Washington, Jan 13 :
A patchwork extension of federal farm programs passed as part of a larger
"fiscal cliff" bill keeps the price of milk from rising but doesn't include many
of the goodies that farm-state lawmakers are used to getting for their rural
districts.
House and Senate Agriculture Committee leaders who spent more
than a year working on a half-trillion-dollar, five-year farm bill that would
keep subsidies flowing had to accept in the final hours a slimmed-down,
nine-month extension of 2008 law with few extras for anyone.
With the new
Congress, they'll have to start the farm bill process over again, most likely
with even less money for agriculture programs this year and the recognition that
farm interests have lost some of the political clout they once held.
"I
think there's a lot of hurt feelings, that all of this time and energy was put
into it and you've got nothing to show for it," said Roger Johnson, president of
the National Farmers Union.
Senate Agriculture Committee Chairwoman
Debbie Stabenow, D-Mich., said it even more bluntly on the Senate floor just
after she learned that the bare-bones extension would be part of the fiscal
cliff deal.
"There is no way to explain this," she said angrily as the
deal came together New Year's Eve. "None. There is absolutely no way to explain
this other than agriculture is just not a priority."
After Congress
failed to pass a farm bill earlier last year, the legislation became tangled in
the end-of-the-year fiscal cliff talks as dairy subsidies were set to expire
Jan. 1 and send the price of milk to $6 or $7 a gallon, double current prices.
The White House and congressional leaders negotiating the fiscal cliff had
agreed that the bill would somehow have to avert that "dairy cliff," but it was
uncertain how.
Hoping to salvage some of their work, Stabenow and House
Agriculture Committee Chairman Frank Lucas, R-Okla., crafted a last-minute
extension of 2008 farm law to add to the fiscal cliff package, including help
for their own state interests: fruit and vegetable growers plentiful in
Michigan, and more than $600 million in emergency money for livestock producers
who were affected by drought, a priority for Lucas. In addition to averting the
milk price spike, their bill also contained an overhaul of dairy programs, a
priority for House Agriculture's top Democrat, Collin Peterson of
Minnesota.
The extension Stabenow and Lucas crafted cost around $1
billion — an amount too high and too risky for House and Senate leaders
negotiating the broader fiscal cliff deal. According to aides familiar with the
talks, the White House and congressional leaders wanted a farm bill extension
with no major policy changes or new spending that could subject the entire
fiscal cliff bill to opposition.
Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell
of Kentucky added a bare-bones version of a farm bill extension that didn't
include money for any of the agriculture leaders' top priorities and renewed
other farm programs without any new funding.
The result, the aides said,
was a farm bill extension that would keep major programs going but didn't spend
any new money. Missing were dollars for some organic programs, environmental
programs and several different energy programs for encouraging renewable fuels.
Many of those programs were renewed, but without any money.
The reaction
from farm-state lawmakers was swift. Stabenow went to the Senate floor called
the new bill "absolutely outrageous." Peterson said farm-state leaders had been
"disrespected." Stabenow, as well as Lucas, ended up voting for it, Peterson
against.
The National Farmers Union issued a statement saying it was
"left out in the cold." The long-powerful National Corn Growers Association's
statement said the group is "tired of the endless excuses and lack of
accountability."
Direct payments, a subsidy that costs $5 billion
annually and is paid to farmers whether they farm or not, were retained in the
agreement. Both a Senate bill passed in June and a House Agriculture Committee
bill passed in July had cut those payments after a consensus in the farm
community that those subsidies would be eliminated and redirected.
"That
is amazing to me, I have to say. That is absolutely amazing to me. I want to
hear someone justify that on the Senate floor," Stabenow
said.
Ends
SA/EN
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