KJAN Programs

Iowa Secretary of Agriculture Mike Naig, IEDA Led Trade Mission to Costa Rica and Guatemala

Ag/Outdoor, News

February 24th, 2025 by Ric Hanson

February 24, 2025 (DES MOINES) – Iowa Secretary of Agriculture Mike Naig and a 13-member delegation have just returned from a trade mission to Costa Rica and Guatemala. The mission, coordinated by the Iowa Economic Development Authority (IEDA), included representation from Iowa’s meat and grain commodity groups. The purpose of the mission was to foster trade opportunities as the State of Iowa advocates for the high-quality of Iowa corn, soybeans, pork and beef products produced in Iowa for export markets.

The U.S. remains the number one export market in agricultural products for Costa Rica and Guatemala. Guatemala accounts for approximately one-third of the Central America region’s GDP, and is steadily increasing agricultural imports from the U.S. In 2024, Guatemala imported $1.9 billion in agricultural goods from the U.S., while Costa Rica imported $956 million in 2024.  In 2024, Iowa companies alone exported $75.1 million in agricultural goods to Costa Rica and $145 million to Guatemala. (Source: USDA and WISERTrade)

“Iowa’s hardworking farmers can produce an abundance of food and fuel incredibly efficiently, which is why international market development continues to be one of my top priorities,” said Secretary Naig. “I was pleased to lead a delegation of Iowa farmers and agricultural leaders to Central America, an area of the globe that offers promising potential as a growing destination for Iowa grain, protein, and biofuels. Our delegation enjoyed meeting with customers in Costa Rica and Guatemala, we thanked them for their business, and we learned more about how we can further strengthen our trading relationship going forward. Trade matters to Iowa, and these face-to-face meetings are the best way to build connections in key markets as we seek to export significantly more Iowa products.”

The Iowa ag delegation visited San Jose, Costa Rica and Guatemala City, Guatemala from February 15-21. The itinerary was comprised of trade policy discussions, information sessions on Iowa’s agricultural industry and business development meetings. The delegation was comprised of representatives from the Iowa Beef Industry Council, Iowa Corn, Iowa Farm Bureau Federation, Iowa Pork Producers Association and the Iowa Soybean Association. IEDA worked with the U.S. Grains Council, U.S. Meat Export Federation, U.S. Soybean Export Council and U.S. Department of Agriculture – Foreign Agriculture Service to identify and organize business prospects and meetings for the mission.

IEDA’s International Trade Office connects Iowa companies with markets for their products and services, educates Iowa businesses on exporting and assists global companies wishing to establish or expand operations in Iowa. To find out more about these services or other trade missions, visit iowaeda.com.

Southwest Iowa Beekeeper’s to hold their Annual Meeting March 23rd, in Atlantic

Ag/Outdoor, News

February 24th, 2025 by Ric Hanson

(Atlantic, Iowa) – The Southwest Iowa Beekeepers organization is inviting any and all beekeepers to their annual meeting on Sunday, March 23 at 1pm at the American Legion Memorial Building in Atlantic, Iowa. The group’s mission is to support beekeepers, share knowledge and build the beekeeping community.

Whether you have 1 hive or 100 hives, Southwest Iowa Beekeepers welcomes all beekeepers and all styles of beekeeping so whether new or old, big or small – join them for exchange of ideas and general bee camaraderie.  Even if you don’t have any hives, that’s ok! The groups members would love to help new beekeepers get started. Beekeeping is both challenging and exciting and much like the bees they tend, bee keepers, they say, are stronger when they lean into each other for support.

The club meets 5 times per year. Meetings are held in March, April, June, August, & October. The summer meetings are typically hands-on field days held on member farms. For more information you can contact Nathan Paulsen by emailing southwestiowabeekeepers@gmail.com.Southwest IA Beekeepers

Southwest IA Beekeepers photo

Iowa Farmers Union Cancer Listening Post set for this Sunday afternoon, in Atlantic

Ag/Outdoor, News

February 24th, 2025 by Ric Hanson

(Atlantic, Iowa) – The Iowa Farmers Union is hosting a series of Cancer Listening Posts, including one in Atlantic on Sunday, March 2nd. The event will be in the American Legion Memorial Building’s Memorial Hall, from 2-until 3:30-p.m., Sunday. The event is one of four Cancer Listening Posts the Iowa Farmers Union has put together throughout the state. The first was held last Friday in Spencer. The next is this Friday, in Fairfield, followed by a Cancer Listening Post in Charles City on Saturday. ,

The IFU said in a press release, “Recent data highlights Iowa as one of the states with the fastest-growing cancer rates in the country. The Cancer Listening Posts will serve as a platform for individuals to voice concerns, discuss potential causes, and explore solutions to improve healthcare and prevention efforts in rural communities.”

Iowa has the second-highest cancer rate in the country, and is No. 1 in number of new cases per year.

