$1,500 CME Beef Industry Scholarships Awarded to 10 College Students

Ten college students were awarded the 2017-2018 $1,500 CME Beef Industry Scholarships at the 2017 Cattle Industry Convention and NCBA Trade Show today. The scholarship was sponsored by the CME Group and administered by the National Cattlemen’s Foundation (NCF). Taylre Sitz of Bozeman, Montana, was the overall essay winner.

“We’re pleased to continue our support of the CME Beef Industry Scholarships, which provide education to future beef industry leaders,” said Tim Andriesen, CME Group managing director of agricultural products. “Our partnership with NCF enables us to continue investing in accomplished university students who represent the next generation of food producers here in the U.S.”

The CME Beef Industry Scholarship was introduced in 1989 in partnership with the Chicago Mercantile Exchange. Today this scholarship tradition remains strong by recognizing and encouraging talented college students who will one day be industry leaders.

“We cannot emphasize enough how grateful we are for the continuous support from CME for Beef Industry Scholarships to provide financial assistance for future beef leaders,” said John Lacey, chair of NCF Board of Trustees. “Each year we are impressed with the caliber of students that apply for these scholarships.”

In addition to the $1,500 scholarship, Taylre Sitz received a trip to Nashville, Tenn., for the 2017 Cattle Industry Convention & NCBA Trade Show, where she was recognized at the Best of Beef Awards Breakfast on Friday. Sitz currently attends Montana State University, where she is pursuing a Bachelor’s Degree in Animal Science, as well as a minor in Business Administration. She is currently enrolled in the pre-veterinary program with plans to become a large animal veterinarian.

“Growing up on a ranch, I developed a commitment to the beef industry at an early age,” Sitz said. “I am interested in becoming a large animal veterinarian, and through ranch life I have been able to see and visit as they doctored cut horses or lame cattle. These experiences only furthered my desire to pursue the large animal veterinary career.”

Other $1,500 CME Scholarship winners are:
Thor Burnside, Fort Hays State University, Talala, Okla.
Cole Grisham, West Texas A&M University, Van Vleck, Texas
Emily Ivey, Land Lake College, Loudon, Tenn.
Abby Marion, University of Florida, Deltona, Fla.
Garrett Nichols, Iowa State University, Marshalltown, Iowa
Dan Johnson, Kansas State University, Dillion, Mont.
Shelby Schiefelbein, Texas A&M University, Kimball, Minn.
Madison Slaven, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, Va.
Rachel Waggie, Kansas State University, Manhattan, Kan.

To learn more about scholarship opportunities and additional youth support from the NFC visit: www.nationalcattlemensfoundation.org/

A big Congratulations to Taylre Sitz for taking home the top prize!

Insider Shares Political Realities at Record-Breaking Cattle Industry Convention Dana Perino tells audience to “Expect the Unexpected”

Actions of the new administration are like “a dog on ice chasing a marble,” Dana Perino told an audience at the 2017 Cattle Industry Convention and NCBA Trade Show in Nashville, Tenn., Feb. 3. “You have to expect the unexpected.”

Perino spoke to many of the more than 9,000 cattlemen and women at the event – a record number of attendees for any cattle industry convention – at Friday’s general session. The previous convention record was in Nashville in 2014, at just under 8,300.

Renowned ag broadcast journalist Max Armstrong emceed the event, and introduced National Cattlemen’s Beef Association incoming president Craig Uden of Nebraska. Uden briefly visited with Armstrong about his vision for the organization and the industry. High Fidelity, a Nashville a capella singing quartet, sang patriotic songs to open and close the event.

Perino was the press secretary for President George W. Bush for seven years and is now a panelist on The Five, which airs daily on the Fox News Channel. Her exposure to the Washington scene brought an insider’s knowledge as keynote speaker at the general session, which was sponsored by Laird Manufacturing. Having grown up in Colorado and Wyoming, she said she felt “right at home” in front of the audience of thousands of cattlemen and women.

Perino said the recent presidential election was unique. The odds of getting an inside straight are 254 to 1, she told the audience, and those are the kind of odds Trump beat to win the presidency. “It was a hard hand to play, and he played it perfectly,” she said. While Hillary Clinton won the popular vote, she didn’t win states she needed, including Pennsylvania, Michigan and Wisconsin. For two years she didn’t visit Wisconsin, Perino said, and she should have listened to her volunteers in the state, instead of her statisticians, who said the state was safe.

