Official Newspaper of Eddy County since 1883

Letters to the Editor: April 20, 2020

ND Stockmen’s Association offers principles for USDA to consider in CARES relief distribution

Congress authorized $9.5 billion for livestock and specialty crop producers and local foods systems through the Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security (CARES) Act, but tasked the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) with designing how the funding will be allocated.

With the help of a specially appointed Livestock Relief Subcommittee comprised of state beef industry leaders, the North Dakota Stockmen’s Association (NDSA), which represents approximately 3,000 cattle-ranching families, established a set of foundational principles for USDA and other program crafters to consider in developing a meaningful and equitable distribution mechanism that helps address the severe impact the COVID-19 pandemic has had and will continue to have on the cattle industry.

“North Dakota cattle ranchers play an important role in helping ensure our nation’s food security and they have been hit hard through this crisis,” said NDSA President Dan Rorvig, who ranches with his family near McVille, N.D. “Our aim is to help guide decision-makers as they develop the CARES Act relief program and get some relief into producers’ hands during this critical time.”

The NDSA’s recommendations include the following:

• The cattle industry should have special consideration as funding is allocated across agricultural industries. As the largest segment of the U.S. agriculture industry, U.S. cattle production accounts for $67 billion (18%) of the $371 billion in total cash receipts from agricultural commodities. It has a presence in each of the nation’s 50 states on 729,046 operations and in each of North Dakota’s 53 counties on 8,245 operations. Additionally, cattle producers are not eligible for traditional safety net programs.

• Cow-calf and seedstock producers, stockers, backgrounders and feeders have all been impacted by the pandemic. The NDSA believes assistance must be delivered equitably across all producer segments of the cattle supply chain where there is demonstrated loss and financial need. Business size and structure are not reliable determinants of financial need or viability and should not be a prohibiting factor for eligibility. The packing segment of the cattle industry has not suffered a loss due to the pandemic, and the NDSA is firmly opposed to any relief funding being distributed to this segment.

• Economic assistance for cattle producers should prioritize need and not disrupt or mask market signals or be a subsidy program that stimulates overproduction or underwrites inefficient and unprofitable operations.

• The Congressional intent of the CARES Act is to get relief into the hands of producers quickly. In order to accomplish that, to support an already inundated Farm Service Agency network that likely will be tasked with administering the program and to not overburden livestock producers who are in the midst of calving and will soon be branding, breeding and turning cattle out to pasture, the NDSA believes the program should be as simple as possible and based on the inventory of three classes of cattle: cows, feeder cattle and fed cattle. It is the NDSA’s intention that newly born calves (399 pounds and less) not be counted as feeder cattle. (This weight break matches with other USDA programs.)

• The NDSA proposes a one-time, per-head payment based on qualifying producers’/feeders’ inventories as of Feb. 21. That was when U.S. cattle markets began to sharply decline after additional COVID-19 diagnoses and with the advent of social distancing rules and business closures. The NDSA believes that payments should be based on past inventories, not future ones, to avoid influencing producer marketing decisions and creating artificial market impacts. For example, let’s say that a producer, on Feb. 21, had 175 cows and 175 2019-born feeder cattle. His payment would be based on 175 x the per-head payment for cows + 175 x the per-head payment for feeder cattle.

• The pandemic has sent the cattle market in a nosedive. Losses in the U.S. cattle industry continue to mount. Some of those losses have already been realized and other very substantial losses are still looming. Early – and already very much outdated – projections have estimated the combined cattle industry damage to be more than $9.44 billion. The cow-calf industry is the foundation of the entire industry. The NDSA believes that, long term, it will suffer the longest residual impact of the COVID-19 crisis and, therefore, must be at the heart of the relief program. The NDSA suggests USDA consider a $150-per-head payment based on the applicants’ respective inventories as of Feb. 21.

• The NDSA recognizes that there is a finite pool of relief funds available and multiple commodities that will be sharing in the pool. As such, it supports a reasonable cap of $250,000 on the livestock relief support payment to an individual producer. This will also help assure that the dollars are spread across the cattle industry.

• The U.S. cattle industry and entire economy have been severely damaged by the COVID-19 pandemic. The NDSA firmly believes that relief should be earmarked for U.S. citizens and not flow to anyone from outside the country. 

The NDSA has pitched its ideas to the North Dakota Congressional delegation, USDA officials and other state and national ag leaders. Rorvig said the organization will continue to work with them and others as the program is rolled out.