Survey: Midwest bankers pessimistic about economy, trade and tariffs

Ag/Outdoor, News

February 24th, 2025 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – A monthly survey of bank C-E-Os in Iowa and nine other Midwestern states shows a dismal outlook. The Creighton University report shows the February score fell to 38 on a zero-to-100 scale, where 50 is growth neutral. Creighton Economics Professor Ernie Goss says the new numbers are reminiscent of the COVID-era, and he cites struggling commodity prices as one of the big reasons for the Midwest economy’s continuing slump. “Agricultural commodity prices, particularly grain, are moving up a bit lately,” Goss says, “but still not as strong as we’d like to see. On the flipside, to give us some good news, livestock is doing somewhat better. When we asked the bankers about looking forward to 2025, they were much more positive about the livestock sector.”

About 71-percent of bankers surveyed expect livestock ranchers to experience positive cash flow or net income in 2025, while nearly half expect grain farmers to experience negative cash flow. Goss says President Trump’s recently-announced tariffs on products from Canada and Mexico have bankers concerned. Only nine-percent of those surveyed expect positive outcomes from Trump’s tariffs, as Canada and Mexico are major trade partners. “Retaliation is really a concern among bankers and economists, as well,” he says. “We’re talking about 47-percent of the exports of agricultural and livestock goods coming from this part of the country, 47-percent go to Mexico. So, if you see retaliation there, that would hit the economy really hard.” Another factor is continuing cases of highly pathogenic avian influenza detected in poultry in Iowa and other parts of the Midwest.

Goss says the main impact is in the survey’s confidence index, which sank to a score of 40 this month, down from January’s 42.3. “We ask each month for the bankers to look forward another six months,” Goss says. “They were pretty darn negative, as you can imagine in Iowa — one of the big producers of eggs and poultry. That’s a big issue, even without any contamination over to livestock.” Goss says the lack of action on a Farm Bill in Congress is also creating uncertainly among survey respondents across the region. “There’s so much uncertainty in agriculture and farming,” he said. “We don’t have much positive input from the U.S. federal government. We got a one-year farm bill. We need to see a five-year farm bill and not a one-year farm bill. Each year, we’re getting less and less support from the federal government.”

Goss says farm equipment sales continue to struggle, though February’s mark of 18.2 is actually up from last month’s level of 17.4.

Hinson, Feenstra discuss bird flu

Ag/Outdoor, News

February 24th, 2025 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – Iowa Congresswoman Ashley Hinson and Congressman Randy Feenstra say they are working to help producers hit by the bird flu. Hinson, a Republican from Marion says it was the topic of a recent meeting. “Our Ag F-D-A Appropriations Committee had experts from U-S-D-A, APHIS, and animal research A-R-S, to really talk about what we need to be doing to combat avian influenza. This is about protecting those farmers and ranchers from losing their flocks and herds,” she says. Hinson says one topic was using prevention measures. “They’ve got a pilot program that’s designed to help with stopping the critters that get into these facilities that help spread, helping to deter the wild bird blocks that otherwise might bring that disease close to these, these barns and facilities,” Hinson says. They also discussed helping producers with their losses.

“On the indemnity side, we also had a great discussion about the math that they’re using and the system that they’re using to calculate what that indemnity looks like,” she says. Republican Congressman Randy Feenstra of Hull says he recently talk with the new U-S Ag Secretary about the issue. “We just lost 21 million birds over the last several months right here in western Iowa. So we’re looking at vaccines and solutions to try to mitigate this issue. We just heard that. You know, bird flu is now in rats and mice, so we’ve got to figure out a solution to this epidemic,” Feenstra says. Feenstra says he also learned some frozen U-S-D-A funds have been released. “There’s 20 million of grants that got released as of the 20th of February. So I’m so excited that happened,” Feenstra says. “We had a lot of discussions with the administration, and this is what happens. We have a new administration, and some things get hooked up, but I tell you what, we got this resolved.”

Feenstra spoke at an event in Sioux City and Hinson made her comments on her weekly conference call with reporters.

EPA lets E15 be sold in Midwest this summer

Ag/Outdoor, News

February 24th, 2025 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The Environmental Protection Agency has announced it will let a higher blend of ethanol be sold this summer in Iowa and seven other Midwestern states. The sale of fuel with a 15 percent blend of ethanol has been prohibited nationwide in the summer due to concerns it could worsen smog levels. Bills have been introduced in congress to make the year-round sale of E-15 a permanent federal policy.

E-P-A Administrator Lee Zeldin says in the absence of congressional action, the agency is considering emergency waivers. He announced late Friday that E-15 may be sold in the Midwest this summer. Iowa elected officials, farm groups and the ethanol industry praised the decision.

