Print

Print


2 House subcommittee votes to extend current farm law


Note to readers: This is older than the one indicating they are working
on Farm Bill and you should call but it has some good back ground FYI


Jun 20, 2007 3:54 PM, By Forrest Laws
Farm Press Editorial Staff 

 

The House Agriculture Subcommittee on General Farm Commodities caught
most of the agriculture community by surprise when it approved a
five-year extension of the 2002 law during a mark-up session for the
commodity title of the new farm bill.

Subcommittee leaders approved some amendments and promised more changes
to the legislation, but its members' refusal to make more than simple
alterations drew howls of protests from conservation and environmental
groups that had been demanding a major overhaul of the farm bill.

Later, House Agriculture Committee Chairman Collin Peterson issued a
statement defending the subcommittee's action and promising to continue
to work on new proposals when the full committee takes up the farm bill
after the July 4 recess.

"The proposals approved today by the Subcommittee on General Farm
Commodities and Risk Management reflect the message we heard loud and
clear from farmers and ranchers nationwide - the structure of the 2002
farm bill works for them," said Peterson, a Minnesota Democrat.

"We will continue to develop proposals on rebalancing and reform in farm
programs that will build on this good foundation as we move forward. The
Agriculture Committee has a tough job ahead, but I am committed to
continuing a process that is open and allows for a complete debate of
all the important issues involved in writing a farm bill."

Both Peterson and General Farm Commodities Subcommittee Chairman Bob
Etheridge, D-N.C., had offered a lengthy list of changes for the
commodity title that would have reduced the marketing loan rates for
cotton, corn and grain sorghum by 2 cents per pound and per bushel,
increased target prices for soybeans and wheat and required direct
attribution for farm program payments.

But Etheridge announced during a mark-up session for the farm bill's
commodity title June 19 he was bringing up an amendment that was a "pure
extension of the 2002 farm bill."

Other committee members who had planned to make additional changes in
the current law, the Farm Security and Rural Investment Act of 2002,
lined up in support of Etheridge's amendment.

"As I indicated in my opening statement, I have had a desire for some
time to do something in addition to extending the current farm bill,"
said Rep. Jerry Moran, R-Kan., ranking member on the subcommittee. "I
have thought from the beginning it was not a matter of turning this over
to the WTO to determine what farm policy should be in the United States.

"But I think that because of the budget circumstance we find ourselves
in, an extension of the current farm bill is the best outcome for the
farmers, ranchers and consumers in this country. I clearly believe the
current farm bill is good farm policy. I voted for it, and I supported
it."

Etheridge said the extension will help the subcommittee meet its goal of
preserving the safety net for farmers that was restored when Congress
passed the 2002 farm bill. He and other members said the safety net was
lost with the passage of the 1996 freedom to farm bill.

"Every member on the subcommittee is sincerely interested in improving
the safety net for our nation's hard-working farmers," said Etheridge.
"Our challenge is to accomplish that goal with a smaller baseline and
without any new resources. As we move to the full committee we will
continue to strengthen the safety net to ensure that farmers can provide
a plentiful food supply for the American family's table."

Moran said he wished the subcommittee could do more to make improvements
in the 2002 farm bill. But the budget provided the committee - which
includes a 58 percent reduction in the baseline for the commodity title
- makes an extension of the current law the better option.

"When we passed the 2002 farm bill, we were successful in increasing the
baseline over the previous farm bill by $40 billion to $50 billion," he
said. "This year we're presented with a reduction in the baseline of $60
billion."

Farm organizations were divided in their reaction to the vote with the
National Cotton Council and USA Rice Federation supportive of the move.
The National Corn Growers Association and conservation groups such as
American Farmland Trust were generally negative.

Some of the strongest criticism of the vote came from Ken Cook,
president of the Environmental Working Group, which recently unveiled
the names of 350,000 previously unidentified farm program payment
recipients on its Web site.

"Today, the House subcommittee with responsibility for federal crop
subsidy policy voted to extend for another five years the very same
unfair, dysfunctional subsidy policies that were put in place by the
widely discredited 2002 farm bill," said Cook.

"The vote is Exhibit A in the case for not letting farm subsidy policies
be decided by the subsidized. The subcommittee asked itself: Is the
current inequitable crop subsidy system the best that we can do with
billions of dollars of taxpayer' money? And the subcommittee answered
unanimously: 'Yup!'"

The Environmental Defense's Scott Faber also blasted the subcommittee
both in a statement and in a new blog he said he plans to issue
periodically to share his opinions on the 2007 farm bill.

Faber, director of the Environmental Defense Farm and Food Policy
Campaign, is a supporter of legislation introduced by Reps. Ron Kind,
D-Wis., and Jeff Flake, R-Ariz., which would replace the current
three-pronged, direct and counter-cyclical payment and marketing
assistance program with a managed savings account approach.

The subcommittee voted to reject the Kind-Flake amendment along with a
farm program buyout proposal offered by CitiGroup Corp., and the Bush
administration's USDA farm bill language.

"I have talked to numerous farmers in my district in Kansas, and there
is no support for any of these proposals," said Rep. Nancy Boyda, a
Democrat. "Questions have also been raised about the impact of a farm
program buyout on tenant farmers, young farmers, farmers who elect not
to participate and on the health of the rural economy."

Etheridge told Deputy Agriculture Secretary Charles Conner, who attended
the subcommittee business meeting, that USDA "hasn't convinced the
American farmer that you have the right idea for agriculture" in its
farm bill proposal.

