Agriculture

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – Lake County Farm Bureau, with assistance from Lake County UC Cooperative Extension and Lake County Ag Department, is offering a pesticide safety train the trainer workshop conducted by UC Pesticide Safety Coordinator Lisa Blecker.

The workshop will be held from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 5, at the Kelseyville Lion’s Club, 4335 Sylar Lane.

Cost is $75 per person and includes continental breakfast, lunch and all materials.

This training will be conducted in Spanish only, with materials available in Spanish or English.
 
Participants who complete this training will become qualified to provide pesticide safety training to fieldworkers and pesticide handlers, as required by California state regulations.

Hands-on training techniques and group activities will be used to demonstrate ways to extend pesticide safety information to pesticide handlers and agricultural fieldworkers in an interactive and effective manner.

This training is approved and co-sponsored by the California Department of Pesticide Regulation.
 
Who should attend this important meeting? Growers, safety managers, farm labor contractors, ag supervisors and other safety trainers will all benefit from this interactive workshop.
 
Registration forms are available in Spanish and English by contacting the Lake County Farm Bureau office. Registration and payment is required prior to the workshop.

Attendance is limited to 30 participants so register now to ensure a spot. No refunds will be given, but substitutions are allowed.
 
If you have any questions or need a registration form, please contact Lake County Farm Bureau at 707-263-0911, This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. or visit the Lake County Farm Bureau office at 65 Soda Bay Road in Lakeport.

NORTHERN CALIFORNIA – Petaluma was the site of the California Women for Agriculture’s 39th annual convention and statewide meeting Jan. 10 through Jan. 12.

Attendees who arrived on Friday were treated to a local tour of the Petaluma Creamery hosted by Larry Peter, Dairy Dell hosted by Camilla Gray-Nelson, and Lagunitas Brewing Co.  

The convention was attended by nearly 100 members from 17 of the state’s 20 chapters in good standing.  

Toni Scully, Lori Hedstrom, Terry Dereniuk and Kathy Koehler attended the convention from the Lake County Chapter of CWA (LCCWA).  

These members oversaw the convention’s hospitality booth, giving convention attendees a literal taste of Lake County by serving pear and persimmon treats to guests.  

A Powerpoint about the AgVenture program played in the background, initiating interest in LCCWA’s vital educational program about local agriculture.

California Assembly Member Mark Levine and Sonoma County Second District Supervisor David Rabbitt welcomed convention attendees on Saturday and Sunday respectively.  

Attendees went to workshops specifically designed for newly installed local chapter officers. They also were offered a Legislative Boot Camp to prepare for CWA’s yearly visit to Sacramento to communicate the agricultural industry’s concerns to elected officials.  

California Women for Agriculture is a nonprofit organization boasting 2,000 plus members across the state.

CWA is the most active, all volunteer agricultural organization in the state and members are actively engaged in public relations, education and legislative advocacy on behalf of agriculture.

To learn more about the Lake County Chapter of California Women for Agriculture, visit www.lakecountycwa.org .

WASHINGTON, DC – U.S. Reps. Mike Thompson’s (D-CA-5) legislation, The Crop Insurance Accountability Act of 2013 (H.R. 2260), passed the House of Representatives Wednesday as part of the compromise long term reauthorization of the Farm Bill (H.R. 2642).

The bipartisan Crop Insurance Accountability Act, co-authored by Rep. Jeff Fortenberry (R-NE-1), enhances conservation by incentivizing responsible farming practices.

Under this legislation, in order for farmers to qualify for taxpayer subsidies of crop insurance, they must meet basic conservation requirements that minimize the impact to some of our most sensitive areas such as highly erodible lands and wetlands.

“This legislation will help us achieve two important goals. It will allow American farmers to continue having a strong and reliable crop insurance safety net, and it will help protect and conserve our most sensitive lands,” said Thompson. “I’m glad to see this bipartisan legislation pass the House and look forward to it being signed into law so that our farmers can be protected and our most sensitive lands can be better conserved.”

