Coronavirus Food Assistance Program - Round 1 in 1st District of Michigan (Rep. Jack Bergman), 2021
Subsidy Recipients 181 to 200 of 576
Recipients of Coronavirus Food Assistance Program - Round 1 from farms in 1st District of Michigan (Rep. Jack Bergman) totaled $730,000 in in 2021.
Rank | Recipient (* ownership information available) |
Location | Coronavirus Food Assistance Program - Round 1 2021 |
---|---|---|---|
181 | Mark R Patrick | Bark River, MI 49807 | $1,221 |
182 | Neil C Van Drese | Cornell, MI 49818 | $1,219 |
183 | Shady Meadow Dairy Farms LLC | Posen, MI 49776 | $1,215 |
184 | Robert Kautz Jr | Hubbard Lake, MI 49747 | $1,214 |
185 | Kenneth R Janson | Pelkie, MI 49958 | $1,208 |
186 | Kelly Nordstrom | Powers, MI 49874 | $1,206 |
187 | Nora Viau | Escanaba, MI 49829 | $1,203 |
188 | Barron Farms | Gladstone, MI 49837 | $1,202 |
189 | Daniel Wieciech | Bark River, MI 49807 | $1,201 |
190 | Jim Meyers | Bark River, MI 49807 | $1,188 |
191 | Lee A Keck | Levering, MI 49755 | $1,182 |
192 | Motto Farms | Wilson, MI 49896 | $1,180 |
193 | Hoolsema Dairy Inc | Rudyard, MI 49780 | $1,176 |
194 | Peter Kleiman | Wilson, MI 49896 | $1,168 |
195 | Donald Kozlowski | Stephenson, MI 49887 | $1,165 |
196 | Terry L Stites | Kewadin, MI 49648 | $1,164 |
197 | Joseph Bower | Bark River, MI 49807 | $1,160 |
198 | John Joseph Bosco Bloniarz | Bark River, MI 49807 | $1,151 |
199 | Donald Budzinski | Cheboygan, MI 49721 | $1,145 |
200 | Peter Alan Jarman | Cheboygan, MI 49721 | $1,139 |
* USDA data are not "transparent" for many payments made to recipients through most cooperatives. Recipients of payments made through most cooperatives, and the amounts, have not been made public. To see ownership information, click on the name, then click on the link that is titled Ownership Information.
** EWG has identified this recipient as a bank or lending institution that received the payment because the payment applicant had a loan requiring any subsidy payments go to the lender first. In 2019, the information provided to EWG by USDA began to include the entity that received the payment, rather than the person or entity that applied for it, which was previously provided. This move to shield subsidy recipients from disclosure enables USDA to further evade taxpayer accountability. Six percent of subsidy dollars went to banks, lending institutions, or the Farm Service Agency.”