Coronavirus Takes Its Toll on Hospitality Industry

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At the Council’s December webinar and virtual annual meeting,  Mary Holland, owner/operator of Hereford House Restaurants and Pierpont’s at Union Station, said her industry was already prepared for COVID-mandated quarantines, lockdowns and closures that heavily targeted restaurant and bar establishments. Additional sanitation requirements and stricter oversight are nothing new to her fellow restaurateurs.   “Our industry is already held to high standards,” said Holland. Phil Strnad, general manager of the Hilton President Hotel for the last 13 years, reiterated, “People don’t understand how much we get inspected for cleanliness.” But Holland noted her dining rooms and kitchens upgraded their sanitation products and systems anyway.  

For the most part, the pandemic has not made things easy for the hospitality industry. Jason Fulvi, president of Visit KC, reported some of the bleak statistics:

  • 167 events were canceled this year representing 300,766 room nights of lost business.

  • Downtown room occupancy on March 11, 2020 was 71.5%; a week later, March 18, the occupancy rate was 8.8%.

But there was some good news. The rate had recovered somewhat to 22.5% over Thanksgiving and 45% of corporate travelers are considering resuming domestic business travel in the near future. Strnad said no one had any idea how bad the pandemic was going to be. He added, “We need to get people traveling and back into hotels again; get them comfortable.” The stakes for doing so are high for the regional tourism industry. Tourism has a $5.6 billion economic impact on the area annually. It supports 48,350 jobs. Kansas City hosts 25.2 million conventioneers and leisure visitors a year, and almost half (47%) stay overnight.

Fulvi suggested road trips and travel closer to home will likely drive much of the hospitality recovery as COVID-19 recedes. Surveys by 2020 MMGY Travel Intelligence indicate 68% of travelers feel safer in their own car; 45% are likely to travel by car after COVID-19; 43% will travel to destinations close to home. Trips of 300 miles one way appear to the preferred distance for Americans these days. 

Latest News & Updates in KC Agriculture - December 2020

Developments

Major League Baseball announced that it was “correcting a longtime oversight in the game’s history” by elevating the Negro Leagues from 1920 through 1948 to major-league status, a move that recognizes the sport’s long-excluded Black pioneers and immediately rewrites baseball’s record books. Roughly 3,400 Black and Latino players from seven distinct leagues, who were barred from joining the segregated National and American Leagues, will now be classified as “major-leaguers,” alongside white stars of the era, the Wall Street Journal reported. All statistics and records for those players will become part of MLB’s official history. Bob Kendrick, president of the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum in Kansas City, called the move “historical validation for those who had been shunned from the major leagues and had the foresight and courage to create their own league that helped change the game and our country, too.” Source: Wall Street Journal, December 17, 2020.

After 40 years of public service, U.S. Senator Pat Roberts delivered his final speech on the Senate floor, December 10. His office highlighted comments from his address below. (The full transcript is available here.)

  • “I have had the honor and privilege of representing Kansans for 16 years in the House and 24 in the Senate.

  • “I have held six gavels in the House and Senate, and that, in and of itself, might be a record. But, it’s what happened during my tenures as chairman that I believe have had the most lasting impacts. It’s not just having the gavel – it’s what you do with it.

  • “To be a member of this United States Senate is a true privilege. A working family, it is the greatest deliberative body in the world. But, today, as compared to when I first came to the Senate, it’s the deliberative part that gives me great concern. I lament the loss of comity, the ability to work together, or just to get along. Sadly, gridlock appears to be the new normal. However, it does not have to be.

  • “I am very proud that I have had the privilege of being chairman of a committee that does get along, and we do get things done – the Senate Agriculture Committee. And, it really is not that hard.

  • “Here, in the Senate, only we can decide what our new normal is, and we ought to get to know one another. We don’t have to let the apparent gravitational pull of more and more politics in pursuit of power to change what our founders gave us – the creation of a nation of liberty and freedom, the envy of the world – and to literally move the United States Senate from the moorings of its historic and great past to simply be a rubber stamp for radical change.

  • “Let us once again become a body of respect, humility, cooperation, achievement and friendship. That can and should be our new normal.

  • “The entire country could use a little bit of what we say in Kansas, ‘Ad astra per aspera’ – to the stars through difficulties.”

The Water Resources Development Act of 2020 (WRDA) (S. 1811) was approved by the House of Representatives. S.1811 represents an agreement between House and Senate committees on final WRDA language, based in part on H.R. 7575, which passed the House by voice vote in July 2020 and was introduced by House Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure Ranking Member, U.S. Rep. Sam Graves and his colleagues on the Committee. The bill is critical for flood control, navigation, ports, locks, dams, and other water resources infrastructure: 

  • “North Missouri’s inland waterways are dependent on the Water Resources Development Act (WRDA). Ensuring that timely flood control and navigation improvements continue to occur is a centerpiece of this bill,” said Ranking Member Graves.  “Lives and livelihoods depend on the important reforms in WRDA and I am proud to cosponsor this bipartisan bill so we can help reduce the disastrous flooding we’ve seen over the years and improve the navigability of our rivers. This bill is the product of a bipartisan effort and it’s the perfect example of the way things should work around here.”

  • The final bill contains many important provisions to North Missouri including expanding work on a Lower Missouri River Basin Flood Risk and Resiliency Plan, expedited completion of maintenance and repair activities for Federally operated and maintained levee systems in the Lower Missouri River Basin, changes to the PL 84-99 non-federal levee program to enhance flood protection, further prohibition of Interception-Rearing Complex’s (IRC’s), changes to the Inland Waterways Trust Fund cost-share which would help make repairs and upgrades to locks and dams on the Mississippi River, and continuation of work on the Upper Mississippi River Comprehensive Plan, along with several other provisions critical to flood control and navigation. 

Boehringer Ingelheim will contribute $800,000 over the next five years to the Kansas State University Foundation to support interaction and collaboration between the company and veterinary students. The university said the collaboration will create opportunities for the company’s employees to train and present to students and allow for additional professional development and learning initiatives between Boehringer Ingelheim and the university. “The Kansas City Animal Health Corridor and BI share a history dating back more than 100 years,” said Randolph Legg, BI’s head of the U.S. commercial business. 

Kansas City-based American Hereford Association reports that producers, brand partners and customers celebrated 25 years of the Certified Hereford Beef® (CHB) brand in 2020. Among the world’s great beef brands, Certified Hereford Beef is found in the nation’s best restaurants and retail outlets. “The Certified Hereford Beef team is proud to celebrate a brand that continues to evolve and accommodate the demands of consumers worldwide,” says CHB President and CEO Amari Seiferman. With 7 million head harvested and a total of 900 million pounds sold, the brand continues to provide a growing opportunity for rural America and a safe and wholesome product for families everywhere.

Costco announced it will ban the use of cages for chickens in its global egg supply, saying it’s the first U.S. retailer to issue a global policy on the confinement of animals in its supply chain. “We are in the process of making that transition to cage-free eggs,” said Josh Dahmen, financial planning and investor relations director for Costco. 