According to Perino, cattle producers should work to make sure they “get in front of the administration as much as possible” on things like trade. She suggested giving away the upper hand in trade to China through destruction of the TPP was not a good idea, but “he (Trump) can change his mind.”

“Government doesn’t work just like a business,” she said, adding that she hoped “things would settle down for them.” Donald Trump “thrives on chaos,” according to Perino. At some point, however, things will get calmer “or the chaos will take over.”

Perino was also confident that the nomination of Neil Gorsuch to the country’s highest court would be successful. “Mark my words,” she said, “he will get confirmed to the Supreme Court.”

More than 350 exhibitors featured their wares and services on more than seven acres at the NCBA Trade Show, which wraps up Friday, Feb. 3. The 2017 Cattle Industry Convention and NCBA Trade Show started Wednesday, Feb. 1, and wraps up with the NCBA Annual Meeting on Saturday, Feb. 4.

Week 4 || Montana 65th Legislative Session

Listen to the podcast below for an update for the week ending January 27, 2017. MSGA’s Director of Natural Resources, Jay Bodner, sits down with MSGA Manager of Communications, Kori Anderson, to discuss the past week at the Capitol. They discuss water bills,fence laws, the Department of Livestock and more!

 

Zinke gets thumbs up from ag groups

Source: Rebecca Colnar
for Tri-State Livestock News

With the Senate Hearing for the Secretary of the Interior nominee Ryan Zinke completed, those most affected by federal lands management in the west are giving Montana’s sole Congressman a nod of approval.

Throughout his opening statement, Zinke reiterated his willingness to meet with people most affected by the department’s policies, and listed his three immediate tasks.

“The first is to restore trust by working with rather than against local communities and states,” Zinke noted. “I fully recognize that there is distrust, anger, and even hatred against some federal management policies. Being a listening advocate rather than a deaf adversary is a good start.”

The Montana native said his second task would be to “prioritize the estimated 12.5 billion dollars in backlog of maintenance and repair in our National Parks. The President elect is committed to a jobs and infrastructure bill, and I am going to need your help in making sure that bill includes shoring up our Nations treasures.”

“Third, I want to ensure the professionals on the front line, our rangers and field managers, have the right tools, right resources, and flexibility to make the right decisions that give a voice to the people they serve,” he said.

Ranchers watching the hearing may have noticed that grazing did not make the list of multiple use; natural resource development of oil production and coal received the most attention, with sportsmen’s concerns coming in second. Several western senators surfaced sage grouse management issues, and how stakeholders in the western states had worked to develop a feasible solution only to have those plans dismissed by the Bureau of Land Management. However, despite the lack of agriculturally related comments, ranchers believe the Congressman will listen to the concerns of those whose livelihoods depend on grazing public lands.

As Montana’s Representative, Zinke has been willing to meet with ag groups and local rural communities.

“He’s been very supportive of the agricultural community,” said Tom DePuydt, a cow-calf producer from Malta. “About a year ago, he held a town hall meeting in Malta and heard our local concerns, especially regarding the listing of sage grouse as an endangered species. The Treasured Landscape Initiative, for monument expansion, introduced in 2010 by the then Bureau of Land Management Director Robert Abbey, was still very much on the minds of people in Malta and Rep. Zinke listened to us.”

DePuydt believes Zinke will be a willing listener. “Listening and understanding is an important part of local input. Federal plans need to be consistent with local land use. I find it disturbing that in some cases, international concerns carry more weight than those of local people.”

Although Zinke has indicated his strong support of funding for the Land and Water Conservation Fund, DePuydt expressed concern. “I have reservations about that, as I feel that fund needs to be overhauled and have a limitation regarding private lands and private property rights. I worry that fund provides too much money for land acquisitions. However, I’m hopeful if voted as Interior Secretary and with the new leadership in Washington, D.C., Zinke will make proper use of development of natural resources a priority. That’s what makes our rural communities thrive,” DePuydt said.

