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For
Immediate Release December 5, 2001 |
Contact: |
Scott Faber/ED: 202-387-3500 Sarah
Feinberg/EWG: 202-667-6982 | |
Environmental Groups Applaud New Harkin Farm Bill
WASHINGTON - Environmental Defense and Environmental Working Group
today applauded Senate Agriculture Committee Chairman Tom Harkin (D-IA)
for increasing average annual U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA)
conservation funding to $4.4 billion in a revised Farm Bill reintroduced
today.
"Senator Harkin's revised Farm Bill will reward farmers and ranchers
when they help improve water quality, restore wildlife habitat, and serve
as the frontline against suburban sprawl," said Environmental Defense
water resources specialist Scott Faber. "But it also recognizes that while
farmers and ranchers are willing to do their part to meet environmental
challenges, good stewards face new costs or lost income when they take
steps to help the environment."
"More than half of farmers and ranchers are now turned away when they
apply for conservation assistance because these popular programs have not
been funded. Thanks to the leadership of Senator Harkin, these stewards of
the land will no longer be denied access to USDA assistance," said
Environmental Working Group President Ken Cook.
In particular, the new Harkin Farm Bill will provide:
- $350 million annually on average for the Farmland Protection
Program, which acquires development rights from willing farmers and
ranchers threatened by sprawl;
- $1.2 billion annually on average for the Environmental Quality
Incentives Program, which shares the cost of efforts to improve water
quality;
- $270 million annually on average for the Wildlife Habitat Incentives
Program, including a new focus on habitat restoration for endangered
species;
- A new program to work with farmers and ranchers to lease, transfer,
or acquire water rights on 1.1 million acres of land, to help endangered
fish and wildlife; and,
- Sufficient funding to annually restore 250,000 acres of wetlands
nationwide.
A similar effort to boost conservation funding in the House by Reps.
Ron Kind (D-WI), Sherwood Boehlert (R-NY), Wayne Gilchrest (R-MD), and
John Dingell (D-MI) came closer than expected in an October vote, boosting
Senate reform prospects.
Because all farmers and ranchers are eligible for conservation funds,
the Harkin's revised Farm Bill also makes farm policy more regionally
equitable - but will boost funding available to small and medium-sized
farms in every state, including his own. Under current spending, only
certain agricultural products are eligible for traditional income support
payments. Consequently, farmers in 15 commodity-crop states receive 75% of
all USDA spending, while large farm states such as New York, Pennsylvania,
North Carolina, Florida and California receive very little USDA funds. |