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Tribal advocates keep up legal pressure for fair political maps; 12-member jury sworn in for Trump's historic criminal trial; the importance of healthcare decision planning; and a debt dilemma: poll shows how many people wrestle with college costs.

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With Farm Bill On Front Burner, Subsidies to Mega-Farms Boiling Over

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Monday, October 22, 2007   

Lyons, NE – Minnesota's Senators are gearing up for debate over a new U.S. Farm Bill this week, and their participation on the Agriculture Committees in Congress could give them a big say in the process.

One major issue is subsidies to mega-farms, at the expense of family farms. Chuck Hassebrook with the Center For Rural Affairs says the plan now under consideration in the Senate contains a loophole "big enough to drive a tractor through."

"The Farm Bill makes payments to farmers, to support their income. And, in theory, there's a limit on how much any one farm can get -- but that limit is so full of loopholes that we end up with a farm program that subsidizes the nation's biggest farms, and this drives smaller operations out of business."

Hassebrook worries the subsidies to large corporate farms have huge implications. He was disappointed when the U.S. House version of the Farm Bill didn't provide adequate protection for smaller farms, business that he believes are essential to a successful rural economy in Minnesota.

"The direct impact is that we end up with a Farm Bill that subsidizes the destruction of family farming. Minnesotans' tax dollars are wasted to sustain a rationale that they don't support, which is the destruction of family farming. Ideally, we should be capping payments and using that money to invest in the future of rural America."

Hassebrook adds there's still time to change the direction of the legislation, but it will take Minnesota's strong representation on the House and Senate Agriculture Committees to do so.



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