Montana Farm Bureau President Hans McPherson, who has met with Rep. Zinke in Montana and Washington, D.C., is thrilled with the nomination. “My experience is he gathers facts before forming opinions. He wants information from people who are on the ground with dirt under their fingernails or sawdust in their cuffs,” said the Stevensville rancher. “He wants to know what’s going on in the woods and on the farm. He will be levelheaded and honest, and willing to take advice and seek advice. He’s not going to tell you he’ll do something, then not do it.”

McPherson believes Zinke will listen, a trait that he believes has been lacking in past interior secretaries. “Anybody who grazes, farms, logs or mines will have a say. He is certainly not going to let the environment get trashed, but he’ll use sound science to make decisions, and give more weight to those directly affect by federal land management policies than basing a decision from someone far-removed in San Francisco.”

The fact Zinke understands Western issues is critical. “Montana is unique because we have logging, we have grazing, we have mining, and yet we also have the biggest and best national parks in this country,” McPherson noted. Zinke understands the importance of balancing those. He will be a great asset to President Trump’s cabinet, and as a Montanan, I couldn’t be more excited or more proud to have him serve as Secretary of the Interior.”

Although grazing wasn’t front and center in the Senate Confirmation Hearings, the National Cattleman’s Beef Association and the Public Lands Council also gave approval for Zinke.

According to the NCBA, Western ranchers own approximately 120 million acres of the most productive private land in the West and manage nearly 250 million acres of public land. “For too long, ranchers have been marginalized and overlooked during planning processes and the benefits they provide to public rangelands, wildlife and natural resources have gone unrecognized,” said Dave Eliason, PLC president. “The current leadership of the Department of Interior refuses to stand up for the very people who have invested their time and livelihoods into the management and improvement of public lands. Having a Secretary of Interior who understands public lands, and who values true cooperation with stakeholders is in the best interest of all Americans. We are excited for Representative Zinke to refocus the agency’s efforts to their core mission, and to have someone in this role that understands the unique challenges we face in the West.”

American Beef: Number One in South Korea

For the first time in 13 years, American producers in November surpassed Australia in beef imports that have cleared customs into South Korea.

 

The Korea Customs Service reported this week that 13,921 tons of American beef were brought into the country in November vs. only 10,310 tons from the Land Down Under. That’s up 20 percent over November 2015, and export value is up 21 percent to $619 million – the highest it has been since July 2013.

 

Even better news for American beef producers is the fact that even before December’s numbers are in, 2016’s exports to South Korea have already shattered 2015’s final tally of $847.4 million. From January through November 2016, American producers exported $929.3 million to South Korea – a whopping 25 percent increase. When December’s numbers are reported, South Korea will join Japan, Hong Kong, Canada, and Mexico as the fifth nation to import more than $1 billion worth of American beef in a single year.

 

Overall U.S. beef exports in November 2016 made up almost 15 percent of all production and 11.7 percent for just muscle cuts – the best levels in two years. 2016 exports through November account for 13.5 percent of all U.S. production – up 13 percent from 2015’s numbers. November’s per-head beef export value reached a 2016 high of $294 – up five percent from a year earlier.

 

This historic rise in American beef exports to South Korea underscores the tremendous importance of international trade to our industry. NCBA continues to work to break down unnecessary trade barriers so American producers can have greater access to the 96 percent of the world’s consumers who live outside our country.

 

The ever-growing Asian markets of China and Japan remain vitally important, where limited access and high tariffs continue to put American producers at an unnecessary disadvantage to producers in nations like Australia.

Source: National Cattlemen’s Beef Association

SWCDM & NRCS team up to present Soil Health Workshops for landowners

The Soil and Water Conservation Districts of Montana are pleased to announce an upcoming series of workshops hosted in eastern Montana.

The workshops will be held January 17, 18, & 19 in Great Falls, Billings, and Sidney, respectively.

Dr. Dwayne Beck and Dan Forgey will be the featured speakers. They will speak to producers & landowners about managing cropping systems for soil health, including no-till drilling, diverse crop rotations, precision agriculture, integrating livestock into cropping systems, and more.

Those interested in attending the workshops can learn more and register at swcdmi.org/soilhealth. Registration is $20 online (up to 3 days in advance) or $25 at the door.