U.S. farm profit this year will rise to a seven-year high after government aid payments doubled during the pandemic and trade disputes, according to USDA. Net farm income this year will jump 43% to $119.6 billion, the highest inflation-adjusted level since 2013, USDA said. The latest data show the increasing dependence of growers on government assistance after three years of trade and COVID-19 aid on top of traditional subsidies. Farmers face a less certain outlook next year if the Biden administration adjusts payments. Direct government aid, accounting for 39% of net farm income, rose to a record $36.5 billion from $22.4 billion last year. The forecast by USDA’s Economic Research Service marked a $16.9 billion rise in net income from a September projection. 

Comments from speakers at the conclusion of the Agricultural Retailers Association’s 2020 Conference and Expo, December 2, included these prognostications: 

  • Scott Rawlins, of Kansas City, Kansas-based ag product distributor Wilber-Ellis Company, said “Waters of the U.S. returns in some fashion; we can expect TPP to come back; [we] should get used to hearing the term environmental justice; [we should] watch for nutrition programs and green payments; and [we] expect a more active regulatory [environment].”

  • Growmark’s Chuck Spencer encourages ag retailers to see the opportunities in working with politicians and political appointees who may be considered to have a more urban rather than rural background. 

Kansas City-Kansas-based Wilbur-Ellis Company LLC has acquired the assets of Probe Schedule LLC, Aurora, Colorado, to provide its customers with a technologically innovative irrigation water management system. Probe Schedule is a leading irrigation management company backed by 24 years of continual research and development efforts. Its irrigation water management (IWM) software receives and collects data from in-field hardware devices and weather stations to calculate accurate crop water usage and soil moisture, providing growers with specialized irrigation schedules. 

Events

The Missouri Department of Agriculture is offering 30 high school students representing 4-H clubs and FFA chapters, as well as farm families, throughout Missouri the opportunity to explore careers in agriculture through the 2021 Missouri Agribusiness Academy. It is a competitive program for sophomores interested in pursuing agriculture-related degrees and careers. The students selected will have a yearlong opportunity to learn about the unique opportunities for careers in the Kansas City area, volunteer at the Missouri State Fair and learn more about the agriculture industry in Jefferson City. Since 1988, MAbA has graduated 990 students through a competitive application and interview process. The first leg of the 2021 MAbA will be held June 7-11, and marks the program’s 34th year. Students interested in participating must submit an application by Feb. 1, 2021. More information available here.

People

U.S. Rep David Scott (D-Georgia) will become the first Georgian and the first African American to lead the U.S. House Agriculture Committee. The House Democratic Caucus ratified the choice of Scott to lead the panel. He represents a suburban district south and west of Atlanta. The committee oversees the USDA as well as food stamps, school meals and soil and water conservation. Rep. Scott says he wants to focus on climate change’s threat to the nation’s food supply and other issues. He replaces Rep. Collin Peterson, a Minnesota Democrat who lost his bid for reelection. 

The Missouri Farm Bureau selected Garrett Hawkins, 40, as its 15th president Sunday, making him one of the youngest Farm Bureau presidents in the nation and the youngest president ever to lead Missouri's largest farm organization. He will start serving his two-year term immediately. 

Seth Meyer will be returning to USDA to assume the position of chief economist. Meyer takes the place of Rob Johansson, who has held the position since 2015 and plans to depart USDA at the end of January and accept a position as the associate director of economics and policy analysis at the American Sugar Alliance. Meyer comes from the University of Missouri’s Food and Agricultural Policy Research Institute, where he served as an associate director and research professor. 

Congressman-elect for Kansas’ 1st Congressional District Tracey Mann has announced his senior staff, starting in their official capacity on Jan. 3. His chief of staff will be Brandon Harder. He most recently served as the director of government relations and communications at the Farmers' Rice Cooperative. He also served as Sen. Jerry Moran’s agriculture and trade adviser. Reid Petty will serve as Mann’s district director. Petty most recently worked as Moran's Southwest Kansas District Director. Source: Agri-Pulse Communications.

Governor Laura Kelly announced her intention to appoint David Toland, Secretary for the Kansas Department of Commerce, to become her Lieutenant Governor when current Lieutenant Governor Lynn Rogers vacates the position in January. “Replacing Lynn Rogers is no small task, but of all the candidates I considered, David is ready to hit the ground running in his new role,” Governor Laura Kelly said. “I have been impressed throughout his tenure as Commerce Secretary by his enthusiasm, energy, and commitment to economic development and business recruitment. I look forward to our continued partnership as he takes on his new responsibilities in the Lieutenant Governor’s office.”

The National Cattlemen’s Beef Association recognized U.S. Senator and Chairman of the Senate Agriculture, Nutrition and Forestry Committee, Pat Roberts (R-Kansas) with the Capitol Hill Top Hand Award in honor of his long career fighting for cattle producers and rural communities in our nation’s capital. NCBA President Marty Smith said, “It is my honor to give Chairman Roberts the first Top Hand award and I personally thank him for all that he has done for every U.S. cattle producer.” The Capitol Hill Top Hand Award, in its inaugural year, is given to one elected official annually, who goes above and beyond the call of duty to represent cattle producers nationwide.

Ag Business Group Re-Elects Krissek, Johansen as 2021 Leaders

 
(L to R) Greg Krissek, Dustin Johansen

(L to R) Greg Krissek, Dustin Johansen

 

December 10, 2020, KANSAS CITY, MO: Greg Krissek, CEO of the Kansas Corn Growers Association and Kansas Corn Commission was re-elected chairman of the Agricultural Business Council of Kansas City at the group’s annual meeting held December 10. Dustin Johansen, Vice President, Osborn Barr Paramore, was re-elected vice chairman of the Council.

Krissek, a native of Kansas City, Kansas, has over 30 years’ experience working with agriculture and ethanol sectors. Prior to being named CEO of Kansas Corn in 2014, his previous stints included executive positions with Kansas Department of Agriculture, ICM, Inc., and Kennedy and Coe. He earned his law degree and MBA from the University of Denver. He earned his bachelor’s degree from Rockhurst University in Kansas City.

Johansen manages the Kansas City office of Osborn Barr Paramore and leads OBP’s animal agriculture and equipment practices. Previously he spent nearly 20 years at Caterpillar in sales and marketing. Johansen was raised on a farm in central Missouri and is a graduate of the University of Missouri.

The Council’s Board of Directors is composed of 20 persons who serve staggered two-year terms. Those elected to the Board for a two-year term commencing January 1, 2021 were:

  • Shonda Atwater, Metropolitan Community College

  • Alan Barkema, Apical Economics

  • Eric Bohl, Missouri Farm Bureau

  • Bill Ford, Lathrop GPM

  • JJ Jones, Roots & Legacies Consulting

  • Debbie Kirchhoff, Kansas State University - Olathe

  • Jackie Klippenstein, Dairy Farmers of America

  • Stephanie Siders, CC Capitol Advisors

  • Brad Tolbert, John Deere

  • Bill Vaughn, Merck Animal Health

  • Kelly Farrell, Farrell Growth Group

Krissek extended his thanks to several outgoing leaders who have played an influential role in the Council’s activities through the years.  Those include long-time board members Gary Anderson, Dennis Bode, Ron Seeber, and Alan Wessler.

