this scholarship, I will be able to obtain my Agricultural Business degree and advocate for the industry that shaped me.
Arthur and Elana Panos Scholarship
As a first-generation university student, I am pursuing a degree in Agricultural Business intending to give back to my community what agriculture has given to me. I believe that this generation has the responsibility of advocating for agriculture while keeping our heritage alive.
Dating back to creation, our world has been built on agriculture and those who have implemented agricultural practices. Through the industry, humans have evolved and gained knowledge about the land around them. Without trees, there would be no homes or businesses. Without lakes and waterways, there would be no water sources. Without crops and livestock, we would have no food. Without agriculture, we would be nothing. For this reason, we need to seek ways to preserve agriculture and to share with our community its importance to life. The issue is that many people of the younger generations do not know a time in which everyone relied on agriculture. Today, everything revolves around technology, industrialization, and even the fact that we could start living on lab-grown resources. This has to end, or humanity is going to. I am ever grateful that I get to live on a working ranch, and I refocus my thoughts on the value, and need, for agriculture. Just as I have been exposed to the industry, I feel that we need to expose the younger generations also. This can be done through prioritizing agricultural education, research, and participation.
Another issue is that as population increases, agricultural industries decrease. Every day, more and more people move to the United States, thus leading to more housing developments being built, more food demands, and a drop in natural resources. As homes are built to support the growing number of people, builders are buying vacant agricultural land every chance they get. While it may seem that using vacant agricultural land is a smart decision and beneficial to society, other aspects must be addressed. If all the agricultural land is taken to be used for housing, there is not going to be a place to grow our resources such as livestock and crops. The good thing about this issue though, is that there are beneficial solutions that can be made through agricultural preservation. Instead of using vacant agricultural land, we should advocate for abandoned buildings and lots to be reused. Not only will this limit the loss of agricultural land, but it will also beautify our state, country, and world as a whole.
One recent issue with housing developments and agricultural land was right after Hurricane Milton. Families in a housing development in Lakeland woke up to find their homes flooded and their neighborhood completely underwater with no way out. What most people do not realize is that this was the result of the neighborhood being built on top of an old sinkhole. Where the issue lies for me, and many community members, is that a few years prior, agricultural families were not allowed to build on this land because it was not approved due to the sinkhole. So, we are not able to use the land for agricultural purposes, but an entire housing development can be built upon it? This is where we must draw the line and become advocates.
To conclude, I have seen the impacts that time is having on agriculture, and it hurts to say that these impacts are negative. However, I will not let these issues go on and I am going to stand up for preserving agricultural land and agricultural life. By receiving this scholarship, I will be able to obtain my Agricultural Business degree and advocate for the industry that shaped me.
Brayden Blankley Memorial Scholarship
As a first-generation university student, I am pursuing a degree in Agricultural Business intending to give back to my community what agriculture has given to me. I believe that this generation has the responsibility of advocating for agriculture while keeping our heritage alive.
Dating back to creation, our world has been built on agriculture and those who have implemented agricultural practices. Through the industry, humans have evolved and gained knowledge about the land around them. Without trees, there would be no homes or businesses. Without lakes and waterways, there would be no water sources. Without crops and livestock, we would have no food. Without agriculture, we would be nothing. For this reason, we need to seek ways to preserve agriculture and to share with our community its importance to life. The issue is that many people of the younger generations do not know a time in which everyone relied on agriculture. Today, everything revolves around technology, industrialization, and even the fact that we could start living on lab-grown resources. This has to end, or humanity is going to. I am ever grateful that I get to live on a working ranch, and I refocus my thoughts on the value, and need, for agriculture. Just as I have been exposed to the industry, I feel that we need to expose the younger generations also. This can be done through prioritizing agricultural education, research, and participation.
