By Derek
Wallbank
The U.S. House
next week will take up a one-year extension of most of an agriculture-policy
law that expires in September along with a provision that would help livestock
producers hurt by a record drought, according to a posting yesterday
on the Rules Committee website.
The bill would
allow growers of major crops such as corn and soybeans to continue to receive
so-called direct payments, which are allotted regardless of commodity prices
and which the Senate and the House Agriculture Committee have voted to
eliminate. It would also allow lawmakers to provide emergency relief to cattle,
pig and poultry producers who’ve suffered losses, without having to make an
election-year vote on legislation that calls for deep cuts in food-stamp
funding.
Representative Collin
Peterson of Minnesota, the top Democrat on the House Agriculture
Committee, said he’s against any extension of the farm-policy law unless he’s
assured it will lead to a conference with the Senate on the five-year bill that
chamber approved in June.
“Congress should
not be playing politics with the rural economy,” Peterson said yesterday in a
statement. “Farmers need the certainty of a five-year farm bill.” His comments
echoed those made a day earlier by Debbie Stabenow, the Michigan Democrat
who heads the Senate Agriculture Committee.
While the House
Agriculture Committee approved its version of the bill July 12, Speaker John
Boehner, Republican of Ohio, never scheduled a vote on the measure.
Lucas’s Support
Still, House
Agriculture Committee Chairman Frank Lucas, an Oklahoma Republican, said
he supports an extension.
“It is critical
that we provide certainty to our producers and address the devastating drought
conditions that are affecting most of the country,” Lucas said yesterday in a
statement.
Lawmakers begin
a monthlong recess Aug. 6 and don’t return to Washington until Sept.
10.
The current law
authorizing spending for U.S. Department of Agriculture programs, including
nutrition and conservation initiatives as well as subsidies, expires Sept. 30.
While the legislation has provisions that help farmers insure major crops, a
measure that would have provided disaster aid for ranchers expired last
September.
Spending Cuts
The draft bill
posted yesterday would cost $621 million, if scored over a 10-year period,
while saving $399 million if compared with current federal policies, according
to a statement from the House Agriculture Committee. The measure would cap some
funding for conservation programs and provide a slight reduction in the
direct-payment subsidies.
The farm bill
approved by the House Agriculture Committee would have cut Agriculture
Department spending by $35.1 billion over a 10-year period, with almost half of
the savings coming from food aid to needy families. The Senate’s legislation
called for reductions of $23.6 billion over a decade, with about $4 billion
coming from food stamps.
The
agriculture-policy bill has become a prime target for congressional budget
cutters because of near record farm profits and the highest-ever expenditure on
food stamps.
To contact the reporter
on this story: Derek Wallbank in Washington atdwallbank@bloomberg.net
Original Article
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