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ASA Strongly Oppose Alternative Farm Bill Plan
Developed by House and Bush Administration
February 13, 2008… Saint Louis, Missouri… The American Soybean
Association (ASA) expressed strong opposition to an alternative version
of the 2008 Farm Bill released today by the leadership of the House
Committee on Agriculture and the Bush Administration.
"This plan represents unilateral surrender to the short-sighted
budget and policy priorities of the Bush Administration rather than a
compromise with the farm bill passed by the Committee and the full House
last year," stated ASA President John Hoffman, a soybean farmer from
Waterloo, Iowa. "It reverses the limited progress ASA achieved in the
House bill to provide more equitable income support to soybean
producers, and sufficient funding to make U.S. biodiesel producers
competitive with imported biodiesel. Worse yet, the plan makes changes
to the loan deficiency payment program that dramatically weaken the
income safety net and disadvantage soybean, corn and other feed grains,
and wheat farmers compared to current law."
Hoffman continued, "ASA will work with Members of the Senate and
House Agriculture Committees to restore these important priorities in
Conference on the farm bill in the coming weeks."
Hoffman’s comments followed release of a plan developed after a
month-long series of meetings between House Agriculture Committee
leaders and U.S. Department of Agriculture and White House officials
that cuts overall spending by $12 billion from the earlier House-passed
bill and inserts policy positions championed by the Administration that
had previously been overwhelming rejected.
The cuts include $6.5 billion from the Commodities Title, including
$5.2 billion from eliminating direct payments in the ninth year of a
10-year bill, and an unspecified amount from eliminating increases in marketing
loan rates and target prices, including for soybeans, sought by ASA and
other commodity organizations. Other cuts include $3 billion less in
increased food stamp spending and $2.2 billion less in the Energy Title.
Funding for the CCC Bioenergy Program, including support for domestic
biodiesel production, is reduced from $1.4 billion to $245 million. The
plan also would require producers of all commodities, with the exception
of cotton and rice, to lose beneficial interest in their crops in order
to receive a Marketing Loan Gain or Loan Deficiency Payment (LDP).
Responding to the details of the plan, Hoffman said, "It is extremely
short-sighted to reverse efforts to provide a more equitable safety net
for producers of soybeans, wheat, barley, minor oilseeds, and other
crops that have been disadvantaged under the 2002 Farm Bill."
"Moreover," the ASA President said, "requiring producers to sell
their crop in order to receive an LDP would end the effectiveness of
this program in protecting farm income during periods of low prices.
While the income safety net provided by the LDP program is not triggered
during times of normal or high prices, gutting the effectiveness of this
program during potential future times of low prices represents a major
step backward from current law. Further, exempting cotton and rice would
distort crop rotations in the South, and discriminate against soybean,
corn, and wheat producers under the marketing loan program."
Hoffman concluded, "This plan reflects a failed effort to negotiate
an acceptable farm bill directly with the Administration, and its
enactment would be far worse for U.S. soybean producers than an
extension of the 2002 Farm Bill. The original bill, passed unanimously
by the House Committee, had broad support from all regions of the
country and all farm organizations. ASA calls for immediate action by
House and Senate Conferees to reverse the Administration’s undue and
negative influence on the House proposal, and to write a final bill that
is equitable and acceptable to production agriculture."
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For more information contact:
John Hoffman, ASA President, (319) 290-5042, 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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