‘We are taking loans just to pay bills’: Broken Minnesota farmer posts heartbreaking Facebook video to reveal how the average salary in his industry has dropped to just $15,000-a-year

‘We are taking loans just to pay bills’: Broken Minnesota farmer posts heartbreaking Facebook video to reveal how the average salary in his industry has dropped to just $15,000-a-year

  • Mark Berg, 26, posted an emotional six-minute-long video, viewed more than 300,000 times, voicing his frustration over the strain of running a dairy farm
  • The  young farmer, brushing back tears, talks about his father telling him that he has less than when he started the business 40 years ago
  • Highlighting the desperation that many of his peers in the dairy industry feel, Berg says he knows of farmers who have died by suicide
  • Minnesota saw the median income at a dairy farm drop from about $43,000 last year to less than $15,000, with one out of 10 dairy farms ceasing operations 

A Minnesota dairy farmer frustrated by the industry’s rising financial pressures has taken to social media to voice his concerns in an emotional video that’s been viewed hundreds of thousands of times.

Mark Berg, 26, told the Star Tribune that he posted the six-minute-long Facebook video Monday after arguing with his family about how to save their 200-cow dairy farm in Pine Island.

‘Literally just got done arguing with my dad. Just arguing, screaming back and forth. And it never used to be that way, you know, it never did,’ Berg says in the video. ‘And it’s not our fault. It isn’t our fault. It isn’t fair.’

Brushing back tears, he talks about his father telling him that he has less than when he started the business 40 years ago.

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Mark Berg, 25, of Trailside Dairy in Pine Island, Minnesota, took to Facebook to voice his frustrations with the difficulty of maintaining a dairy farm under modern conditions

Mark Berg, 25, of Trailside Dairy in Pine Island, Minnesota, took to Facebook to voice his frustrations with the difficulty of maintaining a dairy farm under modern conditions

Mark Berg, seen here with a dairy cow, revealed that after four decades in the farming business, his father has less now than when he began

Mark Berg, seen here with a dairy cow, revealed that after four decades in the farming business, his father has less now than when he began

Minnesota saw the median income at a dairy farm drop from about $43,000 last year to less than $15,000. Roughly one out of 10 dairy farms in the state has ceased operations.

Berg explains that his family has been taking out loans to pay their bills, and that they need to sell some of their cattle due to depleted feed supplies and years of low milk prices.

‘We’re not asking to make a million,’ he says. ‘But when you literally work day in day out, all the time, for nothing? We’ve gained nothing.’

Talking about the desperation that many in the industry feel, Berg says he knows of farmers who have died by suicide.

Trailside Dairy, pictured here, is struggling in an industry where Minnesota dairy farm income dropped from about $43,000 last year to less than $15,000

Trailside Dairy, pictured here, is struggling in an industry where Minnesota dairy farm income dropped from about $43,000 last year to less than $15,000

Berg explains that his family has been taking out loans to pay their bills, and that they need to sell some of their cattle due to depleted feed supplies and years of low milk prices

Berg explains that his family has been taking out loans to pay their bills, and that they need to sell some of their cattle due to depleted feed supplies and years of low milk prices

State data about suicide among farmers isn’t readily available, but there are efforts throughout the state to address mental health in the farming industry.

The University of Minnesota Extension began organizing a mental health workshop called Farming in Tough Times after a farmer died by suicide in fall 2018.

The Minnesota Department of Agriculture has set up a crisis hotline and other stress-coping resources for farmers on the agency’s website.

Roughly one out of 10 dairy farms in Minnesota has ceased operations entirely

Roughly one out of 10 dairy farms in Minnesota has ceased operations entirely

Berg’s video was posted with a note that read: ‘To the Dairy Community, I know you are hurting, hang in there if you can.’

He told the Star he posted the video because he ‘had to get something off his shoulders.’

‘I didn’t know if anybody would listen,’ Berg said. ‘I feel like I was at my weakest point.’

The video has been viewed more than 300,000 times.

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