Another issue is that as population increases, agricultural industries decrease. Every day, more and more people move to the United States, thus leading to more housing developments being built, more food demands, and a drop in natural resources. As homes are built to support the growing number of people, builders are buying vacant agricultural land every chance they get. While it may seem that using vacant agricultural land is a smart decision and beneficial to society, other aspects must be addressed. If all the agricultural land is taken to be used for housing, there is not going to be a place to grow our resources such as livestock and crops. The good thing about this issue though, is that there are beneficial solutions that can be made through agricultural preservation. Instead of using vacant agricultural land, we should advocate for abandoned buildings and lots to be reused. Not only will this limit the loss of agricultural land, but it will also beautify our state, country, and world as a whole.
One recent issue with housing developments and agricultural land was right after Hurricane Milton. Families in a housing development in Lakeland woke up to find their homes flooded and their neighborhood completely underwater with no way out. What most people do not realize is that this was the result of the neighborhood being built on top of an old sinkhole. Where the issue lies for me, and many community members, is that a few years prior, agricultural families were not allowed to build on this land because it was not approved due to the sinkhole. So, we are not able to use the land for agricultural purposes, but an entire housing development can be built upon it? This is where we must draw the line and become advocates.
To conclude, I have seen the impacts that time is having on agriculture, and it hurts to say that these impacts are negative. However, I will not let these issues go on and I am going to stand up for preserving agricultural land and agricultural life. By receiving this scholarship, I will be able to obtain my Agricultural Business degree and advocate for the industry that shaped me.
Anthony Bruder Memorial Scholarship
As a first-generation university student, I am pursuing a degree in Agricultural Business intending to give back to my community what agriculture has given to me. I believe that this generation has the responsibility of advocating for agriculture while keeping our heritage alive.
Dating back to creation, our world has been built on agriculture and those who have implemented agricultural practices. Through the industry, humans have evolved and gained knowledge about the land around them. Without trees, there would be no homes or businesses. Without lakes and waterways, there would be no water sources. Without crops and livestock, we would have no food. Without agriculture, we would be nothing. For this reason, we need to seek ways to preserve agriculture and to share with our community its importance to life. The issue is that many people of the younger generations do not know a time in which everyone relied on agriculture. Today, everything revolves around technology, industrialization, and even the fact that we could start living on lab-grown resources. This has to end, or humanity is going to. I am ever grateful that I get to live on a working ranch, and I refocus my thoughts on the value, and need, for agriculture. Just as I have been exposed to the industry, I feel that we need to expose the younger generations also. This can be done through prioritizing agricultural education, research, and participation.
Another issue is that as population increases, agricultural industries decrease. Every day, more and more people move to the United States, thus leading to more housing developments being built, more food demands, and a drop in natural resources. As homes are built to support the growing number of people, builders are buying vacant agricultural land every chance they get. While it may seem that using vacant agricultural land is a smart decision and beneficial to society, other aspects must be addressed. If all the agricultural land is taken to be used for housing, there is not going to be a place to grow our resources such as livestock and crops. The good thing about this issue though, is that there are beneficial solutions that can be made through agricultural preservation. Instead of using vacant agricultural land, we should advocate for abandoned buildings and lots to be reused. Not only will this limit the loss of agricultural land, but it will also beautify our state, country, and world as a whole.
One recent issue with housing developments and agricultural land was right after Hurricane Milton. Families in a housing development in Lakeland woke up to find their homes flooded and their neighborhood completely underwater with no way out. What most people do not realize is that this was the result of the neighborhood being built on top of an old sinkhole. Where the issue lies for me, and many community members, is that a few years prior, agricultural families were not allowed to build on this land because it was not approved due to the sinkhole. So, we are not able to use the land for agricultural purposes, but an entire housing development can be built upon it? This is where we must draw the line and become advocates.
To conclude, I have seen the impacts that time is having on agriculture, and it hurts to say that these impacts are negative. However, I will not let these issues go on and I am going to stand up for preserving agricultural land and agricultural life. By receiving this scholarship, I will be able to obtain my Agricultural Business degree and advocate for the industry that shaped me.
El Jefe Entrepreneurial Scholarship
As a first-generation university student, I am pursuing a degree in Agricultural Business intending to give back to my community what agriculture has given to me. I believe that this generation has the responsibility of advocating for agriculture while keeping our heritage alive.
