[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 162 (Wednesday, October 26, 2011)]
[House]
[Pages H7071-H7072]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
``GROWING OPPORTUNITIES: FAMILY FARM VALUES FOR REFORMING THE FARM
BILL''
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Oregon (Mr. Blumenauer) for 5 minutes.
Mr. BLUMENAUER. This is a special moment for American agriculture as
well as an opportunity to address the major challenges America faces:
our long-term government spending, our budget deficit, environmental
protection, and the health problems of our families. It is also key to
improving the economy, which should be our number one priority. Helping
more people at less cost by reducing subsidies to large agribusiness
also speaks directly to the frustrations of protesters from coast to
coast, whether they are occupying Wall Street or they are Tea Party
protesters.
Now, there is no doubt that America's massive investment in farm
support--hundreds of billions of dollars of taxpayer money--the special
rules and regulations, and tariff protections have all contributed to
the success of American agriculture. It has boosted productivity and
made a difference in providing plentiful low-cost food. Left
unaddressed is whether this expensive patchwork of complicated and
excessive programs is the best we can do.
The answer from independent analysts is overwhelming. We can do far
better for less money and help more farmers and ranchers and especially
those Americans in need of food. Today, I am releasing a report
entitled ``Growing Opportunities: Family Farm Values for Reforming the
Farm Bill,'' which brings together that big picture and illustrates a
better way.
The core principles are to reduce the flow of money to the largest
agribusiness interests, which shortchanges the majority of farmers and
ranchers who receive virtually no assistance from direct commodity
payments, an expensive web of programs to shield farmers from market
forces and, of course, the unusual program of crop insurance, which
pays more to insurance agents than to farmers.
It would, instead, concentrate assistance for people who need help
the most, make healthy food more affordable and give assistance to new
farmers, which is so necessary to deal with the turnover in American
agriculture, where the average farmer today is 55 years of age.
It would stop the inappropriate and expensive subsidization, which
compromises our international trade responsibilities, which not only
gives these large agribusinesses a leg up but helps them get bigger at
the expense of small- and medium-sized farmers and ranchers.
It would stop the insanity of giving a billion and a half dollars to
Brazilian cotton farmers over the next 10 years because we don't have
the courage and the political will to stop giving support to American
cotton farmers, which has been deemed illegal.
We must make the production of food, not commodities, more affordable
and more nutritious for all Americans but particularly for our
students, our young families, and the elderly.
Redirecting money away from incentives to pollute and paying more to
farmers and ranchers to protect water quality and wildlife habitat will
give real benefit to American communities, which are the neighbors of
our farmers. It fits our economic and recreational
[[Page H7072]]
opportunities and reduces the cost of the cleanup of our waterways from
animal waste, pesticides, and fertilizers. Help with research,
marketing, and environmental protection will allow our farmers to be
more productive and better stewards of the land while putting money in
their pockets--in turn, increasing benefits and reducing costs for
everybody else.
Now, I don't pretend this report contains any silver bullet. It's a
collection of what I've learned in dealing with these issues in my 15
years in Congress but, more importantly, by spending a lot of time with
Oregon farmers and ranchers, people in the nursery industry, the
vintners, who are all shortchanged by the current system and deserve
better.
Joining me in the release of this report are Representatives who
advocate on behalf of the taxpayers, who deal with deficit spending,
who are environmental advocates, and people who care deeply about
America's farmers and ranchers. There is across this country a grand
coalition that is forming and coalescing behind a unified vision for
American agriculture at exactly the time when the taxpayers need it,
when most farmers and ranchers deserve it and when advocates on behalf
of better health and nutrition for all Americans demand it.
Executive Summary
Americans deserve a better Farm Bill. Current agricultural
policy spends too much money supporting large corporations,
doesn't adequately help the majority of small and midsize
farmers, and subsidizes manufactured food at the expense of
fruits and vegetables. This report outlines a series of
reforms to make the Farm Bill more accountable, more
affordable, and fairer to taxpayers, farmers, ranchers and
consumers alike.
Commodity Programs: The report advocates for eliminating
direct payments and storage payments, and placing limits on
counter cyclical, market assistance and ACRE payments to save
taxpayer dollars and create a more level playing field for
America's farmers.
Conservation Programs: While recognizing the important role
that conservation plays for farmers, ranchers and the public,
the report supports a shift to performance-oriented
conservation programs, giving farmers and ranchers
flexibility while ensuring that taxpayers get cleaner air and
water, and healthier soil.
Research and Development: The report acknowledges the
important role that research and development dollars have
played in boosting America's farm and ranch productivity, and
supports increasing or at a minimum keeping level research
funding.
Beginning Farmer and Rancher Programs: Recognizing the
importance of engaging younger Americans in farming and
ranching, the report advocates for small changes to current
programs to support beginning farmers and ranchers.
Crop Insurance: While the last negotiation of the Standard
Reinsurance Agreement made some improvements to the crop
insurance program, most economists agree that it is still in
need of reform. This report advocates for several principles
that should be used to guide the creation of any new crop
insurance agreement.
Nutrition: The report recognizes the opportunity to improve
the outcomes of nutrition programs and local farm economies
by coordinating the two. It also advocates for increased
local flexibility so that communities can take steps on their
own to increase access to fresh, local food.
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