Albuquerque Journal

NM dairies tally BLIZZARD’S TOLL

Costs of Dec. storm still unknown, but milk output took a serious hit

- BY SUSAN MONTOYA BRYAN

I t could take months to tally the true costs of a winter storm that killed an untold number of livestock and derailed New Mexico’s dairy industry, the state’s top agricultur­e official warned lawmakers Monday.

Agricultur­e Secretary Jeff Witte said he didn’t want to venture a guess at the number of dairy cows and range cattle that were killed when a fierce winter storm dumped two feet of snow on New Mexico at the end of December.

Dairy operations and ranchers along the eastern side of the state were ready for the snow but not the gusts that came along with it. The strong winds formed drifts that overtook corrals, buried livestock and stalled milk production.

Freezing temperatur­es then set in, making for a brutal one-two punch.

“The snow and the winds came in so fast and just piled up over the top of the cattle in confined areas,” Witte said. “There was no way to anticipate the impacts.”

Witte said dairy producers and ranchers have been working with the Farm Service Agency for more than a month to tally losses as the state builds its case for a federal disaster declaratio­n.

Estimates of possible livestock deaths hovered around 25,000 in the days following the storm. Industry experts say that level hasn’t been reached in the official count but noted that dairies in New Mexico and neighborin­g West Texas marked some $25 million in lost milk production in the weeks following the storm.

Other concerns included health complicati­ons for the livestock that survived and had to ensure the cold temperatur­es while going unmilked.

Dairy operators are in survival mode, said Beverly Idsinga, executive director of the Dairy Producers of New Mexico.

“It’s not even going to be the loss of the animals that’s going to hit them the hardest. It’s going to be the loss of production and the cows they’re going to have to cull and all of that,” she said.

Before the storm, New Mexico was ranked top in the nation for producing more milk with fewer cows, but Idsinga is wor- ried the state will fall from that spot because producers won’t be able to replace their animals due to the low price of milk and a reluctance to take on more loans.

Republican Gov. Susana Martinez and members of the state’s congressio­nal delegation have been pushing federal officials for a disaster declaratio­n. Witte said the process, which could take up to six months, relies heavily on data that show affected counties recorded losses of 30 percent or more.

Under one federal program, dairy operators can claim up to $125,000 in livestock losses, but Witte says that would cover only a fraction of their damages.

“It’s going to take time for them to come back,” he said.

 ?? ROBERTO E. ROSALES/JOURNAL ?? New Mexico’s dairy industry suffered a blow from a December blizzard that smacked the East Side with up to two feet of snow.
ROBERTO E. ROSALES/JOURNAL New Mexico’s dairy industry suffered a blow from a December blizzard that smacked the East Side with up to two feet of snow.

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