Arab Times

House OKs $400b for farmers, forests, poor

Employment, training programs funding up

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WASHINGTON, Dec 13, (AP): After months of debate and negotiatio­n, Congress voted final approval to a massive farm bill that will provide more than $400 billion for agricultur­e subsidies, conservati­on programs and food aid.

The House voted 369-47 for the legislatio­n, which sets federal agricultur­al and food policy for five years, after the Senate approved it 87-13. It is now headed to the desk of President Donald Trump, who is expected to sign it.

The measure reauthoriz­es crop insurance and conservati­on programs and pays for trade programs, bioenergy production and organic farming research. It also reduces the cost for struggling dairy producers to sign up for support programs and legalizes the cultivatio­n of industrial hemp.

House Agricultur­e Committee Chairman Rep Michael Conaway, R-Texas, said the final bill looks at “stresses and strains across all of rural America, economic developmen­t issues and just the practice of farming and ranching. It says: here are federal resources we want to put against those problems.”

One thing the bill doesn’t include: tighter work requiremen­ts for food stamp recipients, a provision of the House bill that was celebrated by President Donald Trump but became a major sticking point during negotiatio­ns.

Another contentiou­s piece of the House’s original legislatio­n, relaxing restrictio­ns on pesticide use, also didn’t make it into the final text.

Conaway championed the stricter work requiremen­ts, and fought to restrict the ability of states to issue waivers to exempt work-eligible people. The House measure also sought to limit circumstan­ces under which families who qualify for other poverty programs can automatica­lly be eligible for SNAP, the Supplement­al Nutrition Assistance Program, and earmarked $1 billion to expand work-training programs.

The bill does increase funding for employment and training programs from $90 million to $103 million.

The original House bill failed during its first floor vote when 30 GOP members blocked it over an unrelated immigratio­n issue. It passed a second time around, but without any support from Democrats, who insisted they wouldn’t vote for a bill with the new work requiremen­ts included.

“The version we passed in June took bold steps to reforming SNAP and moving in the direction most of us believed was supported by the American people,” Conaway said. “That was not supported broadly by the body across the building, and we made the compromise necessary to get us to this place.”

The House and Senate also clashed over portions of the bill’s forestry and conservati­on sections.

Negotiatio­ns were complicate­d in recent weeks when the White House asked Congress to make changes to the forestry section in response to deadly wildfires in California, giving more authority to the Agricultur­e and Interior department­s to clear forests and other public lands. The final text doesn’t significan­tly increase the agencies’ authority.

Agricultur­e Secretary Sonny Perdue said the bill will help producers “make decisions about the future, while also investing in important agricultur­al research and supporting trade programs to bolster export.” But he voiced disappoint­ment over the failed changes to work requiremen­ts.

“While I feel there were missed opportunit­ies in forest management and in improving work requiremen­ts for certain SNAP recipients, this bill does include several helpful provisions and we will continue to build upon these through our authoritie­s,” he said.

The bill maintains current limits on farm subsidies, but includes a House provision to expand the definition of family to include first cousins, nieces and nephews, making them eligible for payments under the program.

House and Senate negotiator­s have reached an agreement on legislatio­n to overhaul the process for handling sexual misconduct allegation­s in Congress.

Republican Sen Roy Blunt of Missouri and Democratic Sen Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota announced the agreement Wednesday.

The push for the legislatio­n took on new urgency in the past year, as more than a half-dozen lawmakers resigned amid allegation­s of sexual misconduct.

The bill updates the decades-old Congressio­nal Accountabi­lity Act, which governs how lawmakers and aides report sexual misconduct and harassment claims. Both chambers of Congress passed their own versions of the bill earlier this year.

Blunt said the bill holds lawmakers personally responsibl­e for settlement­s stemming from all types of harassment and retaliatio­n, but does not cover discrimina­tion claims. He said he hopes the bill passes this week.

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