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Ohio wheat growers may be bucking the trend of several years of shrinking wheat production.

A group of milk producers in Ohio, Indiana, Michigan, New Mexico, Texas and Tennessee is suing the USDA, claiming the new milk subsidy program does not treat all farms fairly.

Medium-sized farms are expected to be penalized most under the new dairy payment program.

USDA's Farm Service Agency signup begins Oct. 1 for the direct and counter-cyclical program for crop years 2002 and 2003.

Growers need to update crop records with the USDA in order to receive accurate direct and counter-cyclical payments in the near future.

Lower livestock, crop prices to blame for weak forecast; recovery seen in 2003 with 'safety net.'

The majority of dairy farm operators in all areas of New York state plan to maintain or expand their dairy herds, and are prepared to keep their land in farming through the next generation.

Information coming out of the USDA or the Farm Service Agency on the counter-cyclical payment program mechanism included in the National Dairy Market Loss Payment Program, is sparse, but OSU ag economist Cam Thraen tries to sort through the mess.

An injunction calls for the end to checkoff collections beginning July 15.

Wheat production in Ohio has been in a steady decline since 1996.