By Associated Press,
Federal officials are using their limited options to help farmers
facing widespread drought conditions, but they need Congress to pass legislation to
provide better disaster relief, U.S. Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack said
Friday.
The House passed legislation Thursday to revive disaster relief
programs for cattle and sheep producers affected by drought before lawmakers
left for a five-week recess, but the Senate didn’t act on the bill.
Vilsack is pushing for more, saying passage of a comprehensive
five-year farm policy bill would have a deeper, longer-lasting effect.
The drought and the various types of aid available to farmers and
ranchers were among the concerns Vilsack discussed with producers Friday while
visiting the Ohio State Fair.
“The president has instructed us to do everything we can to help.
Our tools are going to be used, but they’re limited,” Vilsack told The
Associated Press by phone afterward. “We need quick passage of the farm bill by
the House of Representatives.”
The Senate has passed a version of the five-year bill, and a House
committee approved similar legislation, but the House Republican leadership has
resisted bringing it to the floor because of fears that conservative lawmakers
might oppose spending levels in the bill. The head of the Senate Agricultural
Committee, Sen. Debbie Stabenow, D-Mich., has said informal talks would be
held over the recess in an effort to produce a plan that could be offered to
both chambers next month.
Democratic opponents have characterized the measure passed
Thursday by the House as cover for Republicans having to explain to rural
constituents why they put off action on the comprehensive farm bill, and
Vilsack added his criticism.
“The House passed, at the last minute, a piece of legislation
which even many members acknowledge is more about politics than policy,” he
said.
If the larger farm policy bill isn’t passed by the end of the
fiscal year on Sept. 30, when the existing bill effectively ends, policies and
programs such as disaster aid could lapse, creating more uncertainty for
farmers and people in rural communities, he said.
This week, 218 counties in a dozen drought-stricken states were
added to the federal government’s list of natural disaster areas as Vilsack
unveiled new help for frustrated, cash-strapped farmers and ranchers grappling
with extreme dryness and heat. That means more than half of all U.S. counties
have been designated primary disaster areas this growing season, mostly due to
drought.
“There’s no question that this is one of the most geographically
expanded droughts we’ve confronted,” he said. “It’s affecting and impacting
virtually every state of the Lower 48.”
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