Crop Insurance Today February 2014 - (Page 20)
CropInsurance TODAY
CrOP INSuraNCe IN ACTION
Crop Insurance Lifeline
by Dave ray, North bridge Communications
In 2012, the drought in Kansas was in its
second year, and wheat, corn and soybean
farmer Paul Penner was just trying to survive
to the next season.
Crop insurance has been Penner's lifeline
for the last two years and the years before that.
It has given him and his wife, Deborah, the
means and security to plan ahead and prepare
for another year should the drought persist.
"Without it, many farmers, including us,
would face financial uncertainty as revenue
would be insufficient to cover production expenses," said Penner, 60, of Hillsboro, which is
about 45 miles north of Wichita.
In 2012, the Penners had a 75 percent insurance coverage plan for wheat crops and 70
percent coverage for fall crops, such as corn,
soybeans and sorghum. Just like car insurance, his goal is to "never have to use it."
Penner has been covered by a crop insurance policy for more than 25 years now. If not
for this federal safety net, he said, "I wouldn't
be in farming today."
The insurance helps him recover part of
his losses. "It pays for a little bit of your crops
or production if we
had a bad year
20
February2014
Paul Penner, Hillsboro, Kansas
like the last two to three years' drought. The
insurance pays me a certain percentage of
the revenue I have lost. They don't pay all of
it," he explained. "They will never pay you
100 percent."
But he said he's OK with not recovering
100 percent because even in a bad year, he
said a farmer does not really lose a 100 percent of his production. "At least you're given
enough so you can pay your bills," he said.
Insurance estimates are based on actuarial
history of crop yield and the price of the commodity, among other parameters. Premiums
could be higher for one crop per acre than the
other. In Penner's case, corn has a higher premium cost than wheat and soybeans.
Filing is a straightforward process. A
farmer reports his losses to the crop insurance agent, and the insurance company will
then send an adjuster to verify the claims
based on established guidelines. The
farmer and the adjuster will
work through production
data sheets. Once approved, help is on
the way.
His agent is a local, family-owned company with businesses around the Midwest.
It's the third insurance company Penner
has contracted over the years, as many have
folded up and sold their business.
The premium varies year to year. Penner
said he has paid anywhere from $8,000 to
$20,000 over the years he has been using crop
insurance. The federal government picks up
part of the premium-about 60 percent-as
the cost to the farmer would be "prohibitive."
With the current mood in Congress to cut
the national debt, there are some who would
like to see the entire crop insurance bill "disappear," he said. He asserted not all so-called
"subsidies" should be painted with the same
brush, and it's his view that ad hoc disaster
legislation "is a thing of the past."
Like many in Kansas, Penner was born
to farm. Kansas ranks sixth in farm exports.
Beef, grain sorghum, and wheat, introduced
to the state by the early Russian Mennonite
settlers, are the major products. Hillsboro,
where Penner Farms is located, has a population of about 3,000.
"Farming is a risky business as weather
is the biggest uncontrollable factor," Penner
said. "Without an adequate risk management
tool like crop insurance, a farmer cannot
make marketing plans with the reasonable
certainty he will be successful."
Penner says that he can't fathom
managing all the risks of farming without
crop insurance.
"Crop insurance is absolutely necessary,
period," he said. Penner says that what crop
insurance helps this country do is ensure food
security-the country's ability to provide a reliable and safe food supply for its people, and
not be forced with "going to China and Brazil
to purchase our food."
Table of Contents for the Digital Edition of Crop Insurance Today February 2014
Four Keys to 2014
A 25 Year Milestone in Farm Policy, Looking Back at the 1989 GAO Report
Excellence & Professionalism, No Matter What Comes Our Way!
Corn Loss Instructions Updated for 2014
There's a Right Tool for Every Job! NCIS' IMAP could be the one you're missing
Crop Insurance In Action: Crop Insurance Lifeline
FFA Proficiency Winner
Insurable Crops Locations & Plans
Crop Insurance In Action - A Young Farmer on a Mission to Stay in Farming
Crop Insurance Today February 2014
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