Volume 24, Number 1 – Winter/Spring 2022

Page 88

THE ROAD TO F

RESILIENCY

THREE-TIME ALUMNUS SERVES AS USDA FOOD SYSTEMS RESILIENCY SENIOR ADVISER

or Marty Matlock, his experiences growing up on a subsistence farm in rural Osage County, Oklahoma, moved him toward service and food resiliency. Now, at age 59, he serves as the U.S. Department of Agriculture senior adviser for food systems resiliency in the market and regulatory programs. Matlock’s hope is to bring his wisdom and experience to help improve the decision-making process to nudge the food supply chain to more resilient footing, he said. “The U.S. food system is incredibly efficient, it’s incredibly sustainable, and it’s incredibly profitable,” Matlock said, “but very fragile.” Matlock said resiliency is the ability of a system to keep functioning under stress combined with how quickly it can recover once disrupted. During the COVID-19 pandemic, the U.S. saw just how fragile the food system is, he said. “What is a success for me will be 10 years from now we have a diversity of meat processing as well as fruit and vegetable production across the landscape,” Matlock said. “U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack has carved out about $4 billion of the Build Back Better fund to make food systems more resilient in the U.S.,” Matlock said. 88 WINTER/SPRING 2022

The impacts of the money being spent now are expected to show results in two years, he said. Matlock has spent his professional life relying on short-term thinking, he said. Now, his goal is to try and look up more, see the bigger picture, and pick his next path more explicitly, he added. Matlock’s road to becoming a USDA senior adviser has been one achieved through hard work, service, ambition and the occasional failure, he said. That road for Matlock began as a child growing up in Prue, Oklahoma. “My upbringing was comparable to many other rural, working-class Oklahoma families,” Matlock said. His mother was a homemaker, and his father was a machinist. Some of Matlock’s fondest memories include competing in rodeos, growing up on the land, and graduating with a class of 27 students, he said. Matlock’s Cherokee heritage came from his father and both parents taught him a sense of community responsibility and a strong work ethic, he said. “You get up in the morning and work because that’s what you do,” Matlock said “The dignity of sweat cannot be overstated.” Matlock said growing up he remembers the famine that struck Ethiopia

in the 1980s. The famine gained global news coverage and caught the attention of celebrities like Michael Jackson and Lionel Richie, he said. The famine also caught his own attention, Matlock said, and sparked a passion to one day feed the world. His passion for alleviating food insecurity directed his collegiate career. In 1984, Matlock obtained his bachelor’s degree in agronomy from Oklahoma State University. During Matlock’s senior year of his undergraduate program, faculty member and mentor Jerry Grant introduced him to Norman Borlaug, a Nobel Peace Prize recipient. “Norm changed my life,” Matlock said. “He taught me hunger is no longer an agronomic problem. It is an economic and political problem.” In 1989, Matlock received his master’s degree in plant physiology from OSU, where his primary adviser was Jim Ownby, the former head of the botany department. “Dr. Ownby was perhaps the most influential person in my young academic career after Norm and Jerry,” Matlock said “He taught me to think like a scientist and opened my mind to the process of discovery science is.” After finishing his master’s degree, Matlock worked for five years at a


Articles inside

Preserving the Prairie

6min
pages 92-96

Riding for Safety

5min
pages 80-83

Centennial Celebration of Cowboys

4min
pages 98-104

Bravery over Everything

6min
pages 76-79

Serving up Good Nutrition

6min
pages 72-75

The Road to Resiliency

7min
pages 88-91

A Site for New Opportunities

5min
pages 84-87

World Traveler Turned Cowboy

3min
pages 68-71

Pie, Anyone?

6min
pages 64-67

Ramsey’s Ripple Effect

6min
pages 61-63

Roots and Rocks

5min
pages 48-51

An Agricultural Olympian

5min
pages 44-47

Next Gen Composting

3min
pages 42-43

Exceeding Excellence Early On

8min
pages 56-60

Tribute to a Legend

4min
pages 52-55

Star of the Landscape

3min
pages 38-41

More to the Ordinary

5min
pages 34-35

Crossing New Lines

6min
pages 18-21

Ferguson Framework

6min
pages 10-13

A Rewarding Return

8min
pages 14-17

Beyond the Bees

4min
pages 6-9

Taste the Iberico Difference

3min
pages 36-37

No Horsing Around

6min
pages 30-33

Football and Ferguson

5min
pages 22-25
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