The NDSA’s Livestock Relief Subcommittee was comprised of the following members: Brian Amundson, Jamestown, N.D., cow-calf producer and feeder; Chad Ellingson, St. Anthony, N.D., cow-calf and seedstock producer; Tim Erbele, Streeter, N.D., cow-calf producer and feeder; Jamie Hauge, Carson, N.D., cow-calf and seedstock producer and feeder; Melvin Leland, Sidney, Mont., cow-calf and seedstock producer; Will MacDonald, Bismarck, N.D., cow-calf and seedstock producer and feeder; Tim Petry, Fargo, N.D., North Dakota State University livestock economist; Dan Rorvig, McVille, N.D., cow-calf producer; Jeff Schafer, New Rockford, N.D., cow-calf producer and feeder; Larry Schnell, Dickinson, N.D., livestock auction market owner and operator; Jason Schmidt, Medina, N.D., cow-calf producer and feeder; Roger Stuber, Bowman, N.D., cow-calf and seedstock producer; and Warren Zenker, Gackle, N.D., cow-calf producer and feeder.

Established in 1929, the NDSA’s mission is to unite, protect, promote, educate and serve the state’s beef cattle industry. For more information, visit http://www.ndstockmen.org.

North Dakota

Stockmen’s Association

407 S. 2nd St.

Bismarck, ND 58504

(701) 223-2522

http://www.ndstockmen.org

Update from SBA Regional Administrator

Dan Nordberg

The U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) continues to aggressively move forward in assisting small businesses and non-profit organizations adversely affected by the devastating impact of coronavirus (COVID-19) in Region 8, and across the nation. As of today, 1,035,086 Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) loans valued at nearly $248 billion dollars from 4,664 lenders have been approved nationwide. We are less than two and a half weeks into the process of administering this massive economic recovery program which will help thousands of small businesses pay their employees during these turbulent times.

I am very grateful to the hundreds of banks, credit unions and farm credit institutions in Region 8 that have made this program work. As I’ve stated previously, by joining forces and leveraging the power of private industry, the Paycheck Protection Program is working and providing the businesses with the capital and certainty they need to retain their employees and continue serving our communities.

All of us understand the enormity of the stress small business owners are feeling right now not only for their families, but also for their employees. Please be assured that we will all get through this difficult situation united as a nation, and that the SBA will do its part to make the economic recovery effort a success. 

For additional resources, small business owners are encouraged to visit http://www.sba.gov/coronavirus, and please remember to follow us @SBArockymtn.

Dan Nordberg serves as the SBA’s Region VIII Administrator based in Denver.

Open Letter to Doug Burgum

Office of Governor

Governor Burgum,

While recognizing Executive Branch authority to act in the time of a bona fide state emergency within the bounds of the North Dakota Century Code, the North Dakota Constitution, and the United States Constitution, as members of the Legislative Branch, we are concerned primarily with protecting our state citizens’ rights pertaining to life, liberty, and property.

As you have said, the state of North Dakota is at less than 1% of hospital capacity. The stable and low number of new COVID-19 cases per day in the state as reported by the ND Department of Health underscores this fact, and removes any perceived need to continue select Executive Orders.

Executive Orders 2020-14, 2020-21, and 2020-21.1 particularly restrict personal liberty of movement and assembly. Executive Orders 2020-06, 2020-06.1, and 2020-06.2 particularly restrict the use of personal property in the form of business transactions between workers, employers, and customers. While these executive orders may have been issued with honorable intentions, they have resulted in immeasurable social and economic harm to families and businesses of all sizes.

It is imperative that North Dakota businesses be allowed to open their doors while encouraging them to implement safeguards to protect their employees, customers, and themselves. Failure to do so will likely result in many more businesses closing their doors and people losing their jobs. We urge you to rescind these Executive Orders, or at the very least, let them expire. We strongly request that you refrain from extending them or instituting others that unnecessarily harm the economy and prolong the phase of COVID-19 communicability. We believe any additional executive orders should be limited to lifting burdensome regulation and assisting the at-risk population.

Respectfully,

Rep. Dan Ruby, Dist. 38 Rep. Larry Bellew, Dist. 38 Rep. Rick Becker, Dist. 7

Rep. Tom Kading, Dist. 45 Rep. Luke Simons, Dist. 36 Rep. Aaron McWilliams, Dist. 20

Rep. Bob Paulson, Dist. 3

Rep. Jeff Hoverson, Dist. 3 Rep. Sebastian Ertelt, Dist. 26

Rep. Kathy Skroch, Dist. 26 Rep. Jeff Magrum. Dist. 28 Rep. Matthew Ruby, Dist. 40

Senator Pro-Tempore Oley Larsen