Wallaces Farmer

Agency will continue to defer interest charge for 2019 crop insurance.

Rod Swoboda

November 18, 2019

3 Min Read
crop field
NEW DEADLINE: USDA is giving farmers until Jan. 31 to pay 2019 crop insurance premiums without accruing interest charge.

USDA’s Risk Management Agency on Nov. 14 announced it will continue to defer accrual of interest for 2019 crop year insurance premiums to help the wide swath of farmers affected by extreme weather in 2019.

Specifically, USDA will defer the accrual of interest on 2019 crop year insurance premiums to either the applicable termination date or Jan. 31, whichever comes first. This change is for all policies with an original premium billing date of Aug. 15, 2019.

For any premium that is not paid by the new deadline, interest will accrue consistent with the terms of the policy.

This extension is necessary since harvest progress has been very delayed and crop insurance claims are not typically settled until harvest is complete, squeezing cash flow even further, said Bill Northey, USDA's undersecretary for farm production and conservation. “USDA is committed to helping farmers and ranchers impacted by the weather challenges this year. We hope this deferral will help ease cash flow challenges for producers, many of whom are caught in a very delayed harvest," he said.

Extra help

USDA had previously announced a deferral to Nov. 30, providing producers with an additional two months from the traditional Sept. 30 date. With the new announcement, producers will have until Jan. 31 to pay the 2019 premium without accruing interest.

This extended deferral builds on other steps USDA has taken to support farmers and ranchers impacted by flooding and other disasters. So far this year, producers have reported they were prevented from planting on nearly 20 million acres, a modern record. Indemnities from crop insurance have reached almost $6 billion this year, with more than $3.9 billion of that going to producers unable to plant because of flooding or excess moisture.

More than $3 billion is available through the disaster relief package passed by Congress and signed by President Donald Trump in early June, including a “top-up” payment for producers who made prevented planting claims.

USDA has distributed through producers’ approved insurance providers nearly $580 million in top-up payments. Additional payments will be made in the middle of each month as more prevented planting claims are processed, Northey said.

Contact your insurance agent

The Disaster Relief Act also authorized the Wildfire and Hurricane Indemnity Program Plus, administered by USDA's Farm Service Agency, and included new programs to cover losses for milk dumped or removed from the commercial market, and losses of eligible farm stored commodities due to eligible disaster events in 2018 and 2019.

Farmers who planted cover crops on prevented plant acres were able to hay, graze or chop those fields earlier than November this year while maintaining eligibility for their full 2019 prevented planting indemnity.

USDA adjusted the 2019 final haying and grazing date from Nov. 1 to Sept. 1 to help farmers who were prevented from planting because of flooding and excess rainfall this spring. The agency also determined that silage, haylage and baleage should be treated in the same manner as haying and grazing for this year.

For more information on this crop insurance deadline extension, producers are encouraged to contact their crop insurance agent.

 

About the Author(s)

Rod Swoboda

Rod Swoboda is a former editor of Wallaces Farmer and is now retired.

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