Dating back to creation, our world has been built on agriculture and those who have implemented agricultural practices. Through the industry, humans have evolved and gained knowledge about the land around them. Without trees, there would be no homes or businesses. Without lakes and waterways, there would be no water sources. Without crops and livestock, we would have no food. Without agriculture, we would be nothing. For this reason, we need to seek ways to preserve agriculture and to share with our community its importance to life. The issue is that many people of the younger generations do not know a time in which everyone relied on agriculture. Today, everything revolves around technology, industrialization, and even the fact that we could start living on lab-grown resources. This has to end, or humanity is going to. I am ever grateful that I get to live on a working ranch, and I refocus my thoughts on the value, and need, for agriculture. Just as I have been exposed to the industry, I feel that we need to expose the younger generations also. This can be done through prioritizing agricultural education, research, and participation.
Another issue is that as population increases, agricultural industries decrease. Every day, more and more people move to the United States, thus leading to more housing developments being built, more food demands, and a drop in natural resources. As homes are built to support the growing number of people, builders are buying vacant agricultural land every chance they get. While it may seem that using vacant agricultural land is a smart decision and beneficial to society, other aspects must be addressed. If all the agricultural land is taken to be used for housing, there is not going to be a place to grow our resources such as livestock and crops. The good thing about this issue though, is that there are beneficial solutions that can be made through agricultural preservation. Instead of using vacant agricultural land, we should advocate for abandoned buildings and lots to be reused. Not only will this limit the loss of agricultural land, but it will also beautify our state, country, and world as a whole.
One recent issue with housing developments and agricultural land was right after Hurricane Milton. Families in a housing development in Lakeland woke up to find their homes flooded and their neighborhood completely underwater with no way out. What most people do not realize is that this was the result of the neighborhood being built on top of an old sinkhole. Where the issue lies for me, and many community members, is that a few years prior, agricultural families were not allowed to build on this land because it was not approved due to the sinkhole. So, we are not able to use the land for agricultural purposes, but an entire housing development can be built upon it? This is where we must draw the line and become advocates.
To conclude, I have seen the impacts that time is having on agriculture, and it hurts to say that these impacts are negative. However, I will not let these issues go on and I am going to stand up for preserving agricultural land and agricultural life. By receiving this scholarship, I will be able to obtain my Agricultural Business degree and advocate for the industry that shaped me.
Gary & Judy Bowler Trade and Technical Scholarship
WinnerAs a first-generation university student, I am pursuing a degree in Agricultural Business intending to give back to my community what agriculture has given to me. I believe that this generation has the responsibility of advocating for agriculture while keeping our heritage alive. Dating back to creation, our world has been built on agriculture and those who have implemented agricultural practices. Through the industry, humans have evolved and gained knowledge about the land around them. Without trees, there would be no homes or businesses. Without lakes and waterways, there would be no water sources. Without crops and livestock, we would have no food. Without agriculture, we would be nothing. For this reason, we need to seek ways to preserve agriculture and to share with our community its importance to life. The issue is that many people of the younger generations do not know a time in which everyone relied on agriculture. Today, everything revolves around technology, industrialization, and even the fact that we could start living on lab-grown resources. This has to end, or humanity is going to. I am ever grateful that I get to live on a working ranch, and I refocus my thoughts on the value, and need, for agriculture. Just as I have been exposed to the industry, I feel that we need to expose the younger generations also. This can be done through prioritizing agricultural education, research, and participation. Another issue is that as the population increases, agricultural industries decrease. Every day, more and more people move to the United States, thus leading to more housing developments being built, more food demands, and a drop in natural resources. As homes are built to support the growing number of people, builders are buying vacant agricultural land every chance they get. While it may seem that using vacant agricultural land is a smart decision and beneficial to society, other aspects must be addressed. If all the agricultural land is taken to be used for housing, there is not going to be a place to grow our resources such as livestock and crops. The good thing about this issue though, is that there are beneficial solutions that can be made through agricultural preservation. Instead of using vacant agricultural land, we should advocate for abandoned buildings and lots to be reused. Not only will this limit the loss of agricultural land, but it will also beautify our state, country, and world as a whole. One recent issue with housing developments and agricultural land was right after Hurricane Milton. Families in a housing development in Lakeland woke up to find their homes flooded and their neighborhood completely underwater with no way out. What most people do not realize is that this was the result of the neighborhood being built on top of an old sinkhole. Where the issue lies for me, and many community members, is that a few years prior, agricultural families were not allowed to build on this land because it was not approved due to the sinkhole. So, we are not able to use the land for agricultural purposes, but an entire housing development can be built upon it? This is where we must draw the line and become advocates. To conclude, I have seen the impacts that time is having on agriculture, and it hurts to say that these impacts are negative. However, I will not let these issues go on and I am going to stand up for preserving agricultural land and agricultural life. By receiving this scholarship, I will be able to obtain my Agricultural Business degree and advocate for the industry that shaped me.
