Inactivity on Farm Bill Threatens Farmland and Natural Resources
Today, the halls of Congress are empty as
legislators are back in their districts for a five week recess. And they left
Washington without acting on a new Farm Bill.
The single largest federal investment in private
lands conservation comes from programs authorized every five years in the Farm
Bill. Programs to protect farmland, improve water quality and provide wildlife
habitat all come from this important legislation. For example, public programs, including those
authorized by the Farm Bill, combined have permanently protected more than
16,000 farms covering nearly 3 million acres, keeping farmers on the land and
ensuring our food security. This work to protect and conserve our natural resources
may soon be in jeopardy if Congress does not pass the Farm Bill by September
30.
The development pressures on America’s farmland and
the conservation challenges facing family farmers do not take a break. We have been losing farmland to development at
a rate of nearly one acre every minute. If the Farm Bill fails because of
Congressional gridlock, future conservation funding is placed in serious
jeopardy and threatens to cost us our best, most productive agricultural lands.
Congressional inactivity also threatens the ability
of farmers to stay on the land. Many are
left with an uncertain future, not knowing whether the bill will fail, creating
market volatility. For example, the USDA
Market Access program and the Foreign Market Development program will have to
close at the end of next month, harming exports and cutting farm income. Opportunities to provide fresh, local foods
require funding for programs such as the Farmers’ Market Promotion Program, Beginning
Farmer and Rancher Development Program, Specialty Crop Block Grants and Value-Added
Producer Grants. Similarly, the uncertainty over insurance and crop payments
has many ranchers and farmers holding back on new investment and reducing
production, thus increasing food prices and slashing farm income.
The clock is ticking. Congress has scheduled only nine
session days for September, and the Farm Bill expires on the 30th.
We have come too far this year to allow the Farm
Bill to stall and to let funding to protect farm and ranch land slip away.
We need a new, comprehensive Farm Bill that
reinvests in farmland conservation, that provides sound conservation practices
and that helps farmers stay on the land. There is too much at stake to allow
Congress to simply turn its back on these important programs.
Andrew McElwaine is President of American Farmland
Trust. American Farmland Trust is the nation’s leading conservation
organization dedicated to protecting farmland, promoting sound farming
practices and keeping farmers on the land. Since its founding in 1980 by a
group of farmers and citizens concerned about the rapid loss of farmland to
development, AFT has helped save millions of acres of farmland from development
and led the way for the adoption of conservation practices on millions more. AFT’s national office is located in
Washington, DC. Phone: 202-331-7300. For more information, visit
www.farmland.org.