Ohio Farmers Union

Serving Family Farmers and Consumers Since 1934



United to Grow Family Agriculture Since 1934

  • About
    • The Farmers Union Triangle
    • Vision
    • OFU Leadership
  • Issues
    • 2020 Virtual Lobby Days
    • OFU Policy & NFU Policy
    • 2019 Lobby Day Registration
    • Get Involved!
    • NFU Climate Leaders
  • Education
    • 2019 OFU Essay Contest
    • Ohio Farmers Union Scholarships
    • Farm Safety
    • Renewable Energy Curriculum
  • Insurance
    • Hastings Mutual Insurance Co.
    • Health & Other Offerings
    • Ohio BWC Group Coverage
  • Join Us
    • Member Benefits
    • Insurance
  • Blog

Ag News Roundup – August 1

August 1, 2011 By Ron Sylvester Leave a Comment

Here are a few news stories from around the country that the National Farmers Union is following plus a couple from the Ohio media OFU is following:

Ohio manufacturers to gain from ‘biopreferred’ labels

July 28, 2011 – Dayton Business Journal

Many Ohio manufacturers should benefit as 14 bio-based product categories are now eligible for federal procurement preference. The move expands business opportunities for Ohio-manufactured products made with agricultural products.

Biobased products are composed wholly or significantly of biological ingredients — renewable plant, animal, marine or forestry materials. A BioPreferred designated item is one that meets or exceeds USDA established minimum biobased content requirements.

Already, more than 70 Ohio companies manufacturing biobased products are eligible for preferred federal procurement under the USDA’s biopreferred program.

Read More

Potential of shale gas boom hard to nail down

July 31, 2011 – Columbus Dispatch

Right now, beneath your feet, Ohio has oil and gas deposits so vast that they could transform the economy.

But there are many reasons for skepticism. These shale-based resources are difficult to reach and expensive to extract, and they come with a host of concerns about air and water pollution.

Ohio leaders are in the early stages of figuring out how to navigate this complicated situation. Meanwhile, oil and gas producers are making bets that the obstacles can be overcome.

Last week, some big numbers became part of the discussion: $15 billion to $20 billion. That’s the range of income that Chesapeake Energy said it expects to generate from drilling in the Utica shale in eastern Ohio.

For some perspective, Ohio had $665 million worth of oil and gas production in 2009, the most-recent data available. Chesapeake’s potential income, even if spread over several decades, would be a huge increase in the state’s production.

Read More

Farm Bill Needs Major Overhaul to Aid Hungry

July 29, 2011 – Pressconnects.com

by Mark A. Dunlea

The Federal Farm Bill is up for renewal next year. It needs a major overhaul so it will help family farms and promote healthier diets.

Family farms continue to disappear at an alarming rate. Most support goes to wealthy investors owning corporate farms. The average payment for 80 percent of farmers is $579.

Processing facilities need to be funded so medium-sized farmers aren’t forced to raise their crops and livestock solely based on the dictates of a few large corporations. The Farm Bill must do a better job of supporting rural development; farmers can’t survive when neighboring communities disappear.

More funding is needed to preserve farmlands, especially near urban areas where development pressures are great but wheremuch of our food is grown.

The Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (food stamps) accounts for two-thirds of Farm Bill funding. The House Republicans recently voted to gut food stamps because with the economy in such bad shape, spending has increased to help more households feed their families. The food stamp program, however, is supposed to be a safety net when families are out of work and/or unable to pay their bills.

Read More

Farmers face losses from record-breaking drought season

July 31, 2011 – Associated Press

Thousands of farmers are counting their losses amid record heat and drought this year.

The drought has spread over much of the southern U.S., leaving Oklahoma the driest it has been since the 1930s and setting records from Louisiana to New Mexico. But the situation is especially severe in Kansas and Texas, which trails only California in agricultural productivity.

Ranchers in parts of Kansas are hauling their spring cattle to auction barns because a drought and the brutal heat have made it difficult to provide the water and hay needed to keep the animals healthy, according to a state agency.