Please contact Ann McCauley, SWCDM, at [email protected] with questions.

soil workshop

Montana Outfitters and Guides Association HOSTS MONTANA HUNTER ACCESS SYMPOSIUM

MSGA has several members on the landowner panel. We encourage members to attend and have their thoughts and opinions heard.

Montana Outfitters and Guides Association HOSTS MONTANA HUNTER ACCESS SYMPOSIUM 

January 14 from 8:00 to 12:00

Radisson Colonial Inn

Helena, MT

 

As part of the 2017 MOGA Winter Convention the Association is hosting a Conservation Session dedicated to exploring the full-range of perspectives regarding Hunter Access in Montana.  The issue of access for hunters to both private and public lands has been with us for decades.  Come listen and participate in a forum designed to explore ALL perspectives of this issue in a respectful and informative setting.   Prepare to gain understanding of ALL perspectives that create the challenge of managing hunter access in today’s world.

 

We have assembled a VARSITY squad of speakers and policy advisors.

 

 

 

Agency and Others Panel – Pat Tabor, moderator

  • Leanne Marten, US Forest Service Regional Forester, Norther Region
  • Ryan Weiss – DNRC Access Coordinator
  • John Bloomquist – Legal Issues on Access
  • Hank Worsech, FWP

 

Sportsman Panel – Mac Minard, moderator

  • Dave Chadwick, MWF
  • Kendall Van Dyk, Helena
  • Jim Loessberg
  • Vito Quatraro, Bozeman

 

Outfitter Panel – Wagner Harmon, moderator

  • Eric Albus
  • Rob Arnaud
  • Rich Birdsell
  • Cody Carr

 

Landowner Panel – Chuck Rein, moderator

  • Dusty Crary, Choteau
  • Karl Rappold, Dupuyer
  • Ron Ingersol, Wolf Creek, Rogers Pass
  • Matt Wickens – The time is now

 

Lunch Speaker – George Betas

You may register for the Saturday Lunch below

 

The Public Is Invited

 

When:  January 14, 2017 from 8:00 am to 12 noon

Where: Radisson Colonial Inn, Helena, MT

VIEW AGENDA

REGISTER FOR CONVENTION NOW

REGISTER FOR SATURDAY LUNCH ONLY

REGISTER FOR THE BIG HEARTS BANQUET

Livestock Industry Lays Out Federal Lands Priorities for Trump Administration

The Public Lands Council and the National Cattlemen’s Beef Association issued federal land management priorities for the new administration to bring responsible management and economic viability back to the Western landscape.

“Ranchers and other multiple-use interests in the West have been subjected to an almost wholesale shift in federal land management policy under the Obama administration,” said Dave Eliason, PLC president. “While the Bureau of Land Management has a clear directive to manage BLM lands for multiple use and sustained yield, instead focus has shifted toward ‘conservation’ without responsible management. The priorities laid out by the associations are necessary to restore balance to federal land management and set an agenda that will ensure that ranchers can continue their tradition of stewardship well into the future.”

Within the first 100 days in office, the associations are calling on the administration to bring an immediate halt to the Sage Grouse Resource Management Plans, repeal the sprawling monument designations made through abuse of the Antiquities Act, address the critical habitat designations imposing stifling restrictions on landowners, and immediately withdraw EPA’s “waters of the United States” rule and the Bureau of Land Management’s planning 2.0 rule.

Long-term, attention must be paid to the National Environmental Policy Act, as reform is necessary to streamline and improve the process. Additionally, the incoming administration must take the steps necessary, in conjunction with Congress, to reauthorize and reform the Endangered Species Act.  It is time to restore some balance to this failing law. Recovery plans must be structured for achievable on-the-ground results – not intangibles like climate change; prioritization must be on recovery, not simply the “listing rate,” and resources must be directed toward delisting of those species that have been successfully recovered. Further, work must be done to address the exploding population of wild horses and burros. The unchecked population growth is not only exponential government waste; it is most likely the greatest example of inhumanity toward livestock; standing idly by while populations starve due to expansion well beyond range-carrying capacity.

“Ranchers that operate on federal lands protect water sources used by livestock and wildlife, maintain fence lines, reduce spread of invasive weeds like cheatgrass and medusahead, and decrease the fuel loads that lead to catastrophic wildfire,” said Tracy Brunner, NCBA President. “Despite these contributions, beneficiaries of our work continue to attack responsible grazing, essentially biting the hand that feeds them. It is time these groups – whether they be wildlife advocates, environmental organizations, or recreational interests like hikers and sportsmen – put politics aside and appreciate the hard work required to provide them with the quality outdoor experiences they all cherish.”

