News Update
May 4, 2011

Farm Credit CEO Retires After 40 Years of Service

Farm Credit Services of Mid-America (FCS) President and CEO Donnie Winters has retired, effective May 1. He will continue as a consultant to Farm Credit through August.

“With over 40 years of experience at Farm Credit — the last 21 years as president — Donnie has provided this association with strong, trusted leadership and visionary thinking. He truly represented the voice of our 93,000 customer-members across Kentucky, Ohio, Indiana and Tennessee,” said Ed Yanos, a Cambridge City, Ind., farmer and chair of the FCS Board of Directors. “He leaves us on a high note, with an incredible legacy that the board of directors will ensure continues.”

Winters served as president and CEO since 1989 and directed a staff of almost 900 employees. Prior to that time, he held a number of positions within the organization.

Under his leadership, the association has grown from less than $3 billion to over $17 billion in assets, lowered the cost of operations 70% and has provided the lowest-cost fixed-rate financing in the national Farm Credit System. Prior to being appointed to the role of president and CEO, he was one of the key players in the coordination of the merger of almost 100 PCAs and FLBAs to form a single entity, Farm Credit Services, which this year marks its 25th anniversary.

Winters is a lifelong resident of LaGrange, Ky. He received his undergraduate degree from the University of Kentucky (UK) and his MBA from the University of Louisville. Earlier this year, as a gift of appreciation, the Farm Credit Board established a scholarship endowment in his name at UK’s College of Agriculture.

“I feel extremely good about the value that we have brought our customers during my tenure as CEO and I know that it is primarily due to the efforts of our staff who work tirelessly on their behalf,” said Winters. “I am very optimistic about the future of Farm Credit and the future of the farmers in our four states. I am equally confident about the abilities of our management team and feel good about turning the leadership over to Bill Johnson, who brings a great deal of experience and ability to this association as well as a commitment to excellence,” he said. Johnson joined Farm Credit as CEO-elect in mid-March.

In appreciation of the years of dedication to Farm Credit and upholding a high level of customer service, the FCS Board created a special award — the Service to Membership Award — which was presented to him during his retirement dinner in late April.

Winters plans to spend time with family, and looks forward to having the time and energy to fulfill his church and other volunteer commitments. He and his wife, Judy, have two children and seven grandchildren.

— Adapted from a PR Network release.

Last Chance to Nominate a Farm Mom to Win $7,500

Nominations for America’s Farmers Mom of the Year end May 8.

Go to www.AmericasFarmers.com and tell us in 300 words or less how she embodies the caring, values and hard work that make up the family farm way of life.

Five regional winners will receive $5,000 each. All five will be posted on AmericasFarmers.com where voting will determine one national winner of an additional $2,500.

Don’t forget to come back to AmericasFarmers.com after May 16 to see the five regional winners and cast your vote for the national Farm Mom of the Year.

To be eligible, a mom must be at least 18 years of age and work on a farm that produces at least 250 acres of corn, soybeans, cotton, vegetables and/or specialty crops (canola, sorghum, wheat or alfalfa); and/or at least 40 acres of fruits and vegetables; and/or raise at least 100 head of cattle or hogs; and/or maintain at least 50 head of dairy cows and/or at least 20,000 poultry (broilers or layers) within the United States. Winners will be selected based on the judging criteria set forth in the Official Rules. For a copy of the Official Rules of this contest, please visit www.AmericasFarmers.com.

— Release by Monsanto Technology LLC and BEEF magazine.

Interior Announces Next Steps in Protection, Recovery, and Scientific Management of Wolves

The Department of the Interior (DOI) U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) announced today, May 4, that it is proposing to delist biologically recovered gray wolf populations in the Western Great Lakes, and — in accordance with recently enacted legislation — reinstating the Service’s 2009 decision to delist biologically recovered gray wolf populations in the Northern Rocky Mountains.

“Like other iconic species such as the whooping crane, the brown pelican, and the bald eagle, the recovery of the gray wolf is another success story of the Endangered Species Act,” said Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar.  “The gray wolf’s biological recovery reflects years of work by scientists, wildlife managers, and our state, tribal, and stakeholder partners to bring wolf populations back to healthy levels.”

Gray wolves were originally listed as subspecies or as regional populations of subspecies in the lower 48 states and Mexico under the Endangered Species Act (ESA) and its predecessor statutes.  In 1978, the Service reclassified the gray wolf as an endangered species across all of the lower 48 states and Mexico, except in Minnesota where the gray wolf was classified as threatened. 

