Press Releases
Release Date:
July 27, 2001
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  Contact:Christopher Galen
Phone:(703) 243-6111
email:CGalen@nmpf.org
           
HOUSE AGRICULTURE COMMITTEE APPROVES DRAFT OF 2002 FARM BILL
Dairy Producers Win Several Key Victories In Farm Policy Proposal

     
WASHINGTON, DC – The House Agriculture Committee on Thursday approved several policy items crucial to the dairy industry as part of a multi-year blueprint for U.S. farm policy, NMPF said today.
     
Although work on the Farm Bill package will continue today, the Agriculture Committee has already completed voting on the dairy outline, and most other sections, of the 2002 Farm Bill. The key element of the dairy title extends the dairy price support program through 2011, at the current price level of $9.90 per hundredweight. NMPF termed the extension “a significant victory for America's dairy farmers, who will be able to take comfort in knowing that a modest safety net is in place to prevent the catastrophic collapse of their prices,” said Jerry Kozak, Chief Executive Officer of NMPF.
     
The Farm Bill draft approved by the agriculture panel also extends the authorization for the Dairy Export Incentive Program (DEIP) through 2011, at the maximum level allowed under U.S. world trade commitments. The DEIP program is needed “to help U.S. farmers compete against heavily-subsidized competition from other dairy-exporting nations,” Kozak said.
     
Another victory for U.S. dairy farmers was the inclusion of language in the Farm Bill outline applying the mandatory dairy promotion assessment to imported dairy products. Importers of dairy items will have to pay the equivalent of 15 cents per hundredweight on the products they bring into this country. The importers will be given up to two seats on the National Dairy Board to supervise the workings of the checkoff program.
     
“For too long, U.S. dairy farmers alone have had to shoulder the cost of the dairy checkoff program, even though foreign products also benefit from the positive marketing climate created by generic dairy promotion efforts in this country,” Kozak said. “Dairy is the only major U.S. checkoff program that does not require importers to pay their fair share. I'm glad we'll rectify that oversight with the next Farm Bill.”
     
The Farm Bill draft also contains language to correct a technical omission hampering USDA efforts to oversee the mandatory reporting of price and inventory data from dairy processors. The technical correction language will amend an NMPF-supported bill, passed by Congress in 2000, designed to improve the quality of dairy price and inventory information available to the industry.
     
The research title of the Farm Bill authorizes a new Johne's disease control program, through which the USDA will work with state veterinarians to conduct research, testing and evaluation of programs to control Johne's disease. This amendment, offered by Rep. Ron Kind (D-WI), is “takes a big step toward improving the biosecurity of the cattle industry, and will greatly improve our ability to manage Johne's disease,” Kozak said.
     
Another of NMPF's priority items included in the Farm Bill draft is reauthorization of the Environmental Quality Incentives Program (EQIP) through 2011 at $1.2 billion annually. The EQIP authorization also removes the size restrictions on the eligibility limitations for livestock producers who may participate in the program.
     
The Farm Bill draft does not include a supplemental payment program for Class III and IV milk, as previously requested by NMPF, nor does it address another NMPF priority: the imposition of tariffs on imports of Milk Protein Concentrate and casein. The Agriculture Committee does not have jurisdiction over trade issues such as import tariffs.
     
The Agriculture Committee is expected to complete its work on the legislation today, after which it will be voted on by the full House of Representatives, probably at some point this fall. The Senate Agriculture Committee, meanwhile, is just beginning work on its own version of the 2002 Farm Bill.