[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 21 (Tuesday, February 4, 2014)]
[House]
[Pages H1552-H1553]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
AGRICULTURAL ACT OF 2014
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Pennsylvania (Mr. Thompson) for 5 minutes.
Mr. THOMPSON of Pennsylvania. Mr. Speaker, last week, the House of
Representatives passed the Agricultural Act of 2014, a 5-year farm bill
reauthorization, with bipartisan support by a vote of 251-166. This
farm bill is a big win for the Nation's economy and will support jobs
across the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, while making necessary reforms
that will save taxpayers billions.
Mr. Speaker, not only does this bill deliver for taxpayers, it is
good public policy. We spent over 4 years crafting the measure through
dozens of hearings, audits, and other forums for public and stakeholder
input.
The bill was produced by the House-Senate conference committee, upon
which I served, that was charged with resolving the differences between
the House- and Senate-passed farm bills. Throughout this process,
members of the Agriculture Committee have proved that positive movement
on important pieces of legislation can be achieved.
This bill repeals direct payments and limits producers to risk
management tools that offer protection when they suffer significant
losses. Under the measure, limits on payment are reduced, eligibility
rules are tightened, and means tests are streamlined to make farm
programs more accountable.
The measure provides historic reforms to dairy policy by repealing
outdated and ineffective dairy programs. It supports small businesses
and beginning farmers and ranchers with training and access to capital.
The agreement reauthorizes numerous research, extension, and
education programs, including programs for land grant universities, the
National Institute of Food and Agriculture, and the Agricultural
Research Service.
This farm bill makes the first reforms to the food stamp program
since the welfare reforms of 1996, while maintaining critical food
assistance to families in need. It closes the heat and eat loophole
that artificially increases benefit levels when States provide nominal
LIHEAP assistance.
The bill also includes the Forest Products Fairness Act, a bill I
introduced, which would open new market opportunities for timber and
forest products by allowing them to qualify for the U.S. Department of
Agriculture's BioPreferred program. It contains language codifying the
Forest Service's authority to categorically exclude noncontroversial
day-to-day activities from the National Environmental Policy Act, or
NEPA, assessments. It provides certainty to the forest products
industry by clarifying that forest roads and related silvicultural
activities will not be treated as a point source of pollution under the
Clean Water Act and will no longer be subject to frivolous lawsuits.
It improves the farm bill conservation title through the
consolidation of 23 duplicative programs into 13. Overall, the package
reduces deficits by $16.6 billion over 10 years.
Mr. Speaker, for family farms and agribusinesses in my home State
that drive the economy with more than $68 billion in total economic
activity annually, this bill is a big win. For individuals and families
in my home State that are looking for that next job or a little more
take-home pay, this bill is
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a big win. For the families and individuals that rely on safe and
affordable food every day, this bill is a big win.
Mr. Speaker, I urge the Senate to quickly pass this bill and get it
to the President's desk for his signature. Americans deserve as much.
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