The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

2020 a difficult year for dairy farmers, too

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They had to deal with government framework that couldn't provide enough places for perishable products to go.

Some Pennsylvan­ia dairy farmers, after years of struggle with volatile and evolving markets for their product, entered 2020 with cautious optimism.

But as L NP-Lancaster On line’ s Sean Sauro reported in September: “Then, COVID-19 hit. And by mid-March, a government-ordered shutdown forced dairy buying restaurant­s closed, instead sending customers to clear out grocery store shelves. Itwas an abrupt change in the farmto-consumer supply chain— one that left processors unable to quickly adapt, leading to waste and yet another round of profit loss.”

The pandemic has had devastatin­g ramificati­ons for so many aspects of our lives, economy and culture.

Sauro examined the difficult and heartbreak­ing year that local dairy farmers have experience­d.

Their stories and their livelihood­s are intertwine­d with the necessary shutdowns to keep the deadly novel coronaviru­s from spreading further in Pennsylvan­ia, causing more deaths and potentiall­y crippling the health care system.

But the necessity of the shutdowns doesn’t lessen the anguish for farmers.

Farmers also found themselves dealing with an inefficien­t industry and government framework that — for a time — couldn’t provide enough places for perishable products to go.

In a May editorial, we wrote of “the incredibly frustratin­g scenes of milk being dumped by dairy farmers because there was no market for it amid a pandemic that has jolted traditiona­l buyers and supply chains.”

Additional­ly, “there was no appreciabl­e infrastruc­ture to distribute surplus food from farms to food banks before COVID-19.”

For dairy farmers, profits were literally going down the drain.

While the situation has recovered somewhat fromthat lost spring, there remain no easy answers moving forward for the Pennsylvan­ia dairy industry.

Not with the continuing double jeopardy of COVID-19 and an ongoing transforma­tion of the dairy industry.

In recent years, LNP-Lancaster Online has detailed the struggles of dairy farmers who have seen the value of milk drop more than 2% since 2012 and are battling to keep their farms viable.

Said one dairy farmer in 2018: “I’d rather keep on going, but I don’t see any milk futures as being profitable, so there’s no sense in keeping cows. It’s not profitable.”

— LNP-Lancaster Online

Don’t give upon Halloween

Coronaviru­s pandemic recommenda­tions and decisions area mixed bag. You never really know what you will pull out.

Reach in and you might get a real treat— something factbased and common sense that everyone should be able to realize is the way to go. Don’t cough on Grandma, for example.

Youmight also pull out the wormy apple of a contradict­ion that flies inthe face of the last thing youwere told.

Buckle up, because Halloween is coming and things are already getting tricky.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention announced in September that trick-or-treating should be avoided because of COVID-19 and the need to practice social distancing to stay safe.

Some local government­s are already saying “smell my feet” to that idea and announced they will continue with official, designated trick or-treat dates and times in manner. And it makes sense.

For months, people have fought about whether it’s necessary to wear masks in public. Halloween is the day many of them will do it quite willingly.

Halloween can be less a celebratio­n of ghosts and goblins than it can be about creativity.

People who can find away to make a kid a Transforme­r costume out of cardboard boxes can probably figure out away to not just hand-out treats in a socially distant manner but to do so in an innovative and entertaini­ng way.

And kids need this. Communitie­s need this. We all need this.

We have lost a lot since March. Easter and birthday sand graduation and pro manda whole summer’ s worth of festivals.

More than anything, we have lost people — more than 206,000 deaths to date in the United States, more than 1 million lost lives worldwide.

But this couldbe onepiece of normal that kids and families and neighborho­ods could take back as long as they do it safely.

It just has to be approached that way.

People need to remember that if we want this treat, we can’t play tricks.

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