Marques D. Rodriguez Memorial Scholarship
As a first-generation university student, I am pursuing a degree in Agricultural Business intending to give back to my community what agriculture has given to me. I believe that this generation has the responsibility of advocating for agriculture while keeping our heritage alive. Dating back to creation, our world has been built on agriculture and those who have implemented agricultural practices. Through the industry, humans have evolved and gained knowledge about the land around them. Without trees, there would be no homes or businesses. Without lakes and waterways, there would be no water sources. Without crops and livestock, we would have no food. Without agriculture, we would be nothing. For this reason, we need to seek ways to preserve agriculture and to share with our community its importance to life. The issue is that many people of the younger generations do not know a time in which everyone relied on agriculture. Today, everything revolves around technology, industrialization, and even the fact that we could start living on lab-grown resources. This has to end, or humanity is going to. I am ever grateful that I get to live on a working ranch, and I refocus my thoughts on the value, and need, for agriculture. Just as I have been exposed to the industry, I feel that we need to expose the younger generations also. This can be done through prioritizing agricultural education, research, and participation. Another issue is that as population increases, agricultural industries decrease. Every day, more and more people move to the United States, thus leading to more housing developments being built, more food demands, and a drop in natural resources. As homes are built to support the growing number of people, builders are buying vacant agricultural land every chance they get. While it may seem that using vacant agricultural land is a smart decision and beneficial to society, other aspects must be addressed. If all the agricultural land is taken to be used for housing, there is not going to be a place to grow our resources such as livestock and crops. The good thing about this issue though, is that there are beneficial solutions that can be made through agricultural preservation. Instead of using vacant agricultural land, we should advocate for abandoned buildings and lots to be reused. Not only will this limit the loss of agricultural land, but it will also beautify our state, country, and world as a whole. One recent issue with housing developments and agricultural land was right after Hurricane Milton. Families in a housing development in Lakeland woke up to find their homes flooded and their neighborhood completely underwater with no way out. What most people do not realize is that this was the result of the neighborhood being built on top of an old sinkhole. Where the issue lies for me, and many community members, is that a few years prior, agricultural families were not allowed to build on this land because it was not approved due to the sinkhole. So, we are not able to use the land for agricultural purposes, but an entire housing development can be built upon it? This is where we must draw the line and become advocates. To conclude, I have seen the impacts that time is having on agriculture, and it hurts to say that these impacts are negative. However, I will not let these issues go on and I am going to stand up for preserving agricultural land and agricultural life. By receiving this scholarship, I will be able to obtain my Agricultural Business degree and advocate for the industry that shaped me.
Kalia D. Davis Memorial Scholarship
As a first-generation university student, I am pursuing a degree in Agricultural Business intending to give back to my community what agriculture has given to me. I believe that this generation has the responsibility of advocating for agriculture while keeping our heritage alive.
