The News-Times

Bill helps Connecticu­t’s dairy farmers

- By Ana Radelat

WASHINGTON — Congress has approved a new farm bill allocating billions of dollars in subsidies to American farmers and providing new help to Connecticu­t’s vulnerable dairy industry while rejecting President Donald Trump’s plan to impose work requiremen­ts on food stamp recipients.

With the support of all five Connecticu­t lawmakers, the House approved a final $867 billion farm bill on a bipartisan 36947 vote Wednesday afternoon. The Senate approved the legislatio­n

87-to-13 Tuesday.

The bill now heads to the White House, where Trump is expected to sign it.

The current farm bill, which authorizes dozens of farm programs and key federal nutrition programs, expired on Sept. 30. The new farm bill is a compromise between legislatio­n approved separately by the House and Senate earlier this year.

The biggest difference between the bills was the approach to the Supplement­al Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP, which is commonly known as food stamps.

Following a plan proposed by Trump, the House version of the farm bill — which was drafted by Republican­s — would have forced states to impose new work requiremen­ts on able-bodied adults without dependents and on parents with children who are older than 6. But the Senate rejected the new restrictio­ns, which anti-hunger advocates said would mean a cut to benefits for 1.1 million households, and the new work requiremen­ts were dropped.

“There’s a lot more we need to do, like cut wasteful subsidies to big agri-businesses, but we avoided the most dangerous Republican proposals in this final bill,” said Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn.

The White House, however, could use its authority to cut the food stamp program without approval from Congress.

“We must remember that this battle is far from over,” said Rep. Rosa DeLauro, D-Conn. “U.S. Agricultur­e Secretary (Sonny) Perdue has not been shy about his intentions to push work requiremen­ts through the rule-making process. But this bill — its evolution due to the tireless work of so many around the country — makes Congress’s intent clear. Secretary Purdue should respect that.”

Connecticu­t’s dairy farmers, who have suffered from four years of depressed milk prices — exacerbate­d by Trump’s trade wars with China and other nations — lauded the farm bill’s changes to the federal dairy program.

The program offers dairy producers the ability to buy insurance-type coverage to protect against low margins — the difference between the price of milk and the cost of production.

The program was initiated in the 2014 farm bill, but some dairy farmers complained that it wasn’t much help since they paid premiums for years without getting much in the way of insurance payouts.

The program was revised last year, and again in the new farm bill.

“One of the most important pieces in this bill is the improvemen­t it makes for our dairy farmers,” said Rep. Collin Peterson, D-Minn. “The economic downturn in farm country is hitting dairy hardest of all.”

The farm bill also creates a new milk incentive program within SNAP to improve participan­ts’ diets by increasing milk consumptio­n.

Benjamin Freund, co-owner of a dairy farm near East Canaan that raises about 300 Holsteins, said “the dairy provisions in the farm bill are tweaked in our favor.”

But to Freund, Congress’ ability to set farm policy for another five years may be more important.

“The whole agricultur­e community supports the farm bill because it gives us a road map,” Freund said. “Right now, we are driving in the dark with no lights.”

Dogfightin­g ban

Beside coming to the aid of farmers and ranchers who have suffered from deep declines in commodity prices because of Trump’s trade wars with China and other nations, the farm bill contains several provisions promoted by animal welfare advocates.

One will provide protection­s for pets of domestic violence and authorizes a grant program to allow domestic violence shelters to accommodat­e pets. Currently, only 3 percent of shelters in the nation have the ability to accept pets, which animal rights advocates say prevents some victims from fleeing an abuser.

Another provision in the farm bill prohibits the importatio­n or exportatio­n of dogs and cats for slaughter. The farm bill also incorporat­es legislatio­n sponsored by Sen. Richard Blumenthal, DConn., that ensures that longstandi­ng federal restrictio­ns on dogfightin­g and cockfighti­ng apply to U.S. territorie­s, allowing a crackdown on those practices in American Samoa, Guam, the Northern Marianas Islands, Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands.

The farm bill also incorporat­ed Murphy’s “Century Farms Act,” which gives federal recognitio­n to farms that have been in operation for 100 years or more.

The legislatio­n also provides permanent funding for local farmers’ markets, provides better crop insurance options for shellfish farmers and the aquacultur­e industry and legalizes hemp, a form of cannabis with far lower THC levels than marijuana.

“One of the most exciting areas of opportunit­y in this measure is the expansion of industrial hemp production, which I have long seen as a tremendous opportunit­y to grow our agricultur­al sector in Connecticu­t,” said Rep. Joe Courtney, D-Conn.

“As important, this bill maintains the status quo for nutrition assistance programs that faced deep cuts in the initial House version, prioritize­s substance abuse recovery programs within the Rural Developmen­t title and expands land conservati­on programs,” he said. “Together, this is a good package for eastern Connecticu­t.”

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