House approves Deficit Reduction Act, cuts ag spending by $3.7 billion

Nov 23, 2005 6:52 PM

The House of Representatives approved legislation that would reduce total mandatory spending by $49.99 billion during fiscal years 2006/2010. The Deficit Reduction Act of 2005 includes cuts of $3.7 billion in agriculture programs.

Passage of the bill on a party line vote of 217-215 sets up a conference with Senate members, whose version of the legislation reduces mandatory spending by $35 billion, including cuts of $3.014 billion over the five years. The conference will be scheduled after the House and Senate return from their Thanksgiving recess.

The House version requires USDA to save $1.01 billion by cutting direct payments to row crop producers by 2.5 percent and eliminating the Step 2 program for cotton; $760 million by reducing conservation spending; $446 million by lowering rural development program funding; $620 million by cutting USDA and cooperative Extension research programs; and $796 million in food stamp reductions.

Farm groups including the National Farmers Union said the House package is misguided.

“The House’s passage of nearly $4 billion in cuts to programs that benefit rural America is the wrong move at the wrong time,” said President Dave Frederickson. “The representatives' plan will make a bad situation out on the farm even worse.”

Frederickson said farm spending makes up less than 1 percent of the federal budget, yet farmers and ranchers are required to take more than 9 percent of all federal spending reductions.

“Policymakers are placing a disproportionate share of the burden on rural America while proposing tax cuts for the nation’s wealthy.”

e-mail: flaws@primediabusiness.com

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© 2009 Penton Media, Inc.


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Continuing Education


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Weed Resistance Management in Cotton

This course covers a wide range of options to effectively control weeds in cotton and reduce the risk of weed resistance management. It is accredited for hours/units for licensed/accredited applicators in 7 U.S. Cotton Belt states (Florida, Georgia, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Texas, South Carolina an d Tennessee. CCA credit is pending).

This course is accredited in Texas, Oklahoma, New Mexico, Virginia, West Virginia and Wyoming as well as for CCA credits:

(New Course)
Spray Drift Management

Keeping crop protection chemicals on the crop for which they are intended has been a cornerstone of farming not only to protect neighboring crops, but to not waste money allowing products to drift off the intended target. This accredited online continuing education course covers the critical elements of spray drift management.

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