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Saturday, November 23, 2024

Minnesota Farmers Donating Soy-Based Shoes To Frontline Healthcare Workers

From farm to the frontline, the Minnesota Soybean Research & Promotion Council (MSR&PC) is taking another giant leap forward to highlight environmentally friendly investments from the soybean checkoff. Pipestone County, in partnership with MSR&PC, which directs the state’s soybean checkoff resources, is launching the Stepping Up campaign to amplify farmer profitability and promote the value-added uses of the “miracle bean” while making community connections.  

Coming on the heels of the successful Driving Soy promotion, Minnesota counties are lacing up to promote renewable, value-added soy products and give back to frontline healthcare workers in their counties.  

“As a local soybean board, we’re always trying to promote local soybeans,” board member Gene Boersma said. “Recognizing Skechers for using soybeans in their products and repaying all the hardworking, wonderful healthcare workers in our county at once was a great promotion for us to participate in.”

Pipestone County is donating 50 pairs of Skechers soy-based GO shoes to Ridgeview Estates, Good Samaritan, and Pipestone County Medical Center as part of the Stepping Up promotional effort.

The Stepping Up campaign ran throughout the summer.  The statewide effort strives to inform both the farming and non-farming public on soy’s environmental advantages and the myriad uses of soybean oil. County leaders also want to show their appreciation to healthcare workers in their community.

“We know how much healthcare workers sacrifice for others in communities throughout Minnesota, especially in the past couple of years. I’ve seen it firsthand,” said Council Chair Joe Serbus, whose wife, Doreen, has worked in health care for more than 40 years. “This campaign is an investment in value-added soybean products and the selfless health care professionals who keep us safe and healthy.” 

A step above the rest

In 2020, Skechers released its GO line of footwear, which uses soybean oil to improve grip, stability, and durability. Skechers is using the same checkoff-supported technology featured in Goodyear Tire Company’s line of sustainable soy-based tires, which incorporated soy into its rubber technology.

Kurt Stockbridge, Skechers vice president of Product Development and Innovation, said the company and the soybean checkoff are stepping up to create a superior shoe and reduce their environmental footprints.

“Discovering ways to make product more sustainable is top of mind for Skechers,” Stockbridge said. “Though we were aware of the sustainable qualities of soybean oil, we were surprised to learn what the oil could do to improve our outsole rubber performance.”

For each dollar Pipestone County soybean farmers pay toward checkoff resources, growers receive $12.33 in the return value. Today, more than 1,000 commercially available products – ranging from shoes to machinery lubricants to asphalt – use commodity and high oleic soybean oil. 

“Once that soybean hits the mill, it’s local, it’s national – it’s everywhere,” said Belinda Burrier, a United Soybean Director who helped oversee the partnership with Skechers. “The money farmers make back on the checkoff is fantastic.”

Follow the Stepping Up social media campaign at #SoySteppingUp and by visiting mnsoybean.org/stepping-up.

About the Pipestone County Corn and Soybean Growers Board  

Pipestone County is affiliated with the Minnesota Soybean Research & Promotion Council, a 15-person, farmer-led board that oversees the investment of checkoff dollars on behalf of the nearly 28,000 soybean farmers in Minnesota. The Council is governed by the rules of a federally mandated checkoff program requiring all soybean producers to pay a fee for the soybeans they sell. This money is used to promote, educate and develop market opportunities for soybeans. 

For more information or to interview a county director, contact Bailey Grubish at bgrubish@agmgmtsolutions.com.

Original source can be found here.

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