Friday, July 1, 2022 CapitalPress.com 13 Loans: ‘Demand for credit is going to climb’ ducers have on-farm storage for fuel and purchased their needs earlier this year in the $4.50 a gal- lon range, he said. “So they dodged that bullet a little bit,” he said. Fuel was definitely higher this spring than a year ago, and farm- ers have already absorbed the increase. But other costs are high as well, he said. “Repairs, maintenance, parts have gone up dramatically, if we can get them … even belts,” Wil- lis said. All have at least doubled, and the price of used equipment has gone up. An older Peterbilt semitruck that would normally sell for $15,000 to $20,000 has doubled in price, he said. Another issue for farm- ers is interest rates. The Federal Reserve raised the prime inter- est rate to 4.75% in mid-June to tame inflation, and it’ll probably continue to raise interest rates through the year, he said. Continued from Page 1 Higher input prices “Higher input costs made it necessary to increase operating commitments for many borrow- ers,” he said. But custom- ers remain well positioned despite the challenging inflationary envi- ronment, and he expects the num- ber of operating Doug loans as well as Robison loan amounts to grow, he said. The Producer Price Index for farm products in the U.S. increased by more than 34% from April of 2021 through April of 2022, he said. “The costs for fertilizer and chemical increased at an even faster pace, with the Producer Price Index for nitrogen-based products increasing more than 49% while spot prices for many products have increased by more than 100%,” he said. Input costs for agricultural pro- ducers have significantly out- paced the inflation rate often cited in relation to the Consumer Price Index, which has been above 8%, he said. Loan officer Bennett has already updated quite a few oper- ating loans since the first of the year, increasing the amount because producers underestimated the cost of fuel and fertilizer. By mid-May they had already deter- mined it was going to take more money to grow this year’s crops, he said. “The demand for borrowing has increased because of the antic- ipated cost of production,” he said. The increase varies, but it’s up 10% on the low end with some loans up 40% year over year, he said. Carol Ryan Dumas/Capital Press Justin Willis, vice president commercial and agricultural loan officer at D.L. Evans Bank, at his office in Twin Falls, Idaho. Financial health Producers came into the year in good shape, and Northwest Farm Credit has been able to meet their increased needs, he said. “I think, in general, credit qual- ity was up because most people made money the last couple of years,” he said. People added working capital and paid down debt. There wasn’t a lot of debt from last year’s oper- ating cycle, he said. Crop outlooks Water was the biggest concern this year until rains came in April and May and brightened the out- look. But the earlier expectations of cutbacks changed cropping plans. There’s a lot less corn being grown and a lot more wheat as prices neared double-digits a bushel, he said. “We’re going to be pretty darn short on corn silage this year. Demand will stay high, supply will stay low and it will drive the price high,” he said. Feed costs — 60% to 66% of a dairy’s cost of production — are Carol Ryan Dumas/Capital Press Eric Bennett, relationships manager at Northwest Farm Credit Services, crunches the numbers on op- erating loans at his office in Twin Falls, Idaho, on June 14. going to stay high, he said. “Dairies are making money now. The concern for dairies is breakeven is going to stay high, but will the milk price hold?” he asked. If the milk price doesn’t stay at $20 to $21 a hundredweight, dair- ies are going to lose money, he said. Row crop farmers are going to be OK, he said. Labor a factor Labor is another component of the high cost structure, whether it’s crops or dairy. He knows one dairy- man who’s already given milkers three raises this year. On average, those wages are $14 to $15 an hour, he said. Farmers can mitigate some of the risks with crop insur- ance and revenue protection pro- grams, as well as futures and options to lock in a price floor, he said. “It would help if the expense side would come down,” he said. But oil and fuel prices aren’t likely to come down, and labor costs aren’t coming down, he said. “Farmers are seeing inflation way higher than 8%. Just the cost of doing business is much more than a year ago, two years ago or five years ago,” he said. “Demand for credit is going to climb,” he said. Lawsuit: ‘These rules aren’t all reasonable’ Continued from Page 1 Sara Duncan, spokes- woman for Oregon For- est Industries Council, said OFIC considers OSHA’s rules unreasonable. “Given extraordinary events like the 2020 Labor Day wildfires and last sum- mer’s heat dome, we agree with all Oregonians that the health and safety of employ- ees must be prioritized, and employers should adapt as we acclimate to a changing climate,” said Duncan. “But these rules aren’t all reason- able — many go far beyond extreme events and are dra- matically more strict than any other state.” Duncan pointed out, for example, that the air quality index requirements under Oregon’s new rules are twice as stringent as Califor- nia’s rules. According to Oregon OSHA, the heat rules apply to outdoor and indoor work activities where there is no climate control when the heat index equals or exceeds 80 degrees Fahrenheit. These requirements, Dun- can of OFIC said, “will sig- nificantly