We have a brand new updated website! Click here to check it out!

Friday’s closing grain bids

September 15th, 2017

 

St Joseph

 

Yellow Corn

3.13

White Corn

no bid

Soybeans

9.04 – 9.24

LifeLine Foods

3.23

 

 

Atchison

Yellow Corn

3.14 – 3.20

Soybeans

 9.03

Hard Wheat

 3.56

Soft Wheat

 3.59

 

 

Kansas City Truck Bids

 

Yellow Corn

3.27

White Corn

no bid

Soybeans

9.39

Hard Wheat

3.76 – 3.80

Soft Wheat

3.74 – 3.79

Sorghum

5.44
//pagead2.googlesyndication.com/pagead/js/adsbygoogle.js

(adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({});
USDA Cash Grain Prices

For more information, contact the 680 KFEQ Farm Department.
816-233-8881.

Arkansas makes first move toward possible Dicamba ban

The Arkansas Plant Board took up a recommendation for a window on dicamba use in the state from January 1 to April 15 in 2018. There are still several steps to go through before the recommendation is approved, including votes from the full Plant Board, the Arkansas Governor, and the State Legislative Council. State officials put together a Dicamba Task Force, which recommended the ban. The recommendation will be considered by the full Plant Board when it meets on September 21 at 1:30. Shawn Peebles, an organic farmer and member of the Task Force, says, “We didn’t recommend a ban forever, but a ban for the 2018 crop to perform more testing. We expect to see more university testing next year.” Peebles says the Task Force will evaluate the 2018 findings to determine the best course of action for 2019. Monsanto, maker of XtendiMax with VaporGrip Technology, calls the move a step in the wrong direction. “We saw 25 million acres of dicamba tolerant crops that show dicamba can be used safely and effectively,” says Scott Partridge, vice president of global strategy at Monsanto. The proposal could affect chemical sales for the company, as well as seed sales since in-season dicamba use is one of the primary benefits of the Xtend technology.

Sunset proposal in NAFTA 2.0

As the next round of negotiations regarding the North American Free Trade Agreement approach, the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative is considering submitting a “sunset” proposal. That’s a provision that would automatically cancel the deal five years after approval if the three countries don’t agree to renew it. The USTR began circulating the idea among federal agencies last week in anticipation of tabling the text during the third round of negotiations that start next weekend in Ottawa. At least two agencies, the U.S. Department of Agriculture and the State Department objected to the idea. A USDA official sent an email to the USTR office, saying, “Termination of NAFTA would be devastating for the U.S. agricultural economy and making such a termination automatic greatly increases the likelihood.” A source who had seen the email told Politico’s Morning Agriculture Report that the same USDA official said one of the biggest benefits of trade agreements are their certainty and “a sunset provision removes any such certainty and will significantly damage investment and trade.”

Farmers, ranchers get more time to document hurricane damage

Ag Secretary Sonny Perdue announced on Wednesday that the USDA will put special procedures in place to assist producers who lost crops or livestock or had other damage to their operation because of Hurricanes Harvey and Irma. USDA will also provide loan flexibility to assist farm loan borrowers because the damage was so widespread and severe. Perdue said the impact will be felt for many months down the road. “In addition to on-the-ground efforts to assist producers,” he says, “we’ve adjusted our regular reporting requirements so producers can take care of pressing needs first and deal with paperwork and claims later.” The USDA Farm Service Agency is authorizing emergency procedures on a case-by-case basis for crop and livestock producers in the affected counties. Farm-loan borrowers who’ve received primary loan servicing applications may be eligible for a 60-day extension. USDA also lengthened deadlines for many of their programs, including the Marketing Assistance Loan Program and the Farm Storage Facility Loan Program. The deadlines to file a loss under the Livestock Indemnity Program and the Emergency Assistance for Livestock, Honeybees, and Farm-Raised Fish Program are also extended. Farmers are encouraged to carefully document their losses from the storms.

Thursday’s closing grain bids

September 14th, 2017

 

St Joseph

 

Yellow Corn

3.12

White Corn

no bid

Soybeans

9.11 – 9.31

LifeLine Foods

3.22

 

 

Atchison

Yellow Corn

3.14 – 3.19

Soybeans

 9.11

Hard Wheat

 3.52

Soft Wheat

 3.53

 

 

Kansas City Truck Bids

 

Yellow Corn

3.26

White Corn

no bid

Soybeans

9.46

Hard Wheat

3.72 – 3.76

Soft Wheat

3.68 – 3.73

Sorghum

5.43
//pagead2.googlesyndication.com/pagead/js/adsbygoogle.js

(adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({});
USDA Cash Grain Prices

For more information, contact the 680 KFEQ Farm Department.
816-233-8881.

