Rome News-Tribune

Ranchers lose hope for drought aid in time

- By Margery A. Beck Associated Press

OMAHA, Neb. — It’s hard to tell what frustrates Todd Eggerling more — the weather or Congress.

Searing temperatur­es and drought scorched Eggerling’s land in southeast Nebraska, leaving little grass to feed his 100 cattle. Then Congress left for a five-week break without agreeing on aid to help ranchers through one of the worst droughts in the nation’s history.

That means it will be September before Eggerling and other ranchers can even hope for disaster aid legislatio­n that includes cash to buy feed until they would normally send their cattle to feedlots or slaughter in the fall or winter. For some, it’s already too late. Out of grass and out of cash, they’ve sold their animals.

For others, time is rapidly running out as they try to hold on. Their decisions will affect the price and supply of meat for months, perhaps years, to come.

“I’d like to see every one of the senators and con- gressmen go out into one of these widespread, droughtstr­icken areas and spend a day,” said Eggerling, 44, of Martell, Neb. “Walk around and see the effects of what’s going on. Look at the local economies and see what’s going to happen to them. Then they can go back to Washington with a real perspectiv­e and say, ‘Hey; we need to do something.’”

Most farmers are having a hard year with drought and unusually warm temperatur­es in the middle of the country burning up everything from corn to cabbage. But ranchers are in a particular­ly precarious position because most don’t have access to federally subsidized insurance programs that cover crops like corn and soybeans.

Private companies won’t insure grazing land because it’s too hard to predict losses, and ranchers say pilot programs tested by the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e are too expensive and pay out little when there’s a loss, Nebraska Farm Service Agency director Dan Steinkruge­r said.

The White House announced last week that the federal government will buy up to $ 170 million worth of pork and other meat for food assistance programs in an effort to help drought- stricken farmers. The Defense Department also was expected to encourage its vendors to speed up meat purchases in an effort to prop up prices with a glut on the market expected in the next few months.

Feed prices soared amid the drought, and livestock farmers have been selling off animals for months as they run out of money. The meat is expected to hit grocery stores this fall, with prices dropping briefly and then rising early next year. Meanwhile, farmers are getting a fraction of what their animals would normally be worth at sales.

“It’s not like we can hold our products — like setting a shirt on a shelf until it sells for the price we set,” said Kristen Hassebrook, a spokeswoma­n for the Nebraska Cattlemen, a trade group. “We can’t just tell that steer or heifer to stop eating for a couple of days until the market share goes up. If we can’t feed that animal, we have to sell it for whatever the price is that day.”

The Obama administra­tion also has offered lowinteres­t emergency loans, opened federal land for grazing and distribute­d $30 million to get water to livestock. Farmers say they’ll take what help they can get, but emergency loans come with a tangle of red tape and aren’t available to everyone. Water is appreciate­d, but animals need to eat, and even with grazing on some federal land, hay is in short supply.

The House approved $383 million in disaster relief earlier this month, but Congress went home before the Senate acted on the bill. The Senate had previously passed a disaster aid package as part of a five- year farm bill, but GOP leaders in the House refused to bring that to a vote because many Republican­s object to the nearly $ 80 billion included for the food stamp program.

 ?? Nati Harnik
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The Associated Press ?? Todd Eggerling, of Martell, Neb., points to some of his cattle grazing on thin pasture. Eggerling would normally graze his 100 head of cattle through September, but the drought has left his pasturelan­d barren. He’s begun using hay he had planned to set...
Nati Harnik / The Associated Press Todd Eggerling, of Martell, Neb., points to some of his cattle grazing on thin pasture. Eggerling would normally graze his 100 head of cattle through September, but the drought has left his pasturelan­d barren. He’s begun using hay he had planned to set...

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