Hello Winnebago County Producers, Plan for schedule changes to the youth farm, tractor and machinery safety certification class. If you have youth that plan to attend the Tractor Safety Certification Class in 2014, please be aware of these changes coming to the Winnebago County class. Based on parent feedback, the class has been shifted later into spring and will be shortened into five weeks. Classes will run from March 8th to April 5th, 8:30 am to 3:00 pm on Saturdays. This will help reduce conflicts with winter sports and music competition activities. Winnebago County will be partnering with Green Lake County. Tentatively, three classes are planned in Omro and two classes planned in Berlin. 20 students will be admitted. More details will be provided in the next newsletter. If you would like to place your child on the enrollment waiting list, please contact UW Extension at: 920-232-1971. Wishing you a wonderful Thanksgiving and Christmas, Nick Schneider, Your County Agricultural Agent November- December 2013 In this issue: Page Winnebago County Agriculture Activities & Advice Calendar of Events 2 Reproduction Meeting 3 Grain Marketing 4 Annie’s Project 5 Milk Quality Meeting 6-7 Pest Management Mtg 8 Soil/Water/Nutrient Mtg 9 Nutrient Mgt Classes 10 WI Agronomy Update 11 Affordable Care 12-14 WI Runoff Rules 15-17 Ag Performance 18 Ag Enterprise Areas 19 USDA Updates 20-22 What’s New Websites 23 Staff Directory 24
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Hello Winnebago County Producers, Plan for schedule changes to the youth farm,
tractor and machinery safety certification class.
If you have youth that plan to attend the Tractor Safety Certification Class in 2014, please be aware of these changes coming to the Winnebago County class. Based on parent feedback, the class has been shifted later into spring and will be shortened into five weeks. Classes will run from March 8th to April 5th, 8:30 am to 3:00 pm on Saturdays. This will help reduce conflicts with winter sports and music competition activities. Winnebago County will be partnering with Green Lake County. Tentatively, three classes are planned in Omro and two classes planned in Berlin. 20 students will be admitted. More details will be provided in the next newsletter. If you would like to place your child on the enrollment waiting list, please contact UW Extension at: 920-232-1971. Wishing you a wonderful Thanksgiving and Christmas, Nick Schneider, Your County Agricultural Agent
ANNIE’S PROJECT IN NORTHEAST WISCONSIN Annie’s Project is an educational program dedicated to
strengthening women's roles in the modern farm enterprise.
When: Thursdays, January 9, 16, 23, and 30, 2014
Time: 10:00 am-2:30 pm
Where: J.P. Coughlin Center, 625 E. Cty Rd Y, Oshkosh WI
Cost: $30 includes meals
Annie’s Project is an education program for farm women, based on a real farm woman’s experience of living and working in a complex business. The mission of Annie’s Project is to empower farm women to be better business partners through networks and by managing and organizing critical information.
Agenda:
January 9: Discover the Color of Your Personality Rene Mehlberg, Winnebago County Youth Development Educator How Does the Affordable Care Act Affect Farm Families? Kristi Cutts, Winnebago County Family Living Educator Make the Most Of Your Relationship with the Farm Service Agency Vicki Wiese, Outagamie County FSA Director
January 16: Financial Recordkeeping Jenny Vanderlin, UW Center For Dairy Profitability Outreach Build and Interpret Your Farms Financial Statements Dr. Nate Splett, Retired UW River Falls Ag Economics Professor
January 23:
Calf Care to Improve Respiratory Health and Improving Animal Husbandry Dr. Amy Stanton, UW Dairy Specialist Improving Herd Reproductive Performance Connie Cordoba, UW Reproductive Management Specialist The Cost of Raising Heifers Liz Binversie, Outagamie County Dairy Educator
January 30: Marketing 101, Kevin Jarek, Outagamie Co Crops and Soils Agent Shifting Gears for the Golden Years, Nick Schneider, Winnebago County Agriculture Agent Communication Across Generations
Directions to farm: From east: Exit Highway 41 on Main Street in De Pere; then on County G from De Pere west, which becomes Fernando Drive From north: Come down County Road U, turn on Fernando Drive east From south: Go up County Road U and then turn right on Fernando Drive east
Topics & Speakers Precision Dairy – Robotic Dairying Dan Diederich, farmer/owner Cost Analysis of Robotic Milking Jeff Hahn/Francisco Rodriguez - Delaval Continued on page 7….
Jim and Bonnie Simon Farm N4628 County Road PP, Black Creek
Kurt and Meghan Moeller 60 cows SCC 150,000 RHA 22,000
Directions to farm:
From north: Take Highway 47; turn left on WI 54 and right on CR-PP. From south: Take Highway 47 north; turn right on CR-PP. From west: Take WI 54 E; turn right on CR-S; turn left on CR-PP.
