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NFU Tells Obama Admin It Left Farmers Out of Clean Power Plan

August 4, 2015 By Ron Sylvester Leave a Comment

nfunr2National Farmers Union President Roger Johnson issued the following statement today regarding the Obama administration’s release of the Clean Power Plan:

“Climate disruption, linked to the emission of greenhouse gases (GHGs), poses severe threats to family farmers, ranchers, and rural communities across the country. These threats include extreme weather events, interference with access to water, heat stress on crops and livestock, and changing pest and disease pressures. These threats undermine the stability of the food supply and must be mitigated. NFU appreciates the administration’s work to address the causes of climate change.

“Unfortunately, the administration is missing an important opportunity to constructively engage family farmers in its efforts to build climate resiliency. Farmers can avoid GHG emissions and sequester carbon in the soil. Given the correct policy and financial incentives, farmers can mitigate climate change less expensively and more quickly than the rural power cooperatives that serve them. Instead, these cooperatives will have to raise rates to comply with today’s rule.

“The final rule does not allow states to comply by working with farmers to secure offsets for their emissions. NFU urges the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to consider such offsets in state compliance plans due next summer. This would allow farmers to help cooperatives manage rates and provide value to farmers subject to rate increases. NFU stands ready to assist the administration in its efforts to mitigate the effects of climate change.”

Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: Barack Obama, Clean Power, Farmers

NFU Explains Opposition to Federal Estate Tax Repeal

April 17, 2015 By Ron Sylvester Leave a Comment

nfunr2National Farmers Union President Roger Johnson opposed Thursday’s action in the U.S. House of Representatives that would repeal the estate tax, stating the move would place a larger tax burden on American family farmers and ranchers.

“Repeal of the estate tax puts a larger tax burden on those that are currently exempted from the tax,” said Johnson. “Over 99 percent of small farms do not face the tax, as estates under $5.43 million, $10.86 million for couples, are exempted from it. As a result, NFU opposes completely eliminating the tax.

Johnson noted that Congress has repeatedly decreased the tax rate and increased the exemptions, making it increasingly unlikely for family farms to face the tax.

“The U.S. Department of Agriculture estimates that only 0.6 percent of farms have to pay an estate tax, and that another 2.1 percent would have to file returns but would not owe any taxes,” said Johnson. “It is not the estate tax that hurts family farmers. It is repealing the tax that would give them an increased share of the overall tax load.”

Johnson also noted that the move would add to the nation’s debt. “The Joint Committee on Taxation estimates that repealing the estate tax without offsetting revenue or spending will increase the deficit by $269 billion over 10 years. This drag on the U.S. economy will bring rural America down with it.”

Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: Congress, Estate Tax, Farmers

Natural Gas Boom: Should You Lease Gas Rights on Your Land Now? Or, wait …

October 24, 2011 By Ron Sylvester Leave a Comment

Here are a few headlines from the last several weeks regarding the beginning of the natural gas rush in Ohio:

  • Lowball gas drill leases haunt Pa., Associated Press
  • In North Dakota, Flames of Wasted Natural Gas Light the Prairie, New York Times
  • Rural Ohio is the Wild West as gas and oil companies compete for drilling rights, The Plain Dealer

If you are a farmer or a landowner in eastern Ohio, it’s likely that if you haven’t had a visit – or several – from a gas company, they’re probably just now pulling into the driveway. They will have a deal for you, maybe even a signing bonus. There are two questions to ask yourself. First, if they drill, do you understand all of the impacts to your land and its water supply. Second, will there be better deals down the road?

From the Associated Press story cited above:

The Beinlichs are among thousands of residents living atop the gas-rich Marcellus Shale who signed lowball leases in the years leading up to the boom in Pennsylvania. In those early days a half-decade ago, virtually no layperson had even heard of the rock formation, let alone knew that drillers had found a way to access the huge reservoir of natural gas locked inside it.

An untold number of industry-friendly agreements are now approaching their expiration dates. But landowners who expected to sign new leases — and reap windfalls of thousands of dollars an acre — are facing the reality that energy companies with billion-dollar investments in the Marcellus are not about to let their prime acreage slip away.

As landowners in Ohio and New York prepare for their own round of Marcellus leasing, high-stakes battles are developing in law offices and courtrooms throughout Pennsylvania. Landowners who signed early for pittances are trying to get out of their leases, and gas companies are trying just as hard to keep them shackled to the original terms. In some cases, landowners say they were fraudulently induced into signing by high-pressure sales agents known in the industry as landmen. In others, residents contend that companies failed to abide by the lease or act in good faith.

