U.S.
disaster aid won't cover crops drowned by Midwest floods
Reuters,
2 April, 2019
MALVERN, Iowa (Reuters) - The Black Hawk military helicopter flew over Iowa, giving a senior U.S. agriculture official and U.S. senator an eyeful of the flood damage below, where yellow corn from ruptured metal silos spilled out into the muddy water.
And
there’s nothing the U.S. government can do about the millions of
bushels of damaged crops here under current laws or disaster-aid
programs, U.S. Agriculture Under Secretary Bill Northey told a
Reuters reporter who joined the flight.
The
USDA has no mechanism to compensate farmers for damaged crops in
storage, Northey said, a problem never before seen on this scale.
That’s in part because U.S. farmers have never stored so much of
their harvests, after years of oversupplied markets, low prices and
the latest blow of lost sales from the U.S. trade war with China -
previously their biggest buyer of soybean exports.
The
USDA last year made $12 billion in aid available to farmers who
suffered trade-war losses, without needing Congressional approval.
The agency has separate programs that partially cover losses from
cattle killed in natural disasters, compensate farmers who cannot
plant crops due to weather, and help them remove debris left in
fields after floods.
But
it has no program to cover the catastrophic and largely uninsured
stored-crop losses from the widespread flooding, triggered by the
“bomb cyclone” that hit the region in mid-March. Congress would
have to pass legislation to address the harvests lost in the storm,
according to Northey and a USDA statement to Reuters.
“It’s
not traditionally been covered,” he said. “But we’ve not
usually had as many losses.”
Indigo
Ag, an agriculture technology company, identified 832 on-farm storage
bins within flooded Midwest areas. They hold an estimated 5 million
to 10 million bushels of corn and soybeans - worth between $17.3
million to $34.6 million - that could have been damaged in the
floods, the company told Reuters.
Across
the United States, farmers held soybean stocks of 2.716 billion
bushels as of March 1, the largest on record for the time period, the
USDA said on Friday. Corn stocks were the third-largest on record.
Some
Congress members have expressed interest in pursuing legislation to
provide aid for damaged crops in storage, Northey said. But passing
legislation could require a lengthy political process in the face of
an urgent disaster, U.S. Sen. Charles Grassley told farmers at a
meeting in Malvern, Iowa.
“If
we have to pass a bill to do it, I hate to tell you how long that
takes,” said the senator from Iowa, who joined Northey on the
helicopter tour.
With
farm incomes declining for years before the flood, many farmers had
planned to sell their grain in storage for money to live, pay their
taxes or finance operations, including planting this spring.
THROWING
AWAY CROPS
From
the helicopter, piloted by National Guard members, officials surveyed
miles of flooded fields in Iowa, littered with lawn chairs, fuel
tanks, furniture, tires and other flood debris.
Farmers
will have to destroy any grains that were contaminated by floodwater,
which could also prevent some growers from planting oversaturated
fields.
Near
Crescent, Iowa, farmer Don Rief said the flood damaged more than
60,000 bushels of his grain, worth hundreds of thousands of dollars.
He tried to move the crops before the flood, but dirt roads were too
soft from the storm to support trucks.
“We
were just hurrying like hell,” Rief said. “Hopefully USDA will
come in and minimize some of the damage.”
The
USDA does not have a program that covers flood-damaged grain because
farmers have typically received more advance notice of rising waters,
allowing them to move crops and limit losses, said Tom Vilsack, who
ran the agency under former President Barack Obama.
In
this case, floods inundated fields quickly after multiple levees
failed when rain and melting snow filled the Missouri River and other
waterways. The frozen ground was unable to soak up the water.
Near
Percival, Iowa, railroad tracks leading up to a grain facility were
flooded and broken. A Deere & Co (DE.N) dealership, Wendy’s
restaurant, Motel 6 and gas station nearby were also underwater,
along with homes, cars and farm equipment.
Some
farmers moved machinery such as tractors on to highways to keep it
out of the path of the floods. The equipment was still parked there
during the flyover on Friday.
DISASTER
RELIEF ‘GAP’
About
416,000 acres of cropland across six counties in Iowa were flooded,
said Amanda De Jong, state executive director for the USDA Iowa Farm
Service Agency.
Of
that, about 309,000 acres will be eligible for the federal program
that helps farmers and ranchers remove debris left by natural
disasters on farmlands, De Jong said last week. She estimated the
program would need about $34 million to clean up the fields.
Iowa’s
agriculture secretary Mike Naig said the U.S. government also should
help compensate farmers for some of the grain that was damaged.
“This
is clearly a gap that we think needs to be addressed,” said Naig,
who accompanied Grassley and Northey in the chopper.
Time
is short for a solution, said Carol Vinton, supervisor of Mills
County, Iowa, one of the state’s two most heavily damaged counties.
Vinton
said she was getting calls from farmers whose grain was damaged and
are worried about making good on previously signed contracts to
deliver those crops to elevators.
The
USDA wants to do everything it can to help farmers hurt by the
disaster, Northey said.
“They
spent all last year raising that crop, putting it in the bin and they
maybe already have it marketed,” he said. “And now they’re
going to have to spend time just to get rid of it - just to clean the
place up.”
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