From the Iowa Farmers Union:
EXECUTIVE OFFICE OF THE
PRESIDENT
OFFICE OF MANAGEMENT AND
BUDGET
WASHINGTON, D.C. 20503
July 25,
2007
(House Rules)
STATEMENT OF ADMINISTRATION
POLICY
H.R. 2419 - Farm, Nutrition and Bioenergy Act
of 2007
(Rep. Peterson (D) MN)
The
Administration appreciates the progress that the House Agriculture Committee has
made in drafting a new farm bill and the Committee's willingness to work with
the Administration. The House bill contains the first step toward reform;
however, more reform is needed, as in several areas the Committee's bill moves
backward.
The Administration is concerned that the
House bill "offsets" $4.7 billion in real spending with changes in the timing of
direct, counter-cyclical, and crop insurance payments. These shifts in
timing do not result in real savings to the taxpayers. The Administration
would strongly oppose tax increases as offsets, and the unnecessary expansion of
the Davis-Bacon authorities.
The final farm bill should
include further real reform, should identify offsets without gimmicks or tax
increases, and should not include an expansion of Davis-Bacon. The
Administration believes these concerns can be addressed by continuing to work
with Congress.
However, if the bill were presented to the President in
its current form, the President's senior advisors would recommend that he veto
the bill.
Commodity and Crop Insurance Program
Concerns
The Administration supports the
inclusion of direct attribution coupled with the elimination of the
"three-entity rule" and the reduction of subsidies to crop insurance
companies. The Administration also supports the introduction of a
revenue-based counter-cyclical program. In addition, the Administration
supports the reduction of the loss ratio in crop insurance to 1.0, the reduction
of the Administrative and Operating expense reimbursements to the companies by 2
percentage points, and the inclusion of a supplemental crop insurance program to
improve the safety net for producers. Furthermore, the Administration
supports increased funding for specialty crops and for beginning
farmers.
The House should go further, however, and require
producers to lock in loan deficiency payments only when they sell their crops,
thereby preventing multi-billion dollar pay-outs when prices temporarily drop.
The Administration strongly opposes increases in target prices (income support
levels) and loan rates (minimum farm prices) for program crops and sugar, as
they would shift the balance of support in a more potentially trade-distorting
direction and possibly would encourage farmers to plant for government payments
rather than according to market demand. As a
result, our trading partners would question how these changes and new cotton
textile mill subsidies would be consistent with existing WTO obligations to
limit trade-distorting support. The Administration supports lifting the fruit
and vegetable planting restrictions to eliminate any question that direct
payments are "green box" in the light of the WTO rulings in the cotton dispute
with Brazil.
The Administration opposes the provision
allowing crop insurance companies to collude during the renegotiation of
financial terms of the standard reinsurance agreement, which would likely raise
consumer prices and government costs. The Administration also urges the
House to include additional crop insurance reforms, including mandatory purchase
of crop insurance for Title 1 recipients along with the proposed offsets.
In addition, the Administration has concerns that the supplemental insurance
provision in the House bill will provide growers with less choice and encourages
the House to consider, instead, using the Administration's supplemental
deductible coverage.
The Administration urges the House to
increase support for beginning farmers. At the same time, the
Administration does not support subsidies to farmers with an Adjusted Gross
Income above $200,000 averaged over three years, who are among the wealthiest 2
percent of American taxpayers. The Administration strongly opposes the
complete elimination of the payment cap on marketing loan payments, which would
undermine the partial reform of payment limits in the bill and allows the
largest producers to capture even larger subsidy payments.
Conservation Program Concerns
The
Administration proposed a record level of funding for conservation programs and
supports the Committee's action to enhance USDA's conservation programs,
including the inclusion of the Regional Water Enhancement Program (RWEP), which
provides needed resources to producers and partners to improve water quality and
water conservation while sustaining agriculture. The House should fully fund the
RWEP program and not restrict the Department's ability to award grants
competitively to support broad coalitions regardless of the geographic
location.
The Administration opposes the House bill for
failing to protect native grasslands from conversion to cropland, and for
failing to consolidate the programs, which would improve access for farmers and
ranchers. The bill also would impede conservation program performance by
eliminating the requirement for U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service representation on
State Technical Committees and coordination on the Wetland Reserve Program and
overlooks the need for monitoring compliance and program performance necessary
to demonstrate long term conservation benefits.
