Jo Ann Emerson - Missouri's 8th Congressional District
  For Immediate Release  
March 10, 2005
 
Press Release
 
Emerson Letter to Budget Chairman Urges
  Restoration of Cuts to Ag Programs
 
WASHINGTON  -  U.S. Representatives Jo Ann Emerson (MO-08) and Marion Berry (AR-01) this week sent a letter to Budget Committee Chairman Jim Nussle urging the restoration of money for farm programs to the FY 2006 federal budget. 
 
The letter, signed by 59 members of Congress, highlights proposed cuts of $5.7 billion from commodity programs over ten years, a reduction in the cap on crop payments of more than $100,000, and a 5 percent reduction in payments to producers.
 
“The proposed budget for agriculture programs would yank the tablecloth from the American dinner table, with disastrous results.  Folks in Washington don’t seem to understand the realities of farming in America today.  Just because a farm is incorporated doesn’t mean it is a huge, multi-national corporate farm,” Emerson said.  “The deck is already stacked against the American farmer.  On average, Japan subsidizes its farmers $3960 per acre, the European Union $320 per acre and the U.S. $49 per acre.  When American farmers export their products, they face a 62 percent tax levied by other countries trying to keep our competition out.  There is no reason to intentionally make a bad situation worse.”
 
A copy of the Emerson-Berry letter and a list of cosigners to the letter are attached below:
 
The Honorable Jim Nussle Chairman Committee on the Budget

Dear Chairman Nussle:

We write to state our support for America's farm policy. We strongly hold that the House     Budget Resolution must preserve the Farm Bill or risk injuring America's farmers, rural communities, and hungry families.

U.S. farm policy is really about people. Whether it is a family farmer or rural retailer, cutting Farm Bill programs will have a dramatic impact on everyday life in rural America. Examining the Farm Bill changes proposed by the President's budget proposal, for example, reveals deep cuts to farmers who would face anywhere from a 10 to 30 percent cut in gross income. Most farmers, who must compete against foreign producers benefiting from higher subsidies and     tariffs, operate at slim margins, and such deep cuts would erase profit margins for many producers. Additionally, cutting farm programs while the United States is in the midst of negotiating a multilateral trade framework in the Doha Round of the WTO could undermine our position - making it even more difficult for our farmers to compete.

Hardships family farms would experience as a result of the President's Budget would not stop at field's edge. Our farm programs are fundamentally important to the economic fabric of rural America as a whole; entire communities would endure economic loss. Americans already experiencing hard times rely on the U.S. Department of Agriculture's (USDA) food nutrition assistance programs. We cannot ignore the fact that hunger remains a daily struggle for millions of Americans.

Aside from deserting our rural communities and the hungry, cutting agriculture programs and re-opening the Farm Bill will create more fiscal problems than it solves. The Farm Bill is a fiscally responsible alternative to the ad hoc assistance commonplace prior to adoption of the  current safety-net. The federal government spent an average of $24.5 billion per year for each of the three years preceding the Farm Bill (including ad hoc assistance), but in the three years     since passage of the Farm Bill ending in 2004, spending has averaged only $15.6 billion - almost $9 billion less per year than the average for the preceding 3 years and $5.4 billion less per year than the amount provided for in the budget. Although farm spending is estimated to increase beyond levels originally projected in the Farm Bill for Fiscal Year 2005, the total spending under the new Farm Bill would remain more than $13 billion less than original projections. From a fiscal perspective, the Farm Bill is an effective tool for spending restraint.
Additionally, cutting the Farm Bill, whose agriculture programs only account for about one half of one percent of the federal budget, will not create enough savings to justify undercutting an industry that is responsible for 15% of our nation's Gross Domestic Product (GDP),  twenty-five million jobs, and a supply of food and fiber that is the safest, most abundant, and most affordable in all the world.

Beyond saving money, the Farm Bill acts as a multi-year contract that farm families rely on to make plans for the future. Re-opening the Farm Bill's safety-net, designed to last through 2007, would create more uncertainty for farmers who must already contend with market instability, unpredictable weather, and variable supply costs. Interrupting U.S. farm policy at random prevents farmers from being able to make long-term decisions, and making cuts to programs like Federal Crop Insurance diminish farmers' risk management tools.

Finally, conservation initiatives under U.S. farm policy are unrivaled in their success in rehabilitating wetlands, wildlife and wildlife habitat, curbing soil erosion, and improving air and water quality through voluntary, incentive based practices. We hope to build on this success rather than turn back.

As your committee begins deliberating the House Budget Resolution for Fiscal Year 2006, we implore you to stand by the commitment we have made to our nation's farmers, our rural communities, and the hungry by maintaining the baseline for agriculture.
 
1. Jo Ann Emerson (R-MO)
2. Cathy McMorris (R-WA)
3. Bob Etheridge (D-NC)
4. Sam Graves (R-MO)
5. Marion Berry (D-AR)
6. Ike Skelton (D-MO)
7. David Scott (D-GA)
8. Jack Kingston (R-GA)
9. Allen Boyd (D-FL)
10. Sanford Bishop (D-GA)
11. Bud Cramer (D-AL)
12. G.K. Butterfield (D-NC)
13. Mike McIntyre (D-NC)
14. John Salazar (D-CO)
15. Solomon Ortiz (D-TX)
16. Rodney Alexander (R-LA)
17. Ray LaHood (R-IL)
18. John Boozman (R-AR)
19. Nick Rahall (D-WV)
20. Charlie Melancon (D-LA)
21. Rick Larsen (D-WA)
22. Frank Lucas (R-OK)
23. Tom Osborne (R-NE)
24. Chip Pickering (R-MS)
25. Henry Bonilla (R-TX)
26. Lynn Westmoreland (R-GA)
27. Timothy Johnson (R-IL)
28. Terry Everett (R-AL)
29. Ruben Hinojosa (D-TX)

30. Mike Rogers (R-AL)
31. Jim Costa (D-CA)
32. Ron Paul (R-TX)
33. Marilyn Musgrave (R-CO)
34. Leonard Boswell (D-IA)
35. Mike Ross (D-AR)
36. Jim Marshall (D-GA)
37. Brad Miller (D-NC)
38. Dennis Rehberg (R-MT)
39. Robert Aderholt (R-AL)
40. Randy Neugebauer (R-TX)
41. Dennis Cardoza (D-CA)
42. Jerry Costello (D-IL)
43. C.L. “Butch” Otter (R-ID)
44. Ed Pastor (D-AZ)
45. David Price (D-NC)
46. Bennie Thompson (D-MS)
47. Tim Holden (D-PA)
48. Ralph Hall (R-TX)
49. Charles Boustany (R-LA)
50. Jim Gerlach (R-PA)
51. Stephanie Herseth (D-SD)
52. Charlie Norwood (R-GA)
53. Henry Cuellar (D-TX)
54. John Barrow (D-GA)
55. Earl Pomeroy (D-ND)
56. Todd Platts (R-PA)
57. Vic Snyder (D-AR)
58. Devin Nunes (R-CA)
59. John Shimkus (R-IL)

 

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