If this interests you please take action to support the farm
bill to limit annual per farm commodity subsidy payments to $250,000 and
reallocate funds to support programs such as Beginning rancher/farmer individual
development accounts, organic certification cost share and community food
banks. Please read on if interested.
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ACTION
ALERT
- FOR
SENATE FLOOR ACTION, WEEK OF NOVEMBER 5 -
URGE
SENATORS TO SUPPORT THE
DORGAN-GRASSLEY
PAYMENT LIMITATIONS AMENDMENT
ON THE
SENATE FLOOR
The full Senate will
begin Farm Bill debate and voting the week of November 5. This marks the farm
bill debate’s final stages and the last chance to institute real reform
before the bill moves to the Conference Committee.
Like the widely denounced
House bill payment limit provision, the Senate Committee bill maintains the current
high commodity payment limits and loopholes that lead to farm consolidation and
the slow demise of family-scale agriculture. It also soaks up precious
resources that then cannot be spent on key programs that are short-funded by
the bill.
An amendment
introduced on the floor of the Senate by Senators Byron Dorgan (D-ND) and Chuck
Grassley (R-IA) is our last chance to reform these commodity payments
and fund sustainable agriculture priorities. The
Dorgan-Grassley amendment will put a hard cap of $250,000 on commodity payments,
close loopholes, and shift the savings to
beginning and minority farmer, rural development, conservation, nutrition, and
anti-hunger programs. It will be the major floor amendment on the
Farm Bill, and the vote count is expected to be very, very close. Every single
vote will count.
PLEASE
CALL YOUR SENATORS TODAY
The message is simple: “I am a
constituent and am calling to ask that Senator_________ vote YES on the
Dorgan-Grassley payment limits amendment on the floor of the U.S. Senate during
the Farm Bill deliberations. The amendment supports family farmers and also
funds important beginning and minority farmer, rural development, conservation,
nutrition, and anti-hunger priorities. How will the Senator vote on this
defining amendment for the 2007 Farm Bill?”
It’s easy to call: To call your
Senators’ offices, you can contact the Capitol switchboard at (202)
224-3121 or locate your Senators’ office number by going to http://www.congress.org/congressorg/home/.
When you call the office, ask for their legislative aide that works on
agriculture. If the aide is unavailable, leave a short message of support for
the Dorgan-Grassley amendment, along with your name and phone number, on the
aide’s voice mail or with the receptionist.
If you prefer to write,
fax a brief letter of support, addressed to the Senator, and remember to
include your name and address and contact information. Fax numbers can be
found under your Senators’ listing at: http://www.congress.org/congressorg/home/.
In recent years, many of the original goals and methods of commodity
programs have been abandoned and replaced with production subsidies that
encourage overproduction and often low prices. Negative consequences of these
policies include farm consolidation and the disappearance of mid-sized family
farms, land prices rising well beyond market levels, reduced farming
opportunities for a new generation of farmers, and the growth of industrial
animal feeding facilities. While a variety of reforms are needed to reduce or
eliminate the negative impacts of current commodity programs, the very
effective first step Congress could take in the 2007 Farm Bill is to cap
subsidies to mega farms through the Dorgan-Grassley Farm Program Payment
Limitation Reform Amendment.
●
Limit annual per farm commodity subsidy payments to $250,000. The
amendment would establish effective caps of $40,000 on direct payments, $60,000
on counter cyclical payments, and $150,000 on loan deficiency payments and
marketing loan gains, including gains on generic certificates and forfeited
commodities. The combined limit would be $250,000.
●
Close loopholes. No longer would farmers be able to use
generic commodity certificates or forfeitures to the government to evade the
limits. Those limitation avoidance mechanisms would now count against the
limits. All payments would count toward an individual’s limit, whether
received directly or through a corporation or other type of entity. All
beneficial interests in an entity would be subject to payment limitations,
making it more difficult to create “paper” farms for the purposes
of exceeding the limits.
● Ensure that payments flow to
working farmers. The
amendment creates a measurable standard to determine who is eligible to receive
farm payments. It requires that management be personally provided on a
regular, substantial, and continuous basis through direct supervision and
direction of farming activities and labor and on-site services. Landowners who
share rent land to an actively-engaged producer remain exempt from the
“actively engaged” rules provided their payments are commensurate to
their risk in the crop produced.
The $1.15 billion in savings from the
Dorgan-Grassley Payment Limitation Amendment will be shifted to:
● Beginning
Farmer and Rancher Development Program ($60 million)
● Beginning
Farmer and Rancher Individual Development Account Program ($20 million)
● Pigford black
farmer lawsuit settlement with USDA ($100 million)
● Rural Microenterprise Assistance Program ($40 million)
● Farmers
Market Promotion Program ($15 million)
● Organic Certification
Cost Share Program ($3 million)
● Community
Food Grants ($50 million)
● Grasslands Reserve Program (approximately $50 million)
● Farmland Protection Program (approximately $50 million)
● Emergency Food Assistance Program (approximately $370 million)
● Food Stamp Benefit Enhancements (approximately $400 million)
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)
For information on organic
agriculture production please visit:
http://www.MichiganOrganic.msu.edu/
P Please
consider the environment before printing this email
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