The Palm Beach Post

Sugar program at center of larger farm-bill fight

- By Andrew Taylor

WASHINGTON — Food processors, soft drink manufactur­ers and candy makers are squaring off against the U.S. sugar industry in a familiar battle over a program that props up sugar prices.

The sugar program, a web of price supports, loans and tariffs that critics say rips off consumers, is one of the key battles in this year’s farm bill, a five-year renewal of federal farm and nutrition policy that always proves to be a headache for Republican­s controllin­g Congress.

GOP leaders are promoting this year’s renewal of the measure as tightening work and job training requiremen­ts for food stamps. But the food stamp proposal has driven Democrats away from the bill, scheduled for a vote Friday. That means Republican­s have to pass the measure with minimal GOP defections.

The sugar program is part of an amalgam of commodity support programs that have sweeping backing in Republican-leaning farm country. But most Republican­s oppose the sugar program, saying it runs counter to the party’s free market bearings.

“It’s one of the most ridiculous programs in the entire federal government, and that’s saying something,” said Rep. Tom McClintock, R-Calif.

Some GOP moderates are uneasy about the new work standards for food stamps, which the Congressio­nal Budget Office estimates would drive up to 2 million people off the program.

Currently, adults ages 18 to 59 are required to work part time or agree to accept a job if they’re offered one. Stricter rules apply to able-bodied adults without dependents between the ages of 18 and 49, who are subject to a three-month limit of benefits unless they meet a work requiremen­t of 80 hours per month.

The new bill expands that requiremen­t to apply to all work-capable adults, mandating that they either work or participat­e in work training for 20 hours per week with the exception of seniors, pregnant women, caretakers of children under the age of 6, or people with disabiliti­es.

For years, the twice-a-decade effort to rewrite the farm bill has relied on a coalition of farm-state Republican­s who back federal agricultur­e subsidies and other assistance and Democrats supporting food stamps. .

Rep. Virginia Foxx, R.-N.C., is behind a plan that would scrap production limits, give the Department of Agricultur­e secretary more power to boost sugar imports and eliminate a government program that sells surpluses to ethanol producers.

“This is Soviet-style policy,” Foxx said, adding her amendment “is all focused on what’s better for the American consumer.” She’s optimistic that her plan may finally have enough votes to pass after another version failed by just a few votes five years ago.

House Agricultur­e Committee Chairman Mike Conaway, R-Texas, says Foxx’s proposal is a “poison pill” since its passage could bleed support for the underlying farm bill and force Republican­s in some areas to take a politicall­y tough vote.

Critics of the sugar program say it has led to the closing of U.S. candy factories in the face of foreign competitio­n and means higher food prices in the grocery aisle.

House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., was among the majority of Republican­s who voted to dismantle the sugar program five years ago.

 ?? JOE RIMKUS JR./MIAMI HERALD ?? Birds fly from the front of a sugar cane harvester in U.S. Sugar’s fields in Clewiston. A fight is brewing within the GOP over rules propping up domestic sugar production.
JOE RIMKUS JR./MIAMI HERALD Birds fly from the front of a sugar cane harvester in U.S. Sugar’s fields in Clewiston. A fight is brewing within the GOP over rules propping up domestic sugar production.

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