Washington, DC
July 27, 2007
The
U.S. House of Representatives today passed a new
Farm Bill that makes historic investments in fruit
and vegetable production, conservation, nutrition
and renewable energy while maintaining a strong
safety net for America's farmers and ranchers.
"This Farm Bill is
about much more than farms. It is about the food we
eat, the clothes we wear, and increasingly the fuel
we will use. It assures that we will have a safe,
strong food supply now and for years to come,"
House Agriculture Committee Chairman
Collin Peterson (D-MN) said.
"I am proud of the
balanced and forward-looking Farm Bill that we have
passed supporting conservation, nutrition, rural,
renewable energy, labor, and farm country."
Important highlights
of the Farm Bill (H.R. 2419) include:
-
Investing more
than $1.6 billion in priorities to strengthen
and support the fruit and vegetable industry in
the United States. A new section for
Horticulture and Organic Agriculture includes
nutrition, research, pest management and trade
promotion programs.
-
Implementing
Mandatory Country of Origin Labeling for fruit,
vegetables and meat after years of delay.
-
Expanding the USDA
Snack Program, which helps schools provide
healthy snacks to students during after-school
activities to all 50 states and continuing the
DOD Fresh Fruit and Vegetable Program, which
provides a variety of fresh produce to schools.
-
Strengthening and
enhancing the food stamp program by reforming
benefit rules to improve coverage of food costs
and expand access to the program with additional
funding support.
-
Including key
provisions that invest in rural communities
nationwide, including economic development
programs and access to broadband
telecommunication services.
-
Providing farmers
participating in commodity programs with a
choice between traditional price protection and
new market-oriented revenue coverage payments.
-
Strengthening
payment limits to ensure that people making more
than $1 million a year (adjusted gross income)
can't collect conservation and farm program
payments and closing loopholes that allow people
to avoid payment limits by receiving money
through multiple business units.
-
Extending and
making significant new investments in popular
conservation programs, including the
Conservation Reserve Program, Wetlands Reserve
Program, Environmental Quality Incentive
Program, Farm and Ranchland Protection Program,
and many others.
-
Making important
new investments in renewable energy research,
development and production in rural America.
-
Rebalancing loan
rates and target prices among commodities,
achieving greater regional equity.
-
Establishing a new
National Agriculture Research Program Office to
coordinate the programs and activities of USDA's
research agencies to minimize duplication and
maximize coordination at all levels and creates
a competitive grants program.
-
Protecting and
sustaining our nation's forest resources.
The House of
Representatives passed the 2007 Farm Bill (H.R.
2419) by a vote of 231-191. The Senate must now
consider the Farm Bill.
The 2002 Farm Bill
expires on September 30, 2007.
The U.S. House
Committee on Agriculture
web site
has additional information on this and other
subjects.
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