USDA: dairy program signup

Dec 30, 2008 9:46 AM

USDA’s Farm Service Agency has begun signup for the Milk Income Loss Contract program. Dairy producers can enroll in the program from now until Sept. 30, 2012, the end of the new farm bill.

The 2008 law reauthorized the MILC program with three key changes. Under the 2008 act, the MILC payment rate and the per-operation poundage limit are modified, depending on when the milk is produced.

The new program includes a “feed cost adjuster,” that operates over the life of the 2008 law. The new provision adjusts the $16.94 per hundredweight benchmark price upward depending on the cost of feed rations.

When available, MILC payments are based on a payment rate percentage that is multiplied by the difference between a now-flexible target ($16.94 per hundredweight or higher) and the specific month’s Boston Class I price of milk.

USDA’s Commodity Credit Corporation issued MILC payments on an operation-by-operation basis up to a maximum of 2.4 million pounds of milk produced and marketed (about 120 cows) from Oct. 1, 2007, through Sept. 30, 2008. The production limit per operation increased to 2.985 million pounds (about 145 cows) for each fiscal year from Oct. 1, 2008, through Aug. 31, 2012. The production limitation reverts back to the original limit of 2.4 million pounds per fiscal year in Sept. 2012.

The 2008 act adjusts the trigger price of $16.94 per hundredweight, depending on the extent to which feed costs increase. The feed cost adjustment takes effect when the monthly National Average Dairy Feed Ration Cost (calculated from the “entire month” prices published by the National Agricultural Statistics Service) is greater than $7.35 per hundredweight beginning Jan. 1, 2008, through Aug. 31, 2012. Calculations from Jan. 1, 2008, through Aug. 31, 2012, will be made at 45 percent of the percentage that the National Average Dairy Feed Ration Cost exceeds $7.35 per hundredweight.

Beginning with fiscal 2009 marketings, which started Oct. 1, 2008, the 2008 law made changes to the provisions for payment eligibility to add an adjusted gross income (AGI) limit. If the individual or entity has annual non-farm AGI for the relevant base period greater than $500,000, the individual or entity is not eligible for MILC benefits. The base period will be set pursuant to AGI regulations yet to be issued. That rule will also define what is considered to be non-farm income.

During the signup application period, participating dairy operations must select the month of the fiscal year to start receiving payments for eligible production. Producers submitting a contract application within 30 days of the beginning of the application period can select any preceding month as the start month.

Producers submitting contract applications after Jan. 21, 2009, will not have the option of selecting an earlier month as the payment start month for the dairy operation for a fiscal year; and will be limited to applicable start month selection rules.

Those general rules are that the start month must either be the month the contract is submitted or some later month. Changes in the month may be made from year to year so long as the designation is made by the fourteenth of the month proceeding the new start month. Pound limits run from the start month and all pounds for which payment is received count against the limit for that fiscal year.

Eligible dairy producers are those who commercially produce milk in the United States. To receive program approval, producers must enter into a MILC contract with CCC and provide monthly milk marketing data. Dairy producers can apply for MILC at local FSA offices.

More information on MILC is available at local FSA offices.

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