Press Conference Thursday 10 a.m. Five national groups have formed a coalition to try to get funding back in the federal budget for the Wetlands Reserve (WRP), Wildlife Habitat Incentive Program (WHIP), and Farmland Protection Program (a program that helps protect farms from sprawl). The 5 groups include Defenders of Wildlife, Natural Resources Defense Council, PIRG, Sierra Club and National Environmental Trust. A press conference will be held this Thursday and will feature some farmers and others speaking in favor of these programs, which incidentally all protect or restore habitat. The press conference will be held Thursday, the 19th, at 10 a.m. at the Capitol, room 118. Anyone is welcome to attend to show support. If you are interested in more details, let me know. We'd like to have the room full of people. Thanks, Jane Clark [log in to unmask] "ZERO FUNDING" FOR AG CONSERVATION From Defenders of Wildlife While the huge federal budget surplus has sparked record tax cuts, a House subcommittee on agriculture recommended "ZERO FUNDING" for three key agricultural conservation programs: the Wetlands Reserve Program (WRP), the Wildlife Habitats Incentive Programs (WHIP) and the Farmland Protection Program (FPP). These three voluntary, incentive based programs protect hundreds of thousands of acres of habitat and the wildlife that depend on it. They also often provide the only means family farmers and ranchers have to properly steward the land. While cutting the funding for such programs is a theme of the Bush Administration, a coalition of over 100 national and local farming, church, conservation and hunting and fishing groups take the position that incentive based ag conservation should be supported. The next farm bill re-authorization is slated to occur in 2002, though a great deal of work is currently going on behind the scenes. This bill will have tremendous impact on family farmers, consumers and the environment. It's time we put aside our differences and join efforts in demanding safe food that sustains our farm families and replenishes and heals our biodiversity, water and land. Future generations will thank us proudly. ************************************************************************** Zero Funding means farmers will lose the ability to: Enroll more land in the Wetlands Reserve Program Further protect wildlife with the Wildlife Habitat Incentives Program Protect additional Farmland from urban sprawl with the Farmland Protection Program We are deeply concerned that three key agriculture conservation incentive programs - the Wetlands Reserve Program (WRP), the Farmland Protection Program (FPP), and the Wildlife Habitat Incentives Program (WHIP) - have been zero-funded in the Agriculture Appropriations bill by the House of Representatives. Many American agricultural producers need these programs to assist them in being good stewards of the land. The Farmland Protection Program has leveraged $230 million in state and local funding and protected 127,000 acres of farmland from sprawling development. WHIP cost-share programs have improve nearly 1.4 million acres of habitat for Atlantic salmon, northern bobwhite, Karner blue butterfly and other species. WRP enrollments have helped protect and restore nearly a million acres of wetlands. However, tremendous needs still exist. FPP, for instance, currently has a backlog of over 4,000 farmers. While we recognize that these programs have expended authorized acreage or dollar amounts, we estimate that demand for WRP is more than $578 million, FPP more than $200 million, and WHIP more than $150 million. We believe that funding to address existing demand for WRP, FPP, and WHIP can and should be accomplished within a fiscally-responsible appropriations bill and will help farmers and all Americans alike. Funds to restore these three programs should come out of programs that do not provide other benefits to family farmers. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - To get off the IOWA-TOPICS list, send any message to: [log in to unmask]