Dating back to creation, our world has been built on agriculture and those who have implemented agricultural practices. Through the industry, humans have evolved and gained knowledge about the land around them. Without trees, there would be no homes or businesses. Without lakes and waterways, there would be no water sources. Without crops and livestock, we would have no food. Without agriculture, we would be nothing. For this reason, we need to seek ways to preserve agriculture and to share with our community its importance to life. The issue is that many people of the younger generations do not know a time in which everyone relied on agriculture. Today, everything revolves around technology, industrialization, and even the fact that we could start living on lab-grown resources. This has to end, or humanity is going to. I am ever grateful that I get to live on a working ranch, and I refocus my thoughts on the value, and need, for agriculture. Just as I have been exposed to the industry, I feel that we need to expose the younger generations also. This can be done through prioritizing agricultural education, research, and participation.
Another issue is that as population increases, agricultural industries decrease. Every day, more and more people move to the United States, thus leading to more housing developments being built, more food demands, and a drop in natural resources. As homes are built to support the growing number of people, builders are buying vacant agricultural land every chance they get. While it may seem that using vacant agricultural land is a smart decision and beneficial to society, other aspects must be addressed. If all the agricultural land is taken to be used for housing, there is not going to be a place to grow our resources such as livestock and crops. The good thing about this issue though, is that there are beneficial solutions that can be made through agricultural preservation. Instead of using vacant agricultural land, we should advocate for abandoned buildings and lots to be reused. Not only will this limit the loss of agricultural land, but it will also beautify our state, country, and world as a whole.
One recent issue with housing developments and agricultural land was right after hurricane Milton. Families in a housing development in Lakeland woke up to find their homes flooded and their neighborhood completely underwater with no way out. What most people do not realize is that this was the result of the neighborhood being built on top of an old sinkhole. Where the issue lies for me, and many community members, is that a few years prior, agricultural families were not allowed to build on this land because it was not approved due to the sinkhole. So, we are not able to use the land for agricultural purposes, but an entire housing development can be built upon it? This is where we must draw the line and become advocates.
To conclude, I have seen the impacts that time is having on agriculture, and it hurts to say that these impacts are negative. However, I will not let these issues go on and I am going to stand up for preserving agricultural land and agricultural life. By receiving this scholarship, I will be able to obtain my Agricultural Business degree and advocate for the industry that shaped me.
Tardus Beach Volleyball Scholarship
As a first-generation university student, I am pursuing a degree in Agricultural Business intending to give back to my community what agriculture has given to me. I believe that this generation has the responsibility of advocating for agriculture while keeping our heritage alive.
Dating back to creation, our world has been built on agriculture and those who have implemented agricultural practices. Through the industry, humans have evolved and gained knowledge about the land around them. Without trees, there would be no homes or businesses. Without lakes and waterways, there would be no water sources. Without crops and livestock, we would have no food. Without agriculture, we would be nothing. For this reason, we need to seek ways to preserve agriculture and to share with our community its importance to life. The issue is that many people of the younger generations do not know a time in which everyone relied on agriculture. Today, everything revolves around technology, industrialization, and even the fact that we could start living on lab-grown resources. This has to end, or humanity is going to. I am ever grateful that I get to live on a working ranch, and I refocus my thoughts on the value, and need, for agriculture. Just as I have been exposed to the industry, I feel that we need to expose the younger generations also. This can be done through prioritizing agricultural education, research, and participation.
Another issue is that as population increases, agricultural industries decrease. Every day, more and more people move to the United States, thus leading to more housing developments being built, more food demands, and a drop in natural resources. As homes are built to support the growing number of people, builders are buying vacant agricultural land every chance they get. While it may seem that using vacant agricultural land is a smart decision and beneficial to society, other aspects must be addressed. If all the agricultural land is taken to be used for housing, there is not going to be a place to grow our resources such as livestock and crops. The good thing about this issue though, is that there are beneficial solutions that can be made through agricultural preservation. Instead of using vacant agricultural land, we should advocate for abandoned buildings and lots to be reused. Not only will this limit the loss of agricultural land, but it will also beautify our state, country, and world as a whole.
One recent issue with housing developments and agricultural land was right after hurricane Milton. Families in a housing development in Lakeland woke up to find their homes flooded and their neighborhood completely underwater with no way out. What most people do not realize is that this was the result of the neighborhood being built on top of an old sinkhole. Where the issue lies for me, and many community members, is that a few years prior, agricultural families were not allowed to build on this land because it was not approved due to the sinkhole. So, we are not able to use the land for agricultural purposes, but an entire housing development can be built upon it? This is where we must draw the line and become advocates.
