News & Events - Archived News

[ Up ]

House Moving Ahead With Farm Bill

By Philip Brasher, Star Tribune
October 3, 2001
 
WASHINGTON (AP) -- The House is moving ahead with an overhaul of farm programs, despite the Bush administration' s advice to slow down because of concerns over whether the government can afford the $170 billion price tag.

The House was to begin debate on the legislation Wednesday. Farm groups hope that House approval of the measure this week will put pressure on the Senate to act quickly on a bill of its own.

Agriculture Secretary Ann Veneman said Tuesday that there was no reason for Congress to hurry, since existing programs don' t expire until next September.

" Certainly we would like to have time for a thoughtful discussion of all the issues, " she said. " It' s not an issue that we think needs to be taken up immediately."

The legislation was approved by the House Agriculture Committee in July and counts on using $72 billion in surplus funds that were projected in a congressional budget agreement this spring. That surplus is fast disappearing in the wake of the terrorist attacks in September.

Farm groups think that quick action in Congress will get them most or all of that $72 billion.

Bob Stallman, president of the American Farm Bureau Federation, called the legislation an " economic stimulus package" for rural America.

The bill would increase subsidies for grain, cotton and soybean farmers by $37 billion over 10 years by creating a new assistance program tied to swings in crop prices.

Groups representing those growers are worried about a proposed amendment that would shift $19 billion of their subsidies into conservation programs that take land out of production or reward farmers for improved environmental practices.

Aides to Rep. Larry Combest, R-Texas, chairman of the House Agriculture Committee, have told farm lobbyists he will block final action on the bill if that amendment is approved. Combest was confident that the amendment would be defeated, spokesman Keith Williams said Tuesday.

Stallman, a Texas rice grower, said the amendment would " create more economic hardship in the countryside."

The proposal' s supporters say it would ensure that more states benefit from farm programs.

" It' s the biggest challenge (farm groups) have faced in a long time, " said Ken Cook, president of the Environmental Working Group, an advocacy organization. " It' s really looking at redrawing the subsidy map."

Besides the conservation amendment, there also are expected to be proposals in the House to lower price supports for sugar and to put strict payment limits on grain and cotton subsidies. A program created a year ago allows large farms and corporations to bypass the $150, 000-per-person cap on crop subsidies.

The bill is H.R. 2646.