Members of the Agricultural Business Council include over 350 individuals associated with the food and agribusiness sector.  Agribusiness continues to be one of the largest business sectors in the Kansas City region, accounting for 8 percent of the workforce and contributing 22 percent of the gross regional product.  For further information:  Bob Petersen (816) 810-5000; www.agbizkc.com

Digging Deeper... The Loss of a Giant

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Earlier this month, agriculture – locally, nationally and globally – lost a giant when Dr. Barry Flinchbaugh passed away.  For more than half a century the Kansas State University agricultural economist influenced the formation of U.S. farm policy. In 2014, Dr. Flinchbaugh received the Agricultural Business Council’s Jay B. Dillingham Award for Agricultural Leadership and Excellence. He worked on every Farm Bill since 1976, and it has been noted he met every American president since Harry Truman. In this edition of Digging Deeper, we are featuring tributes to Dr. Flinchbaugh from Sara Wyant, founder of Agri-Pulse Communications and its chief editor, and U.S. Senator Jerry Moran, who said, “There may be no Kansan whose company I enjoyed more.” But before getting to their remembrances, it might be nice and surely fun to recall the directness, wit and insight Dr. Flinchbaugh provided whenever he spoke. So here, then, is a Sampler of Flinchbaughian Rhetoric (excerpted from his keynote speech to a Kansas Commodity Classic audience in January 2018). Dennis McLaughlin, McLaughlin Writers LLC

  • “We’ve got a solid Kansas delegation with Sen. Moran and Sen. Roberts, and with Dr. Marshall we have a member on the House Ag Committee again….. If the other 49 states had the kind of delegation Kansas does, there’d be a lot fewer problems. But unfortunately, they don’t.”

  • “There is a big lesson that needs to be learned or re-learned [regarding trade]. This is a global economy and we aren’t going back. In 1960, about 9% of our GDP came from trade. In 2016, it was 24%.

  • “We’ve been through the nonsense of having congressmen fall for the idea of separating the two [regarding food stamps]…..If you take food stamps out of the bill, then that’s the last Farm Bill you’ll see. Urban congressmen don’t have any reason to support crop insurance without a nutrition program. The two have got to stay together.”

  • “You’ve got people  saying if food stamp recipients need to be drug-tested, then so do farmers getting subsidies for crop insurance……It’s a no-win position.”

  • “TPP was probably the most lucrative bill for farmers in my lifetime. It put the U.S. in a strong, countervailing position of power to China. It put two powers in the region instead of one bully. Rejecting it played right into China’s hands. We have to get across the point that multi-lateral agreements are far superior to bi-lateral agreements for farmers.”

  • “At the end of the day, the question is, if you don’t have exports, you need to cut ag by 25%. Which 25% do you want to put out of business?”

  • “You get all this talk about H2A workers, but we don’t need seasonal workers. Cows have to be milked 365 days a year. We need permanent workers.”

  • “The reality of the last several years has been that net migration is going south, wages are going up and labor shortages are becoming common.”


 
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An Economist Who Influenced Decades of U.S. Farm Policy,

And Thousands of Students and Farm Leaders

Sara Wyant, Founder and Editor-in-Chief, Agri-Pulse Communications

There are a lot of different and talented agricultural economists in this country. But Dr. Flinchbaugh was unique in his style, his colorful stories and his convictions. If you ever met him, you wouldn’t forget him.

As a professor and extension educator, Flinchbaugh taught agricultural policy subjects to approximately 4,000 undergraduates and, as a much sought-after speaker, lectured at farm meetings around the country. Most recently, he served as professor emeritus, department of agricultural economics, at Kansas State University, where he joined the faculty in 1971.

"He was always able to look at complex numbers and develop a narrative around those numbers that helped everyone understand the policy and the implications — whether it was the farmer, the elected official or the person in the White House," noted Mike Torrey, principal and founder of Michael Torrey Associates and a former student in Dr. Flinchbaugh's farm policy class.

Kansas farmer Jay Armstrong was Dr. Flinchbaugh’s second teaching assistant in 1972-74. “I drove him around to every county in Kansas when he educated farmers on how use-value appraisal would work. It was complicated, but Barry’s style made it so farmers could understand it,” Armstrong recalled. “From that effort, ag organizations took hold of their now educated membership and got urban candidates to support a change to the Kansas constitution which has saved farmers untold millions.  

“His plain speaking style is what made him a necessary force in Kansas ag policy and in turn his talents were used nationally with Freedom to Farm. Outspoken? Certainly. Effective? Definitely, yes.”

Students flocked to Dr. Flinchbaugh’s classes and many remember his style as tough but rewarding. He frequently chewed on a cigar and in later years, took pleasure in stomping his cane at his side to make a point.

“The truth was that Barry’s ‘bark was worse than his bite’. He would challenge and sometimes even scare students. But once they became amiable to working and understanding, he would bend over backwards for them - not only in their studies but helping them with their lives and finances. In short, his heart was bigger than his bravado,” Armstrong added. “He told me many times, ‘put humor into teaching and students will remember….that’s the goal.’”

During his early professional years, he began working with leaders of both political parties on federal farm bills. On a national level, his contributions to the development of U.S. agricultural policy have included serving as chairman of the Commission on 21st Century Production Agriculture formed by the 1996 FAIR Act (also known as the Freedom to Farm Act).

Dana Brooks, the CEO of the Pet Food Institute, said she first met Dr. Flinchbaugh when he chaired the 21st Century Ag Commission in 2000. She was a new staffer on Capitol Hill. “I was mesmerized by his intelligence, personality, leadership and commitment to agriculture. When I started looking at graduate school programs, I picked Kansas State University because of its reputation and Dr. Flinchbaugh was an advisor to the program. He will always be larger than life in my memories.”

Some of Dr. Flinchbaugh’s speeches and comments created controversy. Gregg Doud, who is now the top agricultural adviser for the U.S. Trade Representative, remembers walking across the Kansas State campus during his freshman year when the American Agriculture Movement hung a Flinchbaugh look-alike in effigy. They were upset about comments Flinchbaugh had made about whether or not there were too many farmers in 1985. “I remember thinking, ‘who is this guy?’” Doud recalled. “He taught me never to back down.”

Many government leaders shared their memories of the impact he had on policy, as well as on them personally. Said Kansas U.S. Senator Pat Roberts, chairman of the Senate Agriculture Committee: “Franki [wife] and I are deeply saddened by the news of Dr. Barry Flinchbaugh’s passing earlier today. Dr. Flinchbaugh was nothing short of a legend in his field. His expertise made him one of the most coveted and trusted advisors for agricultural policy for decades.

