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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; Healthcare decision planning important for CT residents; Debt dilemma poll: Hoosiers wrestle with college costs.

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“Take Two” on the Farm Bill

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Wednesday, June 18, 2008   

Lyons, NE – A new five-year farm bill is back on the President's desk, and he says he'll veto it again because it costs too much. Congress is expected to override the veto, but some agriculture groups want lawmakers to take a second look at the measure.

Brian Depew with the Midwest-based Center for Rural Affairs says it's a great chance to reform farm policy.

"Congress passed over that opportunity. In particular, the bill lacks payment limits to large megafarms. It also lacks a ban on meatpacker ownership of livestock."

Depew says continued misdirection of large subsidies and more consolidation means the new bill won't address some of the big problems in agriculture policy.

"With a lack of payment limits in this farm bill, we'll continue to see large checks go to a small number of very large farms. That's going to drive the consolidation of our farm sector. That's bad for rural communities; it's bad for family farmers. With the lack of a ban on packer ownership of livestock in the farm bill, we'll continue to see a decline of our family-farm livestock producers."

Depew says there are some positive aspects to the proposed bill, and those will help rural communities and consumers.

"One thing that the center is particularly pleased to see in the bill is a new Rural Micro-Enterprise Assistance Program, that will help small businesses in rural communities get started. We're also happy to see new funding for a nationwide Conservation Stewardship Program and new provisions in the Value-Added Producer Grant Program that will provide grants for small and mid-sized producers."

One aspect of the bill winning broad support is its food and nutrition provisions, which make up a major portion of its spending.

President Bush vetoed the bill earlier, but an expected override didn't happen when it was discovered the measure had been improperly drawn up, so that Congress had to pass it again in corrected form.




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