PLC, NCBA, the American Sheep Industry, and the Association of National Grasslands as well as the associated western affiliates, urge the incoming administration to reevaluate the flawed policies driven by radical special-interest groups and take advantage of the tremendous benefits and opportunities available through restoration and enhancement of responsible grazing on federal lands.
Source: National Cattlemen’s Beef Association

Merry Christmas from MSGA

A very Merry Christmas to all of our members! As a reminder, the MSGA office will be closed through January 2, 2017. We look forward to another year spent protecting and enhancing Montana ranch families’ ability to grow and deliver safe, healthy, environmentally wholesome beef to the world! Thank you for your continued support of the Montana Stockgrowers Association.

merry-christmas-from-msga

MSU College of Agriculture students win more than $400,000 in scholarships

The Montana State University College of Agriculture distributed more than $400,000 in scholarships to more than 200 agriculture students at its annual student scholarship banquet held earlier this month.

The banquet, held during the college’s annual Celebrate Agriculture event, attracted more than 300 Montana agricultural supporters and students.

College of Agriculture faculty and staff acknowledged agriculture students who received scholarships from a variety of donors during the 2016-2017 year, in addition to recognizing the college’s 2016 Outstanding Agricultural Leader, Jim Hagenbarth. The banquet dinner featured a Montana-made meal highlighting local and regional foods and their agricultural producers.

With more than 110 distinct, named scholarships housed in the College of Agriculture, Montana businesses, families and individuals contributed scholarship donations in every size and shape, from a “full ride” (tuition and fees) to a silver belt buckle, according to Nora Smith, assistant dean of the College of Agriculture and Montana Agricultural Experiment Station.

“We are so fortunate to have such outstanding support for our students and such a commitment from our scholarship donors,” Smith said. “Our donors understand the importance of keeping college accessible for Montana students, and they clearly see the value in investing in our agriculture future, which begins with our students.”

The more than 200 College of Agriculture students who received scholarships represented every option and curriculum in the college’s academic departments, with scholarships recipients averaging  a 3.6 (out of 4.0) cumulative GPA, according to Smith.  The college’s scholarship selection committee considered nearly 400 scholarship applications, Smith added, and noted that the committee consists of faculty from every department in the college. The committee is coordinated by Smith and Jessica Murdock, MSU College of Agriculture student services coordinator.

“These awards are not only going to students who are in financial need, but they are also awarded on merit and interests,” Smith said. “The scholarships are going to high-achieving, motivated students who are engaged on and off campus, who are excelling in a variety of classroom environments. A lot of these students are really involved in the college’s clubs and organizations as well.”

The college hosts an online platform for scholarship applications for students, which streamlines the application process into a singular submission for the scholarship selection committee. That process gained particular notice in a national poll that ranked the College of Agriculture as the fourth best college of agriculture in the country, according to Campus Explorer.

Many of the scholarships provided to students come from current and historical Montana producers and generations of families who have long and storied connections to the college, according to Kevin Brown, senior development director for the College of Agriculture.

“What’s remarkable about scholarship giving, particularly in the College of Agriculture, is the commitment to supporting the next generation of agricultural leaders – from all walks of life and from every industry,” Brown said. “The agriculture community in Montana has a healthy and wonderful commitment to supporting current students who want to carry on MSU’s agricultural legacy.”

Some of the scholarship funds date as far back as the 1950s, and continue today bearing the name of a family member from a farm or ranch, or former MSU Cooperative Extension agents, or Montana Agricultural Experiment Station or college faculty, Brown said. Other scholarships are given from regional and local commercial agribusinesses, the Montana Wheat and Barley Committee, Montana FFA, Montana Cattlewomen’s Association, First Security Bank, Alpha Zeta Society, statewide crop and beef producers and a host of College of Agriculture alumni.

The College of Agriculture includes six academic departments and seven off-campus research stations through the Montana Agricultural Experiment Station. More than 1,200 students from 44 states and 15 countries are represented in the college’s student populace.

Source: MSU