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Booker Urges USDA to Include Nursery, Mushroom, and Floriculture Farmers in Federal Specialty Crop Assistance Program

U.S. Senator Cory Booker (D-NJ) sent a letter to U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) Secretary BrookeRollins urging the agency to include nursery, mushroom, and floriculture crops in the Assistance for Specialty Crop Farmers (ASCF) Program. The USDA excluded these growers from market relief funding for specialty crops, even though federal law has recognized them as specialty crops for more than two decades.

“Nursery, mushroom, and floriculture farmers are a vital part of American agriculture,” Booker wrote. “These growers contribute significantly to local economies, support tens of thousands of jobs, and supply domestic and international markets with high-value agricultural products.”

Booker noted that the same market challenges that are affecting other specialty crops are also hitting indoor and ornamental growers, such asrising labor costs, higher input prices, and ongoing market instability. “Without access to bridge assistance, viable family farms and businesses face the real risk of closure. Excluding these producers leaves a substantial segment of American agriculture without the support intended to stabilize the broader farm economy,” he wrote.

Booker urged for the inclusion of these farmers and asked the USDA to extend the program acreage reporting deadline to give all specialty crop producers adequate time to apply. Booker concluded the letter by urging the USDA to base program payments on aggregate sales or revenue, which is a better fit for specialty crops.

Source : senate.gov

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Seeding Winter Wheat near Oshkosh Nebraska

Video: Seeding Winter Wheat near Oshkosh Nebraska

Seeding Winter Wheat near Oshkosh Nebraska

I am in the fie3ld with a farmer near Oshkosh Nebraska as he his no-till drilling winter wheat into a harvested corn field. In the video the farm is running their John Deere 9470RX tractor pulling a 42 foot wide Deere 1890C air drill with a 1910 commodity cart.

Winter wheat will emerge this fall and go dormant over the winter. In the spring it will stat growing again and be ready to harvest in mid July.