"Dr. Flinchbaugh’s legacy as an educator and advocate will live on through his work at Kansas State University and his lifetime of dedication to agriculture. I will not only miss his guidance, but I will also miss his friendship, wit and humor. I have many special memories of Barry, in particular our times together on the Pat and Dan Show, where he moderated lively discussions between former Congressman Dan Glickman, our state agriculture groups and myself. Our prayers are with the Flinchbaugh family during this difficult time.”

When he learned that Dr. Flinchbaugh had died, Dan Glickman, who served as Secretary of Agriculture from 1995-2001 and appointed Flinchbaugh to the Commission on 21st Century Agriculture, said “There will be a little bit of Kansas history lost. He has been my mentor for decades and will be fondly remembered for his wit, his wisdom and irreverence.” Glickman added, “He was one of the most unforgettable characters I’ve ever met.”

A Life of Accomplishment

Dr. Flinchbaugh served on a variety of boards of directors such as the Farm Foundation, advisory organizations like the 25x’25 Alliance and national task forces, providing input on domestic food and agriculture policy and serving as an advisor to industry and government leaders

Originally from York, Pennsylvania, Dr. Flinchbaugh earned a bachelor's degree in animal science in 1964 and a master's degree in agricultural economics in 1967, both from Penn State. He went on to earn a doctoral degree in agricultural economics from Purdue University. Dr. Flinchbaugh has been honored with Outstanding Teacher Awards three times by Kansas State University and has been recognized by the agricultural industry with several honors. He received a Distinguished Service Award from the American Farm Bureau and recently was selected as one of Farm Credit's 100 Fresh Perspectives, a national recognition for leaders making positive contributions to agriculture and rural communities. He was a lifetime member of Penn State's Alumni Association, its Ag Alumni Society and its alumni Stockman's Club.

He and his wife Cathy raised three children: David (deceased), James, and Katherine. He is also survived by two grandchildren: Henry and Piper. A celebration of Dr. Flinchbaugh’s life will be scheduled sometime after the pandemic is over. The family suggests that memorials be sent to the Kansas State University Foundation for the Flinchbaugh Agricultural Policy Chair (Account O64415), the Flinchbaugh Agricultural Policy Student Scholarship (Account O64410) or given to a charity of your choice in Barry's name. The Kansas State University Foundation is at 1800 Kimball Avenue, Suite 200, Manhattan, Kansas 66502-3373.


 
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Remembering A Friend and Agricultural Titan

U.S. Senator Jerry Moran, Kansas

Dr. Barry Flinchbaugh was an icon of agricultural policy in Kansas and throughout the nation. Dr. Flinchbaugh was well known for his involvement in helping craft farm bills for nearly five decades, and his authority on agriculture issues made him a trusted advisor to me and many prominent federal officials of both parties throughout his lifetime.

More importantly Dr. Flinchbaugh was my friend. We met when I called him more than 30 years ago to ask a question about Kansas tax policy. Ever since, I’ve admired and respected (loved) him. He spoke his mind, told me what he thought and made me a better senator and person. His death is a huge loss to me and all of his many friends, and it is hard to find the words to capture a man revered by so many. There may be no Kansan whose company I enjoyed more.

Each year, I would make a surprise visit to his ag policy class at K-State. His trademark sarcasm, wit and quips that made him a talented professor and a sought-after speaker was always on full display at the front of the classroom. I saw he loved and cared about his students and those feelings were mutual.

There is no doubt Dr. Flinchbaugh’s presence in ag policy will be felt for generations to come through the thousands of students he taught and mentored during his decades-long career as a professor at Kansas State. His loss will be felt deeply within the ag community, and Robba [wife] and I will be praying for Dr. Flinchbaugh’s family and loved ones during this time.

Latest News & Updates in KC Agriculture - November 2020

Developments

As COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations continue to rise in Missouri and across the Midwest, Governor Mike Parson signed Executive Order 20-19, November 19, 2020, extending the state of emergency in Missouri through March 31, 2021.  This will allow continued flexibility in deploying critical resources around the state as well as the continued utilization of the Missouri National Guard and easing of regulatory burdens to further assist Missouri’s COVID-19 response efforts. 

Farmer confidence is at its highest in the five-year history of Purdue University’s Ag Economy Barometer, the latest monthly results show. Confidence rose by 27 points to 183 in October, the highest reading since the barometer began in 2015. More farmers than ever said their farms were in better financial condition than a year ago, and a solid majority expected good times in the near to medium term, Chuck Abbott reports. “The late summer/fall rally in commodity prices, combined with government payments arising from the second round of the Coronavirus Food Assistance Program (CFAP2), appeared to be the primary drivers behind the sentiment improvement,” Purdue economists James Mintert and Michael Langemeier wrote.

Boehringer Ingelheim Animal Health announced a collaboration with Henke-Sass, Wolf to develop a needle-free injection device for pigs. The device, which is expected to be available beginning in December 2020 in most countries, will be called FreVAX through Boehringer and EPIG as part of HSW. (IHS Markit Connect) 

From the Land of Kansas is a trademark program designed to promote and celebrate agricultural experiences and products grown, raised or produced in Kansas. The From the Land of Kansas brand makes it easier for people to find and support Kansas-made products and Kansas-based businesses. The program, affiliated with the Kansas Department of Agriculture, offers an array of incentives to Kansas companies that grow, raise, serve or produce. “Purchases directly support small Kansas businesses and promotes local Kansas communities,” say Janelle Dobbins, marketing manager for the program. For information about holiday gift boxes and promotions contact Dobbins at Janelle.dobbins@ks.gov or 785-564-6759.

Brakke Consulting surveyed people in the animal health industry about their Thanksgiving plans and how they will change from last year.  About 17% of respondents said they spent last Thanksgiving at home with their immediate family. But this year that number will triple to 60%.  Likewise, 42% said they spent last Thanksgiving with extended family and friends. This year only 9% will celebrate Thanksgiving with a large gathering.  Interestingly, 28% said they would spend Thanksgiving with extended family (no friends) compared to 29% last year – not much change.

Trade teams from West and East Africa, Indonesia, Vietnam, Thailand, New Zealand, and Australia visited Kansas last month virtually, as the U.S. Grains Council hosted its Export Exchange Conference. The virtual event included a trade show, meetings and trade team visits with international buyers over Zoom. Kansas Corn, Kansas Department of Agriculture and K-State’s International Grains Program hosted a virtual trade show booth for Kansas grains, and Kansas Corn staff and leaders participated in the online Grain Exchange Conference. This year’s Grain Exchange overall hosted 1,207 registrants from 55 different countries.  The Kansas Corn Commission is a long-time supporter of the US Grains Council, which is based in Washington, D.C. and has offices around the globe.