Some auction markets are seeing more than triple the number of cattle at weekly sales than they typically have at this time of year, the Kansas Agricultural Statistics Service said. For example, 14,500 head of cattle were taken to sale rings at Pratt, Salina and Dodge City last week. Last year, those auction markets sold just 4,300 head.

Read More

 NYC’s solar windfall a sign of clean energy future?

July 28, 2011 – Huffington Post

by John Farrell

A recently released solar map of New York City found enough room on building rooftops for solar panels to power half the city during hours of peak electricity use. Taking advantage of this solar windfall could allow New Yorkers to save millions on electricity costs and create tens of thousands of jobs.

New York City is not alone in its solar power potential.

Almost 60 million Americans live in areas where solar prices are competitive with retail electricity costs, but this opportunity is often kept out of reach by utilities and the antiquated rules of the U.S. electricity system.

Read More

Legislative riders target environmental protections

July 28, 2011 – Washington Post

by Darryl Fears & Juliet Eilperin

For environmentalists, it was something to shout about. In a rare show of defiance, 37 House Republicans broke party ranks two days ago and voted with Democrats to strike an amendment from an appropriations bill that forbade the Fish and Wildlife Service from listing any new plant or animal as endangered.

In telephone calls and e-mails, environmentalists at groups such as the National Wildlife Federation and Defenders of Wildlife called the vote “historic” and “awesome” in surprised reactions.

But a long list of other amendments aimed at weakening environmental protections at the Department of Interior and the Environmental Protection Agency brought them back to Earth.

Nearly 40 amendments would stop the enforcement of water quality standards, abolish rules that protect streams from surface mining, gut a budget to acquire and protect pristine forestland, and slice a portion of money used to operate national parks.

Read More

 

 

 


 

 

 

Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: Ag News, Family Farms, Fracking, Shale Gas

Members Enjoy Beautiful Day & Fellowship at Annual Picnic

August 1, 2011 By Ron Sylvester Leave a Comment

Ohio Farmers Union members load up for a hayride tour of WR Hunt Club & the Wright's farm

The Ohio Farmers Union held its Annual Summer Picnic this past Saturday at the WR Hunt Club in Clyde, Ohio.

“I want to thank all of the OFU members who made the trip to Clyde and enjoyed a sunny day with Bob and Betty Wright,” said OFU President Roger Wise.

“The Wrights did a nice job of opening up their club and farm to all of us and everyone enjoyed hearing some of Bob’s stories about the history of his farm and the hunt club,” Wise added.

Bob Wright regales OFU members with stories about the hunt club and family farm operation

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Blog

Action Alert: Act Today to Protect Smaller Growers of Leafy Green Vegetables

July 26, 2011 By Ron Sylvester Leave a Comment

Big Ag tries to game the system for large (huge) growers in Washington

The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) recently published a proposed rule to establish a national marketing agreement regulating leafy green vegetables. This rulemaking was the result of a request by the largest players in the industry, who asked for regulations based on the statewide agreements established in California and Arizona in the wake of the 2006 E. coli outbreak in California spinach.

If this agreement moves forward, it will provide the largest produce handlers (processors, shippers and packers of leafy green vegetables) the power to establish on-farm practices for all growers of leafy greens, regardless of size.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: Family Farmers, Growers, Leafy Green Vegetables, Ohio Farmers Union, Produce Handlers, Rulemaking, USDA

Ag News Roundup – July 26

July 26, 2011 By Ron Sylvester Leave a Comment

Here are a few items that came to our attention from Ohio sources and the National Farmers Union:

Justices Will Hear Arguments on Whether State Should Pay for Flooded Farms

from The Hannah Report

The Ohio Supreme Court moved this month to schedule oral arguments in a dispute between the Ohio Department of Natural Resources (ODNR) and farmers near Grand Lake St. Marys who say they should be compensated because the department’s flood-management practices frequently put their lands under water and constitute an unlawful taking.

