Skip to main content

Territorial Dispatch

Butte County Farmer Honored for Service

Dec 19, 2024 09:49AM ● By California Farm Bureau News Release

Jamie Johansson, shown with his family, receives the Distinguished Service Award from the California Farm Bureau officer team. From left, Second Vice-President Ron Peterson, First Vice-President Shaun Crook, Kate Johansson, Luke Johansson, President Shannon Douglass, Jamie Johansson, Jack Johansson and Nicole Johansson. Photo courtesy of California Farm Bureau


MONTEREY, CA (MPG) - An olive and citrus fruit grower who served as president of the California Farm Bureau for six years is the recipient of the organization’s Distinguished Service Award for his lifelong contributions to agriculture.

The award for Jamie Johansson of Butte County was announced during the 106th California Farm Bureau Annual Meeting in Monterey.

In addition, Sandy Nixon of Tulare County was honored with the California Farm Bureau’s 2024 Helen Roberti Lifetime Service Award.

Johansson is a first-generation farmer who grows olives and citrus fruit in Oroville and operates an olive oil company, Lodestar Farms.

Serving as a statewide California Farm Bureau officer for 14 years, Johansson was the 16th president from December 2017 to December 2023. He is a former chairman of the California Young Farmers & Ranchers State Committee and a former vice president of the Butte County Farm Bureau.

His other leadership roles include serving as an Oroville City Council member and vice mayor, co-founding the Sierra Oro Farm Trail Association and leading a Boy Scout troop.

Sandy Nixon is often called the “glue” of the Tulare County Farm Bureau. An employee for 53 years, Nixon currently serves as the office manager, bookkeeper, archive manager, livestock yards secretary and historian.

She was hired in 1962 at age 19, left temporarily to raise a family and returned permanently in 1974. She’s worked under 29 county presidents and has directly worked with and mentored about two dozen other employees. Colleagues said her institutional knowledge has been invaluable in advising the executive directors, the board and the members.

The award Nixon received is named in honor of Helen Roberti, who served as secretary/manager of the Plumas-Sierra County Farm Bureau for nearly 70 years. Roberti was hired as secretary in 1956 for $25 per month and retired in 2014 but continued to carry on most of her duties as a volunteer until her death at age 89 on July 8, 2024.

That legacy of service, plus Roberti’s dedication to agricultural education, led the California Farm Bureau to name her the first recipient of its Lifetime Service Award in 2013. Since then, the award has been known as the Helen Roberti Lifetime Service Award. It recognizes dedicated service by a staff member of a county Farm Bureau in California or of the California Farm Bureau.

The California Farm Bureau works to protect family farms and ranches on behalf of more than 26,000 members statewide and as part of a nationwide network of 5.8 million Farm Bureau members.