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sorry for long post is this how it is?

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    sorry for long post is this how it is?

    Most of us don't go through life
    thinking about crop insurance. But on
    the expanse of the prairie in South
    Dakota, in a waving sea of golden grass,
    it's a huge issue.

    Farmer Bryan Kroeplin is a nervous ball
    of energy as he watches thrumming
    combine harvesters carve through his
    winter wheat.

    The 54-year-old is anxious about a lot
    of things, including approaching
    thunderstorms as well as our presence.

    He tells me about another journalist who
    came through asking lots of questions.
    Turns out he wasn't a reporter at all,
    but someone scouting local farming
    opportunities. This is important because
    the Kroeplin family doesn't own their
    farmland, they rent.

    But I know he's warmed up when he
    eventually introduces his father and
    lets my cameraman colleague take a spin
    behind the wheel of a huge tractor. As
    it vanishes over the horizon, he
    casually mentions that it's worth
    $390,000.

    Bryan plants wheat, corn, soybeans and
    sunflowers on 10,000 hectares and goes
    on to explain that he spends roughly
    half a million dollars a year on
    insurance premiums, buying yield and
    much more expensive revenue protection
    policies.

    In 2010, the US government gave him a
    staggering $300,000 back.

    Four years ago, Bryan Kroeplin says he
    was nearly broke, but thanks to some
    canny decisions underpinned by his
    subsidised insurance and high commodity
    prices, he's back on his feet and
    looking to rent more land.

    American taxpayers pay roughly 60 per
    cent of the cost of crop insurance
    premiums across a range of policies. Ten
    years ago, around 30 per cent of
    American farms bought coverage; now 83
    per cent of farmland is covered by
    government-subsidised insurance.

    It's a river of public money, which goes
    some way to explaining why the insurance
    industry is working hard to lobby
    politicians as Congress considers
    cutting subsidies under a new US farm
    bill.

    PHOTO: South Dakota wheat harvest
    farmers (Dan Sweetapple)
    Research by the Washington DC-based
    Environmental Working Group (EWG) shows
    taxpayers also contribute to the
    administrative costs of private
    insurance companies in the program, and
    the US government is still liable for a
    share of payouts when crops fail.

    Over 10 years, the cost of America's
    subsidised crop insurance scheme has
    grown from $2 billion to nearly $9
    billion a year.

    An advocate for cutting subsidies, EWG
    says the crop insurance industry is now
    spending more than traditional farm
    groups on lobbying and political
    contributions to politicians on the
    powerful House and Senate agriculture
    committees.

    The headline in US farm bill media
    coverage so far has been a move to cut
    billions of dollars in direct payments
    to farmers, money they were getting
    regardless of market prices, which the
    American Farm Bureau argues makes
    subsidised insurance a much better deal
    for taxpayers.

    It's also a great deal for US megafarms.

    The biggest 10 per cent of farms pocket
    three quarters of the insurance subsidy
    money, which the farm lobby argues is
    justified on a per unit basis. It
    doesn't want any means testing or
    changes to payment limits, even though
    these same businesses have been highly
    profitable in recent years.

    PHOTO: South Dakota wheat harvest silos
    (Dan Sweetapple)
    There's even a push to add a shallow
    loss-subsidised insurance program to the
    mix, but with Washington sinking under
    trillions of debt, the prospect of
    handing out more to farmers and their
    insurers doesn't sit well with the Tea
    Party crowd or the Republican speaker
    John Boehner.

    As a consequence the farm bill has been
    stuck in Congress, though a worsening
    Midwest drought is leading some
    politicians to call for action.

    Consumer groups warn that an expanded
    farm insurance program would encourage
    overproduction and could wind up costing
    US taxpayers billions of dollars more
    over the next decade.

    Back on the prairie, when I ask South
    Dakota crop grower Bryan Kroeplin what
    he'd tell an Australian farmer who
    doesn't get government subsidies for
    insurance, he laughs awkwardly before
    offering...

    … Good luck, I mean, I don't know the
    situation over there. This has been this
    way for ever, so we don't know no
    different.
    No one outside the farm community talks
    about crop insurance. It's boring and
    complicated. And that's just the way the
    vested interest groups like it.

    #2
    Were heading Im hoping late next week down
    to Bismarck and then over to Mandan then
    up to Minot. Hope to see whats going on.
    But on the spring trip lots of Winter
    wheat and Spring but very little durum.
    Havent been to Montana this summer!

    Comment


      #3
      Not sure how it works in the US, but here is one farmers story in Alberta? A government member yet!
      Subsidized crop insurance isn't considered "polite table conversation" here.....sort of like not talking about a nephew who is in jail for robbery!

      Alberta`s Unluckiest Farmer

      Via email;

      Ray Danyluk must love being an MLA for the good folks of Lac-La-Biche St Paul.
      Indeed he must be very committed to his constituents and very committed to living among them.

      We know that is true because nothing else would explain his irrational attachment to the jinxed land that he farms.

      You see, over the last ten years Ray Danyluk’s small mixed farming operation in Elk Point has had AFSC claims totalling $1.36M – that’s not too much less than he got for being an MLA and cabinet minister.

      He has had worse luck than his neighbours many of whom have more land and larger operations.

      Year after year, since Ray was elected in 2001, bad luck strikes and Ray gets AFSC payouts to cover his catastrophic losses.

      Indeed, his best luck years have resulted in payouts that were twice his insurance premiums, in his worst year he received 13 times what he paid in premiums.

      In the last 4 years he has received over $700K in payouts on premiums of $101K.

      The voters of Lac La Biche need to do Ray a favour and defeat him.

      That way he won’t feel compelled to hold onto this accursed land. He might be able to sell it and move to farmland that won’t be so prone to flooding, hail, and drought.


      I hope he`s laying low today, what with it being Friday the 13th.





      http://www.smalldeadanimals.com/

      Comment


        #4
        Always interesting to think i 'compete'
        with this bullshit.

        Comment

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