[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 79 (Thursday, June 6, 2013)]
[Senate]
[Pages S3979-S3981]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
THE FARM BILL
Mr. THUNE. Madam President, I had hoped to be able to come down today
and call up an amendment to the pending legislation, the farm bill. I
understand we are not currently on the bill but, rather, in morning
business. I hope to have the opportunity to try to get an amendment
pending.
We have been trying now for several days to have amendments
considered to the farm bill. This is a germane amendment. It is very
relevant to the bill. It is one that I think the Senate, the full
Senate, ought to have an opportunity to debate and ultimately to vote
on. It is very unfortunate, in my view, that we are where we are on a
piece of legislation that has this much consequence for our economy,
for farm country, and for consumers across this country.
This is a bill that is a major piece of legislation. Unfortunately,
we have not had the opportunity in the course of the days that we have
been on the bill to get up amendments pending, debated, and voted on.
I can't tell you how disappointing that is to those of us who come
from farm country and wish to try to shape the best farm bill we
possibly can in the Senate, so that when we go to conference, which I
hope we will, with the House of Representatives, we would be in the
best position possible to have a bill that addresses the important
needs of farmers and ranchers across this country with regard to
certainty from a multiyear farm bill. This would also be a bill that we
can defend to the American taxpayers, a bill that is reform oriented.
It moves us into the future of agriculture, not the past.
The amendment I had hoped to offer today, amendment No. 1092, amends
the commodity title of the farm bill that we have been debating. Last
year the Senate passed its farm bill by a vote of 64 to 35. Sixty-four
Senators voted for a farm bill that most of us believe offered a level
of reform that we could support and defend to the American taxpayer.
As several of my colleagues and I pointed out during the debate on
the farm bill in the Agriculture, Nutrition and Forestry Committee, we
have deep concerns over what we believe is a step backwards in the
commodity title with the creation of the adverse market payments, or
what we refer to as the AMP Program. This program takes a step
backwards from last year's farm bill by recreating a program with
countercyclical payments and fixed target prices.
In fact, I would argue this is a policy that goes back. This policy
predates cell phones. This policy predates the Internet. This is going
back to 1980s-type farm policies. Last year's Senate farm bill
completely eliminated this program, which meant we could honestly say
we had passed a reform-minded farm bill, a farm bill that is more
interested in policies that are about the future rather than the past,
that are about the market, that are about making sure we have a
necessary safety net in place for our farmers but
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doing it in a way that is defensible to the American taxpayer and moves
us on the path to reform.
Our concerns are not crop specific. There has been a lot of
discussion about this being something between the Midwest or the South
or regional. This is not a crop-specific concern; this is a policy-
specific concern. An outdated target price program is not--is not--what
most producers in this country asked us for in a new farm bill--just
the opposite.
Almost every member of the Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry
Committee was told by our producers that a sound crop insurance program
is a much higher priority. Amendment No. 1092 is simply a response to
the wishes of most farmers in the United States. This amendment strikes
the newly created AMP Program and places peanuts and rice back into the
ARC Program or, to put it simply, this amendment replaces the commodity
title in the bill that we have before us and replaces it with a reform-
minded, market-oriented commodity title that was included in the farm
bill that we passed last year.
I do not believe Congress is capable of setting accurate fixed prices
for the next 5 years because that is precisely what the commodity title
is in this bill. The House bill commodity title is even much worse in
that respect. It has Congress setting, by statute--we, as Members of
Congress are basically setting fixed prices for the next 5 years. The
market, not Congress and not the USDA, should be setting prices for
title I commodities.
If fixed target prices are set too high and commodity prices drop,
history has proven farmers will once again begin planting for a
government program rather than in response to market signals. This not
only creates a potential unnecessary liability for taxpayers, but it
also increases the risk of overproduction and negative impacts on
global markets, making certain crops subject to possible WTO disputes.
This amendment not only moves us to the reforms we included in last
year's farm bill, it also saves taxpayers more than $3 billion. That
increases the total savings in this bill by more than 12 percent. That
is $3 billion that most of our farmers have told us we don't need to
spend. This is something the American farmer, the producers out there
have made very, very clear and of which I would argue the American
taxpayer would be very supportive.
I urge my colleagues, if we get the opportunity to debate this, to
ultimately support this amendment because it would recapture the level
of reform we had in last year's farm bill and save $3 billion at the
same time.
There are many amendments that were filed to this bill that are not
getting debated, that are not getting voted on. This is one in
particular to the commodity title of the bill that saves over $3
billion from the bill before us today--over $3 billion in savings--by
moving toward a market-oriented policy as opposed to a high fixed
target price policy where the Congress sets in statute the target
prices rather than having the market determine what those prices ought
to be. That is one amendment I have offered to the commodity title of
the bill.
