Farm Progress

Shelly Nutt new executive director of Texas peanut group

Ron Smith 1, Senior Content Director

May 8, 2003

2 Min Read

LUBBOCK, Texas — Shelly Nutt has been named executive director for the Texas Peanut Producers Board, effective April 28.

With the leadership change, TPPB offices will move from Gorman to Lubbock.

“We will move as soon as we obtain office space, but we hope by the end of May,” says Mary Webb, who is retiring as TPPB executive director after 28 years of service to the organization.

Webb joined TPPB in 1975 and served as executive director from 1982 until her recent retirement.

Webb says Nutt comes to the peanut board with unique qualifications. “She has 14 years of experience with state commodity checkoff programs.”

Nutt worked with the Texas Corn Producers Board in Dimmit and in Lubbock.

Webb says her work with the Texas Commodity Referendum Law and as an experienced administrator will be assets as she takes the reins of TPPB, which administers allocation of funds collected in a $2-per-ton peanut checkoff program. Those funds go to peanut research, education and market development.

Webb managed the organization through some chaotic times for peanut producers but says her board members were “wonderful to work with. Peanut farmers have been good to me over the years,” she says. “I could not have worked for a better industry.”

She says the biggest change she’s seen in Texas peanuts in the 28 years she’s worked for the organization is the significant acreage increase. “Peanut acreage has jumped from 150,000 to more than 350,000 (2001 figures),” she says. “But acreage has shifted away from Central Texas to West Texas.”

Webb says changes in the last farm bill pushed many central Texas farmers out of peanuts. Without the quota support price that had been a safety net for decades, many farmers simply could not make profitable crops.

“Texas A&M economists figured producers had to average 4,000 pounds per acre to make a profit under the current system,” she says. “Most producers in West Texas will make that most years, if they have adequate water.”

She says Central Texas producers likely will grow no more than 10 percent of the state’s peanuts.

She said the quota buyout included in the farm bill helped some growers and brought cash into rural communities. “But it was a one-shot deal and doesn’t help the economy long-term.”

She says as peanut acreage and industry infrastructure moves to West Texas, moving TPPB offices makes sense.

email: [email protected]

About the Author(s)

Ron Smith 1

Senior Content Director, Farm Press/Farm Progress

Ron Smith has spent more than 40 years covering Sunbelt agriculture. Ron began his career in agricultural journalism as an Experiment Station and Extension editor at Clemson University, where he earned a Masters Degree in English in 1975. He served as associate editor for Southeast Farm Press from 1978 through 1989. In 1990, Smith helped launch Southern Turf Management Magazine and served as editor. He also helped launch two other regional Turf and Landscape publications and launched and edited Florida Grove and Vegetable Management for the Farm Press Group. Within two years of launch, the turf magazines were well-respected, award-winning publications. Ron has received numerous awards for writing and photography in both agriculture and landscape journalism. He is past president of The Turf and Ornamental Communicators Association and was chosen as the first media representative to the University of Georgia College of Agriculture Advisory Board. He was named Communicator of the Year for the Metropolitan Atlanta Agricultural Communicators Association. More recently, he was awarded the Norman Borlaug Lifetime Achievement Award by the Texas Plant Protection Association. Smith also worked in public relations, specializing in media relations for agricultural companies. Ron lives with his wife Pat in Johnson City, Tenn. They have two grown children, Stacey and Nick, and three grandsons, Aaron, Hunter and Walker.

Subscribe to receive top agriculture news
Be informed daily with these free e-newsletters

You May Also Like