Nutrition Program
Concerns
The Administration supports inclusion
of nutrition proposals to improve access and better reflect the needs of Food
Stamp recipients and state agencies, and proposals to remove penalties for
college and retirement savings, child care expenses and military combat
pay. The House should further reduce unnecessary costs and improve program
integrity by limiting categorical eligibility to those who receive only TANF or
SSI cash benefits.
In addition, the Administration strongly
opposes the Committee's proposal to restrict States' ability to competitively
source Food Stamp Program functions in an effort to streamline and improve the
program's administration. The Administration carefully oversees State
modernization efforts, including increased access and integrity, to insure
improved cost-effectiveness and accountability.
The
Administration opposes Section 4303, which would expand the Fruit and Vegetable
Program to all States and would increase direct spending by $350 million over
five years. The Administration's farm bill proposal increases the availability
of fresh fruits and vegetables through the school meal programs that make better
use of existing purchase authorities and existing
programs.
Other
Concerns
The Administration strongly
opposes the provision that would raise taxes on payments by U.S. subsidiaries to
foreign affiliates. In addition to being a tax increase, this provision
would discourage foreign investment in the United States, override tax treaties
the U.S. has with many nations, and raise questions under other international
agreements. Foreign investment in the United States creates American jobs
and strengthens economic growth. This provision would adversely affect job
creation in the U.S. and relationships with our major trading partners and could
provoke retaliation in the form of higher foreign taxes on U.S.
firms.
The Administration supports the inclusion of
the Administration's proposal of $1.6 billion for programs designed to reduce
the Nation's dependence on oil by encouraging the development of cellulosic
ethanol. However, the Administration is strongly opposed to the expansion
of Davis-Bacon Act requirements to grants and loan guarantees for ethanol plant
construction projects.
On rural development, the
House bill fails to provide mandatory funding for renovations needed at many
rural critical access hospitals, to address the backlog of rural infrastructure
projects, and to streamline the various Rural Development programs through
consolidation.
With regard to all farm programs,
the Administration believes it is vitally important for the U.S. to comply with
its WTO obligations. Otherwise, there is a risk that United States farm and
other exports could be exposed to billions of dollars in retaliation against our
leading farm exports. In addition to provisions mentioned above, the
Administration is concerned with other provisions including shipping pattern
requirements for suppliers of sugar and those relating to extra long staple
cotton competitiveness.
The Administration strongly
opposes a requirement to devote $450 million in P.L. 480 Title II funding to
non-emergency programs without the ability to quickly waive it in an
emergency. This provision would result in a $100 million decrease in
emergency food aid. The Administration also urges the to House adopt the
Administration provision to allow the use of up to 25 percent of P.L. 480 Title
II funding for local or regional purchases of food aid; this will provide
flexibility in responding to urgent, unanticipated needs.
The Administration strongly opposes provisions in the
credit title that expand the Farm Credit System (FCS) outside their traditional
markets and other provisions involving Federal loan programs that are
inconsistent with Federal credit policy, which would increase the financial risk
for potentially billions of dollars of Federal loans and loan guarantees.
The Administration strongly opposes the transfer of the
Agricultural Inspection Function from the Department of Homeland Security (DHS)
to USDA. Such a transfer of thousands of employees would divert attention
from the real mission, delay any efforts to identify needed improvements, and
set the program back for another several years while yet another readjustment
occurs for both USDA and DHS.
Constitutional
Concerns
The Administration notes that several
provisions of the bill raise constitutional concerns. For example, certain
provisions incorporate classifications and preferences based on race, national
origin, or gender that are subject to the rigorous standards applicable to such
provisions under the equal protection component of the Due Process Clause of the
Fifth Amendment. Unless the legislative record adequately demonstrates
that those standards are satisfied, those provisions are objectionable on
constitutional grounds. The Administration looks forward to working with
Congress to resolve these concerns.
* * * * *
Bart
Chilton
CoS/VP Government Relations
National Farmers Union
400 North
Capitol Street, NW
Suite 790
Washington, DC
20001
Phone: 202.554.1600
Fax:
202.554.1654
Email: [log in to unmask]
Iowa Farmers Union
PO Box 8988
528 Billy Sunday Rd
Ames,
IA 50014
800-775-5227
[log in to unmask]www.iafu.org
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