Posts in LDAF
Bossier Parish Man Arrested For Livestock Theft

Yesterday, Louisiana Department of Agriculture and Forestry (LDAF) Livestock Brand Commission agents arrested a Bossier Parish man accused of stealing a horse in Caddo Parish.

Thirty-six-year-old Rodney Jase Norwood, 127 Willow Bend Road, Benton, La., was arrested in Bossier Parish on a warrant from Caddo Parish following an investigation by the Livestock Brand Commission.

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Livestock, LDAFdon molino
Farmers Frustrated at Disaster Assistance in the Aftermath of Hurricane Laura

More than one year after Hurricane Laura caused more than $1.6-billion in damage to the state’s agriculture industry, some farmers say assistance has been inadequate.

“It’s very slow to get any type of aid in your pocket,” said farmer Brandon Vail. “It's not a cheap deal to rebuild and rebuilding is going to take several years.”

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Ag Commissioner: People, Businesses Should Work to Be Resilient

We hear the word "resiliency" a lot nowadays, in discussions of urban planning, infrastructure and economics, usually at a governmental level.

Louisiana Agriculture Commissioner Mike Strain told a St. Mary Chamber Business Luncheon audience Wednesday that people and individual businesses should also find ways cope with and bounce back from the inevitable tough times.

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LDAFkristen oaks
LA State Fire Marshal: Multi-Parish Burn Ban Updated Following Hurricane Ida

As recovery efforts progress following the devastation caused by Hurricane Ida, State Fire Marshal H. “Butch” Browning and Agriculture and Forestry Commissioner Mike Strain are lifting the cease and desist order issued for all private burning for two parishes: Iberville and St. Bernard.

The cease and desist order remains in place for Jefferson, Lafourche, Orleans, St. Charles, St. John the Baptist, and Terrebonne parishes. In these parishes, private burning is only allowed by permission of the local fire department or local government.

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LDAFkristen oaks
Hay on the Way to Cattle Stranded by Ida; Here’s How to Help

Bales of hay are headed to Plaquemines Parish to help cattle and horses impacted by Hurricane Ida.

The Louisiana Department of Agriculture and Forestry says that the hay will be used to feed cattle and horses stranded following the storm.

LDAF says the delivery was made possible thanks to their partners at the Louisiana Farm Bureau Federation, Louisiana Cattlemen's Association, the LSU AgCenter, Louisiana Veterinary Medical Association Equine Committee, Texas Equine Veterinary Association, Texas A&M Veterinary Association and The Foundation for the Horse.

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Hurricane Ida’s Impact on Louisiana Agriculture Hit Timber and Sugarcane

Power outages alongside mangled trees, ruined crops and damaged grain elevators were early indications of Hurricane Ida's impact on Louisiana's agriculture industry.

The Louisiana Department of Agriculture and Forestry did a flyover Thursday across parishes hard hit by the storm. Commissioner Mike Strain saw some stranded livestock and flooding in some orchards in Plaquemines Parish, but it's too early to estimate the total cost of damage.

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Weather, LDAFkristen oaks
Mississippi River Should Be Open To Traffic Next Week, Strain

Louisiana Commissioner of Agriculture and Forestry Dr. Mike Strain says there are a lot of barges and ships grounded in the Mississippi River in the aftermath of Hurricane Ida.

“We have to get the barges floated and the ships back into the channel and get the channel cleared,” said Strain.

“We are some six days out from re-opening the mouth of the (Mississippi) River. We have to remove the debris and get the power lines pulled out of the river.

“We hope the upper river, from basically the Port of (South) Louisiana to Baton Rouge and further north, to have that section of the river open and then start moving cargo again.

“There are a lot of ships in the river that are waiting to be loaded. But we’re also working to get electricity to our refineries and grain elevators so we can get those repaired.

“Nine of Loisiana’’s major refineries, which process over two million barrels of oil a day—or 13% of the US total—were offline in the wake of Ida.”

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LDAFdon molino
Ida's Diesel Price Impacts

Mike Strain, Louisiana's commissioner of agriculture, told DTN agriculture in his state is "working the problem," in the aftermath of Hurricane Ida, but he spent most of Monday working without communications until those came online in the mid-afternoon.

"We probably have a million people without power in southeast Louisiana right now," Strain said. "There's a lot of destruction to the transmission lines."

Farmers far outside the direct path of Hurricane Ida could face higher diesel prices as they move into harvest, as well as early shipping challenges, depending on the extent of time oil production and Gulf Coast ports are down.

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Weather, Trade, LDAFkristen oaks