

U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) Farm Service Agency (FSA) State Executive Director, John W. McCauley, announced that producers who apply for FSA farm loans also will be offered the opportunity to enroll in new disaster loss protections created by the 2014 Farm Bill.
The new coverage, available from the Noninsured Crop Disaster Assistance Program (NAP), is available to FSA loan applicants who grow non-insurable crops, so this is especially important to fruit and vegetable producers and other specialty crop growers.
“FSA is opening its doors wider so that more specialty farmers know of our array of services,” said McCauley. “And new, underserved and limited income specialty growers who apply for farm loans could qualify for basic loss coverage at no cost, or higher coverage for a discounted premium.”
The basic disaster coverage protects at 55 percent of the market price for crop losses that exceed 50 percent of production. Covered crops include “specialty” crops, for instance, vegetables, fruits, mushrooms, floriculture, ornamental nursery, aquaculture, turf grass, ginseng, honey, syrup, hay, forage, grazing and energy crops. FSA allows beginning, underserved or limited income producers to obtain NAP coverage up to 90 days after the normal application closing date when they also apply for FSA credit.
In addition to free basic coverage, beginning, underserved or limited income producers are eligible for a 50 percent discount on premiums for the higher levels of coverage that protect up to 65 percent of expected production at 100 percent of the average market price.
Producers also may work with FSA to protect value-added production, such as organic or direct market crops, at their fair market value in those markets. Targeted underserved groups eligible for free or discounted coverage are American Indians or Alaskan Natives, Asians, Blacks or African-Americans, Native Hawaiians or other Pacific Islanders, Hispanics, and women.
FSA offers a variety of loan products, including farm ownership loans, operating loans and microloans that have a streamlined application process.
Growers need not apply for an FSA loan, nor be a beginning, limited resource, or underserved farmer, to be eligible for Noninsured Crop Disaster Assistance Program assistance. To learn more, visit www.fsa.usda.gov/nap or www.fsa.usda.gov/farmloans, or contact your local FSA office at https://offices.usda.gov.
The Trail Town Task Force Committee will meet Thursday, June 4, at 6 p.m. at the Ohio County Extension Office in Hartford. Everyone is invited to attend.
Agenda
Old Business.
New Business.
Next meeting: July 2, 2015 6 p.m. at Ohio County Extension office.
After the Kentucky Department of Environmental Protection requested the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to perform a time-critical removal action at an arsenic site on 209 Shinkle Chapel Road in November, a federal order gated the property from the public and the agency began conducting its investigation.
Art Smith, on-scene coordinator for the U.S. EPA Region 4 office in Louisville, said the EPA’s contractors visited the site in late March and collected a limited number of samples. This was primarily to identify the type of arsenic compound permeating the property and to confirm the reported high concentrations of the substance.
“We got our samples back, we confirmed the values that were reported to us by the Kentucky Department of Environmental Protection, so we confirmed the arsenic contamination as there as reported to us initially,” he said.
The agency was then able to identify the arsenic compound as arsenic trioxide.
“Arsenic trioxide historically has been used as a herbicide, but we’re unable to confirm whether that was the intended purpose or would explain the presence of it at the site,” Smith said.
The agency also conducted a limited survey of the site and ruled out the possibility of a widespread contamination at the surface. Instead, the arsenic seems to be confined primarily in an area that is covered in a white, powdery substance and has moved 100 feet down a hillside.
While the agency has yet to obtain any information of how deep the arsenic has penetrated through the soil, Smith said the concentrated areas on the surface measured around 30 feet in diameter.
In addition to these findings, the EPA found arsenic dust inside of the hall of the property’s home when it cracked open the hall’s door.
“We don’t know how expansive that is, but we confirmed what we thought was possible was, that over the course of time, when people had lived there, some of it had gotten tracked back into the home from that area out in the clearing,” Smith said.
Since a widespread contamination has been ruled out, Smith didn’t think the arsenic was a threat to any nearby homes. However, wildlife passing through the area could be at risk if they were to ingest any of the arsenic compound.
It’s also not yet known if the arsenic has affected the nearby surface waters, since an investigation hasn’t been conducted yet, or whether a responsible party is involved.
While a follow-up investigation on the site hasn’t been scheduled, it will include the next step in the cleanup process, which will be to define the volume of contaminated material that has to be removed from the site.