Washington County Enterprise-Leader

Is This The End Of The Farm Bill?

- By Jim Harkness Guest Editorial JIM HARKNESS IS THE PRESIDENT OF THE INSTITUTE FOR AGRICULTUR­E AND TRADE POLICY.

“There is absolutely no way to explain this other than agricultur­e is just not a priority,” said Senate Agricultur­e Committee Chairwoman Debbie Stabenow on the Senate Floor on New Year’s Day.

She was describing the bare-bones Farm Bill extension agreed to as part of the stop-gap budget deal.

Most astonishin­g was how Congress and the White House seemed to ignore the long-standing importance of this legislatio­n when they failed to provide mandatory funding for a whole host of programs in the absence of its full renewal.

The Farm Bill is the nation’s largest piece of agricultur­al legislatio­n.

It’s the usual vehicle for far- reaching programs to boost crop production, protect farmers, advance rural developmen­t, conserve energy, provide for internatio­nal food aid, and, notably, run nutrition assistance programs. And it’s in limbo.

This stripped-down extension came just after the House allowed the Farm Bill to expire, never even calling for a vote. House Speaker John Boehner simply didn’t bother. He clearly didn’t pay any political cost for that — he was overwhelmi­ngly re-elected as House Speaker shortly thereafter.

Is this the end of the Farm Bill? Collin Peterson, the ranking Democrat on the House Agricultur­e Commit- tee, seems to think so.

The Minnesota lawmaker has written House leadership asking for an agreement to bring a Farm Bill to a vote if it comes out of committee — otherwise, he just won’t bother writing one. As importantl­y, he asks whether their plan is simply to renew the Farm Bill ( rather than actually writing the traditiona­l fiveyear bill) and look for ways to scale back the bill each year.

The reality is that this key legislatio­n has drifted a long way from its original form passed during the Great Depression. Back then, it was called the Agricultur­al Adjustment Act.

Originally, it was designed to address the oversupply of agricultur­al commodi- ties while ensuring that the marketplac­e paid farmers a fair price.

Now, managing supply and stabilizin­g prices for farmers and consumers — despite evidence of enormous taxpayer savings — isn’t a priority in Washington. The modern-day Farm Bill, while having many good programs, virtually ignores the biggest and most pressing challenges in agricultur­e: wild market volatility that threatens financial stability for farmers and access for consumers, climate-induced droughts and floods, and the increasing monopoly power of corporatio­ns.

Nor does it address major problems of the food system as a whole, such as the health crisis associated with childhood obesity or the exploitati­on of workers all along the food chain.

Instead of acting as a vehicle for real reform, Congress has made it clear that the Farm Bill will be, in essence, a step down from the status quo. The skeletal structure stays in place as it’s bled by a thousand budget cuts.

It’s time we pay attention to the messages Congress is sending and begin to look beyond the Farm Bill to build a new policy framework for a fair, sustainabl­e, and healthy food system.

We need policies — many of which are starting to appear at the community and state level, rather than out of the bumbling federal framework — that get to the heart of the challenges farmers face.

We need fair and transpar- ent pricing, adequate insurance programs, financing options for farmers or food business operators, and fair competitio­n in the marketplac­e.

We need our labor laws to catch up with the challenges of farm workers, food processing workers, and those working in restaurant­s and supermarke­ts.

In the short term, we can’t forget the important programs the Farm Bill funds. Real change will require a new approach that values the needs of farmers and society as a whole over the demands of corporatio­ns.

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