Agricultural organization helps industry recover from hurricanes: efforts total well over $25 million.Like the rest of the nation, the U.S. agricultural industry watched in disbelief as hurricanes Katrina and Rita attacked the Gulf Coast. With winds measured at 120 mph and water surges as high as 20 feet, some experts are calling the combined hurricanes the worst disaster to ever strike the U.S. This also may be one of the worst disasters to ever strike the U.S. agriculture industry. USDA USDA, n.pr See United States Department of Agriculture. Secretary Mike Johanns Michael Owen Johanns (born June 18, 1950) is an American Republican politician. A former Governor of Nebraska, he served as the 28th U.S. Secretary of Agriculture. He was the fourth Nebraskan to hold the position. announced an estimated $900 million in losses for U.S. agricultural production from Hurricane Katrina Thankfully, many committed to the U.S. ag industry have seen and felt the great short and long term needs of the industry and stepped up to help. Currently, donations from the ag industry have exceeded $25 million in monetary funding and uncounted millions of dollars in food, medical aid, and long-term reconstruction and development supplies. Whether it is cattleman helping cattleman, farmer helping farmer, or older generations helping younger generations, the way of the industry is ag helping ag to ensure the continued growth and sustainability of its people and its industry. CATTLEMAN HELPING CATTLEMAN In rural parts of Louisiana CODE, OF LOUISIANA. In 1822, Peter Derbigny, Edward Livingston, and Moreau Lislet, were selected by the legislature to revise and amend the civil code, and to add to it such laws still in force as were not included therein. , Hurricane Rita Hurricane Rita was the fourth-most intense Atlantic hurricane ever recorded and the most intense tropical cyclone ever observed in the Gulf of Mexico. Rita caused $11.3 billion in damage on the U.S. Gulf Coast in September 2005. hit hard. Roughly 175,000 head of cattle were stranded without hay or fresh water for two weeks after the storm hit. Tommy Shields, a nearby extension specialist from Lake Charles Lake Charles, city (1990 pop. 70,580), seat of Calcasieu parish, SW La.; inc. 1867. It is located on Lake Charles at the mouth of the Calcasieu River in a rice, timber, oil, and natural gas region. , La., called the damage devastating dev·as·tate tr.v. dev·as·tat·ed, dev·as·tat·ing, dev·as·tates 1. To lay waste; destroy. 2. To overwhelm; confound; stun: was devastated by the rude remark. , reporting that cattle were "stranded on any piece of dry land they can find," and long-term needs would include hay, fencing supplies, and portable fence panels. Such reports were common throughout rural areas and small towns in the Gulf Coast areas hit by hurricanes Katrina and Rita. But thankfully, so was the help that farmers and ranchers received from their fellow cattlemen and industry organizations. Within days of Hurricane Katrina, the National Cattleman's Beef Association (NCBA NCBA National Cattlemen's Beef Association NCBA North Carolina Bar Association NCBA National Cooperative Business Association NCBA North Carolina Biomedical Association NCBA National College of Business and Arts ), state beef councils and state cattlemen's associations made donations to traditional relief agencies. The NCBA also called on all agricultural producers to contribute to short and long-term recovery efforts of farm and ranch families. The call and the support grew in response to Hurricane Rita and the awareness that the needs of cattleman and their families will continue well into the future. "It is very important that all citizens contribute to the American Red Cross American Red Cross: see Red Cross. , Salvation Army Salvation Army, Protestant denomination and international nonsectarian Christian organization for evangelical and philanthropic work. Organization and Beliefs The Salvation Army has established branches in 100 countries throughout the world. , and other relief agencies as generously as they can," says Jim McAdams, a Texas rancher and president of NCBA. "But cattlemen also naturally want to help their fellow farmers and ranchers, and storm victims located in rural areas of the Gulf Cost Region. NCBA and its state affiliates are coordinating efforts to help make that happen." Coordinated efforts and donations from the cattlemen are numerous, including Missouri-based Heartland Farm sending 20,000 cans of cooked ground beef and canned stew to Salvation Army feeding operations in Biloxi and Jackson, Miss.; the Seattle-based Oberto Sausage Company Please help [ rewrite this article] from a neutral point of view. Mark blatant advertising for , using . sold 288,000, one-ounce jerky jerky see biltong. packets to the NCBA at cost and donated the shipping; and generous farm and ranch families from as far away as California offering through the NCBA to open up their homes as temporary housing for those in need. "NCBA serves as a valuable national focal point focal point n. See focus. for coordinating and directing aid," McAdams said. "But I really can't say enough about the efforts of our state beef councils and state cattlemen's associations. While