Corteva Agriscience has been honored by the Utility Arborist Association as a recipient of the 2020 Partners in Excellence Award. Presented to companies that go above and beyond to support UAA and its mission, the award recognizes members, sponsors and volunteers committed to the enhancement of utility arboriculture and right-of-way management.

Kansas City Southern president and CEO Patrick J. Ottensmeyer, and executive vice president for Precision Scheduled Railroading Sameh Fahmy will address the Credit Suisse 8th Annual Virtual Industrials Conference on Thursday, December 3, 2020. Interested investors not attending the conference may listen to the presentation via a simultaneous webcast on KCS’ website.

A new study by the University of Illinois has an optimistic insight on the global agriculture industry’s consumption of ground and surface water, said to account for about 70% of the world’s supply.  According to the researchers, water use by the agriculture industry has actually decreased over a 15-year period, from 1995 - 2010. The comprehensive study looked at water withdrawals in U.S. agriculture and food production over that time period and found an 8.3% drop for crops and a 14% decline for livestock use. The downturn in water usage is a result of a combination of factors, such as increasing efficiency of the irrigation system, the growth of genetically modified crops, a change in domestic per-capita income and a changing of grown crops. A detailed PDF report of the study – What Factors Drive the Changes in Water Withdrawals in the U.S. Agriculture and Food Manufacturing Industries between 1995 and 2010? – is available at the American Chemical Society, ACS Publications.

Blockapps, an Albany, New York-based, blockchain platform provider has launched TraceHarvest Network with hope of transforming the way agricultural products are managed. The new blockchain-powered business network was developed in collaboration with Bayer. The platform will set new standards in sustainability, driving digital transformation and food system resiliency that will shape the future of the agriculture industry. More information available here.                        

Events

The pandemic has led many conference organizers to shift their farm industry events online this winter. The American Farm Bureau Federation and Commodity Classic have both announced their annual conventions will be held virtually in January and March, respectively. The Cotton Council will hold its Beltwide Cotton Conferences virtually, in January. And EuroTier is also going online this year, in February. Other conferences have been postponed, including the National Cattlemen’s Beef Association and the Midwest Poultry Federation. USDA’s Agricultural Outlook Forum is scheduled for the end of February, with details pending, and the National Farmers Union’s conference is scheduled to be held in person in San Francisco, also in late February. 

Farmers and crop specialists can hear updates from some of the nation’s leading agricultural researchers December 1-2 at the 2020 University of Missouri Crop Management Conference. Due to Missouri COVID-19 restrictions, this year’s conference is offered live online, said MU Extension weed scientist Kevin Bradley. Details and registration available here.

Kansas State University's Olathe campus is offering a workshop covering the regulatory aspects of animal drug and vaccine development. The workshop can be attended in-person at the Olathe campus or virtually: Animal Health Regulatory 101, 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. December 9-10. Attendees will learn how to navigate two of the federal agencies that oversee these products, FDA and USDA; as well as the requirements the agencies place on the development and maintenance of drugs and vaccines.

Kansas Farm Bureau will host its 102nd annual meeting December 3-5 with a mix of virtual presentations, as voting delegates will gather at 10 sites across the state to conduct business and set policy for 2021. “Annual meeting is where we celebrate the outstanding work of Kansas farmers and ranchers over the past year and set the agenda for the new year,” Kansas Farm Bureau president Rich Felts says. “This year the mission is the same, but the format will be different to protect the health and wellbeing of our members and their communities.”

People 

Born and raised on a hog and cattle ranch in Richland, Missouri, Air Force colonel and NASA astronaut Michael Hopkins, 51, is commanding the latest SpaceX operation bound for the International Space Station. The NASA mission will keep the crew occupied in space for several months. “When I was growing up at the Lake, going to the School of the Osage, I never would have thought that someday I was going to be sitting here getting ready to launch to the International Space Station in a brand new vehicle,” Col. Hopkins said prior to launch Sunday, November 15, 2020. From the farm to outer space, Missouri farm kid Michael Hopkins is continuing to fulfill a dream of space travel. At the University of Illinois he earned a Bachelor of Science in Aerospace Engineering in 1991, then a Master of Science in Aerospace Engineering from Stanford University. Hopkins joined the Air Force through the University of Illinois ROTC program.

David Patterson, a Chancellor’s Professor in the MU College of Agriculture, Food and Natural Resources (CAFNR) Division of Animal Sciences and state beef Extension specialist, was named an American Society of Animal Science (ASAS) Fellow. ASAS was created in 1908 and has supported both scientists and animal producers across the globe. Patterson’s ASAS Fellow honor came in the Extension category, which recognizes an individual who has given prominent service to the animal industry and has had continuous membership in ASAS for at least 25 years.

Two pioneers of the US animal health industry died earlier this month: Wes Remington and Dr. Bob Hummel.  

Wes Remington started his career at Anchor Serum as a sales rep and advanced to the position of president until it was sold to Boehringer Ingelheim.  He then started a number of companies, including Med-Tech (which later became Tech America); Agri LaboratoriesPhoenix Scientific, one of the first companies to manufacture off-patent animal drugs; Phoenix Pharmaceuticals (known today as Clipper Distributing); and Pete and Mac’s Pet Resorts.  Wes was instrumental in the passing of the federal generic animal drug bill in 1984.  In the later years of his career, Wes was a very philanthropic individual for the animal health industry; and he was a key financial supporter of the Kansas City Animal Health Corridor at its founding.  

Robert Hummel DVM began his career in 1961 as a Technical Service Veterinarian with American Cyanamid Company.   In 1967, Hummel co-founded Great Plains Chemical Company (later changed to Lextron), which became one of the largest Animal Health distributors in the U.S with an emphasis towards the food animal protein segment. After a merger with Walco, the company name was changed to Animal Health International and was later sold to Patterson Companies.  

U.S. Senator John Boozman, R- Ark., will take over Republican leadership of the Senate Agriculture Committee after Sen. Pat Roberts, R- Kan., leaves. Sen. Boozman will either be chair or ranking member pending the result of the Georgia special senatorial elections in January.

Farm Journal, Lenexa, Kansas, has named Doug Edge senior vice president, revenue development for the company. In this new role, he will manage the producer sales groups with direct responsibility for crop sales while also providing strategic leadership to sales and business development groups and serving on the company's executive committee.

U.S. Senator-elect Roger Marshall, R-Kan., has named Brent Robertson chief of staff in his Senate office and Katie Sawyer state director. Robertson has been chief of staff in Marshall’s House of Representatives office since 2016 and Sawyer has been district director of his first congressional district office since 2017.  Source: Agri-Pulse Communications. 

Americans Can Save A Little on Thanksgiving Dinner

 
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It remains to be seen whether Americans will be social distancing at their Thanksgiving gatherings, keeping masks on and silencing festive sing-alongs inside their homes, as some states have suggested or mandated. But one thing is clear. They will be paying a little less this year for the average traditional holiday meal. The American Farm Bureau Federation’s 35th annual survey shows the average cost of this year’s Thanksgiving feast for ten remains affordable at $46.90 or less than $5.00 per person. This is a $2.01 decrease from last year’s average of $48.91.

