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Grain Indemnity Fund assessment to continue
By Jeff Hutton
The assessment on grain sold to or deposited at Iowa licensed grain dealers and warehouses as part of the Iowa Grain Depositors and Sellers Indemnity Fund (Grain Indemnity Fund) will continue for an additional year, according to the Iowa Department of Agriculture and Land Stewardship (IDALS).
Barring any further claims made against the fund, the assessment is anticipated to cease on Aug. 31, 2025, IDALS says.
In April of 2023, the board that oversees the fund agreed to reinstate producer fees after the fund balance dropped below the statutory $3 million floor after multiple claims were filed following grain facility failures in 2021 and 2022. By law if the fund drops below the $3 million threshold, it requires the Grain Indemnity Fund Board to reinstate the participation fees for grain dealers and warehouses as well as a ¼-cent per bushel assessment. The assessment must remain in effect for at least one full year and remain active until the board votes to suspend the collection of fees or the Fund reaches $8 million.
Prior to the start of the assessment in September 2023, the balance of the fund was just under $312,000. IDALS reports that assessment collection during the first three quarters, which occurred in December 2023, March of 2024 and June of 2024, reached more than $4.7 million. The final quarter of assessment for this current year began in September. Based upon fourth quarter collection estimates, the fund balance is not expected to exceed $8 million. That means the assessment must continue another year.
Created by the Iowa Legislature in 1986 during the farm crisis, the fund is designed to provide financial protection to farmers with grain on deposit in Iowa-licensed warehouses and grain sold on a cash basis to state-licensed grain dealers. In the case of a failure of a state-licensed grain warehouse or grain dealer, the fund pays farmers 90% of a loss on grain up to a maximum of $300,000 per claimant. Over the nearly 40-year history of the fund, more than $19 million in claims have been paid to more than 1,600 grain producers.
Work continues
One of the Iowa Soybean Association’s (ISA) legislative priorities in 2024 was to modernize the fund and raise its cap from $8 million to $16 million. Though nothing changed during the 2024 legislative session, the fund remains top of mind for ISA.
Matt Herman, ISA’s chief officer for demand and advocacy, says the real point of discussion for modernizing the fund would be whether the fund would cover credit sale contracts. While many farmers may not think credit sale contracts impact them, Herman says farmers who sell grain to a co-op in the fall but take payment in the spring are technically working under a credit sale contract.
“If new legislation includes credit sale contracts, the liability could balloon to hundreds of millions of dollars at any given time and that’s something we need to be aware of,” says Herman.
Contact Jeff Hutton at jhutton@iasoybeans.com