Polk County Soybean and Corn Growers donate SoyFoam to local fire departments

Across local fire departments and state agencies, SoyFoam’s feel-good story is spreading throughout Minnesota.

This spring, the farmer-led Minnesota Soybean Research & Promotion Council (MSR&PC) launched the soy checkoff-supported SoyFoam campaign, “Planting to Protect: From Farm to Flame.” Throughout the summer, the Council is offering more than 40 organized soybean counties in Minnesota the opportunity to donate SoyFoam to area fire departments, and the Polk County Soybean & Corn Growers are getting in on the action by donating 10 SoyFoam pails to the Polk County Fire Departments.

Made with soy flour, SoyFoam is the first and only Greenscreen Certified GoldFire Foam with zero intentionally added PFAS, aka forever chemicals. Firefighters have a nearly 10% higher chance of a cancer diagnosis, and cancer is the No. 1 cause of death among firefighters. Cross Plains Solutions, the developer of SoyFoam, has partnered with the soy checkoff to continue testing and promoting the product as a safer alternative to traditional firefighting foam.

“For our soybean farmers, your checkoff investment is helping out the environment and the firefighters who use it,” said Council Director and past Chair Tom Frisch, who has served on the Dumont Fire Department since 2000. “It’s a checkoff investment that is coming to fruition and helping build demand. For our firefighters, rural, city or anywhere in Minnesota, providing a PFAS-free alternative is our goal. For the public in general, homegrown, renewable products benefit all of us.”

SoyFoam is compatible with existing foam inductors and aerating nozzles and is comparable in cost to traditional firefighting foam. With a shelf life of 10 years, SoyFoam can be frozen, heated and thawed and will still be fully functional. 

“I was pleased to be able to give SoyFoam on behalf of the Polk County Soybean and Corn Growers to the Mentor and Fertile fire departments,” County board member John Swanson said. “This product is better for the firemen, and it is biodegradable so when used on car or house fires it does not require additional clean up or in many cases with traditional foam, cars must be destroyed.”

For more information on the “Planting to Protect: From Farm to Flame” campaign, visit mnsoybean.org/soyfoam.

About the Polk County Corn and Soybean Growers
The Polk County Soybean & Corn Growers Board 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 state’s nearly 26,000 soybean farmers. The Council is governed by the rules of a federally mandated checkoff program requiring all soybean producers to pay a fee on the soybeans they sell. This money is used to promote, educate and develop market opportunities for soybeans. 

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