Topics & Speakers
Making a Farm Agreement Jim Simon, Owner/Kurt Moeller, Renter
Cost of Heifer Raising – ICPA Review Zen Miller, Dairy/Livestock Agent, UW-Extension, Outagamie County
UWEX PEST MANAGEMENT UPDATE MEETINGS When: Fond du Lac: Monday, November 18, 2013
Green Bay: Tuesday, November 19, 2013 Time: 10:00 am – 3:00 pm
Where: Fond du Lac: (920) 929-3170 University of Wisconsin – Fond du Lac Rm 113 University
Center 400 University Drive
Fond du Lac, WI 54935 Green Bay: (920) 391-4653
Rock Garden (at the Comfort Suites Hotel) 1951 Bond Street
Green Bay, WI 54303 Fee: $40 per person
Weed Management: Annual Crops: 1) New herbicide updates 2) Efficacy and fit of pyroxasulfone products 3) Late season weed survey and herbicide resistance in WI update. Perennial Crops: 1) New weeds invading your forage crops 2) Benefits of managing weeds in establishing alfalfa 3) Alfalfa stand removal with herbicides 4) Pest Management Mobile, a new resource for key pesticide information in Wisconsin Agronomic Crops. Disease Management: 1) New fungicide products in field crops 2) Utility of fungicides in field crops 3) Head scab and other wheat disease updates 4) 2013 soybean diseases in Wisconsin 5) Roundup Ready alfalfa and Aphanomyces euteiches Race 2 resistance. Insect Management: 1) New insecticide and Bt trait updates 2) Bt corn rootworm resistance and trait stewardship 3) Impact, management and range expansion of Brown Marmorated Stink Bug in field crops 4) Seasonal pattern and research updates for soybean aphid, Japanese beetle, and western bean cutworm 5) Pest Management Mobile, demo of insecticide and Bt trait features. The speakers will be Mark Renz, perennial cropping systems weed scientist; Vince Davis, annual cropping systems weed scientist; Eileen Cullen, field crop entomologist; and Damon Smith, field crop plant pathologist.
Please note that four hours of CCA CEU pest management credits are requested for the meetings. Reserve with host no later than one week prior.
When: Level 1 Nutrient Management: December 3-4, 2013 SNAP+ 2.0 Nutrient Software Training: December 17
Advanced Nutrient Management: December 18 Time: All Classes- 10:00 am to 2:30 pm
Where: James P. Coughlin Center, 625 County Rd Y, Oshkosh Free: Bring your own lunch.
Level 1 Nutrient Management includes: Nitrogen, Phosphorus, Potassium, Manure Management and Soil Conservation, Instructions on Assembling the Plan, and Intro to SNAP+. Level 1 Participants should consider attending the SNAP+ class day.
SNAP+ 2.0 Software Training is for anyone who wants to learn how to operate the nutrient management software used in Wisconsin or needs a refresher. SNAP+ Version 2.0 has been reworked. This is a good opportunity for SNAP+ users to learn the new version. Advanced Nutrient and Fertilizer Management is for farmers who have been writing their own plans. Farmers who write their own plans should attend a refresher every 4 years per WI DATCP rules. Anyone is welcome to participate. We will have detailed information about fertilizer forms, blends, stabilization products, and micronutrients.
If you plan to collect a Farmland Preservation Tax Credit, have a Nutrient Management cost-share contract, or have manure storage under the county ordinance, then you need to have a nutrient management plan. The plan can be prepared by a Certified Crop Advisor or a farmer. In Winnebago County, we teach the Wisconsin Department of Agriculture approved nutrient management curriculum. Since 2008, sixty farmers have attended nutrient management training here. Pack a lunch so we can provide these classes at no cost. Please bring a laptop PC or let the UWEX office know that you will need one. Please contact Nick Schneider at the Winnebago County UWEX by Dec 2. to register at 920-232-1971 or [email protected].
2014 WISCONSIN AGRONOMY UPDATE MEETINGS When: Fond du Lac: Tuesday, Jan. 7 at noon or
Kimberly: Wednesday, Jan. 8 at 7:30 am Where: Fond du Lac: (920) 929-3171
University of Wisconsin – Fond du Lac Rm 114 University Center
400 University Drive Kimberly: (920) 832-5121
Liberty Hall 800 Eisenhower Drive
(Hwy. 441, College Avenue Exit, East 1 block) Fee: Call Host
The Department of Agronomy will offer Crop Production and Management
Meetings at eight locations during 2014. Joe Lauer, Dan Undersander and
Shawn Conley will present the latest information on hybrid/variety
performance, an analysis and discussion of last year's growing season, and
updated recommendations for field crop production.
