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ASA Urges Enactment of 2008 Food &
Farm Bill
May 12, 2008…Saint Louis, Missouri… The American Soybean
Association (ASA) is urging Congress to pass, and President George W.
Bush to sign, the "Food, Conservation, and Energy Act of 2008." The new
Food & Farm Bill will provide a basic safety net for farmers, support
for energy and conservation programs, and funding for nutrition programs
that provides food assistance for the poor, through 2012. Congress is
expected to vote on the bill later this week.
In reviewing the various titles of the Farm Bill, ASA President John
Hoffman, a soybean farmer from Waterloo, Iowa, pointed out that "over
two-thirds of the funding in the legislation is devoted to the food
stamp program and other nutrition initiatives, while 9% is reserved for
conservation, 14% to provide a safety net for farmers, with the
remaining 10% spent on energy initiatives, rural development, research,
trade promotion, international food assistance, crop insurance, and
other priorities. So this legislation really is a Food, Conservation,
and Energy bill."
ASA is pleased that the bill addresses many of the priorities
advanced by ASA, including providing a more equitable safety net for
soybean producers, funding a biodiesel production incentive program,
authorizing cost-sharing for the production of soybeans with improved
oil traits, reauthorizing and funding a biodiesel education program,
providing increased funding for conservation stewardship on working
lands, and allowing some non-environmentally sensitive land that is in
the Conservation Reserve Program to return to production to meet food,
feed, and fuel needs.
"We applaud the decision by Congress to increase the soybean target
price from $5.80 per bushel to $6.00 per bushel," Hoffman stated.
"Raising the soybean target price to a more equitable level has been a
top ASA priority for the 2008 Farm Bill. If soybean prices remain high,
as they are now, we may never need this safety net, but farmers will
have this reassurance in the event prices fall in the future."
Among its many provisions, the Farm Bill reauthorizes the Commodity
Credit Corporation (CCC) Bioenergy Program, a key legislative priority
for the U.S. soybean industry. The $300 million provided for the CCC
Bioenergy Program will make domestic biodiesel more competitive with
petroleum diesel and imported biodiesel. The Program will bring some
stability to the industry so that domestically-produced biodiesel can
continue to add to the nation’s fuel supply.
The Food & Farm Bill also authorizes a Quality Incentive Program to
promote increased production of high-stability soybeans and other
oilseeds to replace trans fats in food products. This initiative has
also been an ASA priority in the Farm Bill debate.
"In addition to these provisions, ASA looks forward to implementation
of the ‘Average Crop Revenue Election’ (ACRE) program," Hoffman stated.
"This alternative to the traditional farm program would compensate
producers when both state and farm income fall below recent average
revenue levels. Soybean farmers welcome the option of enrolling under
this new program."
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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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