Newcomers trying to put green tint on next farm bill

Jan 26, 2007 9:26 AM, By Forrest Laws
Farm Press Editorial Staff

The halls of Congress are likely to be a bit more crowded when lobbyists for traditional farm organizations begin making their rounds on the new farm bill later this year.

LAWS

Livestock and specialty crop producers have been saying they “want a place at the table” when the House and Senate Agriculture Committees begin writing the new legislation next month.

Those groups have been on the periphery for the last few farm bills, primarily to keep their ox from being gored, if you’ll pardon the pun. This time a lot of new faces are demanding not only a seat but also a major role in writing the law.

At this writing, the Farm and Food Policy Project, a “broad coalition of agriculture, anti-hunger, faith-based, public health, rural and conservation groups, was scheduled to release a report — “Seeking Balance in U.S. Farm and Food Policy — at a Washington press conference Jan. 22.

“As the 110th Congress gets under way, it will write a new farm bill that addresses such critical issues as agricultural production, food and nutrition assistance, rural development, renewable energy, equity and conservation,” the groups said.

The Farm and Food Policy Project is a “collaboration of diverse organizations united by a common vision of a more sustainable food and agriculture system for the United States.” The FFPP, it said, has written a joint farm bill declaration that has been endorsed by 200 organizations.

Other groups expected to participate included the Society for Nutrition Education, Environmental Defense, American Farmland Trust, Sustainable Agriculture Coalition and the Land Loss Prevention Project.

The Sustainable Agriculture Coalition had a hand in two earlier events, releasing a report titled “Hidden Treasures: The Conservation Security Program and Wildlife” and a letter urging Congress to pass a comprehensive “competition title” in the new farm bill.

Duane Hovorka, farm bill outreach coordinator for the National Wildlife Federation, was the author of the “Treasures” report, which said the 2002 farm bill’s Conservation Security Program has provided substantial wildlife benefits, but could provide even more with changes in the next farm bill.

Hovorka testified at a Senate Agriculture Committee hearing Jan. 17. The fact the hearing was convened by Committee Chairman Tom Harkin, the author of the Conservation Security Program, wasn’t lost on farm bill lobbyists.

The letter, signed by the Sustainable Agriculture Coalition and 210 other groups, said the new farm bill should have specific measures to limit packer and processor control and manipulation of livestock markets.

Should mainline farm organizations be worried about the newcomers trying to muscle in on their turf? They definitely bring a different take on the issues, one farmers initially may find a bit green, either too naïve or too tree-huggerish.

But they may also find they have more in common with the groups than they expect, and they may be glad to have them in their corner when it comes time to start counting the votes for the new legislation.

e-mail: flaws@farmpress.com

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