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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: Laurie Langstraat (913) 685-2767
October 2, 2012
$2 Billion in Indemnity Payments Already in the Hands of
Farmers
New video offers insight into dramatic losses in the
Heartland
OVERLAND PARK, KAN. — With the vast majority of the U.S.
corn, cotton, soybean and sorghum crops yet to be harvested,
crop insurance companies have already paid out nearly $2
billion in indemnities to farmers who have suffered losses
this year.
“America’s heartland has taken a beating from Mother Nature
and the crop insurance industry is committed to servicing
the nation's farmers and getting indemnity payments into the
hands of policyholders as quickly as possible,” said Tom
Zacharias, president of National Crop Insurance Services
(NCIS). Zacharias noted that the industry’s 5,000 claims
adjusters are working day and night to expedite claims for
farmers who have suffered from this year's drought.
A new NCIS
video offers unique insight into the direct
impact of the drought, featuring testimonials from farmers
and crop insurance agents who discuss the heartbreaking
destruction and losses they have witnessed this year. “Going
out in the fields this year is a thoroughly depressing
experience,” said David Andris, a farmer from Milford,
Illinois. Andris described the disappointment of spending
significant time and resources to get a crop into the ground
and manage it over the growing season only to see if fail.
“It’s like digging a hole and then filling it in,” he said.
Illinois Crop insurance agent Todd Harris explained that
most of the farmers in his area have never had a claim. He
said that while a crop insurance indemnity offers some peace
of mind, it never compares to the financial benefit of a
good harvest. “These folks take a substantial hit when they
have to turn in a claim,” he said.
“We have heard from farmers who live in parts of the country
where losses tend to be more common, and farmers who live
where losses rarely occur,” said Zacharias. “What they all
have in common is that crop insurance gives them peace of
mind to cope with the drought, but also gives them the
guarantee for a chance to farm again next year.
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