The registration fee includes a meal and information materials. Certified Crop Advisor CEU credits have been requested (3.0 hours-Crop Management). A “walk-in” fee will be charged to those who have not preregistered.
UW Extension is planning a webinar in early December about how the Affordable Care Act pertains to farmers specifically. Winnebago County farmers can call the UWEX office at 232-1971 if interested in attending. We will contact you with details about attending once prepared. No doubt you've been hearing about the new Health Insurance Marketplace, a key part of the health care law that opened for business on October 1, 2013. But you probably still have questions. Like what are changes included in the new reform? What is the marketplace? And can you really afford health insurance? The best place for the latest, most accurate, information on the Marketplace is the updated website, HealthCare.gov. At this site, you can learn what it is, who can apply for insurance, how to get insurance, how to lower your costs, and more. If you own a small business, there's information for you too. What’s Next for Health Care Reform? Passed in March of 2010 and upheld by the Supreme Court in July of 2012, the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (also known as PPACA, ACA, health reform law, ObamaCare) improves residents access to quality and affordable health care. Current Measures:
Young adults can stay on their parents insurance until they are 26
Prescription drug rebates up to $250 for seniors
Free preventative health care services
No lifetime limits on health care costs
Children with pre-existing conditions cannot be denied coverage
2014 Provisions
No annual limits on insurance coverage of health care expenses
Insurance companies cannot charge higher premiums based on gender and other factors
State option to expand Medicaid for adults up to 133% of FPL
Starting this fall, the online Health Insurance Marketplace, also called an Exchange, will be the place to find affordable private insurance plans that meet federal and state standards. The Marketplace will be on the Website www.healthcare.gov . It is a new option for people who have not been able to get affordable insurance through their work or buy it on their own. People will be able to compare insurance options and choose a plan that is right for them. The application process of the Marketplace also identifies who is eligible for Medicaid (Badger Care+).
Why should I care about the Marketplace?
The new health reform law requires that everyone who can afford health insurance must buy it, or may have to pay a tax penalty. The Marketplace will help you find and compare plans and make buying that health insurance more affordable. The definition of an affordable health insurance plan is based on how much of your income the premium (cost to buy the plan) requires. Premiums will cost between 2% and 9.5% of your total income in the new Marketplace. A premium that costs more than 9.5% of your income is considered unaffordable and you will not be taxed if you do not buy a plan.
Source: What is the Marketplace? Covering Kids & Families Wisconsin; retrieved 9/25/13
Download the What is the Marketplace fact sheet at:
No matter where you live, you may buy insurance from private health plans that cover a comprehensive set of benefits, including doctor visits, hospital stays, preventative care and prescriptions. And plans in the Marketplace must treat you fairly; they can't deny you coverage because of a pre-existing condition. With a single application, you can also see if you qualify for Medicaid or the Children's Health Insurance Program, or savings you can use right away to lower your health insurance premiums.
Enrollment began October 1, 2013. Visit HealthCare.gov to explore the Marketplace or apply for coverage. HealthCare.gov is your best source of information about the Marketplace. You can read information that pertains to you, print checklists and watch videos to help you get ready to apply and enroll.
As you explore your options on the Marketplace, you may want to get some help. You can participate in an online web chat on the website; or call 1-800-318-2596 to speak with a trained customer service representative.
Visit HealthCare.gov now to get all the information you
need about the Marketplace.
Source: Marketplace.cms.gov, retrieved 9/25/13
OTHER RESOURCES: YOUTUBE
The Youtunes Get Ready For Obamacare (6 min) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JZkk6ueZt-U Los YouToons Se Preparan Para Obamacare (6 min) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H9ND8EATNP4 “The Affordable Care Act in Wisconsin” (24 min) Interview with JM Collins & Caroline Gomez http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hisw7u4HEOs
For the latest news and updates visit our UW Extension website and click the ―Affordable Care Act‖ tab, or go to:
Photos: Jeffrey J. Strobel, Duane Popple and Lynda Schweikert
Farms, like all major industries, must follow environmental requirements to control runoff from fields, pastures and livestock facilities. Otherwise this pollution can harm our lakes, streams, wetlands and groundwater. Wisconsin adopted administrative rules in 2002 (NR 151), with revisions effective in 2011 that set statewide performance standards and prohibitions for all Wisconsin farms. All farmers must comply with these standards and prohibitions. Cost-share funding may be available to assist with compliance. Some state and local programs may require compliance whether or not cost-share funds are available. This fact sheet explains the basic information that farmers need to know about these rules and how to comply with them. It is recommended that farmers contact their county land conservation staff for further details on these rules and their impact on farm operations.
