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National Grain Sorghum Checkoff
Information Page
RESOURCES and Background Information
NEW! National
Sorghum Checkoff Website
http://www.sorghumcheckoff.com/
National Sorghum Producers:
National Sorghum Checkoff Fact Sheet
National Grain and Feed Association
National Sorghum Checkoff
Q&A
To
View the USDA Documents and the Order Authorizing the National Sorghum
Checkoff, visit:
http://www.ams.usda.gov/LSMarketingPrograms
7-1-08--National Sorghum Checkoff Begins Collections
(National Sorghum Producers News Release)
July 1, 2008, the Sorghum Promotion, Research and Information Order
officially began collections for a program that will ultimately contribute
to the improved development of the sorghum industry.
The National Sorghum Producers Board of Directors has been working toward
the creation of a nation-wide sorghum checkoff program for over two years.
The checkoff rate for grain sorghum is 0.6 percent of value and is
collected at the first point of sale. The checkoff rate for forage sorghum
is 0.35 percent of value. In many states, a previously-existing state
checkoff was suspended upon commencement of national checkoff assessments.
“We have watched the decline of sorghum acres and the sorghum industry for
the last 28 years,” said Gerald Simonsen, farmer from Ruskin, Nebraska.
“To the producers for whom sorghum is an important part of their
operation, the national sorghum checkoff is without any doubt the most
positive move we have seen in those 28 years.”
Sorghum, deemed the “water-sipping crop,” is especially adaptable in
semi-arid climates and uses one-third less water than some of its
counterpart grains. It is used for animal feeding, for high-output ethanol
production, as a gluten-free alternative food, and has many niche markets
such as birdseed and wallboard. Much of the U.S. sorghum crop is also
exported to Mexico and Europe for animal feeding and ethanol production.
“We have watched as public and private funding for the industry has been
cut,” said Simonsen. “To me, it is inspiring that producers have taken it
upon themselves to invest in their own industry.”
NSP represents U.S. sorghum producers. The organization works to ensure
the profitability of sorghum production coast to coast through education
and legislative and regulatory representation. To learn more about NSP,
visit www.sorghumgrowers.com.
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