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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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2012 Farm Bill Starts Taking Shape in Senate Ag Committee

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Wednesday, April 25, 2012   

BISMARCK, N.D. - The 2012 Farm Bill starts taking shape today, as the Senate Agriculture Committee begins considering amendments.

Chuck Hassebrook, executive director of the Center for Rural Affairs, is concerned that the current draft further slashes rural development investments, which he says have already been cut by one-third during the past eight years.

"The starting point that they're using provides no funding for rural development programs. Things like small business development, helping communities that need to improve their water and sewer systems, and very little funding for beginning farmer programs."

As it stands now, Hassebrook says, the draft Farm Bill has taxpayers subsidizing the nation's biggest farms and richest landowners to an even greater extent. Unless that changes, he believes, it will drive more family farms out of business.

Some amendments are to be considered. One Hassebrook favors would put several hundred-million dollars over the next five years into small-business development, beginning-farmer programs and support for rural communities.

"It would completely pay for that by reducing the farm subsidies to individuals who make over a half-million dollars a year of taxable income, or over $1 million a year, for a husband and wife, in taxable income."

Hassebrook also notes that Congress in recent years has cut more than half the funding from Value-Added Producer Grants.

"It's a program that supports the entrepreneurship of rural people. Our future in rural America depends on the entrepreneurship of our people, and it's time that we invest in that, instead of simply subsidizing the rich and powerful."

A Value-Added Producer Grant of nearly $50,000 recently was awarded to the Bowdon Community Cooperative in central North Dakota, which reopened the town's grocery store last year and is planning to reopen the local butcher shop as well.

More information is online at agriculture.senate.gov.


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