Justices granted the request from plaintiffs in State ex. rel. Wayne T. Doner et al v. Ohio Department of Natural Resources for oral arguments at the same time it approved their motion to file evidence of flooding from this past spring as further justification for their case. Oral argument is scheduled for Sept. 20.

The plaintiffs, who have farmed along Beaver Creek and the Wabash river for decades, say the thousands of acres in Mercer County they collectively own have frequently flooded since ODNR installed a new 500-foot spillway at the lake in 1997, and they argue that the state is thus compelled to buy their lands and compensate them for losses. …

Algae alert issued at Lake Alma

Columbus Dispatch

A bloom of toxic, blue-green algae at Lake Alma has prompted officials to post health warnings at two public beaches at the state park in southeastern Ohio.

The new alerts come after signs were removed Friday from Brooks Beach at Buckeye Lake, where they were first put up in early June.

Two weeks of water tests found low concentrations of a liver toxin and the algae there appear to be dying off, said Heidi Griesmer, a spokeswoman for the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency.

That leaves 60-acre Lake Alma in Vinton County and Grand Lake St. Marys in western Ohio as the only bodies of water with warnings. Harmful algae have posed problems at 13,000-acre Grand Lake each summer since 2009. …

Read More

 

Cattle Herd Shrinks to Smallest Since 1973 as Drought Scorches U.S. South

Bloomberg

The U.S. cattle inventory on July 1 shrank to the smallest since at least 1973 as producers reduced herds amid a prolonged drought in the Southwest and rising feed costs.

Beef and dairy farmers held 100 million head of cattle as the month began, down 1.1 percent from a year earlier, the U.S. Department of Agriculture said today in a semiannual report. Nine analysts in a Bloomberg News survey forecast a 1.4 percent drop, on average. “The U.S. cattle herd continues to liquidate due mainly to drought conditions in the southern half of the country,” Troy Vetterkind, the owner of Vetterkind Cattle Brokerage in Chicago, said in an e-mail before the report.

Read More

Despite fears more genetically modified crops on the way

Pioneer Press

In a way, the old science-fiction movies were right. Genetically engineered crops have taken over the world – but not because mutant plants went on a rampage.

Fifteen years after the biotech revolution first hit rural America, farmers overwhelmingly choose to grow genetically modified (GM) varieties of corn and soybeans. In Minnesota this year, a record 95 percent of the soybeans are GM varieties. For corn, it’s 93 percent. A similar trend is unfolding around the world.

“Everybody thinks it’s just a U.S. thing, and that’s far from the case now,” said David Morgan, president of Syngenta Seeds, which has its U.S. headquarters in Minnetonka. “With the exception of Europe, it’s pretty well adopted around the world.”

More than 80 percent of the world’s soybeans are GM varieties, industry data show. So is nearly two-thirds of the world’s cotton. That brisk adoption rate is welcomed by developers of biotech seeds, including Syngenta, which ranks No. 3 behind Monsanto and Pioneer. …

Read More

 

Filed Under: Blog

USDA Has Designated Five Ohio Counties Primary Disaster Areas

July 25, 2011 By Ron Sylvester Leave a Comment

Twenty other counties also qualify for low interest loans

The U.S. Department of Agriculture designated five Ohio counties as primary agricultural natural disaster areas, making certain farmers and other agricultural producers in the counties eligible for low-interest emergency loans from USDA’s Farm Service Agency (FSA).

The following counties were designated as primary natural disaster areas, due to excessive rain, flooding, high winds, and tornadoes that occurred from February 2, 2011, through March 23, 2011. Those counties are; Ashland, Delaware, Holmes, Tuscarawas and Wyandot.

Counties covered by the declaration because they are contiguous to the five counties are: Carroll, Coshocton, Crawford, Franklin, Guernsey, Hancock, Hardin, Harrison, Huron, Knox, Licking, Lorain, Marion, Medina, Morrow, Richland, Seneca, Stark, Union and Wayne.

