Georgia Farm Bureau's Leadership Alert - March 7, 2012

Page 1

March 7, 2012

www.gfb.org

Vol. 30 No. 10

HOUSE AG COMMITTEE SCHEDULES FARM BILL FIELD HEARINGS The House Agriculture Committee has announced a series of four field hearings on the 2012 farm bill, the first of which was scheduled for Mar. 9 in Saranac Lake, N.Y. According to a committee press release, the hearings are the next step in development of the next farm bill and will give committee members a chance to hear from farmers about the effectiveness of U.S. farm policy. Last summer the committee conducted a series of audits as a preliminary part of fashioning the 2012 farm bill. The 2008 farm bill is scheduled to expire in December 2012. “Field hearings represent one of the best parts of writing the farm bill because it gives us a chance to see the countryside and visit with folks who are directly impacted by our policy decisions in Washington,” said House Ag Committee Chairman Frank Lucas (R-Okla.). “Agricultural policy affects every American. Ensuring that our farmers and ranchers have the necessary tools they need to continue to produce an affordable and stable food supply is as important to our country as national defense. It’s critical to all of us that we get it right. I look forward to hearing from our producers and from those who live and work in rural America.” The field hearings will be held March 9 in Saranac Lake, N.Y., March 23 in Galesburg, Ill., March 30 in State University, Ark., and April 20 in Dodge City, Kan. Plans also call for a live webcast of the four field hearings, which can be accessed online at http://agriculture.house.gov/singlepages.aspx?NewsID=70&LSBID=71|72|73. The Senate Agriculture Committee changed the dates for the last two of its farm bill hearings. The hearing on nutrition, originally scheduled for March 14, was moved to March 7, and the hearing on risk management and commodities, originally set for March 21, was moved to March 14 to allow more time for negotiations over provisions in the bill after the hearings. Meanwhile, Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack, speaking at the 2012 Commodity Classic in Nashville, Tenn., urged Congress to pass a farm bill in 2012 rather than extending the 2008 farm bill and addressing renewal in 2013, saying that the task of writing the legislation will not get any easier. Vilsack discussed the USDA’s priorities for the 2012 farm bill. He said the crop insurance system leaves protection gaps that should be filled in order to assist farmers in times of crisis, allowing them to maintain their farms. Vilsack said that the farm bill should include provisions that help the U.S. maintain its export programs by reducing barriers to trade and helping to maintain relationships with overseas partners, noting that $137 billion worth of agricultural goods were exported in 2011.


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Georgia Farm Bureau's Leadership Alert - March 7, 2012 by Georgia Farm Bureau - Issuu