Locally Made Hand Sanitizer Spread Across the State

April 16, 2020
A bottle of hand sanitizer made from corn and soybean products is sitting on a table.

State farm associations understand how important ag retail stations are to farmers during spring planting season and they have purchased and donated locally made hand sanitizer to prove it.

Hand sanitizer began rolling off the assembly line at Marquis Energy in Hennepin, IL this past week and will be distributed throughout the state. The sanitizer comes as COVID-19 cases are starting to increase in rural parts of America.

Mark Wilson, Illinois Corn Marketing Board member, went to the Marquis Energy plant and tried out the product firsthand. Illinois Soybean Association and Illinois Corn Marketing Board decided to partner together to help their farmers who depend on ag retailers.

(picture of mark Wilson)

“I thought it was important to help the community during this crisis. It made the most sense to purchase products made right here in Illinois and distribute them across the state. Logistics was the trickiest part,” Rodney Weinzierl, director of Illinois Corn, said.

 

Evergreen FS and WinField United provided the key component of logistics to this project as well as many other ag retailers who helped deliver or pick up cases of sanitizer. The response on social media has been overwhelmingly supportive and it makes us proud to be a part of the Illinois agriculture community.

In Bloomington, IL cases of gallon jugs of sanitizer were sorted and distributed at FS Farmtown all while maintaining safe distance guidelines. Ag retailers who are in usually in business competition put aside their differences to help distribute the product. It is not every day you see a Nutrien truck at an FS location.

A man in a black jacket is washing his hands in a factory

The threat of COVID-19 in the Illinois ag industry during the planting season is considerable. If ag retailers and farm implement dealers, their workers or management test positive for the virus, locations could be shut down. This leaves Illinois farmers potentially without access to fertilizer and customer applicators, equipment parts or experts for maintenance, seed and seed expertise, and more.

Please continue to practice physical distancing while completing needed tasks to keep your businesses running. It has been exciting to see the Illinois ag industry come together during this unusual time and like many of you I am looking forward to the day where we can gather together in person again. 

 

List of places to buy the sanitizer here

Rodney, Kenneth and Jim
By Lindsay Mitchell October 31, 2025
Celebrating Illinois Ag Leaders
Girl painting a leaf with brush at a table with paints, leaves, and other art supplies.
By Emily Graham October 30, 2025
Farm kids grow up surrounded by creativity—whether it’s building forts from hay bales, sketching tractors, or turning feed sacks into costumes.
By Tara Desmond October 30, 2025
When northern Illinois farmer Dan Sanderson started farming in the 1980s, cover crops weren’t exactly mainstream. Government set-aside programs required planting something like oats, but what stuck with Dan wasn’t the paperwork. It was the difference he noticed in those acres the next year—healthier plants and stronger soils. Decades later, that observation led him down a lifelong road of conservation and soil health improvement. In this episode of IL Corn TV, Dan joins IL Corn board member Shane Gray to talk about his path toward regenerative farming, what he learned at a 2017 Soil Health Academy that changed everything, and why he now treats soil as a living system, not something to manipulate. Dan’s story is one every farmer can relate to—trial and error, lessons learned the hard way, and realizing that “good soil” is about more than yield. 🎥 Watch Part 1 now and catch Part 2 soon, where Dan dives deeper into how he’s reducing inputs, improving soil function, and still keeping his yields strong.
college student
By Tara Desmond October 30, 2025
IL Corn's Scholarship Period Now Open
House Ag Chair Sonya Harper, Director of Ag Jerry Costello, Collin Watters, Justin Moore, Shane Gray
By Lyndi Allen October 30, 2025
House Hearing and New Executive Order Spotlight Economic Pressures on Farmers and Call for Stronger Market Opportunities
A crane loads grain onto a ship at a port at sunset.
By Lyndi Allen October 30, 2025
Corn exports continue to increase at record high volumes, but the value is at a stark low. Burdensome global supplies of corn have weighed on markets.
Show More