“The average cost of this year’s Thanksgiving dinner is the lowest since 2010,” said AFBF Chief Economist Dr. John Newton. “Pricing whole turkeys as ‘loss leaders’ to entice shoppers and move product is a strategy we’re seeing retailers use that’s increasingly common the closer we get to the holiday,” he explained.

Turkeys, the classic entrée on the Thanksgiving menu, will cost about $1.21 per pound this year or $19.39, down 7% from last year. AFBF’s survey results show that retail turkey prices are also the lowest since 2010.

The shopping list for AFBF’s informal survey of a typical Thanksgiving spread for ten people includes turkey, stuffing, sweet potatoes, rolls with butter, peas, cranberries, a veggie tray, pumpkin pie with whipped cream, and coffee and milk – in enough quantities to satisfy America’s love for Thanksgiving leftovers.

In addition to turkey, foods that showed slight price declines include whipping cream and sweet potatoes. Foods showing modest increases this year included dinner rolls, cubed bread stuffing and pumpkin pie mix. 

While turkey is the centerpiece of the Thanksgiving table, AFBF acknowledged the holiday’s dinner traditions have changed for some families. So its price survey also includes ham, potatoes and frozen green beans. Adding these foods to the classic Thanksgiving menu increased the overall cost by $13.21, to $60.11.  But even with these additional items, the cost of the expanded Thanksgiving meal is still down compared to 2019.

This year’s national average cost, says AFBF, was calculated using more than 230 surveys completed with pricing data from all 50 states. Farm Bureau volunteer shoppers were encouraged to check prices online using grocery store apps and websites due to the pandemic. They looked for the best possible prices without taking advantage of special promotional coupons or purchase deals.

Source: American Farm Bureau Federation

Polls Off the Mark in This Year’s Election

 
(L to R) Sara Wyant, Blake Hurst, Ron Seeber

(L to R) Sara Wyant, Blake Hurst, Ron Seeber

 

A trio of savvy observers of agriculture policy and politics shared their takeaways from the 2020 Presidential and General Election during the Agricultural Business Council’s virtual November meeting. Ron Seeber, president and CEO of the Kansas Grain and Feed Association, the Kansas Ag Retailers Association, and Renew Kansas, concluded that from an agricultural perspective Kansas had a good night. As for the fortunes of the GOP, he said the state went from red to really red, as Republicans kept supermajorities in both the State House and Senate.  Tarkio, Missouri, farmer Blake Hurst, who also has served as president of Missouri Farm Bureau, called the elections in Missouri “a great night to be an incumbent.” 

Seeber noted “polls were way off the mark” in gaging the Kansas U.S. Senatorial race between Democrat Barbara Bollier and Republican Dr. Roger Marshall who garnered 53% of the vote. Sara Wyant, editor-in-chief of Agri-Pulse Communications was more critical of the pollsters, saying they were the biggest losers along with the media. “It is very discouraging,” she said, adding she is fearful of reportage in the future. 

Wyant offered several other observations that could bear weight in future election campaigns and outcomes. Total campaign spending topped $14 billion making it the most expensive election in U.S. history. She wondered if some of that money should have or could have been spent more wisely – on, say, people, institutions or organizations in need of a financial boost. Wyant raised a concern about how increasing out-of-state campaign contributions might influence voting that is not in the best interests of the citizens who actually live in a particular state.

On the subject of political donations, Wyant pointed out that women were “big donors” in this election cycle, and “politicians need to pay attention to females.”  Rural issues still matter, she said, in particularly rural healthcare and technology accessibility such as broadband availability. Noting that President Trump received more Hispanic votes than conventional campaign wisdom predicted, Wyant warned politicians that ethnic groups are no longer monolithic voting blocks to be taken for granted. 

All the speakers said they are wondering what the fallout will be from Democratic U.S. Congressman Colin Peterson’s defeat. As chair of the House Ag Committee, Peterson was considered a reliable legislator who worked both sides of the aisle on behalf of farmers and agriculture in general. Hurst wondered if the House Ag Committee would shift to the left.

Introduced as “the AgBizKC mystery guest,” Phil Karsting, who served as administrator of USDA’s Foreign Agricultural Service in the Obama-Biden administration (and who has been a frequent speaker at AgBizKC events), enumerated a list of priorities that could be top of mind for President-elect Biden’s transition team.  The agenda includes creating an effective supply chain to deal with COVID-19 in rural areas; creating a reliable labor force; expanding broadband coverage for rural users; focusing science and ag practices on the enhancement of soil health. Karsting also emphasized there is a place for biofuels in the energy sector of the country’s economy.

Ag CEO Council Briefs Presidential Campaigns

By Dennis McLaughlin, McLaughlin Writers LLC 

Earlier this month several national commodity and agriculture industry groups published a policy white paper for the candidates running for President of the U.S. It was written to assist and inform policy development undertaken by both campaigns regardless of the potential election outcome. The council comprises CEOs of a multitude of farm and commodity organizations and key supplier industries that speak for a large segment of U.S. agriculture.  The 12-page document lays out the current challenges facing the agriculture industry and defines the policy needs that will address those concern and improve the agriculture economy. The full report is available here.

Report In Short

The future of U.S. agriculture is bright. Agribusiness and production agriculture are a substantial part of the nation’s rural economy and can help lead positive change that creates a more just and equitable society.  Advancing U.S. agriculture into a new future will require a diverse, highly skilled and hardworking next generation of human talent. 

The current pandemic has magnified the importance of U.S. agriculture as well as the fragility of supply chains and its impact on the food security of our nation for all consumers. Food security sustains national security. America’s food and agriculture sectors are responsible for nearly one-fifth of U.S. economic activity, directly supporting 23 million jobs or 15% of U.S. employment, and contributes $7 trillion in direct and indirect economic output. Farmers and their agribusiness partners are the economic backbone of our rural economies. 

American farmers are independent and have diverse political alignment within our organizations. Therefore, member organizations of the Ag CEO Council do not endorse presidential candidates of either party, nor does the Council itself. But the campaigns would benefit significantly by being able to thoughtfully discuss the key issues that matter to the industry and to rural America – a constituency that historically has significant influence in electoral outcomes and whose issues resonate with the electorate. 

Priorities

Here is a summary of the Priorities for the Next Four Years and Beyond that the Ag Council of CEOs expects whichever party running the country to focus on:

  • COVID-19 Vaccine & Testing:  The COVID-19 pandemic awakened many Americans to the realization that stocked grocery store shelves should not be taken for granted. The ag industry has stepped up to help meet demands in many ways. Development of a vaccine, access to widespread testing and PPE products, and development of a plan to address future pandemics should be achieved as quickly as possible to protect workers in the processing/supply chain, restore consumer confidence, and reestablish restaurant and institutional demand. 

