Texas Family Says Crop Insurance Saved Their Farm
Valerie Diller met her husband Michael while they were students at West Texas State University.
They decided to return to his hometown of Texline, start a farm and raise a family.
About two years after they started farming, a terrible hailstorm destroyed all of their wheat and badly damaged the corn crop.
Fortunately, they had crop insurance. Without it, the Dillers say in a new video, they would have been out of business
That storm was pivotal for their farm and their lives. They started selling crop insurance after the storm because they saw just how important it was during a disastrous time.
“Truly, we wouldn’t be here today without it,” Valerie Diller says. “We would not be able to live where we live and do what we do. I decided at that point if there was a way to help people, if we could, I wanted to do that.”
Today they grow corn, wheat, hay and raise sheep. Their children decided to come back to farm. Their son is farming with them and their daughter is involved in the sheep business.
It’s been a rollercoaster ride on the market this year for the Dillers, and farmers across America, during this unprecedented time of the COVID-19 pandemic. Corn is at about the lowest price in memory.
Farmers in the west Texas panhandle are scared about whether they are going to be able to make it next year, the Dillers say. The tremendous rise in prices at the grocery store is not reflected at the farm level. They want Congress to know crop insurance is more important than ever.
“When I talk to a guy about federal crop insurance, I tell them there is no better way, no cheaper way, to insure your crop than through federal crop insurance,” Valerie Diller says. “You can’t farm without it.”
Watch the Dillers’ story at CropInsuranceInAmerica.org.