the outpourings from the cattle industry have been great, NCBA Chief Executive Officer Terry Stokes is calling on cattlemen across the nation to continue their generosity and remember that hurricane victims are still in great need of assistance in southeastern Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama. "Neighbor helping neighbor is the cattlemen's way," says Stokes. "We've got a long road to recovery on the Gulf Coast, and it's time for all of us to step up and help in any way we can." FFA FFA free fatty acids. PLANTS SEEDS OF HOPE For J. Wesley Graham, an agri-science teacher at Purvis High School Information Purvis High School is a school within the Lamar County School District. It is located in Purvis at the address: 220 School St. Purvis, MS 39475. The schools phone number is 601-794-6221. The current Principal is C. H. Bryant [1]. in Southern Lamar County, Miss., the images of destruction that Hurricane Katrina brought to his town will be etched in his mind for ever. "We were greatly affected," wrote Graham in a letter to the National FFA just days after the hurricane hit. "My agriculture classroom and shop were destroyed. Our fish hut making area was in the shop ... Tuesday after the storm passed, I made it to the shop and just stood there in disbelief. All that we had worked so hard to build in the three years I have taught was gone. Students were very upset. We found our FFA banner and the scrapbook A Macintosh disk file that holds frequently used text and graphics objects, such as a company letterhead. Contrast with "clipboard," which is reserved memory that holds data only for the current session. and laid them out to dry. Now all we can do is move on and try to put this behind us. We will rebuild, we will survive ... don't count us out though--we will be BACK." Graham's positive attitude is reflective of the attitude the entire National FFA is bringing to hurricane recovery efforts. Within days of Hurricane Katrina striking the Gulf Coast, National FFA President Jackie Mundt announced the Seeds of Hope fundraising effort, designed to rebuild agricultural education and FFA programs in Gulf states hard hit by Hurricane Katrina. Partnering with Team Ag Ed, the National Association of Agricultural Educators (NAAE NAAE National Association of Agriculture Educators NAAE National Affiliation of Arts Educators Inc NAAE Nigerian Association of Agricultural Education ) and the National Council for Agricultural Education, FFA plans to use Seeds of Hope to fund a sustained, long-term rebuilding effort to put agricultural education programs and FFA chapters back on their feet in the shortest time possible. At the time of writing, an estimated 120 FFA chapters and schools, 5,000 students and their families, and about 150 agricultural education teachers have experienced severe damage or total destruction to their homes, facilities and school projects, including human and personal property loss. "The National FFA Organization and agricultural education community are mobilizing relief efforts across the nation to help our people along the Gulf Coast, and we have seen a marvelous outpouring of generosity, initiative and assistance," said Dr. Larry D. Case, national FFA advisor. "We want to fast forward to the future through a sustained effort to rebuild our programs and restore educational opportunities to students." ONE GENERATION HELPS THE NEXT Gulf Coast farmers devastated dev·as·tate tr.v. dev·as·tat·ed, dev·as·tat·ing, dev·as·tates 1. To lay waste; destroy. 2. To overwhelm; confound; stun: was devastated by the rude remark. by Hurricanes Katrina and Rita are starting on the long road to recovery, but many farmers are finding that their problems are just beginning. Two groups helping farmers and ranchers get back on their feet are the California Farm Bureau (CFBF CFBF California Farm Bureau Federation CFBF Children's Fire and Burn Fund ) and the Santa Barbara County Farm Bureau (SBCFB). Together they are hoping to return a little bit of "southern comfort" to the lives of their fellow farmers and ranchers. The CFBF's Young Farmers and Ranchers Committee put its support behind the efforts of the SBCFB, which launched an ambitious project called "Operation Southern Comfort." The program concentrates on cash donations that will be distributed to farm families identified by Farm Bureau's in Louisiana, Missippi and Texas. Teri Bontrager, the SBCFB executive director, has been in contact with members of the Missippi and Louisiana State Farm Bureaus. "Every facet of their agricultural industry has been affected, from livestock producers who have lost beef cattle and feed to cotton farmers who have lost 70 to 80 percent of their crop; and from hardwood timber farmers who have lost trees and infrastructure, and horticulturists who have lost growing facilities to the poultry farmers who are fighting to save what is left of their flocks." Bontrager describes "Operation Southern Comfort" as a farmer-to-farm project that will reach out to young farmers, in their twenties, who often work their farms and have second jobs to pay the interest on notes for their farm enterprises. While the Bureau is helping with immediate needs through its ongoing relationship