Sen. Jerry Moran: ‘Farmers are just not prepared for another year of significant circumstances’

Sen. Moran joins us to discuss the farm aid package and the financial reality faced by row crop farmers in his home state of Kansas.

WASHINGTON, D.C. (RFD-TV) — The agriculture sector is weighing in on President Donald Trump’s new farm aid package. U.S. Senator Jerry Moran, R-KS, joins us on Tuesday’s Market Day Report to share his thoughts on the new assistance and what he is hearing from farmers in his state.

“I think there’s a sadness that this is necessary, but I think there’s a realization that there’s really no choice. And the timing is helpful, in assuming that our farmers can convince their bankers of the value of that $12 billion to them and their operations,” Sen. Moran told RFD-TV News. “At the moment, many of us are waiting for more information. Today we learned that USDA will have a formula by which they determine the payment per acre -- and that will be determined later this month, here in December, based upon cost of production, based upon price, and based upon yield. We’ll have an understanding of what that payment will look like to individual farms across the country. We also know the form for which the farmers are going to have to apply will be pre-filled in with their acres qualified, and they sign, and hopefully that payment is predicted to be in the mail, in the farmer’s pocketbook by February.”

Moran said this payment would likely not be enough to support row-crop and specialty-crop farmers, and that another payment will likely be necessary as the Trump Administration and US TR continue to iron out a slate of new trade agreements in the wake of China’s pullback from commodity-crop purchases.

“I would say, at least in Kansas and many places that have had long-term drought, our farmers are just not prepared for another year of significant circumstances in which the bottom line can’t be met. That’s certainly where we are, and we’re not in good shape going into another year in which the high input costs and the low commodity prices don’t meet in a way that makes agriculture profitable. We’ll continue to be the advocates [...] to keep our farmers in business.”

Related Stories
The new FIELDS program will support domestic fertilizer projects aimed at strengthening long-term supply and lowering costs for farmers
Renewable Fuels Association data shows ethanol production reached an 11-week high as gasoline demand and exports increased.

Marion is a digital content manager for RFD News and FarmHER + RanchHER. She started working for Rural Media Group in May 2022, bringing a decade of digital experience in broadcast media and some cooking experience to the team.

LATEST STORIES BY THIS AUTHOR:

Farm Bureau economist Dr. Faith Parum joins us to discuss USDA’s latest reports on crop acreage and grain stocks, and how they impact farm margins and trade outlook moving forward.
Western Caucus Chair and Utah Rep. Celeste Maloy says permitting reform could create rural jobs and strengthen U.S. energy security.
U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Brooke Rollins joined us for a recent town hall presented by the Western Caucus Foundation. In her keynote address, Rollins discusses the fight against the New World screwworm in the U.S., a new policy to expand grazing on federal lands and reduce regulatory burdens, the reigniting of trade policy, the bolstering of domestic fertilizer production, and the creation of federal policies that put America’s great farmers and ranchers first.
Flipping Farms follows father-daughter team Jeff Peiffer and Rachel Lynn as they purchase and restore a historic, run-down 95-acre farm in rural Pennsylvania.
USDA Undersecretary Luke Lindberg discusses America 250 events in Washington and efforts to highlight farmers and improve market access on Rural Evening News.
StoneX’s Arlan Suderman joins us to break down today’s USDA Acreage and Grain Stocks Reports, which show mixed signals for corn, soybeans, and wheat.