Veteran Iowa farmers teach ‘up and comers’

Ag/Outdoor, News

February 24th, 2025 by Ric Hanson

(Iowa News Service) – An agriculture program in Iowa is helping new and up and coming farmers learn from more experienced ones – and its organizers have uncovered another outcome they weren’t expecting. Steve Riggins and his wife moved to their Cambridge, Iowa, farm ten years ago. It’s been in the family since 1855, but hadn’t been worked in decades.

Riggins turned to Practical Farmers of Iowa’s “Labor for Learning” program, which recruits farmers who’ve been around a while to teach those, like Riggins, where to start. “They taught me everything from cutting hay, raking hay, working on machinery, moving cows, working in the dairy,” said Riggins. ‘They taught me a million different things I never would have had a chance to learn. And it was 10 times better than going through YouTube.”

The program teaches beginning farmers practical, hands-on skills and helps them understand ag management practices and financial strategies. It also gives those more experienced farmers some extra hands on their land. Research shows roughly 10% of the nation’s farmland will transition to the next generation in just five years.

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Martha McFarland, farmland viability coordinator with Practical Farmers of Iowa, said while the Labor for Learning program is good for teaching the next generation, organizers were surprised to discover that the more experienced farmers are also potentially recruiting people they will pass their farm on to – as rural America undergoes a huge generational shift in land ownership.

“It’s really awkward to have a match between a retiring farmer and someone who might come in and take over the land and just say ‘OK, now take over,'” said McFarland. “There has to be some kind of an interim getting to know you period. And so, to be able to help retiring farmers find that, in that context, is really helpful.”

She said the more experienced farmers go through a training program with PFI before they take on the new ones.

Another round of layoffs announced at John Deere

Ag/Outdoor, News

February 21st, 2025 by Ric Hanson

(Ankeny, Iowa) —A major agriculture equipment manufacturer says it will lay off more than 100 workers due to reduced demand and a weakened farm economy. KCCI reports John Deere says it informed 119 employees at John Deere Des Moines Works in Ankeny that they will be let go as part of three groups of layoffs. The company provided a statement to KCCI, saying customer orders are down and forecasts from the United States Department of Agriculture indicate a decrease in major row-crop cash receipts from 2024.

John Deere says it employs nearly 1,500 workers at the impacted location. This is not the only recent round of layoffs by the company. Nearly 600 workers were let go last year at three midwest factories, including two in Iowa that laid off more than 300 employees. In total, Deere has cut more than 4,500 jobs in the last decade.

Source: 55 USDA workers fired from Ames lab doing bird flu vax research

Ag/Outdoor, News

February 21st, 2025 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The sweeping federal layoffs in recent days included caretakers for thousands of poultry and herd animals at the USDA National Centers for Animal Health in Ames. The facility is at the forefront of foreign disease diagnostics and livestock vaccine research, including developing a bird flu vaccine for dairy cows. A scientist at the facility, who is identified only as “A” over concerns about their job, says 55 people were escorted off the campus last Friday. “People were pulled from every department, but especially the animal caretakers,” “A” says. “They were disproportionately affected, and they are a small team to begin with.”

The scientist says employees are trying to fill in the gaps with their own unpaid work, but there are discussions about culling animals if they cannot be cared for humanely. “A” says dozens of people have lost their jobs even though many had glowing performance reviews. “I’ve had so many sleepless nights. I mean, that’s all of us,” “A” says. “I can’t stress that enough how hard this has been on everyone mentally.”

The Ames lab also works on vaccine regulations, and does testing on milk samples for bird flu and screening of vaccines companies develop for cats and dogs. “A lot of people don’t realize just how much happens in this one facility,” “A” says.

U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Brooke Rollins said, in a press release, says she welcomes the Trump administration’s efforts to reduce federal spending and that the USDA is aggressively “eliminating positions that are no longer necessary.”

UI considers abandoning nature area after six decades

Ag/Outdoor, News

February 20th, 2025 by Ric Hanson

(Radio Iowa) – The University of Iowa is reviewing its lease on the MacBride Nature Recreation Area to determine whether it makes sense to keep the nature area for economic and educational purposes. Connie Mutel, a retired UI hydro science and engineering professor, says the area is valuable to thousands of K-through-12 students who participate in the university’s Wildlife Instruction and Leadership Development Program.

“We can use it in the future. We have that possibility,” Mutel says. “If we get rid of it now, all of those possibilities are moot. They’re gone, and that’s especially bad when our natural world is being degraded by climate change and by loss of biodiversity.”

The Army Corps of Engineers has leased the land to the UI since the 1960s. Mutel says the area is important for a host of environmental research. “To throw away the sites where we can study that, do research on it, expose people, students to the integrity of the natural world,” Mutel says, “why are we getting rid of the one place on campus where they can do that?”

A ten-member committee started its review in September and is examining the area’s usage and maintenance. Campus members can provide input until March 14th. The review is to be complete by May 1st.