China plans to produce ethanol to decrease corn stocks

China is planning to use ethanol to help draw-down the nations corn stocks, improve corn demand and clean up smog in cities. Reuters says China plans to roll out the use of ethanol in gasoline nationally by 2020, pushing for an E10, or 10 percent ethanol blend, across what is the world’s largest car market. China has not formally announced the plan, but the intentions are boosting confidence in China’s corn industry. The news comes after the government said late last year it would aim to double ethanol output by 2020 to decrease the amount of corn in storage. China has built up state corn reserves estimated at 200 million metric tons, equivalent to a year of demand. According to sources in China, the government aims to build an ethanol production base in the country’s northeast, the main corn growing region.

Censky, McKinney, nomination hearing scheduled

The Senate Agriculture Committee will hold a hearing on nominees to the Department of Agriculture next week. Committee leaders, Chairman Pat Roberts, and ranking minority member Debbie Stabenow announced plans to hold the hearing for Ted McKinney and Stephen Censky Tuesday, September 19th. Censky, CEO of the American Soybean Association, was nominated by President Trump to serve as Deputy Secretary of Agriculture. McKinney, Indiana Agriculture Director, was nominated to be the Under Secretary of Agriculture for Trade and Foreign Agricultural Affairs. Hearings for other nominees to top USDA posts, Including Iowa Secretary of Agriculture Bill Northey as the Undersecretary for Farm Production and Conservation, Nebraska Department of Agriculture Director Greg Ibach as Undersecretary of Agriculture for Marketing and Regulatory Programs, and Stephen Vaden as USDA’s general counsel, remain to be scheduled.

Roberts wants farm bill to target SNAP fraud

Senate Agriculture Chairman Pat Roberts has indicated he wants to use the farm bill as a way to target fraud in the food stamp program. Bloomberg makes the interpretation from a statement by Roberts addressing quality control problems within the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP, which the Chairman said “any problems will need to be given a hard look” in the $70 billion program. Bloomberg reports that the move could endanger the bipartisan support he needs to get the farm bill through Congress. The Senate Agriculture Committee will hold a hearing Thursday focusing on misreporting of costs in the program. During the 2014 Farm Bill process, a national payment-error rate was reported at 3.2 percent. A USDA spokesperson says fraud “should absolutely be part of the discussion,” as “fraud and abuse are problems that threaten the integrity of the program.”

Wednesday’s closing grain bids

September 13th, 2017

 

St Joseph

 

Yellow Corn

3.11

White Corn

no bid

Soybeans

8.95 – 9.17

LifeLine Foods

3.16

 

 

Atchison

Yellow Corn

3.12 – 3.17

Soybeans

 8.96

Hard Wheat

 3.54

Soft Wheat

 3.53

 

 

Kansas City Truck Bids

 

Yellow Corn

3.24

White Corn

no bid

Soybeans

9.31

Hard Wheat

3.74 – 3.78

Soft Wheat

3.68 – 3.73

Sorghum

5.38
//pagead2.googlesyndication.com/pagead/js/adsbygoogle.js

(adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({});
USDA Cash Grain Prices

For more information, contact the 680 KFEQ Farm Department.
816-233-8881.

NPPC seeking ELD waiver

The National Pork Producers Council Tuesday petitioned the Department of Transportation for a waiver and exemption for livestock haulers from regulations that NPPC says could harm animal well-being. The petition was filed on behalf of the pork industry and other livestock sectors, and requests the waiver and exemption because of concerns about the Electronic Logging Device Rule. The petition also asked the agency to address incompatibilities between the transportation of livestock and the department’s Hours of Service rules. Those regulations limit truckers to 11 hours of driving daily, after ten consecutive hours off duty, and restrict their on-duty time to 14 consecutive hours, which includes nondriving time. The Department of Transportation did recently issue an interpretation intended to address shortcomings in its Hours of Service rules, exempting from the regulations and from any distance-logging requirements truckers hauling livestock within a 150 air-mile radius of the location at which animals were loaded. NPPC also supports language included in the transportation fiscal 2018 funding bill that would delay the ELD mandate for one year for livestock haulers.

Copyright Eagle Radio | FCC Public Files | EEO Public File