with Second Harvest, Operation Southern Comfort is designed to help with other long term needs. "Once the Farm Bureaus in Louisiana and Mississippi send us the growing lists of families in need, we will get to work right away determining how many people we can send monies to," says Bontrager. "We are hoping to initially send $1,000 checks, and then to send additional monies to the same families around the holidays so that they will able to celebrate with their families and have a touch of normalcy nor·mal·cy n. Normality. Noun 1. normalcy - being within certain limits that define the range of normal functioning normality . The memo line of a check I received really sums up our goal: to give a ray of sunshine to our fellow farmers." Bontrager knows that donations often slow after an initial crises or a holiday. She is encouraging people to follow the advice she heard at a local grower meeting. "The farm families along the Gulf Coast and in the Delta are going to need our help for a long time. The best thing to do is to treat your donation like a tithe tithe Contribution of a tenth of one's income for religious purposes. The practice of tithing was established in the Hebrew scriptures and was adopted by the Western Christian church. for your church. We need ongoing donations to give true comfort to our friends in the South." by Sabrina Hickel, Hickel Communications AGRICULTURE HELPING AGRICULTURE Here a sampling of agriculturally-based organizations helping with hurricane relief efforts. ADFARM AGENCY Matched employee gifts up to $100 each to the American Red Cross. BAYER CORP. $2 million for relief efforts. Matched employee donations to the American Red Cross. BUNGE $250,000 for relief efforts. CARGILL $1.7 million to support immediate relief and long-term rebuilding projects in affected communities. CARGILL ANIMAL NUTRITION The Southeast district supplied multiple truckloads of horse feed in the week's following Hurricane Katrina out of its LeCompte feed mill, sending feed and pet food to the Lamar Dixon Expo Center in Gonzales, La., and a Federal Emergency Management Agency The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) is the federal agency responsible for coordinating emergency planning, preparedness, risk reduction, response, and recovery. The agency works closely with state and local governments by funding emergency programs and providing technical center in Slidell, La. CNH CNH Carteira Nacional de Habilitação CNH Centro Nacional de Huracanes (Spanish) CNH California Nevada Hawaii (a district of Kiwanis International) CNH Club Náutico Hacoaj CAPITAL * $1 million of Case and New Holland construction equipment to support ongoing relief and restoration efforts related to Hurricane Katrina. * $200,000 of construction equipment from Kobelco, its global alliance partner. Customers located in the federally declared disaster areas were notified that CNH Capital deferred payments. DEERE & COMPANY $1 million to support ongoing relief and restoration efforts. * John Deere's equipment divisions identified how in-kind equipment donations could best be utilized. * The John Deere Foundation contributed $500,000 and matched employee contributions to the American Red Cross. DELTA AND PINE LAND COMPANY * $100,000 for disaster relief. * $20,000 to the Salvation Army Hurricane Katrina Disaster Relief DOW CHEMICAL $3 million to the hurricane relief efforts. The company's donation includes $1 million in an immediate cash donation to the Red Cross, $1 million match to employee and retiree donations to the Red Cross and $1 million in products and technology donations for the longer-term reconstruction effort. DUPONT $1 million corporate cash contributions. * Established the DuPont Hurricane Katrina Fund to channel financial donations from employees, retirees and others to communities near DuPont sites that have been impacted by the storm. DuPont will contribute an amount equal to the total contributions to the DuPont Hurricane Katrina Fund, up to $1 million. * Donated products used in disaster relief, recovery and rebuilding. FFA * Established Seeds of Hope to rebuild agricultural education and FFA programs in the Gulf states of Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama and Florida. FORD MOTOR COMPANY $1 million to be divided between America's Second Harvest America's Second Harvest is a United States based nonprofit organization. It consists of a nation-wide network of more than 200 food banks and food-rescue organizations that serve virtually every county in the United States as well as Puerto Rico. , the American Red Cross and the Salvation Army. Donated 150 used vehicles, valued at $2 million to the states of Louisiana and Mississippi. GENERAL MOTORS $400,000 to the American Red Cross. * Matched employee donations up to $250,000. * The company pledged 25 vehicles for the Red Cross to use in relief efforts. KELLOGG FOUNDATION $12 million for hurricane relief. Also made long term commitment to housing and economic redevelopment assistance, as well as to work hand-in-hand with community leaders, and state and federal agencies, to make sure their development is not forgotten in the reconstruction of the Gulf Coast area. LAND O'LAKES FOUNDATION * Matched