Sen. Chuck Grassley is calling lawmakers for a “common sense” Farm Bill and to address foreign land holdings

House Ag Committee Chair GT Thompson is looking to move a “Skinny Farm Bill” by Fall.

Iowa Senator Chuck Grassley has a list ready to share, and it includes protections for farmers across his state.

“Commonsense payment limits. Then, another one would be working with Senator Ernst and Marshall to pass a nationwide solution to California’s Proposition 12 and Massachusetts’ Question 3. We have those states trying to dictate how Iowa pig farmers should operate their farm.”

The National Farmers Union is also eager to see a Farm Bill cross the finish line, even if it is watered down. The group says while Farm Bills have largely been bipartisan in years past, they hope the current group can keep the momentum going.

“The way things played out this year politically, that’s why we saw things work out this way. So, hopefully, this isn’t the end of the farm bill coalition, or that we move into a way that we can continue to have bipartisan, broadly supported bills,” said Mike Strainz.

House Chair Thompson says he wants to get the Farm Bill done as soon as possible, so lawmakers can get back to serving farmers and ranchers.

Protecting America’s farmland is also top of mind for Senator Grassley. USDA took big steps this month to protect American land from foreign adversaries. However, Grassley wants action from his colleagues in Congress, saying the original guidelines were set in the 1970s and need be to reworked.

“Which was the first reporting of farmland ownership, because we didn’t have any guidance to go on about how much was owned. But that legislation has had to be beefed up since then and needs further beefing up.”

The National Farm Security Action Plan is an effort to keep adversaries, like China, from buying up our farms. The steps outlined by Ag Secretary Brooke Rollins are part of her broader mission to put U.S. agriculture first.

Related Stories
Discussions focused on rising costs and the future of farm policy.
Rep. Adrian Smith joins us to discuss the push for nationwide year-round E15 sales and legislative hurdles for getting it into the farm bill.
Farm Credit’s Christy Seyfert joined us to discuss the ag industry’s push for swift Farm Bill action as it heads toward a House vote.
RFA President and CEO Geoff Cooper joined us to discuss the proposed E15 amendment in the Farm Bill, industry reaction to the legislation, and the outlook for year-round E15 sales.
Ag Secretary Brooke Rollins hints at new fertilizer plan while trade deals, soybean markets, and farm bill momentum drive ag policy discussion.
U.S. Rep. Greg Landsman and U.S. Senator Elissa Slotkin meet with Ohio farmers to discuss E15 expansion, rising input costs, trade concerns, and the need to move forward on a new farm bill.

LATEST STORIES BY THIS AUTHOR:

What are the relative advantages and disadvantages of the split-interest transaction? And what are the rules when property that was acquired in a split-interest transaction is sold? That is the topic of today’s blog post by RFD-TV Agri-Legal Expert Roger McEowen.
A story that started with hardship ultimately led to a producer impacting the lives of youth involved in sheep showing. The North Carolina Farm Bureau takes us to Haynes Farm in Dobson, N.C., to hear this inspiring story.
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.
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.
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.