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State Farm flies to Dallas the week agents revolt over contract changes
State Farm's Falcon 50EX lands in Addison, Texas, as 19,000 agents face a compensation overhaul and a California enforcement action.
By celebplanes · 1 min read · State Farm
State Farm
State Farm flew from Washington Regional Airport in Missouri to Addison Airport in Dallas on June 7, 2026, a 1-hour-10-minute hop aboard its Dassault Falcon 50EX, tail number N76SF.
The same week, State Farm is navigating a crisis on multiple fronts. The company's 19,000 independent agents are reeling from a May 27 announcement that base compensation will be cut 35-40%, health insurance for agents will end, and a deferred retirement program will be eliminated, per NPR Illinois. Agents have formed protest groups like "Save the Farm" and plan to confront management at the June 8 annual meeting in Bloomington. Meanwhile, California regulators announced on May 4 the largest insurance enforcement action in a century, seeking millions in penalties for mishandling claims from the 2025 Los Angeles wildfires, as reported by the Governor's office and The Seattle Times.
The Dallas landing fits a pattern: State Farm's fleet frequently visits Texas, a key market for the nation's largest auto and home insurer. With its Bloomington headquarters grounded in the agent revolt and California's regulatory hammer, this trip suggests high-level discussions about the company's future — far from the policyholder-owned mutual's usual quiet routine.
Aboard the Dassault Falcon 50EX


The aircraft
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