News Farmers Finish Two-Year Leadership Development Program

Farmers Finish Two-Year Leadership Development Program

Farmers Finish Two-Year Leadership Development Program
September 2, 2025 |

By Marlee Jackson

Two years ago, 18 Alabama farmers and ag professionals embarked on an intense, immersive and impactful leadership development experience.

Six institutes later, members of Class VI graduated from the Agricultural Leaders for Alabama (A.L.F.A. Leaders) program Aug. 16. They were honored during the Alabama Farmers Federation Farm & Land Conference in Chattanooga, Tennessee.

The class included Trevor Collier, who raises poultry, cattle and Tennessee walking horses in Lauderdale County. The Rogersville farmer said the program exceeded expectations for personal and professional growth.

“It’s been more than leadership,” said Collier, 32. “It’s been about building relationships. Everything we did had a purpose.”

That’s important for a class packed with full-time farmers who spent more than 40 days with each other — and away from their farms and families. 

Their inaugural institute in Montgomery laid a strong foundation and delved into Federation structure and impact, including an up-close look at grassroots policy development. 

“We learned that you can bring up something at the county level, fine-tune the policy and then see it enacted at the state or federal level,” Collier said. “We can make a difference in our communities from our farms.”

Subsequent sessions introduced the class to state and national advocacy.

During a week in Washington, D.C., the class met with decision-makers such as U.S. House Ag Committee Chair G.T. Thompson, R-Pa. That sparked a fire in Whitney Haynes. Her family grows row crops, raises cattle and operates a direct-to-consumer farm business in Cullman County’s Fairview.

 “I like to explain the ‘what’ and the ‘why,’” said Haynes, 40, also a high school teacher. “I like for ag to be seen and for people to hear what we have to say. I take for granted that everyone lives like us, but they don’t.”

The class’s focus on advocacy extended into a capstone project about workforce development. They used individual and collective strengths to craft and propose a unified resource to encourage youth to pursue jobs related to farming and equip older producers in passing their passion on to the next generation.

The project resonated with Sidney McKathan. He’s a skip-generation farmer from Covington County whose ingenuity and persistence carved a place in agriculture through beekeeping.

“When I was in school, I wanted to farm, but I thought the only way to was to be a row cropper or an ag teacher,” said McKathan, 35, who farms in Pleasant Home. “Part of the capstone is outreach to tell young people about the possibilities that are out there.”

A quiet, thoughtful leader, McKathan credits A.L.F.A. Leaders for drawing him out of his shell. The program expanded his network of farmer-friends, too.

“It may not seem like it, but this has really pushed me out of my comfort zone,” he said. “Public speaking is still not the most fun, but I can do it. It’s awesome to feel more comfortable in my own skin in front of people.

That personal growth was prioritized during a session at the Alabama 4-H Center which concentrated on leadership, team building and media training. A workshop in north Alabama focused on volunteerism and service, while an international experience in Brazil introduced the class to the U.S.’s largest agricultural competitor.

“Although we were thousands of miles from home, they seem to face the same issues — farm labor, government oversight and consumers who don’t understand where their food comes from,” Collier said.

McKathan offered a wellspring of gratitude to the Federation and its Ag Leadership Programs Director Hunter McBrayer for the investment of time, energy and resources.

“A.L.F.A. Leaders surpassed what I thought it would be,” McKathan said. “I grew in appreciation for what the Farmers Federation does day-to-day, saw state and national advocacy and learned how Alfa serves the state. Plus, I met great people along the way.”

Applications for A.L.F.A. Leaders Class VII open in spring 2026. 

A.L.F.A. Leaders 
Class VI Graduates

Cara Clough  |  Marshall County
Trevor Collier  |  Lauderdale County
Joe Corcoran  |  Barbour County
Nic Cornelison  |  Jackson County
LauraBeth Gamache  |  Lee County
Ali Gotcher  |  Colbert County
Rejeana Gvillo  |  Hale County
Whitney Haynes  |  Cullman County
Destry Hopper  |  Baldwin County
Isaac Jones  |  Cherokee County
Josh McCutcheon  |  Blount County
Sidney McKathan  |  Covington County
Daniel Mullenix  |  Lee County
Evan Nelson  |  Jefferson County
Sid Phelps  |  Tallapoosa County
Matt Smith  |  St. Clair County
Ellie Watson  |  Autauga County
Noel Welch  |  Pike County

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