ALL FARMERS MUST:
Meet tolerable soil loss (“T”) on cropped fields and pastures.
Annually develop and follow a Nutrient Management Plan (NMP)
designed to keep nutrients and sediment from entering lakes, streams, wetlands and groundwater. Farmers may hire a certified crop advisor or prepare their own NMP if they have received proper training.
Use the phosphorous index (PI) standard to ensure that their NMP
adequately controls phosphorous runoff over the accounting period.
Avoid tilling within 5 feet of the edge of the bank of surface waters. This
setback may be extended up to 20 feet to ensure bank integrity and prevent soil deposition
Prevent direct runoff from feedlots or stored manure from entering lakes, streams, wetlands and groundwater. Limit access or otherwise manage livestock along lakes, streams and wetlands to maintain vegetative cover and prevent erosion. Prevent significant discharges of process wastewater (milkhouse waste, feed leachate, etc.) into lakes, streams, wetlands, or groundwater.
FARMERS WHO HAVE, OR PLAN TO BUILD, MANURE STORAGE STRUCTURES MUST:
Maintain structures to prevent overflow and maintain contents at or below the specified margin of safety. Repair or upgrade any failing or leaking structures to prevent negative impacts to public health, aquatic life and groundwater. Close idle structures according to accepted standards. Meet technical standards for newly constructed or significantly altered structures.
FARMERS WITH LAND IN A WATER QUALITY MANAGEMENT AREA (300 feet from streams, 1,000 feet from a lake, or in areas susceptible to groundwater contamination) MUST:
Avoid stacking manure in unconfined piles. Divert clean water away from feedlots, manure storage areas, and barnyards located within this area.
A farmer must comply with applicable state standards to receive the Farmland Preservation Tax Credit, even if cost sharing is not available. Farmers may be considered in compliance by entering into a schedule of compliance. This requirement applies to farmers whose land is located in a certified farmland preservation zoning district (i.e. exclusive agriculture), or for farmers who signed a farmland preservation agreement after standards were in effect for that county. Farmers should contact their county land conservation staff for more information regarding applicable standards and compliance documentation. Continued on page 17...
Under DNR rules, a landowner is normally entitled to cost sharing if the landowner is required to implement best management practices on “existing cropland” or an “existing” livestock facility or operation in order to comply with a DNR performance standard.
Cropland or livestock facilities brought into service after the effective date of the standard are considered “new” and must meet standards and prohibi-tions without cost-share funding. Farmers with existing cropland or livestock facilities may be eligible for state or federal cost sharing and are encour-aged to contact their county land conservation staff or USDA Natural Re-sources Conservation Service (NRCS) office for information about current funding sources, rates and practices eligible for cost sharing. Farmers also should work with their land conservation staff to determine how these performance standards and prohibitions may affect their partici-pation in various federal, state and local programs, such as Farmland Pres-ervation. You can find a directory of land conservation offices and related agencies at:
http://datcp.wi.gov/Environment under “Land and Water Conservation.”
Farmers may be required to meet NR 151 Standards in order to obtain local and state permits. For livestock siting and manure storage ordinance per-mits, for example, nutrient management plans and other requirements may be imposed on livestock operations without providing cost sharing. Contact your local officials for additional information. Farmers with 1,000 or more animal units must operate under a Wisconsin Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (WPDES) permit and do not qualify for state cost sharing to meet permit requirements. Contact your DNR Ser-vice Center for more information about WPDES permits. For more information about runoff management in Wisconsin and topics found in this brochure please visit: runoffinfo.uwex.edu
MADISON – The petition period is now open for 2014 Agricultural Enterprise Area designation, which can provide tax credits for farmers, keep land in agriculture, and stimulate the local farm economy. Agricultural enterprise areas, or AEAs, are blocks of land that are primarily in agricultural use, either for farming or for businesses that serve the farming sector. They are created when local governments together with at least five local landowners petition the Wisconsin Department of Agriculture, Trade and Consumer Protection and the department approves the designation. AEA designation by itself does not limit land use within the area, or protect from encroaching development. It does allow farmers within the AEA to receive tax credits of $5-$10 per acre if they enter farmland preservation agreements with the department. The designation can also be used with local planning and zoning, conservation easements, ag economic development incentives and other tools to support farming and the local farm economy. "AEAs are a great tool for local governments and their constituents to preserve and build our rural landscape," said Ben Brancel, Secretary of Agriculture, Trade and Consumer Protection. "The process supports not only agricultural production, but the service and processing infrastructure that goes with crop and livestock production. AEAs allow for a whole range of things that local governments can do to map out a realistic plan to maintain their farming bases." Petition materials, including detailed instructions and petition forms, are available online at http://workinglands.wi.gov. Completed petitions are due March 31, 2014. Petitions must be completed jointly by local landowners and local government officials. Prospective petitioners should notify the department of their intent to apply, so they can receive announcements of workshops or webinars to help them prepare their petitions. Agriculture supports 1 in 10 jobs in Wisconsin, and is a $59.6 billion industry. DATCP may designate up to 250,000 acres around the state in 2014, which would bring the total acreage in AEAs to 1 million. The first four rounds of petitions have led to designating 25 AEAs totaling about 750,000 acres in 19 counties, 72 towns, and one reservation. For more information, farmers and local government officials should call Coreen Fall at at 608-224-4625 or email: [email protected].
