Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Dying farms gone forever, producer says

Won’t stop till funeral, he says

- ALYSSA SCHUKAR

In his earliest memories of his family’s farm, Ethan Uhlir rides in an old truck with his grandfathe­r Arden, feeding cattle and mending fences.

Before Arden Uhlir’s death five years ago, he “reminded me that I was a good cattleman,” Ethan said, and “I have to keep it like that.”

Ethan, now 17, still notices his grandfathe­r’s wiring technique in fence posts scattered across the farm in the rolling plains of northeast Nebraska, along the South Dakota border.

He walks along the same paths as six generation­s of Uhlirs, but Ethan may be the last to work the land.

“There’s enough labor for four people but not enough income for one,” his father, Jeff Uhlir, said.

Like most farmers, Jeff Uhlir sells his cattle, corn and soybeans at prices set by a global commoditie­s market, but only large farms can absorb the narrow profit margins.

Though the family’s small farm is valuable — its 880 acres are assessed at $1.3 million — property taxes eat up most of the money it does make.

Even in a good year when the farm grosses $60,000, Uhlir feels lucky if he has money left over for savings.

“I’ll have to work an hour before my funeral,” Uhlir, 51, said. “I have no retirement.”

For families like the Uhlirs, farming is increasing­ly unsustaina­ble, as drought and extreme weather, fluctuatin­g commodity prices and rising costs alter the economics of running a small to midsize operation.

Hundreds of family farms file for bankruptcy each year in the United States, with the largest share routinely coming from the Midwest.

Nebraska’s high property taxes, which it collects from its 93 counties and reapportio­ns, are compounded by Knox County’s shrinking population.

About 8,400 people live in the county, down 26.8% over the last 40 years. With fewer taxpayers, farmers who own hundreds of acres must shoulder the cost of schools, roads and other public services.

After paying for necessitie­s like fertilizer, seed and pesticides, Uhlir must cover a $15,965.68 property tax bill.

Nebraska’s agricultur­al land property taxes are 46% higher than the national average, according to a 2019 report by the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, and most farmers pay 50%-60% of their net income in taxes.

Sixty percent of Nebraska property taxes pay for schools.

Next fall, Ethan Uhlir hopes to pursue an associate degree in nursing. “I don’t think that I would be able to financiall­y support myself just living off the farm,” he said.

On a crisp, bright afternoon in early October, Uhlir watched his father weld their broken 1980s combine harvester head, which cuts and threshes corn.

Most of “the equipment we have, my grandfathe­r bought,” he said.

Uhlir had once hoped to be named the National FFA’s “Star Farmer,” just as his grandfathe­r Arden was in 1960.

During the 1980s farm crisis, Arden Uhlir nearly lost the farm.

He took on debt and worked to pay it off up until the last few years of his life. His wife, Karen, worked for 16 years in an Alzheimer’s unit at an assisted-living facility in Verdigre.

“They never went to the dentist. They couldn’t afford to,” Jeff Uhlir said. “They never went on vacation. They never spent any money on each other.”

Seeing his parents struggle, Jeff Uhlir has avoided debt.

“I’d love to be able to buy land close to me and expand what I do, but there ain’t no way at 51 years old,” he said. “I’d have to live to 160 to be able to pay it off.”

Uhlir’s financial situation is worse than previous generation­s, he said. “Every year, the property valuations get higher and everything else don’t keep up.”

The family has farmed the land for 151 years, he said. “How do I sell it?”

Payday comes once a year on the farm: in the fall, when Uhlir sells cattle and crops.

Knox County classifies four soil types when taxing agricultur­al use of land, and much of Jeff’s soil received the highest rating and a higher tax rate, despite lower yields than farms in other counties with less sandy soil.

Farming becomes more challengin­g as he ages, Uhlir said, and he wonders what it will be like without Ethan next year, when he’s at college. “As my helper goes away, things get tougher.”

“At some point, the people raising your food are going to be dead,” Uhlir said. “Once we’re gone, we’re not coming back.”

The family has survived plenty of physical and personal hardships. Just months after taking over the farm in 2016, Uhlir broke his neck in a car accident. And on Mother’s Day 2020, most of their home was destroyed by an electrical fire that started in the attic.

The expense of unexpected health issues worries Uhlir, who told his wife not to call the ambulance if he has a heart attack or stroke.

“It would break my heart if this place got lost because of me, and I’m not going to be whole again if that happens,” he said.

Every year, Uhlir travels to Lincoln, the state capital, to testify on property tax bills. He is also appealing how the county taxes his land.

When Ethan takes over from Jeff Uhlir, he will probably continue to work in a health care facility an hour or two away.

To cover the property taxes, he might rent the land to another farmer or take part in the federal Conservati­on Reserve Program, which rents farmland for environmen­tal restoratio­n.

“It’s been in the name this long,” Ethan Uhlir said. “I don’t want to be the weak link and lose it.”

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