The bipartisan Crop Insurance Accountability Act:

  • Applies to annually-tilled crops grown on highly erodible lands (HEL) or any crops in wetlands, as determined by the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA);
  • Requires farmers in these areas to file a conservation plan with USDA that states how they will reduce and offset impacts in these areas;
  • Requires farmers to be in compliance according to their USDA-approved conservation plan in order to receive federal subsidies for their crop insurance premiums;
  • Delays the date for producers to come into compliance who are subject to conservation compliance for the first time for five years;
  • Allows for all appeal processes to be exhausted before farmers are found to be out of compliance; and
  • Provides exemptions for circumstances beyond the farmers control and actions taken in good faith.

Currently, crop insurance for farmers is subsidized by an average of 62 percent. The Crop Insurance Accountability Act would require farmers to meet a certain conservation compliance standard to continue qualifying for subsidized crop insurance.

If a farmer chooses not to participate in conservation compliance or is found to be out of compliance, they may still purchase crop insurance but would be responsible for 100 percent of the insurance premium.

Since the 1985 Farm Bill, conservation compliance has been required for participation in many farm bill programs.

The 1996 Farm Bill disconnected conservation compliance from crop insurance premium subsidies and instead tied it to the direct payments, or fixed payments, farmers receive every year based on their land’s production history.

The Farm Bill that passed the House essentially eliminated direct payments, and in doing so also ended conservation compliance requirements for many of those crops and lands. The Crop Insurance Accountability Act re-links conservation compliance measures to crop insurance premium subsidies.

Reps. Thompson and Fortenberry originally introduced the Crop Insurance Accountability Act on June 5, 2013, and was supported by: the American Farm Bureau Federation, Association of Fish and Wildlife Agencies, Defenders of Wildlife, Ducks Unlimited, Environmental Defense Fund, Environmental Working Group, League of Conservation Voters, National Audubon Society, National Association of State Conservation Agencies, National Corn Growers Association, National Farmers Union, National Wildlife Federation, Pheasants Forever, The Nature Conservancy and World Wildlife Fund.

H.R. 2642, the Federal Agriculture Reform and Risk Management Act of 2013 (the Farm Bill) passed the House by a bipartisan vote of 251-166. It will now be voted on by the Senate.

Thompson represents California’s Fifth Congressional District, which includes all or part of Contra Costa, Lake, Napa, Solano and Sonoma counties. He is a senior member of the House Ways and Means Committee and the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence. Rep. Thompson is also a member of the fiscally conservative Blue Dog Coalition and chairs the bipartisan, bicameral Congressional Wine Caucus.

KELSEYVILLE, Calif. – After the holiday rush is over, community folks and Farm Bureau members are encouraged to attend the Lake County Farm Bureau’s Sunday Morning Breakfast on Jan. 12, 2014.

Relax after all the hustle and bustle and let the Kelseyville Lions Club cook up their delicious breakfast selection of pancakes, scrambled eggs, biscuits with gravy and sausage.

Breakfast will be served from 8 a.m. to 11 a.m. at the Kelseyville Lion’s Club, located at 4335 Sylar Lane in Kelseyville.

Even if you are still taking down your Christmas decorations, come on by because take-outs will be available.

Proceeds from the breakfast will benefit Farm Bureau’s scholarship fund as well as its farm-focused programs.

Tickets are $7 and can be purchased at the door, before the event at the Lake County Farm Bureau office, or from any Farm Bureau director.

Farm Bureau strives to protect and promote farming and agricultural interests throughout Lake County and to find solutions to challenges on the farm, at the ranch home and throughout the rural community.

Farm Bureau is Lake County’s largest farm organization, representing over 550 farm families and individual members.

For more information, contact Lake County Farm Bureau Executive Director Claudia Street at 707-263-0911, visit www.lakecofb.com or find the group on Facebook.

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