To conclude, I have seen the impacts that time is having on agriculture, and it hurts to say that these impacts are negative. However, I will not let these issues go on and I am going to stand up for preserving agricultural land and agricultural life. By becoming involved in agricultural communications, I am going to advocate for this industry that has shaped who I am.
One Chance Scholarship
As a first-generation university student, I am pursuing a degree in Agricultural Business intending to give back to my community what agriculture has given to me. I believe that this generation has the responsibility of advocating for agriculture while keeping our heritage alive.
Dating back to creation, our world has been built on agriculture and those who have implemented agricultural practices. Through the industry, humans have evolved and gained knowledge about the land around them. Without trees, there would be no homes or businesses. Without lakes and waterways, there would be no water sources. Without crops and livestock, we would have no food. Without agriculture, we would be nothing. For this reason, we need to seek ways to preserve agriculture and to share with our community its importance to life. The issue is that many people of the younger generations do not know a time in which everyone relied on agriculture. Today, everything revolves around technology, industrialization, and even the fact that we could start living on lab-grown resources. This has to end, or humanity is going to. I am ever grateful that I get to live on a working ranch, and I refocus my thoughts on the value, and need, for agriculture. Just as I have been exposed to the industry, I feel that we need to expose the younger generations also. This can be done through prioritizing agricultural education, research, and participation.
Another issue is that as population increases, agricultural industries decrease. Every day, more and more people move to the United States, thus leading to more housing developments being built, more food demands, and a drop in natural resources. As homes are built to support the growing number of people, builders are buying vacant agricultural land every chance they get. While it may seem that using vacant agricultural land is a smart decision and beneficial to society, other aspects must be addressed. If all the agricultural land is taken to be used for housing, there is not going to be a place to grow our resources such as livestock and crops. The good thing about this issue though, is that there are beneficial solutions that can be made through agricultural preservation. Instead of using vacant agricultural land, we should advocate for abandoned buildings and lots to be reused. Not only will this limit the loss of agricultural land, but it will also beautify our state, country, and world as a whole.
One recent issue with housing developments and agricultural land was right after hurricane Milton. Families in a housing development in Lakeland woke up to find their homes flooded and their neighborhood completely underwater with no way out. What most people do not realize is that this was the result of the neighborhood being built on top of an old sinkhole. Where the issue lies for me, and many community members, is that a few years prior, agricultural families were not allowed to build on this land because it was not approved due to the sinkhole. So, we are not able to use the land for agricultural purposes, but an entire housing development can be built upon it? This is where we must draw the line and become advocates.
To conclude, I have seen the impacts that time is having on agriculture, and it hurts to say that these impacts are negative. However, I will not let these issues go on and I am going to stand up for preserving agricultural land and agricultural life. By becoming involved in agricultural communications, I am going to advocate for this industry that has shaped who I am.
Rev. Frank W. Steward Memorial Scholarship
As a first-generation university student, I am pursuing a degree in Agricultural Business intending to give back to my community what agriculture has given to me. I believe that this generation has the responsibility of advocating for agriculture while keeping our heritage alive.
Dating back to creation, our world has been built on agriculture and those who have implemented agricultural practices. Through the industry, humans have evolved and gained knowledge about the land around them. Without trees, there would be no homes or businesses. Without lakes and waterways, there would be no water sources. Without crops and livestock, we would have no food. Without agriculture, we would be nothing. For this reason, we need to seek ways to preserve agriculture and to share with our community its importance to life. The issue is that many people of the younger generations do not know a time in which everyone relied on agriculture. Today, everything revolves around technology, industrialization, and even the fact that we could start living on lab-grown resources. This has to end, or humanity is going to. I am ever grateful that I get to live on a working ranch, and I refocus my thoughts on the value, and need, for agriculture. Just as I have been exposed to the industry, I feel that we need to expose the younger generations also. This can be done through prioritizing agricultural education, research, and participation.
