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MOSES Homepage
Introduction to Crop
Insurance
by Jody Padgham ©2003 Midwest Organic and Sustainable Education Service
Organic crop
farmers have historically been left out in the cold as far as crop
insurance coverage has been concerned. Laurie Fredericks and Cindy
Cruea, USDA Risk Management Specialists, came to the Upper Midwest
Organic Farming Conference recently to explain how the USDA-Risk
Management Agency (RMA) is now accommodating organic producers in
government risk management programs, including the opening of Federal
Crop Insurance to organic crops.
Fredericks and
Cruea, from the USDA Risk Management office in St Paul, MN, explained
that the USDA-RMA is the overseer of the Federal Crop Insurance
Program. RMA handles the policy and oversight of the program, but
insurance policies are actually sold by private insurance agents.
All sales, service and loss adjustments take place with the private
agents. RMA shares the risk with the private companies. Area Farm
Service Agency offices have lists of insurance agents that individuals
can choose to buy crop insurance through.
Risk Management
in MN, WI and IA is covered through the St Paul regional office.
There are nine other regional offices around the US.
Federal Crop
Insurance protects a farmer against production or revenue losses
when a particular, insured crop does not meet a pre-set production
guarantee. Covered losses include adverse weather (frost, heat,
drought, hail), fire, insects and disease, wildlife damage, earthquake
or volcanic eruption and failure of irrigation water supply. Non-covered
losses include negligence or wrong-doing, poor management and farming
practices, failure or breakdown of irrigation equipment or facilities
and chemical drift.
Organic producers
need to apply for Federal Crop Insurance using a "Written Agreement",
which is a request for exception. These Agreements are traditionally
used to cover crops outside of their specific qualified area, but
now also are written for organic crops. If only general coverage
is taken on an organic crop, the argument will be made that chemical
treatment could have been used to solve an insect or disease problem
to reduce loss. The specific wording in RMA materials states: "If
a Written Agreement is not requested for organic farming practices,
loss adjustment procedures for conventionally grown crops will be
applicable. Appraisals for uninsured causes of loss will be applied
when conventional farming practices would have prevented damage
due to insects, disease or weeds." The use of a Written Agreement
supersedes the status quo and acknowledges the unique practices
involved in organic production.
In WI, MN and
IA last year there were 481 policies written for organic crops.
See table A for a listing of the crops those policies covered.
To write a Written
Agreement, a producer must first find a crop insurance agent they
trust. That agent will fill out a special form, and work with RMA
to write the agreement.
Not all crops
are covered by Federal Crop Insurance. Crops are approved for particular
states and counties. If a crop is not approved in your area but
is in another, you may write a Written Agreement for that crop in
your area. If a crop is not approved for insurance anywhere in the
US, the Federal program will not write insurance for it.
There are some
crops that are in the process of being approved, and undergoing
three year "pilot programs" in a particular state. If
a crop passes the pilot phase, it will be available to other producers
for coverage under a Written Agreement. To initiate a pilot program
on a crop, approval has to be given by the board of the RMA.
Coverage, and
thus insurance premiums, are based on average yield, numbers of
acres per crop and desired % reimbursement. To figure the terms
under which a particular crop can be covered, two situations can
be relevant. In the first, a producer reports production for each
unit of production (field/crop) for up to 10 continuous years. An
average of the data is the base yield that will be used in figuring
insurance coverage. If 10 years of data are not available, a T-Yield
based on the historic county average will be used instead. New farmers
can claim 100% of the T-Yield, existing farmers can only claim 65%
(an incentive for real records to come into the office). Organic
farms are not segregated or treated uniquely as far as T-Yield averages
are concerned.
Crop insurance
must be taken out at very specific times of the year. Once taken
out, the policy is continuous unless canceled by a given year's
sales closing date (November 20 for Apples and Cranberries, March
15th for barley, corn, dry beans, green peas, oats, potatoes, soybeans,
sweet corn, spring wheat.) Closing dates are specific to each area,
and should be confirmed with an agent.
To date, there
is no reimbursement premium for organic crop production. Policy
payments are based solely on yield reduction, acreage affected and
average conventional commodity price. At the session there were
many concerns and questions about this policy. It was explained
that the USDA-ERS (Economic Research Service) is collecting data
on prices for organic crops, but has not collected enough data to
have price averages for organic crops. So, for now, organic producers
will be compensated for the loss of yield and acreage, but at only
average conventional price.
There is hope
on the horizon for this situation, in the form of a pilot program
being undertaken in Pennsylvania, called the "Adjusted Gross
Revenue Lite" Program. In this program, insurance coverage
is based on the 5 year average farm revenue listed on IRS Schedule
F 1040. At this point only a pilot, this program will hopefully
become available to producers around the US within five years. Participants
in this workshop were frustrated that a program such at this which
could take into account organic premiums was not yet available,
but heartened that it is a possibility down the road.
Also a disappointment
to participants was the news that Federal Crop Insurance does not
cover GMO contamination. "Any loss of production or value due
to contamination of a prohibited substance (intentional or unintentional)
or contamination from a genetically modified organism with certified
organic, transitional or buffer zone acreage is not insured."
Fredericks explained that Congress wrote the Act governing Federal
Crop Insurance, and it was their decision to not include chemical
drift or GMO contamination. Any change in this policy would have
to be made by Congress itself, so pressure need be put on our Congress
people rather than the RMA to bring this policy more in line with
the needs of organic farmers.
Fredericks and
Cruea end their presentation by acknowledging that the Federal Crops
Insurance Program's suitability for organic farmers is less than
ideal, but that it is moving in the right direction. They recommend
that individuals in each of the states contact area RMA staff to
further the conversation about organic farm crop insurance needs
and concerns. For more information or to find contact info for your
area, go to www.rma.usda.gov or contact the regional office at 651-290-3304.
A very complete resource, The National Ag Risk Library, is online
at www.agrisk.umn.edu/ Listed on this website are numerous 1-2 page
documents explaining different risk management options for crop
and livestock farmers.
Jody
Padgham is the Education Director of the Midwest Organic and Sustainable
Education Service
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