Land O'Lakes Board, employee and Leadership Council donations, up to $50,000, to the American Red Cross and Salvation Army Hurricane Katrina Disaster Relief Funds. * Matched hurricane relief donations to those same organizations made by Purina dealerships and Agriliance employees. * Donated Land O'Lakes food products and Land O'Lakes Purina animal feed where possible. MONSANTO $750,000 to the American Red Cross. Donated $250,000 to United Way chapters in Jefferson Parish, Orleans Parish and St. Charles Parish, where the company has a major manufacturing facility. NATIONAL 4-H COUNCIL 45,000 4-H members in Louisiana and 40,000 in Mississippi were displaced by the hurricanes. National 4-H Council sent $50,000 of support in cash and donated items (2,000 4-H t-shirts and 2,000 4-H beanie bean·ie n. A small brimless cap. [Probably from bean, head.] beanie Noun Brit, Austral & NZ close-fitting woollen hat Noun bears). Tens of thousands of 4-H clubs are demonstrating their citizenship by donating hundreds of thousands of dollars. State 4-H operations have donated goods, with North Carolina North Carolina, state in the SE United States. It is bordered by the Atlantic Ocean (E), South Carolina and Georgia (S), Tennessee (W), and Virginia (N). Facts and Figures Area, 52,586 sq mi (136,198 sq km). Pop. being the largest donation with seven semitrailer sem·i·trail·er n. A trailer having a set or several sets of wheels at the rear only, with the forward portion being supported by the truck tractor or towing vehicle. loads of supplies. NATIONAL CATTLLEMEN'S BEEF ASSOCIATION (NCBA) $170,000 from NCBA's Federation of State Beef Councils and independent donations from cattlemen and beef associations. Along with state beef councils and state cattlemen's associations, made donations to traditional relief agencies and called on all agricultural producers to contribute to the recovery effort of farm and ranch families. NORTH DAKOTA STOCKMEN'S ASSOCIATION * Coordinated Operation Dakota Giving. * State farmers raised $8,000, and agricultural processors donated thousands of pounds of food, including 15,000 pounds of ready-to-eat meats from Mandan-based Clover-dale Foods and 25,000 pounds of pancake mix from the North Dakota State Mill and Elevator. * Stockyard stockyard 1. public saleyard where livestock are sold, usually by auction. 2. yards for working cattle or sheep on private property. companies, such as Stockmen's Livestock Exchange in Dickinson N.D., are serving as collection points for fencing supplies, chain saws, lumber and other building supplies. OSBORN & BARR BARR Board on Agriculture and Renewable Resources (Washington, DC, USA) BARR Bureau of Aeronautics Resident Representative COMMUNICATIONS * Matched employee contributions to the American Red Cross throughout all of its four offices. * Individual offices contributed to select causes, including the Kansas City office, which worked with the local chapter of the Heart to Heart International and helped to coordinate and publicize a northland north·land also North·land n. A region in the north of a country or an area. north land donation effort, PFIZER ANIMAL HEALTH $70,000 for animal relief efforts. Gave products to Louisiana State University's Veterinary Medical Association and Mississippi State University Mississippi State University, at Mississippi State, near Starkville; land-grant and state supported; coeducational; chartered 1878 as an agricultural and mechanical college, opened 1880. From 1932 to 1958 it was known as Mississippi State College. veterinarians Veterinarians and veterinary surgeons (vets) are medical professionals who operate exclusively on animals. Well-known and notable veterinarians include:
disaster response teams consisting of veterinarians, technicians and support personnel supported by the American Veterinary Medical Foundation. (VMATs) working to help affected animals. RHEA rhea, in zoology rhea (rē`ə), common name for a South American bird of the family Rheidae, which is related to the ostrich. Weighing from 44 to 55 lb (20–25 kg) and standing up to 60 in. & KAISER MARKETING COMMUNICATIONS $26,000 to the American Red Cross. Extended an offer to match and double employee contributions. Red Cross Aids in Hurricane Relief Efforts Hurricanes Katrina and Rita resulted in an unprecedented disaster relief operation due to the scope of the destruction, the size of the area impacted and the number of people affected. For information on Red Cross relief efforts please visit the Web sites below. Local Relief Effort: For information regarding Red Cross relief provided to hurricane evacuees Resident or transient persons who have been ordered or authorized to move by competent authorities, and whose movement and accommodation are planned, organized and controlled by such authorities. in St. Louis, Mo., please go to: http://www.redcrossstl.org/pressroom1.asp?archive=5&ReleaseID=847. National Relief Effort: For the latest national Red Cross relief efforts visit: http://www.redcross.org/news/ds/hurricanes/katrina_facts.html. Sabrina Hickel is a freelance writer based in St. Louis, Me., and can be reached at 314/918-0504 or at srhickle@sbcglobal.net |
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