May 10, 2020

US Small Business Admin Opens Economic Injury Disaster Loan (EIDL) Programs to Agriculture

This is from Rutgers.  I haven’t checked any of the specifics as I thought it important to get out quickly.

 

Betsy

US Small Business Admin Opens Economic Injury Disaster Loan (EIDL) Programs to Agriculture

Today the U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) announced that agricultural businesses are now eligible for SBA’s Economic Injury Disaster Loan (EIDL) programs. The EIDL portal reopened today as a result of funding authorized by Congress through the Paycheck Protection Program and Healthcare Enhancement Act, in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. Farmers and ranchers are encouraged to apply immediately.

Only agricultural businesses are eligible to apply through the reopened EIDL portal. Agricultural businesses include those engaged in the production of food and fiber, ranching and raising of livestock, aquaculture, and all other farming and agriculture-related industries. All eligible agricultural businesses with 500 or fewer employees should begin preparing the financial information necessary for the application process.

Eligible agricultural businesses can apply for the EIDL loan here.

For agriculture producers who submitted an EIDL application prior to this change, the SBA will continue to process these applications; there is no need to apply again. All other EIDL loan applications that were submitted before the portal stopped accepting new applications on April 15 will be processed on a first-in, first-out basis. This expanded access for agriculture to the EIDL program is in addition to existing access for farmers and ranchers to the SBA’s Paycheck Protection Program, which can be applied for here.

For more information, agriculture producers may visit the SBA.gov disaster assistance page.

(Based on press release from Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services.)

May 4, 2020

5.4.20 Resources – webinars and other information

Lots of webinars coming up – and some new and old resources on finances and respirators.  Feel free to send me questions if you have them.  I’ll see if I can find answers.

 

May 5 – that’s tomorrow – National Initiative for Consumer Horticulture (NICH) will present a free webinar on “Doing Business Under Difficult Circumstances – Finding the Resources You Need!”

https://www.eventbrite.com/e/nich-webinar-doing-business-under-difficult-circumstances-finding-the-resources-you-need-tickets-103737991124

 

Retail Online Store with No Contact Plant Pick Up

May26 2-3 ET

https://cc.readytalk.com/registration/#/?meeting=9djxosvuigbc&campaign=x6m27v6qw2tn

 

Operating a landscaping company during the COVID-19 pandemicNoon on Friday, May 15.
You can register by clicking HERE!

Communication with employees and customers

Changes in day-to-day operation

Positives in this environment

Lessons learned from a leadership standpoint

Conducting business in the future

https://www.morningagclips.com/lupardo-cce-team-up-for-victory-gardens-for-broome/ (REMEMBER information on what is allowed may be different from state to state)

 

Paycheck Protection Program Fact Sheet April 17 – suggestions if you have or haven’t applied – from the Cornell Small Farms Project

https://smallfarms.cornell.edu/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/PPP3.pdf

 

Economic Injury Disaster Loan (EDIL) vs Paycheck Protection Program (PPP)

(No new EDIL as are filling previously submitted ones but PPP might still be open)

https://www.sba.gov/funding-programs/loans/coronavirus-relief-options

 

Benefits.gov

https://www.benefits.gov/help/faq/Coronavirus-resources

 

Respirators for work use if you can’t find the right kind

https://npsec.us/wp-content/uploads/200420-2-Respirator-Infographic.pdf

 

May 1, 2020

GDD update 5.1.20

Hot dog!  Things are starting to move – weatherwise! Otherwise, we are still here but the weather looks more inviting.

 

 

May 1                    May 6

Champlain           11                           18

 

Geneva                26                           36

 

Riverhead            39                           52

 

Bud break is the time that many insects start feeding – all that nice soft needle tissue, yum! Horticultural oils – if they can be used on the species you are growing – are often applied at bud break or just before. Remember to check the temperature before you apply it!

 

Things to look for:

 

Balsam twig aphid – eggs hatching 30-100 GDD. Check twigs near base of needles for eggs. Check new needles as buds start to open for nymphs which will become the ‘stem mothers’ which produce the most damaging next generation of nymphs – no eggs required. If your trees are close to harvest and you find eggs/nymphs, treat.

Take your handlenses!

 

White pine weevil – 7-58 GDD when the forsythia blooms. Check terminals 7-10 inches below the terminal bud for adults feeding and laying eggs in bark. This is the time to treat if necessary.

 

Spruce spider mite – 50-121 GDD for egg hatch.  Did you have damage last fall (bronzing or yellow stippling on interior needles)? Check those areas.  Eggs are very small and hard to see but tap branches over something white to see the mites. (I’ve heard they are dark green when squashed.) If you see fast moving orangey mites, hooray!  They are likely predatory mites keeping your pest mite populations down.  Miticides will kill them so only treat if necessary (they are probably there even if you don’t see them).

 

Eastern spruce gall adelgid – 22-170 GDD scout for stem mothers at base of needles. They lay eggs which hatch to nymphs which feed on the new growth and form pineapple shaped galls.  This isn’t as common as other adelgids.  Has anyone seen this?

Cooley spruce gall adelgid – 22-81 for nymphs before they start to feed on new growth and create the galls that protect them.