Beef Checkoff Is On The Road Again
Date: Thursday, December 22, 2005Contacts: Scharee Atchison (719) 538-8843 SLAtchison@nlpa.org
Diane Henderson (303) 850-3465 dhenderson@beef.org
Beef Checkoff Is On The Road Again
Beefmobile Program More than Doubles Efforts as it Rolls into 2006
CENTENNIAL, COLO. (Dec. 22, 2005) – After visiting roughly 100 venues on behalf of the beef checkoff in 2005, the Beefmobile program has scheduled more than double that number in 2006. At each location, the Beefmobile and its “Wranglers” reach out to producers throughout the country to provide information – and solicit input – about the Beef Checkoff Program.
To double the coverage in 2006, the Beefmobile project will run two vans instead of one, with two additional “Wranglers” – goodwill ambassadors who carry the word to those paying the $1-per-head assessment about what the checkoff does, how it works, who makes decisions about the programs, and the results of those programs. Joining the team as Wranglers for the coming year are
Created in 2004 to provide information about beef and the beef checkoff to producers and consumers, the Beefmobile program is coordinated on behalf of the Cattlemen’s Beef Board by the National Livestock Producers Association (NLPA), which is one of the Beef Board’s contractors for beef checkoff-funded programs.
Orsburn traveled more than 60,000 miles with the Beefmobile during 2005, and said she came through the process “still smiling.”
“This experience has allowed me to combine two of my passions – teaching and agriculture,” said Orsburn, who has a bachelor of science degree in agricultural education from the
According to Orsburn, who has been with the Beefmobile since the program’s second year, the effort provides producers with an opportunity to “have a voice in the checkoff,” regardless of their position on the program. “Everything said about the checkoff is put in a daily report that we provide back to the Beef Board,” she said.
“Our goal is to have the one-to-one contact with producers that isn’t possible with many other communications strategies,” according to Orsburn. “The Beefmobile is an extension of the producer communications program – and it will be even better in 2006 when we will have a true ‘team’ approach to the effort.”
Loutzenhiser and Branecky have been busy since October getting training at the Beef Board offices in Centennial,
According to Loutzenhiser, it’s been a hectic few months. “I just graduated Dec. 16 from
Loutzenhiser, who was the
Branecky also is a recent college graduate, having received her bachelor’s degree in agricultural communications from
“I’ve known since high school that this is the kind of thing I wanted to do,” said Branecky, who served as a Beef Ambassador in
Among the first trips for the team will be to the Arizona National Livestock Show in late December, and the National Western Stock Show in
Orsburn said they will attempt to make every event “bigger and better” in 2006, working to get larger crowds and reach even more producers. Among their goals will be to hit as many major producer meetings as possible, in addition to their regular trips to livestock auctions and other locations where producers gather.
For more information about the Beefmobile, go to www.beefmobile.com, or to schedule a stop, please contact
The National Livestock Producers Association, founded in 1921, is an organization of livestock marketing cooperatives and credit corporations representing more than 200,000 livestock producers nationwide.
The Beef Checkoff Program was established as part of the 1985 Farm Bill. The checkoff assesses $1 per head on the sale of live domestic and imported cattle, in addition to a comparable assessment on imported beef and beef products. States retain up to 50 cents on the dollar and forward the other 50 cents per head to the Cattlemen’s Beef Promotion and Research Board, which administers the national checkoff program, subject to USDA approval.