restrict work in benign circumstances like a typical Oregon summer day.” Industry groups are also Cost crunch Across town, D.L. Evans Bank is also seeing a significant rise in agricultural loans. “We increased our operating lines about 35% on average,” said Justin Willis, vice president commercial and agricultural loan officer. Typically, operating loans are fairly close to the previous year, he said. “This is the highest year of cost of production farmers have seen in my career (21 years),” he said. Farm diesel is $5 to $5.24 a gallon, up $1 to $1.50 since the beginning of the year. Most pro- Wolf: ‘It’s not always about the best available science’ Continued from Page 1 Capital Press File Business and timber groups have filed a lawsuit to block Oregon’s heat and smoke workplace rules. concerned about smoke-re- lated rules. In court docu- ments, plaintiffs allege that the rules “do not distinguish between contributions to the Air Quality Index level from wildfire smoke in com- parison to other pollutants” and don’t give employers a method by which to deter- mine whether particulates from wildfire smoke are present at a work site. Rex Storm, executive vice president of Associ- ated Oregon Loggers Inc., another plaintiff, said he “concurs” with Oregon For- est Industries Council’s statements, though he did not elaborate. Aaron Corvin, of Oregon OSHA, said OSHA’s staff “do no comment on pending litigation.” PCUN, an Oregon-based farmworker union, expressed frustration that business groups filed the lawsuit. “We’re frustrated to see corporate lobbyists and law- yers attempt to delay the recently adopted heat and smoke standards from going into effect, right as sum- mer heats up,” said Reyna Lopez, PCUN’s executive director and president. Oregon OSHA’s rules, she said, provide workers with “common-sense pro- tections such as access to cool water, shaded rest areas and additional breaks in high-heat temperatures.” Countering costs On the flip side, crop prices have increased substantially. The price of hay is up 30% from the beginning of the year, and there’s a lot of speculation it will top $300 a ton across the board, not just for dairy hay, he said. Grain corn prices last year were pushing $5 to $6 a bushel. Contracts were $7 to $7.50 this spring, and the price in June was $8 to $8.50. Wheat prices went from $5.50 to $6 a bushel last year to as high as $9.25 now, he said. “On a positive note, budgeted revenue is up 40% to 45%,” Wil- lis said. Because growers don’t con- tract all of their anticipated pro- duction, some of that revenue might be pushing 50% higher than last year, he said. “The budgeted expenses are up 35% but could be 40% because of rising costs,” he said. The good news is projected net profit margins have increased 2% to 5% from last year due to the high commodity prices, he said. “So even though production costs have increased in 2022, revenue is exceeding those costs and profitability is projected to increase by 2% to 5% from the previous year,” Willis said. Increased costs will increase the bank’s lines of credit for farmers, but they’re all going to get renewed, he said. “Banks love ag credit. Food is not a commodity that goes out of style. It’s a good risk for the bank. In agriculture, there’s always somewhere to take your crop to sell … people always need food,” Willis said. He is worried, however, about food costs next year and how that’s going to affect consumer spending and the economy. This year’s higher commodity prices haven’t gone into the food chain yet, but they will after har- vest, he said. Commissioners Mel- anie Rowland and Lorna Smith are seeking a stron- ger rule than proposed by the staff. Rowland said she didn’t want to waste any more time on a rule that won’t be adopted. “I think it’s pretty clear that Kelly we, Lorna Susewind and I, do not have a majority in terms of peo- ple who want a rule,” she said. Earlier in the meet- ing, Rowland said killing wolves was a “big deal.” “My personal belief is that we’re doing it because we were raised on the big, bad wolf the- ory, and people don’t like wolves. They’re scared of them,” said Row- land, a recent Inslee appointee. “We think it’s a big deal to kill wolves, too,” Fish and Wildlife Director Kelly Susewind answered. ‘WE THINK IT’S A BIG DEAL TO KILL WOLVES, TOO. BETTER OR WORSE, THERE’S ONE PERSON IN THE STATE WHO CAN AUTHORIZE IT AND THAT’S ME, AND I TAKE IT AS A VERY, VERY BIG DEAL. Kelly Susewind, Fish and Wildlife Director “Better or worse, there’s one person in the state who can authorize it and that’s me, and I take it as a very, very big deal. And it both- ers me when people think I don’t,” he said. “I’m sure not doing it because it’s the ‘big, bad wolf,’ “ Susewind said. Whether under a rule or the current protocol, Fish and Wildlife requires ranchers to use non-lethal means to prevent wolf attacks before the depart- ment resorts to shooting wolves. Wolf policy coordinator Julia Smith said the depart- ment hopes the non-lethal measures work, but they aren’t proven. “There is a body of sci- ence on lethal removal showing it is effective, not long term, not forever, no tool is effective forever,” she said. “We have no science whatsoever on things like range-riding, yet we are huge proponents of range-riding because we think it works. We think it has the the pos- sibility to work,” she said. “It’s not always about the best available sci- ence. It’s about, Let’s try things out and see what we can do,” Smith said. “We are promoting meth- ods for which there is no science.”