National Cotton Council leaders were pleased the subcommittee voted to
reject the preliminary discussion draft its staff circulated before the
June 19 meeting. The draft included provisions that would have reduced
the base loan to 50 cents, the target price to 70 cents and imposed
direct attribution on direct and counter-cyclical payments.

After it approved Etheridge's amendment to extend the current law, the
subcommittee then adopted an amendment by Rep. Jim Marshall, D-Ga., that
contained a majority of the recommendations adopted by the National
Cotton Council's board of directors to make U.S. cotton more competitive
in world markets.

The provisions require USDA to establish loan premiums and discounts for
the 2008 and subsequent crops using spot market data weighted by
production; to modify the calculation of the weekly AWP to more
accurately reflect the competitive environment; and, provide a
competitiveness payment to domestic mills for all upland cotton
consumed.

Under the provisions of the subcommittee bill, the upland cotton program
for 2008 and subsequent crops would include a 52-cent base loan; a
6.67-cent direct payment; and 68.61-cent target price. The payment base
and yield used for direct and counter-cyclical payments are unchanged.
Payment limitations are unchanged and the extra long staple program is
extended in its entirety.

"The original draft wrongly isolated cotton by attacking loan rates and
target prices," said Rep. Mike Conaway, R-Texas, a subcommittee member.
"I have previously stated that any attempt to isolate one commodity is
unacceptable. Cotton should not be unfairly singled out and made a
poster child for reform."

Instead, he said, the committee and Congress need to construct farm
policy that provides both stability and predictability while accurately
reflecting the needs for all farmers in Texas and across the nation.

"The 2002 farm bill has provided an effective and efficient safety net
for agriculture over the last several years," he said. "We must allow
our farmers to continue to provide American consumers with the most
abundant and affordable food and fiber supply in the world."

Besides Etheridge's substitute amendment, the subcommittee approved
following amendments:

* Marshall's amendment to adjust premiums and discounts associated with
cotton under loan, to recalculate the adjusted world price of cotton
based on Far East markets as opposed to Northern European markets, and
to provide economic assistance cotton users.

* Rep. Charles Boustany's second-degree amendment to the Marshall
amendment to separate the marketing loans, loan rates, and target prices
for long grain and medium/short grain rice.

* An amendment offered by Boustany, R-La., to make technical corrections
to the target price and loan rate for rice.

* Boyda's amendment to establish a single corn and sorghum loan rate in
each county.

* Indiana Congressman Brad Ellsworth's amendment to create a pilot
program in Indiana to allow for the planting of tomatoes grown and
contracted for processing on up to 10,000 base acres, reducing base
acres on an acre-by-acre basis for each acre of tomatoes planted.

* Moran's amendment expressing the sense of Congress that money used to
fund programs under the subcommittee's jurisdiction should not be
transferred to fund programs authorized or reauthorized under any other
title of the farm bill.

e-mail: [log in to unmask] <mailto:[log in to unmask]> 

 

3. Guidelines for Fruit & Vegetable Processors

A guide to help fruit and vegetable processors comply with state
environmental regulations is now available on the Department of
Environmental Quality's website <http://www.michigan.gov/deq> . 
http://www.michigan.gov/deq <http://www.michigan.gov/deq>  The guide
<http://www.michigan.gov/deq/0,1607,7-135-3307_36106-170580--,00.html>
also provides resources for compliances and links to other
publications.http://www.michigan.gov/deq/0,1607,7-135-3307_36106-170580-
-,00.html

4.  COOL comment period extended
The USDA's Agricultural Marketing Service is reopening the comment
period for 60 days for the proposed rule for mandatory country-of-origin
labeling for beef, lamb, pork, perishable agricultural commodities and
peanuts.

USDA published the proposed rule in the Oct. 30, 2003, Federal Register.


The proposed rule (at www.ams.usda.gov/cool/ls0304.pdf
<http://www.ams.usda.gov/cool/ls0304.pdf> ) requires designated
retailers and their suppliers to notify customers of the country of
origin of covered commodities. 

It also requires retailers and their suppliers to maintain specific
records to verify claims. 

Comments are due Aug. 20 and should be submitted online at 
www.regulations.gov <http://www.regulations.gov> . 

Additional means of comment submission:

* E-mail to [log in to unmask] <mailto:[log in to unmask]> .

* Mail to Country of Origin Labeling Program, Room 2607-S, Agricultural
Marketing Service, 1400 Independence Avenue SW, Stop 0254, Washington,
DC 20250-0254.

* Fax to 202-720-1112. 

Additional information on this and the COOL program is at 
www.ams.usda.gov/cool <http://www.ams.usda.gov/cool> .
===============



This message originated from or was forwarded by:
Chrys Ostrander
Chrysalis Farm @ Tolstoy
Organic Micro-permaculture
33495 Mill Canyon Rd.
Davenport, WA 99122
509-725-0610
[log in to unmask]
http://www.thefutureisorganic.net
<http://www.thefutureisorganic.net/> 

 

Vicki Morrone

Organic Vegetable and Crop Outreach Specialist

Michigan State University

C.S. Mott Sustainable Food Systems

303 Natural Resources Bldg.

East Lansing, MI 48824

517-353-3542

517-282-3557 (cell)

517-353-3834 (fax)

http://www.MichiganOrganic.msu.edu/

http://www.mottgroup.msu.edu/

 

 


If you would like to access previous postings to the Mich-Organic listserv you can copy and paste the following URL into your browser address bar
 http://list.msu.edu/archives/mich-organic.html