Greetings!
Legislative field hearing at Wall Drug
Greetings again! Last night we had a legislative field hearing at Wall Drug. We want to thank Rick Hustead and all the folks at Wall Drug for hosting this event. Legislators in attendance were Sen. Lance Russell, Rep. Julie Frye-Mueller and myself from District 30; Rep. Steve Livermont from District 29; and Rep. Tina Mulally from District 35. The intent of the meeting was to listen to our ranchers regarding hemp production and the much bigger issue of agriculture land taxation. On a cold snowy evening, we had a turnout of 43 hearty souls.
The listening session started out with Sen. Russell making a few remarks, followed by each of the other legislators giving a few remarks. The purpose of this meeting was to listen, not to preach. It’s amazing how hard this is to do sometimes. It reminds me of an old adage: God gave us two ears and one mouth because we are supposed to listen twice as much as we are to talk. I read once that the biggest communication problem is that we don’t listen to understand; we listen to reply. With that in mind, here’s how our listening/hearing went:
-None of the ranchers in attendance have any desire to grow hemp. The U.S. Dept. of Ag. Just came out with regulations regarding hemp production, but because ranchers in attendance were there to discuss agricultural land taxes, we didn’t cover the USDA requirements. The hemp summer study legislative group committee meets again Dec. 2 in Pierre. I will forego any writing about hemp until after that meeting.
-As I mentioned earlier, hemp is not nearly as important as agricultural land tax evaluations. We all witnessed firsthand the grave concern these ranchers have about being able to hold on to their ranch/livelihood, not because of commodity prices, but because they are being taxed out of business.
It is already a given that the only way our next generation will be able to farm/ranch is if it’s inherited and passed on. For a young person to graduate from high school or college and decide they want to be a farmer or rancher probably isn’t going to happen unless it’s already in the family or they marry into it.
That being said, we had great discussions about agricultural land tax evaluation. The current system of using soil types as the main criteria for assessing land production was the most disliked. Many felt past performance, climate (meaning rainfall), carrying capacity and rental rates of land also should be included in taxation criteria.
One rancher even had a formula: rent minus taxes divided by interest rate of 6.6% equals the value of land to be taxed.
All ranchers hit hard on soil being the main criteria, meaning you could have pasture (city folks call it grassland), but because the soil is a certain type, the assessor deems it crop land, and it is taxed that way. In Fall River County, for example, there are thousands of acres that have always been good for pasture only, regardless of soil type. In fact, that’s why the National Grasslands were created, because the land isn’t meant to be broken up (plowed) and planted into crops.
Also mentioned was the formula the School and Public Lands uses for agriculture land evaluations, which is different from---- what the county assessors use.
In closing, this was a listening meeting for us legislators. In my opinion, this is the biggest crisis in our state. It is not Donald Trump and a quid pro quo, or if we can or should grow hemp, or second and first amendment rights, or the half-cent sales tax. IT’S OUR GOVERNMENT’S UNFAIR PRACTICES RUI NING OUR NUMBER ONE BUSINESS INTO FORECLOSURE USING UNFAIR AND UNREALISTIC LAND EVALUATION FORMULAS. More to come…
To the citizens of District 30 and to the men and women in uniform, in honor of all who served, in respectful memory of all who fell, and in great appreciation to those who serve today, Thank You, for giving me the opportunity to represent you.
Tim R. Goodwin, District 30 Representative
Facebook: Goodwin In The House

