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Here are some of the member-leaders and staff who make INFB tick today.

Tom J Bechman 1, Editor, Indiana Prairie Farmer

June 18, 2019

3 Min Read
Bob Cherry talking to Casie Roland
PEOPLE TO PEOPLE: Casie Roland, an INFB regional manager, discusses issues important to the counties she represents with Rep. Bob Cherry, Greenfield, Ind., during the 2019 legislative session. Indiana Farm Bureau Inc.

One hundred years ago, proactive people with a vision started the Indiana Farm Bureau. Proactive people, both member-volunteers and staff, continue to make the organization successful today.

This is the fifth of six articles saluting the state’s largest farm organization as it celebrates its 100th anniversary this year. Molly Zentz, public relations manager, helped pull together information for this series. Read about milestones from INFB’s first 50 years and the past 50 years in the first two articles.

Randy Kron, INFB president and a farmer from Evansville, relies on his board of directors to guide the organization today. There are 10 districts and 13 directors within INFB, Zentz reports. Directors are elected by the membership.

Here is the current makeup of INFB’s board of directors:

  • District 1: Harold Parker, LaPorte County

  • District 2: Kevin Ousley, Whitley County

  • District 3: Kevin Underwood, Tippecanoe County

  • District 4: Steve Maple, Howard County

  • District 5: David Wyeth, Hendricks County

  • District 6: Jon Sparks, Hancock County

  • District 7: Jeff Gormong, Vigo County

  • District 8: Kermit Paris, Rush County

  • District 9: Marybeth Feutz, Gibson County

  • District 10: Robert Geswein, Floyd County

The remaining three seats on the board are filled by the organization’s president, vice president and second vice president. Besides Kron from Vanderburgh County, the board includes vice president Kendell Culp from Jasper County and second vice president Isabella Chism from Howard County.

Related:INFB recounts past, recent achievements

Staff members

Working with 92 county Farm Bureaus divided into 10 districts across the state are 15 regional managers, Zentz says. This position has been called by various names through INFB’s history, including “fieldman” in the not-so-distant past. Key cogs in the locally driven process for INFB, these staff members attend local board meetings and serve as the link between the county level and the state level.

It’s a two-way street, leaders note, with information about policy and other matters flowing from the state organization to the counties through the regional managers. At the same time, the managers field concerns from members of county Farm Bureau boards, and make sure state staff and elected leaders are in tune with what’s going on across the state. Here is the current field staff for INFB. The various regional managers report to Laura Ruhlman, field operations manager. Each regional manager is responsible for the counties listed with their name.

  • Wayne Belden, Carroll, Cass, Clinton, Marshall, Tippecanoe and White

  • Greg Bohlander, Hamilton, Hancock, Henry, Madison, Marion and Wayne

  • Drew Cleveland, Adams, Blackford, Delaware, Jay, Randolph and Wells

  • Trevor Craig, Crawford, Lawrence, Martin, Monroe, Orange and Perry

  • Justin Dahm, Benton, Fulton, Jasper, Lake, Newton and Pulaski 

  • Jennifer Gish, Dubois, Gibson, Pike, Posey, Spencer, Vanderburgh and Warrick

  • Leslie Hickman, Grant, Howard, Huntington, Miami, Tipton and Wabash

  • Amy Hutson, Boone, Fountain, Montgomery, Parke, Vermillion and Warren

  • Susan Lawrence, Allen, DeKalb, Kosciusko, Noble, Steuben and Whitley

  • Mallory Meyer, Clark, Floyd, Harrison, Jackson, Scott and Washington

  • Marissa Mikel, Elkhart, Lake, LaPorte, Porter, St. Joseph and Starke

  • Keegan Poe, Bartholomew, Brown, Hendricks, Johnson, Morgan and Putnam

  • Brad Ponsler, Dearborn, Jefferson, Jennings, Ohio, Ripley and Switzerland

  • E.B. Rawles, Clay, Daviess, Greene, Knox, Owen, Sullivan and Vigo

  • Casie Roland, Decatur, Fayette, Franklin, Rush, Shelby and Union

Related:Indiana Farm Bureau vs. Farm Bureau Co-op: A history lesson

Besides field staff working with counties, there are also specialists in various departments, primarily based in Indianapolis at INFB’s state headquarters. Learn more about the people of INFB today at infarmbureau.org.

About the Author(s)

Tom J Bechman 1

Editor, Indiana Prairie Farmer

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