Search Site   
Current News Stories
2025 Michigan, Ontario winter wheat winners are announced
Winter tree identification clinic set for Crown Hill Cemetery Dec. 17
Wilmington College expands their facility with the help of BrightFarms
Iowa State scientists working with plant breeders to improve crop performance
New pollution laws for CAFOs go into effect in Michigan
Love of farm periodicals goes back to high school
Bids flowed for Michigan on-farm brewery gear
Licking County 4-H youth development educator honored for 25 years of service
Washington state resident infected with a different type of bird flu
Higher cow inventories credited for increased milk production
Camryn Manion communications director for Kentucky farm groups
   
News Articles
Search News  
   
Illinois Iowa, Missouri counties declared USDA disaster areas
 
By STEVE BINDER
Illinois Correspondent
 
 WASHINGTON, D.C. — Thanks to Mother Nature dumping excessive rain on parts of the Midwest during late April and early May, USDA officials recently designated 52 counties in Missouri, eight in Illinois and nine in Iowa as disaster areas.
 
The designation automatically triggers the department’s Farm Service Agency to make low-interest emergency loans available to any grower or rancher who sustained at least a 30 percent reduction in anticipated revenue or significant onetime property losses.

And that includes growers forced to replant early-growing corn damaged because of the excess water. Even growers without crop insurance are eligible for the emergency loans as long as they show proof of insurance intent going forward.

The storms in Missouri and Illinois hit between April 24 and May 11, with some areas reporting more than 11 inches of rain in less than a 48-hour period. Wet weather in Iowa and northeastern Illinois came during a two-day stretch startingMay 15.

In Illinois, the month of April was the second wettest on record, according to State Climatologist Jim Angel. Weather conditions led to a near-record number of replantings in the southern part of the state. COUNTRY Financial alone received more than 2,000 claims for replanting, with most located in the southern part of Illinois, according to Claims Manager Brad Clow.

“We were hit pretty hard (with claims) right after the first wave of storms rolled through,” he said. “This year, the rains just came at the wrong time.”

Depending on the type of damage reported, emergency loan rates as of July 1 were set at anywhere between 2.875-3.75 percent. Terms generally require repayment no later than 18 months, but some loan terms may be extended to up to five years. Applicants have up to eight months to apply for loans.

The eligible Illinois counties include Alexander, Madison, Monroe, Randolph, St. Clair and Union in the southwestern part of the state, along with Carroll and Jo Daviess in northeastern Illinois. Iowa counties eligible for aid are Cass, Emmet, Harrison, Linn, Marion, Mills, Muscatine, Page and Taylor.

The counties eligible in Missouri include Audrain, Barton, Bollinger, Butler, Callaway, Camden, Cape Girardeau, Carter, Cole, Crawford, Dade, Dallas, Dent, Dunklin, Franklin, Gasconade, Iron, Jasper, Jefferson, Laclede, Lawrence, Lincoln, Madison, Maries, Miller, Moniteau, Montgomery, Morgan, New Madrid, Newton, Oregon, Osage, Pemiscot, Perry, Phelps, Pike, Pulaski, Reynolds, Ripley, Scott, St. Charles, Ste. Genevieve, St. Francois, St. Louis, St. Louis City, Stoddard, Texas, Warren, Wayne, Washington, Webster and Wright.
8/3/2017