Watch your mailbox for your official county office committee election ballot
starting early next month. Ballots will be mailed to all eligible voters on
Nov. 4, 2013. If for some reason you don’t receive a ballot, feel free to notify
your local FSA office.
Completed and signed ballots must be returned to the county office by close
of business on Dec.2, 2013.
FSA PAYMENTS
FSA has started issuing Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) annual rental payments to participants across the country. CRP payments will be followed by 2013 direct payments and 2012 Average Crop Revenue Election (ACRE) program payments beginning Oct. 24. These payments were delayed by several weeks due to the lapse in Federal funding. ACRE payments for 2012-crop barley, corn, grain sorghum, lentils, oats, peanuts, dry peas, soybeans, and wheat are scheduled to be released beginning Oct. 24. ACRE payments are contingent upon national average market prices and yields in Wisconsin. Only those farms that participated in the 2012 ACRE program and met both the state and farm trigger will be eligible for payment. ACRE payments for upland cotton are scheduled to be made in early November, after the 2012/13 average market year price is published in the Agricultural Prices publication scheduled to be released on October 31. ACRE payments for 2012 large chickpeas, small chickpeas, canola, crambe, flaxseed, mustard seed, rapeseed, safflower, sesame, and sunflowers are scheduled to be made in early December and for long grain rice and medium and short grain rice in early February 2014 when the final 2012/13 market year average price data becomes available. ACRE payments are contingent upon national average market prices and yields in Wisconsin. Only those farms that participated in the 2012 ACRE program and met both the state and farm trigger will be eligible for payment. The 2008 Farm Bill, extended by the American Tax Payer Relief Act of 2012, provided authority to enroll land in DCP, ACRE and CRP through Sept. 30, 2013; however, no legislation has been enacted to reauthorize or extend this authority. Effective Oct. 1, 2013, FSA does not have legislative authority to approve or process applications for these programs.
The Farm Service Agency makes loans to rural youth to establish and operate agriculture income-producing projects in connection with 4-H Clubs, FFA and other agricultural groups. Projects must be planned and operated with the help of the organization advisor, produce sufficient income to repay the loan and provide the youth with practical business and educational experience. The maximum loan amount is $5000.
For more information you can stop by your FSA county office. Our staff can help with preparing and processing the application forms.
NRCS-APPLY NOW FOR FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE!
The Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) is accepting applications
for Conservation Financial Assistance through their Environmental Quality Incentives Program (EQIP) through December 20th.
Some of the conservation practices we can cost-share are as follows: Nutrient Management Plans
Pest Management Plans No till
Waste Storage Facilities Grassed Waterways
Pasture or hayland planting Fencing (permanent and temporary)
Watering systems for cattle Wells for livestock
High tunnel/hoop houses Tree planting Tree pruning
Brush management Forest stand improvement/thinning
Prescribed grazing plans
Stop in the office to see the whole list of practices we can assist with. You must have records established with Farm Services Agency (FSA) and be in
compliance with HEL/Wetland rules to be eligible for funding.
If you are interested in learning more please call Merrie Schamberger at NRCS at (920)424-0329 ext 110 or stop in the USDA Service Center at 625 E County Road Y in Oshkosh.
An EEO/Affirmative Action employer, University of Wisconsin-Extension provides
equal opportunities in employment and programming, including title IX requirements.
http://www.uwex.edu/ces/cty/winnebago/
Winnebago County UW-Extension 625 E County Rd Y Suite 600
Oshkosh, WI 54901-8131
Agriculture/Horticulture 920-232-1971 Community Development 920-232-1972 Family Living 920-232-1973 4-H Youth Development 920-232-1974 Natural Resource Educator 920-232-1972