I have another amendment to the SNAP or food title or nutrition title
of the bill which would save $2 billion out of overhead administrative
costs. It doesn't affect beneficiaries or income or asset eligibility
standards; it simply finds savings in the food stamp program that are
related to overhead administrative costs and saves $2 billion. We ought
to be voting on that.
We ought to have an opportunity to debate these things and vote on
these amendments. I know colleagues of mine as well have offered
amendments that save dollars and make this a more responsible farm
policy--a policy that is oriented toward reform and that achieves a
significant amount of savings for the American taxpayer.
So I want to say again what I said at the beginning of my remarks;
that is, it is unfortunate that we are where we are--debating a bill
that over a decade will cost nearly $1 trillion. Of course, about 80
percent of that is in the nutrition title of the bill. But we have an
opportunity to actually improve this as it moves across the floor of
the Senate and proceeds into a conference with the House of
Representatives, where they will have passed a bill out of the
Agriculture Committee which will head to the floor and has high fixed
target prices--higher fixed target prices than are included in the
Senate bill--and high fixed target prices for all commodities, as
opposed to the Senate bill, which has them simply for rice and for
peanuts.
We are looking at heading down a path that takes us not to the future
but to the past--to a time when farmers were farming for the government
program rather than farming for the market; to a time when there were
lots of potential disputes because these are trade-distorting, market-
distorting policies that are driven by government as opposed to being
driven by the market. We can do so much better, and we should do so
much better for our producers across this country and for the taxpayers
who ultimately foot the bill.
The amendment I have would do that. It would save over $3 billion in
the commodity title of the bill, it is market-oriented reform, and it
is something we ought to be considering and debating in the Senate. It
is incredibly unfortunate that we are not having that opportunity.
Madam President, I yield the floor.
Ms. COLLINS. Mr. President, I rise today to speak to an amendment to
the farm bill on a subject important not only to the farmers of Maine
but also to the participants in the WIC program. I am pleased that
Senator Mark Udall has joined as the lead cosponsor of the amendment,
which would require that all fresh fruits and vegetables, including
fresh white potatoes, be included in the final USDA rule. Specifically,
the amendment would only allow fresh, whole, or cut vegetables to be
included--vegetables with added sugars, fats, or oils would be
prohibited.
The proposed final USDA rule for the Special Supplemental Nutrition
Program for Women, Infants, and Children, WIC, food package, which went
into effect in December 2009, includes a ban on the purchase of fresh
white potatoes by WIC participants. Fresh potatoes are the only fruit
or vegetable to be excluded, which sends a message to WIC participants
that USDA believes that potatoes are not healthy.
The USDA has said that the proposed ban on fresh white potatoes is
based on a 2005 National Academies' Institute of Medicine, IOM, report,
which considered recommendations of the 2005 Dietary Guidelines for
Americans, DGA, and includes consumption data nearly 20 years old. The
subsequently published 2010 DGA, however, recommends 5 to 6 cups of
starchy vegetables per week for women with a daily caloric intake of
1,800 to 2,400 calories--an increase of 2 to 3 cups per week from the
2005 DGA. USDA has yet to update the rule to reflect the most recent
DGA.
The 2010 DGA lists four ``nutrients of concern''--potassium, dietary
fiber, calcium, and Vitamin D. The guidelines state that dietary intake
of these four nutrients ``are low enough to be of public health concern
for both adults and children.'' Since USDA is concerned about a lack of
these nutrients in the American diet, it would make sense for the
Department to promote good sources of these critical nutrients. Yet the
Department's proposed WIC rule eliminates a vegetable such as the
potato that is an excellent source of these nutrients. USDA should not
limit the availability of the potato but instead should encourage its
healthy preparation and consumption. In a rather puzzling example of
inconsistency, while the newest WIC regulations will no longer allow
WIC mothers, infants, and children to buy white potatoes, if those same
participants get benefits from the WIC Farmers' Market Nutrition
Program, some States may allow them to purchase white potatoes at a
farmers' market.
Consider the following nutritional facts about potatoes that are
often overlooked: potatoes have more potassium than bananas, a food
commonly associated with this nutrient; potatoes are cholesterol free,
fat free, and sodium free, and can be served in countless healthy ways;
a medium-baked potato contains 15 percent of the daily recommended
value of dietary fiber, 27 percent of the daily recommended value for
Vitamin B6, and 28 percent of the daily recommended value of Vitamin C.
It only makes common sense to include a healthy, locally grown, and
nutritious vegetable such as the fresh white potato in the WIC package
and I
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believe the sound recommendations in the 2010 DGA support this. The
Collins-Udall of Colorado amendment would achieve this by requiring
that all fresh fruits and vegetables, including fresh white potatoes,
be included in the final USDA rule.
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