For more information regarding the disaster declaration and low interest emergency loans please visit the Ohio Farm Service Agency.

Filed Under: Blog

Ohio Farmers Union Members Challenged to Help Feed America’s Hungry

July 24, 2011 By Ron Sylvester Leave a Comment

Foundation offers $50,000 matching gift to Feeding America for NFU/OFU members

The Howard G. Buffett Foundation is challenging the National Farmers Union (NFU) to take a stand against hunger in America. The Foundation has donated $50,000 to Feeding America, the nation’s largest domestic hunger-relief charity, as a challenge grant for NFU members. Every dollar donated by NFU members, up to $50,000, will be matched through the Foundation. The members of the Ohio Farmers Union are participating in this challenge to help feed the hungry people in our communities.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: Feeding America, National Farmers Union, Ohio Farmers Union

Livestock Care Standards Board to Hold Series of Public Info Sessions

July 24, 2011 By Ron Sylvester Leave a Comment

The Ohio Dept. of Agriculture has announced that the Ohio Livestock Care Standards Board will hold five information meetings for the public in late August through September.

In 2009, Ohio voters approved State Issue 2 which put in place the board to create state standards for the care of livestock. There are two statutory spots on the board for “statewide farm organization.” The Ohio Soybean Association and the Ohio Farm Bureau hold those positions. Dominic Marchese of Farmdale and a Farmers Union member holds one of the “family farmer” slots on the board.

ODA said in a press release that the information sessions are set to last two hours and will provide for time for questions and comment from the public. ODA said that the sessions will include a presentation on new livestock care standards rules.

The schedule for the information sessions is as follows:

  • Wednesday, August 24 6:00 – 8:00 p.m., Hillsboro, Southern State Community College (Auditorium), 100 Hobart Drive
  • Wednesday, August 31 6:00 – 8:00 p.m., Wooster, Ohio State University OARDC (Shisler Center Ballroom), 1680 Madison Avenue
  • Wednesday, September 14 6:00 – 8:00 p.m., Lima, Independence Elementary School, 615 Tremont Avenue
  • Tuesday, September 27 6:00 – 8:00 p.m., Zanesville, Ohio University – Zanesville Campus (The Campus Center T430 & 431), 1425 Newark Road
  • Thursday, September 29 6:00 – 8:00 p.m.,  Fort Recovery, American Legion, 2490 State Route 49 N.

Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: Ohio Dept. of Agriculture, Ohio Livestock Care Standards Board

State Agencies Work with Ohio Company to Deliver Data on Grand Lake St. Marys Algae

July 24, 2011 By Ron Sylvester Leave a Comment

Screenshot of monitoring results of water quality at Grand Lake St. Marys

News releases from Ohio Gov. John Kasich’s office and the Ohio Dept. of Natural Resources and the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency said last week that a public-private partnership is bringing results in monitoring water quality levels at Grand Lake St. Marys.

Working with Ohio DNR and EPA, YSI, Inc. of Yellow Springs has installed water monitoring stations at the 13,000 acre lake. For the past two years Grand Lake St. Mary’s has been a stew of toxic algae. The state has tried repeated treatments of alum in the water to get the algal blooms under control. Recreational activities at the lake have come to a standstill causing problems for the local economy during outdoor activity seasons.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: Algae, Grand Lake St. Marys, John Kasich, Ohio Dept. of Natural Resources, Ohio EPA, Water Quality

Ag News Roundup

July 22, 2011 By Ron Sylvester Leave a Comment

Here are a few news stories brought to our attention by the National Farmers Union:

New Farm Bill in a Matter of Months?

