Volume CVI, No. 8 Huron, SD NOV/DEC 2021
A PUBLICATION OF SOUTH DAKOTA FARMERS UNION
SERVING SOUTH DAKOTA’S FARM & RANCH FAMILIES SINCE 1915.
Industrial Hemp Farmer Shares All
PAGE 4
Medicaid Expansion ... What’s Next
2022 Legislative Outlook
PAGE 7
Members Engage in Grassroots Policy Development and More During 2021 Farmers Union State Convention
T
PAGE 14
Insurance Agent Carrie Derschan Retires
PAGE 18
Farmers Union Celebrates Day County Farm Family
he 106th South Dakota Farmers Union (SDFU) Convention will be held in Huron, Dec. 16 and 17, at the Crossroads Hotel & Convention Center. The annual event is designed to engage members in grassroots policy development while at the same time provide family farmers and ranchers with resources and information on timely topics, explains Doug Sombke, SDFU President. “This convention brings family farmers and ranchers together to establish policy that Farmer Paul Symens speaks durwill guide our organization,” ing 2018 Policy Discussion. says Sombke, a fourth-generation Brown County farmer. “During convention, Farmers Union leadership and state staff work to connect producers with valuable resources and information.” In addition to grassroots policy, panelists and speakers will bring updates on agriculture topics, ranging from industrial hemp in South Dakota and the future of meat processing in the state, to
State Convention Continued on Page 6
106th Annual STATE CONVENTION Dec. 16-17
Crossroads Hotel and Convention Center Huron, S.D.
To register, send in coupon on page 10, or go online to www.sdfu.org under Membership
South Dakota Farmers Union has served South Dakota farm and ranch families for more than a century. Throughout the year, we share their stories in order to highlight the families who make up our state’s No. 1 industry and help feed the world. This month we highlight the Townsend family, pictured here: Jolene, Zach, Henry and Stephanie. In memory of her husband, Alan, Jolene holds his hat.
I
t’s Oct. 26, 2021. Zach Townsend his wife, Stephanie, and their young son, Henry, are in a corn field southwest of Andover combining. Zach’s mom, Jolene, just delivered lunch. “This is a blast, especially considering what we went through this year. With no rain, then too much rain, I’d pretty much written this crop off,” says Zach, eyes on the yield monitor. “There should be nothing out here. And sure, in some spots yields are zeros, but in other spots the yields are average. And in spots, it floors me! I am completely shocked.” It’s not just the yields that have his spirits up. It’s the fact that the people he cares the most about are harvesting with him. “This is
Townsend Family Continued on Page 2