Gray Wolves in the Northern Rocky Mountains

As part of today’s actions, the Service is publishing a final rule — as directed by legislative language in the recently enacted FY 2011 appropriations bill — reinstating the terms of a 2009 rule removing gray wolves in a portion of the Northern Rocky Mountain Distinct Population Segment (DPS) encompassing Idaho, Montana and parts of Oregon, Washington and Utah from the Federal List of Endangered and Threatened Wildlife. Gray wolves will remain listed under the ESA in Wyoming, although the Service is working closely with that state to develop a wolf management plan that would allow wolves in Wyoming to be removed from the list in the future.

The Service and the states will monitor wolf populations in the Northern Rocky Mountain DPS and gather population data for at least five years under a post-delisting monitoring plan previously approved by the Service.   

“We are implementing the recent legislation that directs the delisting of the gray wolf in most of the Northern Rocky Mountains,” said Interior Deputy Secretary David J. Hayes.  “As with other delisted species, we will be applying the Endangered Species Act’s post-delisting monitoring requirements to ensure that wolf populations remain robust while under state wildlife management.”

Gray Wolves in the Western Great Lakes

The Service is also publishing a proposed rule to remove gray wolves in the Western Great Lakes area — which includes Minnesota, Michigan and Wisconsin, and portions of adjoining states — from the list of endangered and threatened species because wolves have recovered in this area and no longer require the protection of the ESA. 

“Gray wolves in the Western Great Lakes are recovered and no longer warrant protection under the Endangered Species Act,” said Acting Service Director Rowan Gould.  “Under this proposed rule, which takes into account the latest taxonomic information about the species, we will return management of  gray wolves in the Great Lakes to state wildlife professionals. We are confident that wolves will continue to thrive under the approved state management plans.” 

As part of the proposed rule, the Service would revise the range of the gray wolf (the species Canis lupus) by removing all or parts of 29 eastern states due to newer taxonomic information indicating that the gray wolf did not historically occur in those states. The Service is also initiating status reviews of gray wolves in the Pacific Northwest and Southwest to determine the appropriate entity and listing status of that entity in those areas, as well as seeking information on a newly-recognized species, the eastern wolf (Canis lycaon), throughout its range in the United States and Canada. The Service is seeking public comment as part of this process.

The proposed rule to remove wolves in the Western Great Lakes from the ESA, as well as the final rule reinstating the 2009 final delisting rule for the Northern Rocky Mountain DPS as directed by the 2011 Full-Year Appropriations Act will publish in the Federal Register on May 5, 2011. The final rule for wolves in the Northern Rocky Mountain DPS will be effective immediately upon publication. 

Written comments on the proposed rule for wolves in the Western Great Lakes may be submitted by one of the following methods:

  • Federal eRulemaking Portal: www.regulations.gov. Follow the instructions for submitting comments to Docket No. [FWS-R3-ES-2011-0029].
  • U.S. mail or hand-delivery: Public Comments Processing, Attn:  Docket No. [FWS-R3-ES-2011-0029]; Division of Policy and Directives Management; U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service; 4401 N. Fairfax Drive, MS 2042-PDM; Arlington, VA 22203.

Comments must be received within 60 days, on or before July 5, 2011. The Service will post all comments on www.regulations.gov. This generally means the agency will post any personal information provided through the process. The Service is not able to accept email or faxes.

Public hearings for the proposed removal of wolves in the Western Great Lakes and proposed removal of eastern states from the gray wolf listing will be May 18 in Ashland, Wis., and on June 8 in Augusta, Me. More information on the hearings will be available at www.fws.gov/midwest/wolf or by calling 612-713-5350.

Following the close of the comment period, the Service will consider all new information and other data and make a final decision on the proposal to remove the Western Great Lakes DPS of wolves from the ESA and revise the range of the gray wolf in the eastern U.S. In the meantime, gray wolves in the Western Great Lakes area will remain classified as endangered, except in Minnesota where they will remain threatened. Gray wolves will also remain classified as endangered in the western U.S., except where delisted in the Northern Rocky Mountains DPS in accordance with Congressional action and where found in experimental populations, until status reviews and rulemaking processes are completed.

The U.S. FWS works cooperatively with the American public to continue the conservation legacy of America’s great outdoors. For more information on the Service’s work and the people who make it happen, visit www.fws.gov.

— Release by U.S. FWS.

— Compiled by Shauna Rose Hermel, editor, Angus Productions Inc.


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