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ASA Applauds Completion of Senate
Farm Bill
October 25, 2007… Saint Louis, Missouri… The American Soybean
Association (ASA) today applauded approval by the Senate Agriculture
Committee of its proposal for the 2007 Farm Bill. ASA President John
Hoffman, a soybean farmer from Waterloo, Iowa, said that "ASA
appreciates action by the Senate Agriculture Committee in reporting a
bill, and urges its early consideration by the full Senate, so we can
complete omnibus farm legislation this year." Hoffman added that "while
the bill passed by Committee does not fully reflect ASA’s priorities on
support for soybean producer income and biodiesel production, ASA will
work with both Senate and House Conferees to address these issues and
reach an agreement that will meet with needs of U.S. soybean farmers."
Hoffman’s comments followed a two-day mark-up by the Senate Committee
during which draft legislation introduced by Chairman Tom Harkin (D-IA)
was debated and several amendments were considered. The bill would
establish two farm program options, including the current "three legged
stool" of marketing loan, direct payment, and counter-cyclical program
or an Average Crop Revenue program. The latter would include a fixed
payment of $15 per base acre and a payment equal to the shortfall
between a state’s target revenue and actual state revenue for a
commodity at the time of harvest. ASA has supported offering an optional
revenue-based program to producers.
Amendments adopted included one by Senator John Thune (R-SD) that
restores a producer’s option to take a Loan Deficiency Payment (LDP) in
lieu of a marketing loan when prices are below loan level at the time of
harvest. ASA had written a letter to the Committee urging restoration of
the LDP option, and was advised by Senator Thune’s office that the
amendment was offered as a result of ASA’s initiative.
Responding to the Senate bill as reported by the Committee, ASA
President Hoffman commented that "the Senate legislation still includes
provisions that ASA will work to address as it moves to the Senate floor
and to Conference with the House farm bill." According to Hoffman,
"these provisions include increasing the soybean target price from $6.00
to a minimum of $6.30 per bushel, and increasing funding for the
Bioenergy Program for Advanced Biofuels."
Hoffman stated that "ASA strongly opposes introduction of the
recourse loan under the proposed ACR program, and we will continue to
work to eliminate it in Conference." Hoffman concluded that "ASA would
like to ensure funding for the Quality Incentive Program to promote
production of soybeans with high-stability oils, to enable U.S. food
companies to eliminate trans fats without increasing use of unhealthy
saturated fats."
The Senate farm bill is expected to move to the Senate floor in the
next two weeks, and Conference with the House Agriculture Committee is
anticipated in December. Provisions of the 2002 Farm Bill will begin to
expire in early 2008.
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For more information contact:
John Hoffman, ASA President, (319) 233-9480, jhoffman@neotek.net
Bob Callanan, ASA Communications Director, 314/576-1770, bcallanan@soy.org
Access this release at http://www.soygrowers.com/newsroom/news.htm
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