  • Farm Policy = Consumer Food, Feed, Fuel and Fiber Security = National Security: Farming is one of the most important and riskiest businesses in our nation and requires a strong safety net, on-farm conservation assistance, and risk management tools provided in farm policy. 

  • Trade Agreements: Completed and ratified bilateral and multilateral agreements should have significant benefits to American agriculture. A functioning World Trade Organization is critical to U.S. agricultural trade.

  • Biofuels: Continued support for the Renewable Fuel Standard (RFS), including increasing annual will be integral to the success of the biofuels sector and lead to greater reductions of greenhouse gas emissions.

  • Research:  Immediate and intensive innovation is needed if agriculture is to feed 9 billion people or more by 2050. But this cannot be achieved without aggressive research. Public sector investments made into agricultural research have a very high return on investment, but federal investment in agriculture research has been declining. Breakthroughs and discoveries from land grand universities, USDA, and from private sector research are vital to improving our nation’s health and economy.

  • Labor: Access to a stable, legal workforce is imperative for the success of U.S. agriculture. Each of the 2.4 million hired farm employees working on American farms and ranches supports two to three full time jobs further down the value chain. The current, experienced workforce must be preserved, and programs such as the H-2 visa programs must be maintained and expanded to meet all labor needs.

  • Rural Broadband:  Access to broadband is absolutely essential for rural economies, health care, education and agriculture technology in order to retain the next generation of farmers. Some 24 million Americans lack access to broadband internet connectivity, 19 million of whom reside in rural America.

  • Infrastructure and Competitive Modes of Transportation: Modern barge, rail and truck transportation are essential for the flow of inputs to the farm and products from farm to markets both domestically and abroad. Continued investment in improving infrastructure provides an essential underpinning not just to agriculture but to our entire economy

  • Sustainability and Climate:  Agriculture accounts for less than 10% of total U.S. emissions, far less than transportation, electricity generation, and industry sectors. Farmers continue to produce more with greater efficiency. In fact, U.S. agriculture would have needed nearly 100 million more acres in 1990 to match 2018 production levels. The United States can and should lead by continuing to identify and utilize sustainable agriculture practices that preserve and protect our air, soil and water.

  • Nutrition and Health: Consumers around the world have become more interested in and conscious of where their food and fiber come from, how it is produced and the nutritional value of what they eat. These market forces have created millions of jobs and spurred investment by the livestock and commodity industry by funding and finding responsible and renewable production methods and practices that bring greater nutritional efficiency to people around the world. 

Source: Ag CEO Council, Presidential Campaign Briefing; Agri-Pulse Communications; Feeding the Economy.com, 2020; USDA Economic Research Service, Farm Sector Income and  Finances 2020.

Latest News & Updates in KC Agriculture - October 2020

Developments 

USDA’s Foreign Agricultural Service reports U.S. dairy product exports totaled $4.4 billion from January through August this year, a 14% increase over last year’s corresponding time period. “U.S. dairy exports are posting positive gains in value and volume to markets around the world and are keeping pace with other animal product exports,” says Michael Dykes, president and CEO of the International Dairy Foods Association. “U.S. dairy exports are up in 8 of our top 10 export markets by both value and volume over the same period in 2019.” Australia, Canada, China and Vietnam were the primary importers of U.S. dairy products, Dykes said.  China imported about $344 million worth of dairy in the first eight months of 2020, a 38% increase over the January-August period last year.

Boehringer Ingelheim announced the launch of Vaxxitek HVT+IBD+ILT. According to the company, it is the first vaccine for poultry to offer protection in one shot from Infectious Laryngotracheitis, Marek's Disease and Infectious Bursal Disease. (PRnewswire)

Kansas State University researchers are developing facial recognition technology for the cattle industry. The technology builds on concepts used for human facial recognition; using unique facial features of individual cows that can be scanned and used to track the animal throughout its life.  A recent test of the network’s reliability, resulted in 94% accuracy. (Vet Advantage) Kansas State University is using artificial intelligence to build a database of facial recognition technology for the cattle industry. The system could boost biosecurity efforts and work into animal disease traceability systems, according to the university. Just like people, cows have unique facial features that modern technology can scan and later use to track the animal throughout its life, Kansas State said. “We’re talking about a system here that has an incremental cost that is close to zero, and nobody would be (forced) to use it,” said KC Olson, a beef cattle scientist with Kansas State Research and Extension who helped develop the idea. “There would be economic incentives provided by the beef industry to participate.” Human facial recognition is becoming more common in secure locations, such as airports.

Elanco Animal Health says it will restructure its business, eliminating more than 900 jobs, and has started to deleverage by making a $100 million payment on the loan that financed its acquisition of Bayer Animal Health. “Elanco leadership has quickly evaluated the capabilities, structure and staffing of the combined business required to meet its goal of being an agile, fit-for-purpose global leader dedicated exclusively to animal health,” the company said in a news release. “As part of this effort, today the company is announcing its intent to eliminate more than 900 positions across nearly 40 countries, primarily in sales and marketing, but also R&D, manufacturing and quality, and back office support. These actions begin to reduce duplication, drive efficiency and optimize the company’s footprint across geographies, particularly Basel, Switzerland.”

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit rejected the North American Meat Institute’s legal challenge in a different California court brought by the National Pork Producers Council and American Farm Bureau Federation. Enacted in November 2018, Prop 12 imposes space requirements regarding breeding pigs and veal calves within California. The Meat Institute said Prop 12 creates a barrier to trade by imposing obligations on out-of-state competitors in an effort to assist local producers of pork and veal. Prop 12 reaches beyond the state’s borders by prohibiting the sale in California of uncooked pork or veal from animals housed in ways that do not meet California’s requirements. As a result, Prop 12 sets confinement standards for how pigs and veal calves are raised anywhere in the United States or in any foreign country.

The hog backlog peaked at 3.5 million head in late May, according to a Purdue University report. But it says farmers may see elevated prices by the end of the year as the hog supply shrinks. “It will take some time to work through the COVID-19 disruptions,” Purdue economist Jayson Lusk wrote in the quarterly Purdue Agricultural Economics Report. “Decisions to delay breeding or liquidate sows during the worst of the COVID-19 shutdowns [at packing plants] will likely help further reduce the backlog in the months ahead. These same decisions will likely imply a smaller market-hog supply, and thus possibly elevated hog prices, around the end of 2020.” While Lusk said hog prices will improve in the near future, the National Pork Producers Council said farmers need help now and urged passage of a new coronavirus aid bill.

Before the Butcher launched a new plant-based burger that matches the price of ground beef. Mainstream Plant-Based Patties was priced at about $5.50 per pound, similar to average prices of lean ground beef, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Before the Butcher founder and president Danny O’Malley said the goal of the new product line was to produce a plant-based burger that was affordable to all consumers. While boxes of Mainstream have a suggested price of $10.99 per package of eight quarter-pound patties, other plant-based burgers can cost up to $8 at the grocery store for two patties.  Source: FoodDive, October 6, 2020; www.fooddive.com.