Perhaps we in Ohio are where the Beinlich family was a few years ago in Pennsylvania. From the Plain Dealer linked above:

Only a handful of shale gas wells — about 14 — have actually been drilled in Ohio, state records show. But a gusher of money has already been pumped into the state in the form of bonuses when landowners sign lease deals. It totals more than $1 billion so far, said David Mustine, head of JobsOhio, Gov. John Kasich’s new privatized department of development.

The billion-dollar gusher is sure to grow.

Those who signed leases 18 months ago received $500 per acre and a guaranteed royalty of 12 1/2 percent of the value of the gas produced from their acreage.

The competitive frenzy has since pushed the bonus offers to about $5,000 per acre and a royalty of 19 1/2 percent.

One would think that the natural gas market must literally be screaming for supply. We’re hearing a a great deal of cheerleading out of the politicians in Columbus about billions of dollars and hundreds of thousands of jobs. I was thinking about the natural gas market this morning because natural gas is dirt cheap – near a historic low in price – and I was starting to feel feverish about the boom in Ohio. Should I invest in something now? Buy low! Sell high!

Then I remembered this from the New York Times just a few weeks ago (also cited above):

NEW TOWN, N.D. — Across western North Dakota, hundreds of fires rise above fields of wheat and sunflowers and bales of hay. At night, they illuminate the prairie skies like giant fireflies.

They are not wildfires caused by lightning strikes or other acts of nature, but the deliberate burning of natural gas by oil companies rushing to extract oil from the Bakken shale field and take advantage of the high price of crude. The gas bubbles up alongside the far more valuable oil, and with less economic incentive to capture it, the drillers treat the gas as waste and simply burn it.

Every day, more than 100 million cubic feet of natural gas is flared this way — enough energy to heat half a million homes for a day.

The flared gas also spews at least two million tons of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere every year, as much as 384,000 cars or a medium-size coal-fired power plant would emit, alarming some environmentalists.

All told, 30 percent of the natural gas produced in North Dakota is burned as waste. No other major domestic oil field currently flares close to that much, though the practice is still common in countries like Russia, Nigeria and Iran.

Something is not computing. There’s a guy at the door and he says we need to get this matter of a lease handled right away. But, the stuff that they’re going to spend millions of dollars per well on to extract from the ground is being burned as waste as a matter of course in North Dakota.

There are many reasons for Ohio to proceed with caution when it comes to the gas boom. I just gave you three more.

Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: Farmers, Leases, Marcellus, Natural Gas, Ohio, Shale, Utica

USDA: No rulemaking will require CDLs for farmers

August 11, 2011 By Ron Sylvester Leave a Comment

Apparently, the rumors circulating that the U.S. Dept. of Transportation was considering regulations to require commercial drivers licenses for farmers or farm workers was just that – rumor.

Ohio Farmers Union President Roger Wise was in Columbus for a meeting late last week with U.S. Dept. of Agriculture Deputy Secretary John Picaro and Undersecretary for Marketing and Regulatory Programs Edward Avalos. Picaro told the room of rural development and Ohio Dept. of Agriculture officials, including ODA Director James Zehringer, that one of the reason he was in Ohio was to dispel the myth that there were any regulations being considered in Washington which would require farmers to attain CDLs.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: CDLs, Edward Avalos, Farmers, Federal Motor Carrier Administration, John Picaro, Roger Wise, U.S. Dept. of Agriculture, U.S. Dept. of Transportation, USDA

OFU Teams With OSU Buckeye Club on Grow Forward

May 25, 2011 By Ron Sylvester Leave a Comment

The Ohio State University Department of Athletics’ Buckeye Club and the Ohio Farmers Union are teaming up with others in Ohio agriculture to build support for OSU’s student athletes through a unique program aimed at Ohio farmers.

Through Grow Forward, Ohio farmers will be able to donate bushels of grain and corn at their local elevator. Proceeds will benefit Buckeye scholar-athletes. Farmers who donate will earn at a minimum a football season ticket application and various premiums over and beyond that according to how much they donate. Premiums include football parking passes, men’s basketball practice passes, seats in an OSU luxury suite for a football game and walk-on golf course privileges among other exclusive rewards.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: Buckeye Club, Farmers, Grow Forward, Ohio Farmers Union, Ohio State Athletics

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