Dairy Herd Network

If dramatic spending cuts are made in Washington, D.C., the House Agriculture Committee could be forced to draft and pass a 2012 Farm Bill in a matter of months. That’s what House Ag Committee Chair Frank Lucas told AgriTalk radio host Mike Adams on Wednesday. Given a choice, Lucas said he would like to write the 2012 Farm Bill next summer. But he may not have a choice in the matter. If cuts are more immediate, “we’ll have to cinch up our belts, get ready to go, and do what we have to do,” he says. It depends on what emerges from the deficit-reduction negotiations now under way in the nation’s capital.

Read More

Dairy Co-ops like latest Congressional proposal; NFU says it needs work

Watertown Daily Times

The odds of passing significant changes in dairy policy before the 2012 Farm Bill appeared to take a hit when the National Farmers Union this week said it won’t support a proposal by Rep. Collin C. Peterson that resembles a plan from dairy farmer cooperatives.“The current proposal would not provide a safety net for all dairy farmers, particularly family-sized operators,” said the president of the NFU, Roger Johnson, in a statement. “A fundamental problem with this proposal is that it appears that the largest farmers will reap the greatest benefits at the expense of smaller family farms.”

Read More

Ethanol Industry Torn Over Losing Subsidy Billions

National Public Radio

The federal government pays oil companies about $6 billion a year to blend ethanol into your gasoline; it’s been subsidizing ethanol for 33 years now. But any agreement in Washington, D.C., to raise the debt ceiling will most likely include a plan to cut off that subsidy. And after all these years, many in the ethanol industry say they don’t really care.

The end of the subsidy — and the mixed reaction to that idea — reveals how the world of corn ethanol has changed dramatically.

Read More

USDA Meteorologist Warns of Heat, Crop Damage

Des Moines Register

U.S. Department of Agriculture meteorologist Brad Rippey is warning of new heat waves later this month and into August.

“As we move ahead into next week and the latter part of July it does appear that the heatwave will reload across the south central U.S. and we may see a second or even a third push of these hot, humid conditions across the Midwest in late July and early August,” Rippey said.

He added, “again, it’s very untimely for silking corn, for blooming soybeans and it’s not something we wanted to see especially after a cool, wet spring that may have limited root development in some areas of the Midwest.”

The possibility of reduced yields is a concern to grain markets because domestic stocks of corn and soybeans are at 15-year lows.

Read More

 

 

Filed Under: Blog

Join Us at the OFU Annual Picnic!

July 22, 2011 By Ron Sylvester Leave a Comment

Looking for a great way to spend a Saturday afternoon with family, friends and fellow Farmers Union members? Come to the annual picnic! We promise great food, fellowship, information about what OFU is doing for you and activities. As a Farmers Union member you can bring your family and friends for free!

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Blog, Events Tagged With: Ohio Farmers Union, Picnic, WR Hunt Club

« Previous Page
Next Page »
  • Email
  • Facebook
  • RSS
  • YouTube

Latest News from the Ohio & National Farmers Union

OFU Rallies for Rural Schools

Fair School Funding Plan Integral for Rural Public Schools COLUMBUS – The League of Women Voters of Ohio and Ohio Farmers Union held a Statehouse … Read More

Public Schools Build Connections in Rural Communities. Vouchers Tear Them Down.

by Melissa Cropper, president, Ohio Federation of Teachers This op-ed was orignally published on Barn Raiser: Rural communities depend on … Read More

National Farmers Union Week of Action for Strong Farm Bill

National Farmers Union (NFU) today concluded the Week of Action that gathered more than 100 farmers from across the country to the halls of Congress … Read More

How Do Tariffs Affect Family Farms?

A Talk in Kent, Ohio with Ohio Farmers Union and Others Have you noticed the price of eggs? Who hasn’t! How do government actions and tariffs … Read More

Check Out the Entire Blog

NATIONAL FARMERS UNION

Click to Take Action



Contact

Ohio Farmers Union
P.O. Box 363
1011 N. Defiance Street
Ottawa, Ohio 45875
Phone: (419) 523-5300
Toll Free: (800) 321-3671

Copyright Ohio Farmers Union© 2026 | Site by: RCS Communications

 

Loading Comments...