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Cattle Raisers name new executive vice
president
FORT WORTH, Texas, March 25, 2007—Eldon
J. White was introduced March 25 as the new executive vice
president of Texas and Southwestern Cattle Raisers
Association during the group’s 130th annual convention in
Fort Worth. He is expected to assume his new duties in May.
Currently, White is the executive vice president of
the National Agri-Marketing Association (NAMA) based in
Overland Park, Kan. He has 28 years of agriculture related
association management experience, including nearly 16 years
serving as the chief staff officer for up to six
associations concurrently.
“We conducted a comprehensive search to come up with
the right individual to lead this association to the next
level,” reported TSCRA President C.R. “Dick” Sherron. “Eldon
White has extensive association experience, he was raised on
a cattle ranch and he’s worked for the National Cattlemen’s
Association and the American Sheep Industry Association.”
White was raised on a stocker operation outside of
Ogden, Utah. His dad was an order-buyer for a commission
company, and White learned the business early by going with
him to sort cattle. The family ranch also bred registered
Quarter Horses for racing and during his high school years,
Eldon worked as a jockey.
The ranch expanded into the sheep business, when
Eldon’s older brother decided to raise sheep for his 4-H
project. Eldon chose purebred Angus for his project and
showed primarily in the Intermountain West area. He was also
active in FFA and served as Utah state FFA president in
1969.
“My claim to fame is that during the national
convention that year, there were three of us who are still
in the ag circles now that voted to accept girls into the
FFA,” White remembers. He told that story at a national Ag
Day luncheon last week to the great delight of the current
national FFA secretary, who is a young lady.
White earned bachelor’s and master’s degrees from Utah
State University. He has a B.S. in animal science with
minors in agriculture business and international agriculture
and an M.S. in agricultural economics.
His first job after graduation was working as a county
agent specializing in 4-H and livestock. From there he went
to the National Cattlemen’s Association (now the National
Cattlemen’s Beef Association) in Denver as director of
marketing and transportation programs.
“While I was at NCA, I gained an appreciation for the
rich tradition of the Texas cattle industry,” White says. “I
got to know some of the elder statesmen of the industry, and
I respected them a lot.”
White left NCA in 1983 to become director of producer
services for the American Sheep Producers Council, which was
the checkoff program organization for lamb and wool
promotions. He was charged to create a “Cattle-Fax”-type
group for the sheep industry, providing market information
and analysis.
In 1989, the American Sheep Producers Council and the
National Wool Growers Association merged to become the
American Sheep Industry Association. White was named vice
president for policy and government affairs and chief
operating officer. He served in that position until 1991
when he joined NAMA.
For his new position as TSCRA executive vice
president, White and his wife Val will move to the Fort
Worth area. They have two daughters, Kristen, 23, and Kelly,
21.
White was initially contacted by TSCRA’s search team
as a source to suggest possible candidates for the executive
vice president position. It soon became clear, however, that
his qualifications and experience made him the prime
candidate.
“When people ask me what I bring to the organization,
first of all, it’s the love of the cattle industry,” says
White. “Second is my strong association management
experience.
“People who haven’t worked for an association don’t
understand how it’s really different from a for-profit
environment. You have a different set of bosses–in NAMA they
change every year.” (TSCRA elects new officers every two
years.)
“You need to be flexible to leadership styles and meet
the interests of the members in a way that’s achievable and
realistic.
“I was really encouraged by the strategic plan that
TSCRA has and the opportunity to work with a leadership that
has a pretty clear vision of what they want to accomplish,”
White emphasized.
“The other thing that I’ve really been impressed with
in terms of the cattle industry and the people that I’ve met
here at the convention is that they’re in the business of
raising cattle, but more so, they’re in the business of
raising families. This is a business for them, but they want
to pass that business on to their children.”
White described seeing a rancher at TSCRA’s convention
with his five-year-old son all decked out in new Levis,
starched shirt and cowboy hat.
“He was excited about going to the cattlemen’s
convention. That’s the future of what we have as an
organization–the excitement of the next generation. And
that’s one of the challenges that we will have as an
organization.”
Texas and
Southwestern Cattle Raisers Association is a 130-year-old
trade organization whose 14,500 members manage approximately
5.4 million cattle on 70.3 million acres of range and
pasture land, primarily in Texas and Oklahoma.
TSCRA–9–2007 |