“Farmers are at a breaking point”: Farm Bureau sends a message to Congress on emergency relief

The Farm Bureau has a simple yet strong message to Congress: Farmers are at a breaking point, and more family farms are closing up shop.

President Zippy Duvall says the issues range from low prices to high trade deficits and lingering questions around China. He is asking Congress to get some kind of emergency relief to farmers before this calendar year expires.

“These payments must be robust enough to address sector-wide gaps and provide meaningful support as the federal government works to recalibrate trade strategies, stabilize prices, and strengthen key market relationships.”

Read the letter to Congress HERE.

The message comes just hours after Ag Secretary Brooke Rollins addressed the looming farm crisis. During a cabinet meeting with President Trump, she underscored the need to bring costs down for farmers and ranchers, saying they’re working on new markets that will eventually provide prosperity.

Secretary Rollins also said farm aid is delayed while the government is shut down. On september 28th, the USDA reportedly transferred $13 billion dollars from the commodity credit corporation to Secretary Rollins’ office to fund an emergency aid package. At the cabinet meeting, Rollins said emergency payments cannot be released until the government reopens. She said once the shutdown ends, USDA will be ready with a significant program.

In related matters, the Senate Ag Committee Chair says tariff-funded programs allow money to be diverted to help farmers. Senator John Boozman (R-AR) says Section 32 remains a viable source of aid, even if the Supreme Court strikes down past tariffs. The account receives a portion of US tariff receipts, with some money going to USDA for farm assistance. The Supreme Court will fast-track a challenge to the President’s tariffs in November.

Related Stories
New wage rules improve accuracy but may still raise labor costs.
This Final Rule adopts the changes introduced in the Interim Final Rule, consolidating seven agency-specific NEPA regulations into a single, department-wide framework, reducing the overall volume of regulations by 66 percent.
Tight global supply is likely to keep fuel and fertilizer costs elevated.
Dr. Michael Langemeier with Purdue University provided perspective on the improving farmer sentiment and the trends shaping the agricultural economy moving forward.
The sugar policy debate affects prices, trade, and farm stability.
Cattle producers face mounting pressure as U.S.-Mexico trade talks resume, but expanding drought, rising input costs, and policy work to improve the long-term industry outlook.

LATEST STORIES BY THIS AUTHOR:

A split-interest transaction involves one party acquiring a temporary interest in the asset (such as a term certain or life estate), with the other party acquiring a remainder interest. That is the topic of today’s Firm to Farm blog post by RFD-TV Agrilegal Expert Roger A. McEowen.
Show producer Donna Sanders shares her perspective on filming the latest episode of Where the Food Comes From at Splenda Stevia Farms, a company growing a sweet specialty crop here in the U.S. that is typically imported from overseas.
As I try to catch up on my writing after being on the road for a lengthy time, I have several recurring themes in my legal work. Another potpourri of random ag law and tax issues — that is the topic of today’s Firm to Farm blog post by RFD-TV Agrilegal Expert Roger McEowen.
Splenda’s new stevia farm in Florida is the first of its kind in the United States. Thousands of plants produce millions of leaves that are then turned into plant-based stevia sweetener products. But how do they get the sweet stuff out?
What does Splenda have to do with farming? Sweeteners like monk fruit and stevia are plant-based — so they are just not sugar, but are comprised of those other plants also grown on farms.