|
ASA Concerned about 2006 Agriculture Budget
February 9, 2005... Saint Louis, Missouri... The
American Soybean Association (ASA) has expressed concerns regarding the
White House’s 2006 budget proposal for the United States Department of
Agriculture (USDA). ASA has labored hard to work with the U.S. Congress
and USDA to create programs in the Farm Bill that not only work for
soybean producers within the specific budget limits provided by
Congress, but which also play a critical role in the country’s economy
and provide a wide range of benefits to all Americans.
"ASA is concerned that program reductions and/or
restructurings could seriously undermine many nutrition, conservation,
crop insurance and farm programs that are important to all
Americans," said ASA President Neal Bredehoeft, a soybean producer
from Alma, Mo. "Many of these critically important programs already
have sustained budget reductions in recent years."
For example, the agricultural appropriations bill is
the only appropriations bill to have its 302 (b) allocation reduced in
both of the previous two years. These reduced resources, coupled
with the need to fund hurricane and other disaster assistance, have
necessitated reductions in funding for many discretionary agriculture
programs, as well as reductions of $4 billion in mandatory agriculture
programs.
"As another example, the nutrition of the nation’s
low-income people is still suffering because of the budget cuts of the
1990s," Bredehoeft said. "USDA’s nutrition programs have
recently been re-authorized, improving their efficiencies in providing
food to the most vulnerable members of our society."
The 2002 Farm Bill’s conservation provisions
already are benefiting the environment as part of the
"greenest" farm bill ever enacted. Through the first
three years of the 2002 Farm Bill, farm program costs have been more
than $15 billion less than the costs initially projected by the
Congressional Budget Office when Congress passed the 2002 bill.
"A budget that requires further cuts or
structural weakening in these important programs will put at risk the
promising environmental benefits of the bill, and the nutritional health
of some of the poorest populations in our country," Bredehoeft
said. "In addition, with prices for many major commodities
falling sharply from last year, reductions to farm programs would come
at precisely the time that these supports are most needed in rural
America.
"Submission of the President’s budget is the first step in the
budgetary process. ASA will work with the budget-writers in Congress to
ensure that programs important to soybean farmers are adequately
funded," concluded Bredehoeft.
--30--
For more information contact:
Neal Bredehoeft, ASA President, 660/674-2442, nbredehoeft@almanet.net
Bob Callanan, Communications Director, (314) 576-1770, bcallanan@soy.org
Access this release at www.SoyGrowers.com/newsroom/news.htm |