Another issue is that as population increases, agricultural industries decrease. Every day, more and more people move to the United States, thus leading to more housing developments being built, more food demands, and a drop in natural resources. As homes are built to support the growing number of people, builders are buying vacant agricultural land every chance they get. While it may seem that using vacant agricultural land is a smart decision and beneficial to society, other aspects must be addressed. If all the agricultural land is taken to be used for housing, there is not going to be a place to grow our resources such as livestock and crops. The good thing about this issue though, is that there are beneficial solutions that can be made through agricultural preservation. Instead of using vacant agricultural land, we should advocate for abandoned buildings and lots to be reused. Not only will this limit the loss of agricultural land, but it will also beautify our state, country, and world as a whole.
One recent issue with housing developments and agricultural land was right after hurricane Milton. Families in a housing development in Lakeland woke up to find their homes flooded and their neighborhood completely underwater with no way out. What most people do not realize is that this was the result of the neighborhood being built on top of an old sinkhole. Where the issue lies for me, and many community members, is that a few years prior, agricultural families were not allowed to build on this land because it was not approved due to the sinkhole. So, we are not able to use the land for agricultural purposes, but an entire housing development can be built upon it? This is where we must draw the line and become advocates.
To conclude, I have seen the impacts that time is having on agriculture, and it hurts to say that these impacts are negative. However, I will not let these issues go on and I am going to stand up for preserving agricultural land and agricultural life. By becoming involved in agricultural communications, I am going to advocate for this industry that has shaped who I am.
Billy Downey Memorial Agriculture Scholarship
As a first-generation university student, I am pursuing a degree in Agricultural Business intending to give back to my community what agriculture has given to me. I believe that this generation has the responsibility of advocating for agriculture while keeping our heritage alive.
Dating back to creation, our world has been built on agriculture and those who have implemented agricultural practices. Through the industry, humans have evolved and gained knowledge about the land around them. Without trees, there would be no homes or businesses. Without lakes and waterways, there would be no water sources. Without crops and livestock, we would have no food. Without agriculture, we would be nothing. For this reason, we need to seek ways to preserve agriculture and to share with our community its importance to life. The issue is that many people of the younger generations do not know a time in which everyone relied on agriculture. Today, everything revolves around technology, industrialization, and even the fact that we could start living on lab-grown resources. This has to end, or humanity is going to. I am ever grateful that I get to live on a working ranch, and I refocus my thoughts on the value, and need, for agriculture. Just as I have been exposed to the industry, I feel that we need to expose the younger generations also. This can be done through prioritizing agricultural education, research, and participation.
Another issue is that as population increases, agricultural industries decrease. Every day, more and more people move to the United States, thus leading to more housing developments being built, more food demands, and a drop in natural resources. As homes are built to support the growing number of people, builders are buying vacant agricultural land every chance they get. While it may seem that using vacant agricultural land is a smart decision and beneficial to society, other aspects must be addressed. If all the agricultural land is taken to be used for housing, there is not going to be a place to grow our resources such as livestock and crops. The good thing about this issue though, is that there are beneficial solutions that can be made through agricultural preservation. Instead of using vacant agricultural land, we should advocate for abandoned buildings and lots to be reused. Not only will this limit the loss of agricultural land, but it will also beautify our state, country, and world as a whole.
One recent issue with housing developments and agricultural land was right after hurricane Milton. Families in a housing development in Lakeland woke up to find their homes flooded and their neighborhood completely underwater with no way out. What most people do not realize is that this was the result of the neighborhood being built on top of an old sinkhole. Where the issue lies for me, and many community members, is that a few years prior, agricultural families were not allowed to build on this land because it was not approved due to the sinkhole. So, we are not able to use the land for agricultural purposes, but an entire housing development can be built upon it? This is where we must draw the line and become advocates.
To conclude, I have seen the impacts that time is having on agriculture, and it hurts to say that these impacts are negative. However, I will not let these issues go on and I am going to stand up for preserving agricultural land and agricultural life. By becoming involved in agricultural communications, I am going to advocate for this industry that has shaped who I am.