Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Farm country stood by Trump, but the shutdown is pushing it to breaking point

- By Jack Healy and Tyler Pager

DENVER — In Georgia, a pecan farmer lost out on his chance to buy his first orchard. The local Farm Service Agency office that would have processed his loan applicatio­n was shut down.

In Wisconsin’s dairy country, a 55-year-old woman sat inside her new dream home, worried she would not be able to pay her mortgage. Her loan had come from an Agricultur­e Department program for low-income residents in rural areas, but all the account informatio­n she needed to make her first payment was locked away in an empty government office.

And in upstate New York, Pam Moore was feeding hay to her black-and-white cows at a small dairy that tottered on the brink of ruin. She and her husband had run up $350,000 in debt to keep the dairy running after 31 of their cows died of pneumonia, and their last lifeline was an emergency federal farm loan. But the money had been derailed by the government shutdown.

“It has just been one thing after another, after another, after another,” Moore, 57, said.

Farm country has stood by President Donald Trump, even as farmers have strained under two years of slumping incomes and billions in losses from his trade wars. But as the government shutdown drags into a third week, some farmers say the loss of crucial loans, payments and other services has pushed them — and their support — to a breaking point.

While many rural conservati­ves may loathe the idea of Big Government, farmers and the federal government are welded together by dozens of programs and billions of dollars in spending.

Now, farmers and farm groups say federal crop payments have stopped flowing. Farmers cannot get federally backed operating loans to buy seed for their spring planting, or feed for their livestock. They cannot look up new government data about beef prices or soybean yields to make decisions about planting and selling their goods in an ever-changing global market.

“This is real,” said Jeff Witte, president of the National Associatio­n of State Department­s of Agricultur­e and New Mexico’s agricultur­e secretary. “You had farmers who were in the process of closing a loan or getting an operating loan. Now there’s nobody there to service those.”

All week, Joe Schroeder has been listening to shutdown stories pouring into Farm Aid’s hotline. There was the cotton farmer who could not get disaster assistance to help him recover from Hurricane Michael. The woman in her 90s facing foreclosur­e on her family farm. The dairy farmer trying to make one last attempt to renegotiat­e her loan with the Farm Service Agency.

“You cannot reach anybody,” Schroeder said.

Trump is expected to address a largely friendly audience on Monday at the American Farm Bureau’s annual convention. Many farmers, including David Nunnery, 59, of Pike County, Miss., have stayed unflinchin­gly loyal to Trump and his demands for $5.7 billion for a border wall, even as the shutdown threatens their livelihood.

“I may lose the farm, but I strongly feel we need some border security,” Nunnery said.

But Davinder Singh, 41, the Georgia pecan farmer, said the border wall was not worth the price he had already paid — losing out on the chance to finally buy his own orchard instead of working other people’s land.

“Why spend money on the wall?” he said. He just wanted the government to reopen — “as soon as possible.”

The Agricultur­e Department had tried to blunt the effects by keeping local Farm Service Agency offices open through December. And it extended deadlines for farmers to apply for the administra­tion’s $12 billion bailout for farmers hurt by Trump’s trade policies.

States like Wisconsin, which lost at least 638 dairy farms last year, are particular­ly vulnerable.

The new farm bill passed in December contained programs to help dairy farmers weather swings in the market, and to help farmers struggling with stress and depression get mental health services. But those programs cannot be put in effect during the shutdown, said Sen. Tammy Baldwin, D-Wis.

“More uncertaint­y and more stress,” she said. “We can’t afford to wait months and months. We need to get this moving now.”

In Manitowoc County, Wis., Michael Slattery, a grain farmer, is waiting on $9,000 — money the federal government owes him under its trade bailout and a conservati­on program for farmers who take steps to reduce erosion and runoff from their fields.

Slattery said farmers needed these funds to make big offseason purchases such as seed, chemicals and diesel as they prepared for the planting season. But he said everything had ground to a standstill. The county Farm Service Agency committee cannot meet. Slattery, who is also an economist, said he cannot get any raw data to make farming forecasts.

“We’re being stooge,” he said.

In New York’s farming communitie­s, the shutdown is heaping played the additional pain onto farmers after a year of tariff losses, destructiv­e weather and labor shortages because of the Trump administra­tion’s immigratio­n crackdowns.

In Ovid, N.Y., it has left John Myer seething at Trump as he waits for at least $15,000 owed to him under the trade bailout. Myer needs the money to pay his property taxes, which are due by the end of January. Myer, 64, filed his paperwork before the shutdown, but said no payments were being processed.

“You could hardly call it a political stunt,” said Myer, who voted for Hillary Clinton in 2016. “It’s a personal power stance because he doesn’t really care about anything, I don’t think, besides himself.”

This past week, as Moore, the struggling dairy farmer, sipped coffee at Sallie’s Country Kitchen on Main Street in the 2,500-person town of Nichols, N.Y., she said it felt like her financial problems were closing in.

In a corner booth, she spotted a neighbor who had done $147.90 of yard work and trash hauling on her farm. She did not have enough money to pay him.

With little money left for food, she went to a food pantry Thursday afternoon, picking out frozen fruits and vegetables, pasta, bread, dried beans and some onions to cook when her 9-yearold grandson visited later in the week.

“We just have to do what we have to do to get by,” she said.

 ?? EMILY KASK / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? David Nunnery sits in a tractor at his dairy farm in Pike County, Miss. As the government shutdown goes into its third week, many farmers are struggling under the loss of crucial loans, payments and other services.
EMILY KASK / THE NEW YORK TIMES David Nunnery sits in a tractor at his dairy farm in Pike County, Miss. As the government shutdown goes into its third week, many farmers are struggling under the loss of crucial loans, payments and other services.
 ?? LIBBY MARCH / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Pam Moore, above, and her husband have run up $350,000 in debt to keep their dairy in Nichols, N.Y., running after 31 of their cows died of pneumonia, and their last lifeline was an emergency federal farm loan. Now, though, the money has been derailed by the government shutdown.
LIBBY MARCH / THE NEW YORK TIMES Pam Moore, above, and her husband have run up $350,000 in debt to keep their dairy in Nichols, N.Y., running after 31 of their cows died of pneumonia, and their last lifeline was an emergency federal farm loan. Now, though, the money has been derailed by the government shutdown.
 ?? LIBBY MARCH / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? John Myer, a farmer in Ovid, N.Y., is seething at President Donald Trump as he waits for at least $15,000 owed to him under the trade bailout. Myer needs the money to pay his property taxes, which are due by the end of January.
LIBBY MARCH / THE NEW YORK TIMES John Myer, a farmer in Ovid, N.Y., is seething at President Donald Trump as he waits for at least $15,000 owed to him under the trade bailout. Myer needs the money to pay his property taxes, which are due by the end of January.

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