Hog producer: 2025 was strong, but IL legislature needs to address
estate tax
[January 02, 2026]
By Jim Talamonti | The Center Square
(The Center Square) – An Illinois hog producer says 2025 was a strong
year, but state lawmakers need to address estate planning for farmers.
Chad Leman, board member and past president of the Illinois Pork
Producers Association, says Leman Farms markets about 120,000 pigs a
year and also grows corn and soybeans in Central Illinois.
Leman says 2025 was a good year for pork producers.
“Hog prices have stayed strong pretty much all year. We’ve been above
break-even since January without a problem,” Leman said.
Leman said feed prices stayed in check, but health was a challenge.
“There was a lot of PRRS [porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome]
and PED [porcine epidemic diarrhea] that affected most all of the
producers,” Leman said, adding that the wean pig price remained
unseasonably high all through the summer.
“A lot of summers you’ll see wean pig prices get pretty cheap, $25-$30 a
pig, where this summer I don’t know that we dipped under $50 a pig. Wean
pigs were just very much in demand because of the disease pressure that
producers felt at the sow farms through the winter,” Leman explained.

Leman said taxes are an ongoing issue for the future of farming in
Illinois.
“We continue to deal with estate planning and how do we pass these farms
on to the next generations. How can we make it tax-friendly to do so?
That will need to be addressed at the state level,” Leman told The
Center Square.
The General Assembly has failed to advance legislation that would amend
the Illinois estate tax.
[to top of second column]
|

A red barn with a stone foundation stands next to a tall brick silo
covered in ivy. Photo: Grace David / The Center Square

According to the Illinois Farm Bureau, family farm estates are taxed
at a minimum of 10 to 20 times the farm’s annual income.
Leman also said a California law is hurting pork producers across
the country.
Animal welfare activists supported the passage of Proposition 12 in
2018, restricting pork sales in California by producers who fail to
meet the state’s minimum space requirements for farm animals.
Leman says Prop 12 created an unreasonable housing standard for sows
and is not helpful for the care of pigs.
“The last thing we need is seven or eight or ten more states
adopting a ballot initiative that’s similar or taking it to the next
level,” Leman said.
Leman says the IPPA tries to educate urban legislators.
“It’s always surprising to me, the lack of really understanding from
urban areas on how food is produced,” Leman said.
Representing more than 800 pork producers across Illinois, the IPPA
says the Illinois pork industry contributes an estimated $13.8
billion to the state's economy and supports over 57,000 jobs in the
Land of Lincoln.
Leman said Bacon Day, observed at the Illinois Capitol May 7,
bridges most partisan divides. |