Champions of ideas
Author
Published
1/19/2026
Farm Bureau members of Kansas were well represented at the American Farm Bureau Federation (AFBF) Convention in Anaheim, Calif., earlier this month. Young Farmers and Ranchers representatives did well in their respective competitive events, with Lane County’s Mindy McMillen winning the national Discussion Meet and Jacquelyne Leffler placing in the top 10 for the Achievement Award.
The state’s voting delegates successfully lobbied to include policy supporting federal funding of the National Bio and Agro-Defense Laboratory in Manhattan to address current and emergent threats.
And four county Farm Bureaus were selected to share programs they developed through AFBF’s County Activities of Excellence (CAE) Awards. As part of the honor, the counties represented Kansas in the convention trade show and shared their award-winning programs with attendees from across the country who could take those ideas back to their own communities.
It’s worth noting that only 24 counties were recognized, so Kansas accounted for one-sixth of the CAE trade show booths, consisting of the following programs:
- Atchison County: Started its Local Fresh for All program to provide gift certificates to the local farmers market for youth ages 9-19.
- Franklin County: Partnered with a local recreation commission to host the Ag Education Summer Series, which facilitated and hosted lessons, demonstrations and farm tours over eight weeks in the summer.
- Jackson County: Created a Livestock Summit to strengthen knowledge of 4-H exhibitors on livestock selection, nutrition, showmanship and carcass evaluation.
- Meade County: Started the Silver Plate Project as a community-focused effort that provided shelf-stable and easy-to-prepare meals for senior citizens in rural areas to reduce food insecurity.
Walking through the two dozen booths, it was impossible to point to one program or activity as the best, aside from our four homegrown honorees, of course.
While the programs were broadly similar, they were also carefully tailored to the specific needs identified by county Farm Bureaus. One program provided broad instruction to a general audience while another sought to educate a narrow group on specific topics.
The other two counties identified those in need of nutritional assistance in their communities, even though the targets were at opposite ends of the spectrum in terms of age.
They all started as good ideas, but ideas don’t actually do anything on their own. They require the effort of individuals or groups to move beyond the theoretical and make it reality. Ideas are easy, but their execution requires more than just a belief. Ideas require champions if they are to make any real impact.
While these four ideas originated in Kansas, it was their champions who rightfully got the change to present on a national stage. The best ideas inspire others. Hopefully, these ideas will ignite new champions across the country who will borrow the goals and intentions and adapt them into projects tailored to their communities.