Cattle Industry: April 26, 2008

Farm Bill Deal Reached

Contact: Jess Peterson 202/870-3867 - usca@uscattlemen.org

Good Evening Friends,

Crazy things occurred in the 11th hour!

Senate and House Conferees reached an agreement on budget numbers, and the Farm Bill is now in the final stretch. Congressional staff will work throughout the weekend to write the actual text for the conference report. Conferees will meet Monday evening to review and sign the finalized language. The details of the Livestock Title will be published Monday evening. Sources report that the ban on packer ownership was not included, however, the Senate strengthened the House arbitration language.

Below you will find the latest reports from Congress Daily, CQ, and Chairman Harkin.

Have a good evening,

Jess Peterson
United States Cattlemen's Association
Washington, DC
202-870-3867

Key House and Senate farm bill negotiators reached agreement today on the main elements of the farm bill, with details to be presented to all conferees Monday. Senate Budget Chairman Kent Conrad said the five-year bill would raise the target prices and loan rates for northern crops beginning in 2010, raise the sugar loan rate three-quarters of a cent and include a sugar-to-ethanol program. It also provides an additional $4 billion for conservation programs, including $1.1 billion for the Conservation Security Program, a priority of Senate Agriculture Chairman Tom Harkin, and $10.361 billion for domestic and international food aid programs. For offsets, negotiators cut the $5.2 billion per year direct payments program by 2 percent per year for four years, but they will preserve the full payments in the fifth year to preserve the baseline for future years. The bill also includes the new disaster program that Conrad and Senate Finance Chairman Max Baucus have championed, but cut $250 million from the planned $4 billion funding.


CQ TODAY PRINT EDITION
Updated April 25, 2008
Farm Bill Negotiators Reach Deal
By Catharine Richert, CQ Staff

House and Senate conferees have struck a long-awaited deal on the framework for a new farm bill, resolving key funding issues that had stalled progress for month.

The measure (HR 2419) will be total about $570 billion over 10 years, with new funding for farm-related tax credits, a disaster aid program, and food stamps.

Those enhancements will be paid for in part by a $400 million cut to direct payments, a subsidy farmers get based on their acreage and the type of crop they grow.

But most of the offsets for the extra spending will come from extending customs user fees paid by importers, a revenue-raiser favored by the Bush administration.

Nutrition programs would get a significant boost. Food stamps and food aid would top out at about $10.2 billion, up from an initial proposal of $9.5 billion.

"Today the principal farm bill negotiators came together on a bipartisan level to reach a tentative agreement on the agriculture policy that will make the final farm bill a strong one," said Sen. Tom Harkin , D-Iowa, chairman of the Agriculture Committee.

Over the weekend, lawmakers will continue their discussions about preventing very wealthy farmers from collecting government subsidies. The conferees say they will have a conference report ready for formal signatures by Monday, with House and Senate floor action to follow.

Negotiators worked on the measure most of Friday, particularly on the $10 billion in new spending.

The struggle to offset extra funding had stalled negotiators for months, as lawmakers sought to satisfy not only competing interests within Congress but also the White House.

With the conferees finally closing in on a deal, President Bush on Friday signed the latest short-term extension of current farm law (S 2903), which Congress cleared Thursday. It continues the 2002 farm law (PL 107-171) for another week.

It was not immediately clear whether the administration would bless the deal struck by leaders of the House and Senate Agriculture committees, the House Ways and Means Committee and the Senate Finance Committee.

The White House had threatened to veto both the House bill, which was passed by 231-191 on July 27, 2007, and the Senate version, passed by 79-14 on Dec. 14.

Most House Republicans voted against the original House bill because it included tax increases - a prime reason for the White House veto threat. The final package appears to contain no provisions that could be viewed as tax increases.

Farm Bill Negotiators Reach Deal
Lawmakers on Thursday abandoned a plan to offset some of the bill's costs with a change in tax law that would require stock brokers and mutual funds to report the cost basis of securities sold by their clients. The White House warned that Bush would veto the measure if it included the provision.

The administration has not objected to customs user fees to subsidize new farm spending.

House Ways and Means Chairman Charles B. Rangel , D-N.Y., for weeks opposed tapping the user fees, which he planned to use as offsets for other priorities, such as the renewal and expansion of Trade Adjustment Assistance programs for workers displaced by trade and globalization.

With a final deal in place, it's possible that Rangel agreed to allow the farm bill to boost user fees in return for a promise that lawmakers would include a $150 million, two-year extension of the Caribbean Basin Initiative, a program that provides trade preferences for countries there.

The CBI is a priority that Rangel had reportedly envisioned paying for with user fees anyway; attaching it to the farm bill would be an easy way to fast-track the extension.
Sen. Charles E. Grassley , R-Iowa., who is ranking member on the Finance Committee, confirmed that a CBI extension would be included in the final farm bill.

Negotiators indicated that the Senate Finance Committee has promised to help Rangel find other offsets for the TAA renewal, which Chairman Max Baucus , D-Mont., has prominently placed on his to-do list for this year.
Other elements of the package also were tweaked in the final negotiations; lawmakers pared $250 million from a $4 billion disaster-aid fund that Baucus and Sen. Kent Conrad , D-N.D., had made a top priority. Still, inclusion of the fund was a victory for the Senate team, because the House bill had included no such provision.


Established in March 2007, USCA is committed to concentrating its efforts in Washington, DC to enhance and expand the cattle industry's voice on Capitol Hill. USCA has a full-time presence in Washington, giving cattle producers across the country a strong influence on policy development.

   

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
April 25, 2008

Contact: Kate Cyrul / Jennifer Mullin
202-224-3254

Bipartisan Farm Bill Agreement Will Lead
to Strong Final Bill, Says Harkin


Investments in Conservation, Energy and Nutrition
Maintain National Priorities


Washington, D.C. - Senator Tom Harkin (D-IA), Chairman of the Senate Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition and Forestry and the Senate-House conference committee on the farm bill, today said that the core farm bill utilizing the $10 billion above baseline has been worked out among key farm bill negotiators. Specific details and funding will still have to be worked out and are all subject to ratification by the full conference committee. Chairman Harkin intends to convene the conference committee on Monday.

"Today the principal farm bill negotiators came together on a bipartisan level to reach a tentative agreement on the agriculture policy that will make the final farm bill a strong one.

"The tentative agreement reached today maintains strong farm income security and a permanent disaster program. It will solidify the future of the Conservation Security Program, now the Conservation Stewardship Program, returning it to the program it was intended to be when first enacted in the 2002 farm bill. It invests heavily in renewable energy and will help bring the promise of cellulosic biofuels to reality by providing grants and loans to move from corn ethanol to other renewable feedstocks. And our agreement will lead to more fresh fruits and vegetables in our nation's elementary schools and stronger assistance to low-income Americans through federal nutrition programs.

"All in all, this is a balanced agreement that will now be considered by the full conference committee Monday."
   

FOR PLANNING PURPOSES
April 25, 2008

Contact: Kate Cyrul / Jennifer Mullin
202-224-3254

**MEDIA ADVISORY**
HARKIN ANNOUNCES FARM BILL CONFERENCE MEETING

WASHINGTON D.C. - Senator Tom Harkin (D-IA), Chairman of the Senate-House Conference Committee on the farm bill, today announced a meeting for all Senate and House farm bill conferees.

The conference committee is scheduled for Monday, April 28, 2008, at 6:00 PM in room 325 of the Russell Senate Office Building (Russell Caucus Room).
   
   

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