Most rural Nebraskans believe agriculture is a major driver of economic well-being in their households and communities, according to the University of Nebraska-Lincoln’s 2020 Nebraska Rural Poll. Rebecca Vogt, survey research manager of the poll, said, "Even those respondents who are not directly involved in farming or ranching, they do recognize that their communities are dependent upon the agriculture industry," Vogt said. "The different businesses in their community are affected by agriculture, and they recognize that tie.” But the poll results show only 40% of rural Nebraskans know anything about important agriculture policies in the state.

U.S. farmers remain optimistic in the latest Purdue University–CME Group Ag Economy Barometer reading. At 156, the barometer in September hit its highest reading since the pandemic began and 12 points higher than a month earlier. Producers were more optimistic about both current and future conditions than they were in August. Officials noted that the improvement coincided with the announcement by USDA of the second round of pandemic relief payments for producers. Additionally, fall crop prices rose, which also likely contributed to the rise in farmer optimism. 

Sales of both plant-based and conventional meats spiked at the beginning of the pandemic. But plant-based products saw a considerably larger spike, data shows. Nielsen found that March grocery sales of plant-based meat alternatives jumped 231% from the year before; IRI data analyzed by The Good Food Institute showed a 454% increase of plant-based meat alternatives from the previous year for the week of March 21. Conventional meat sales saw their largest year-over-year increase in March, at 40%, Nielsen said. Still, the U.S. meat market is worth about $95 billion at retail, while plant-based meat alternatives are worth about $1 billion.  

Wamego, Kansas – based U.S. CattleTrace has announced new partnerships in the states of Colorado and Iowa, increasing its number of partner states to 12 (Colorado, Florida, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Missouri, Nebraska, Oklahoma, Oregon, Texas, Virginia and Washington). “As we continue our mission of developing the infrastructure for disease traceability in the cattle industry, partnerships in all segments of the industry remain crucial,” say Callahan Grund, executive director. Learn more on how to become a partner and to see a list of current partners at www.uscattletrace.org/our-partners.

People

During the CropLife America 2020 Annual Meeting, the Industry Task Force II on 2,4-D Research Data honored its own Jim Gray in memoriam with its the Lifetime Achievement Award. This award recognizes someone who has dedicated their life to successfully defending the pesticide industry with passion and professionalism. Jim served as the executive director of the Industry Task Force II for 12 years, from 2007 until the moment of his passing in November 2019. He was considered the heart and soul of the Task Force, bringing sharp wit, a broad smile, and an inexhaustible knowledge of all things 2,4-D. He had an extraordinary ability to connect with those around him and introduce people who share a common interest in agriculture, and a love for the land was felt throughout his travels from Europe to North America to Asia.

National 4-H Council president and CEO Jennifer Sirangelo (and lead presenter at the Agricultural Business Council’s May 2020 meeting) has been named winner of a Gold Stevie® Award in the Female Executive of the Year . The Stevie Awards for Women in Business is an international competition produced by the creators of the International Business Awards® and American Business Awards®. She will receive her award at a virtual ceremony December 9, 2020.

In August Look East received two AVA Digital Awards – one gold award and one honorable mention – for work done on behalf of clients Best Food Facts and Kansas Corn Growers Association. AVA Digital Awards is an international competition administered and judged by the Association of Marketing and Communication Professionals that recognizes outstanding work by creative professionals in digital communication. Look East submitted an entry for KCGA’s social media platform that featured a single kernel of corn – that work received honorable mention. LookEast’s short form video for Best Food Fact’s TASTE Tour garnered the gold. This year there were 2,500 entries from the U.S., Canada and 23 other countries. Sixteen percent of the entries won Platinum, the top award, and 21 percent grabbed Gold. 

The Kansas Department of Agriculture has selected Earl Lewis to serve as the chief engineer for the agency’s Division of Water Resources. As chief engineer, Lewis will manage the personnel and programs of KDA–DWR and administer laws related to conservation, management, use and control of water and water structures in Kansas. Lewis has dedicated his career to water resources in Kansas, including more than 20 years with the Kansas Water Office where has been serving as the director since December 2018. He began his career with KDA–DWR in 1992, and has been a licensed professional engineer since 1998. He received a Bachelor of Science degree in mechanical engineering from the University of Kansas.

Drs. Mike Tokach and Jason Woodworth, Kansas State University Department of Animal Sciences and Industry (ASI) professors, were presented awards by the American Society of Animal Science (ASAS) last week. Dr. Tokach is the recipient of the ASAS Fellow Award for research.  Dr. Woodworth is the recipient of the ASAS Industry Service Award. The awards were presented during the 2020 ASAS-CSAS-WSASAS Virtual Annual Meeting and Trade Show this past summer.

The first issue of JDS Communications, a new journal from the American Dairy Science Association (ADSA), has been published. Matthew Lucy, a professor in the Division of Animal Sciences at the University of Missouri College of Agriculture, Food and Natural Resource, will serve as editor-in-chief of the new publication. “JDS Communications will offer a fresh and different publication option for dairy scientists,” Lucy said. “We are interested in high-quality research studies that are focused, hypothesis-driven and designed to answer a specific question on the production or processing of milk or milk products intended for human consumption.” Along with serving as editor-in-chief for an ADSA publication, Lucy received the ADSA Award of Honor earlier this year. The award recognizes unusually outstanding and consistent contributions to the welfare of the Association or distinguished service to the Association. 

Events

Two professional development workshops on regulatory affairs in animal health are being offered by Kansas State University's Olathe campus. Workshops cover the regulatory aspects of animal drug and vaccine development, with options for introductory and advanced courses. The workshops can be attended in-person at the Olathe campus or virtually. Those who attend on campus are required to practice social distancing to aide in participant safety:

  • Advanced Animal Pharmaceuticals, 8:30 am to 4:30 pm, Nov. 11-12: Workshop provides a detailed, practical and experience-based review of the veterinary drug approval process. Content covers the five topics that comprise the four major technical sections of a product submission to FDA's Center for Veterinary Medicine - chemistry, manufacturing and control; efficacy; target animal safety; human food safety; and efficacy for generic products.

  • Animal Health Regulatory 101, 8:30 am to 4:30 pm, Dec.  9-10: Two-day introductory course on the regulatory requirements of animal drug and vaccine development. Attendees will learn how to navigate two of the federal agencies that oversee these products, FDA and USDA; as well as the requirements the agencies place on the development and maintenance of drugs and vaccines.

Agriculture Future of America launches its annual AFA Leaders Conference virtually, November 11. AFA Leaders Conference provides leader development and networking opportunities for college men and women who are preparing for careers in agriculture and food-related fields. Leaders Conference bridges the gap between academic, leadership and work experiences while helping students understand the impact of their decisions. Students are given the opportunity to network with peers and leaders in the agriculture industry as well as increase their excitement about the future of agriculture by creating awareness about career opportunities in food and agriculture. Program and agenda details available at www.agfuture.org.