Senate Passes Funding Deal, Puts Shutdown End Near

If the House concurs and the President signs, USDA services and farm-bill programs resume at full speed with authorities extended for another year.

WASHINGTON, DC (RFD-TV) — A late-night Senate vote advanced a bipartisan funding package that would reopen shuttered agencies and provide full-year appropriations for the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) — a key shift from stopgaps that kept farm services in limbo.

The Senate voted Sunday night to advance a continuing resolution to fund the government. That vote was largely procedural, opening the bill up for debate. Then, overnight, the Senate voted again to send that bill to the House. The measure also extends the 2018 Farm Bill authorities for one year and maintains core ag policies, including support for the Commodity Credit Corporation (CCC) and APHIS operations.

“Ending the government shutdown ensures critical USDA services resume so vulnerable families no longer experience disruptions to nutrition benefits, farmers can access the programs and personnel they rely on to keep their operations running efficiently, and disaster assistance is delivered,” said Senate Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry Chairman John Boozman (R-AR). “We advanced long-overdue farm bill policy improvements in the One Big Beautiful Bill, including enhanced risk management tools farmers have been calling for, and we’re continuing work to reauthorize other key initiatives. Extending the farm bill and the U.S. Grain Standards Act gives us more time to finalize these programs essential to farmers, ranchers, and rural America.”

As it stands, the bill would restore federal spending through January and allocate funds to the USDA and the Food & Drug Administration (FDA) within the Department of Health and Human Services for next year.

What’s Next

House lawmakers have been called back to Washington, D.C. They are expected to vote tomorrow and send the bill to the President’s desk.

If cleared there and signed by President Trump, the USDA can fully restart Farm Service Agency (FSA) lending and payments, Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) conservation work, Agricultural Marketing Service (AMS) market reporting and grading, and Risk Management Agency (RMA) program administration after weeks of delays.

Shutdown or not, the USDA is releasing some significant numbers this week, including the November World Agricultural Supply and Demand Estimate (WASDE) Report. The October WASDE never dropped because of the shutdown.

Economist Rich Nelson at Allendale tells us that if the USDA was going to miss any WASDE report throughout the year, October’s was the right one.

“Typically, October is not a big month,” Nelson explained. “We’re not seeing any major numbers. USDA generally makes larger changes in November and January. So indeed, as we go into Friday’s monthly report, we’ll have a lot of speculation about what type of yield declines will be seen for corn and soybeans and whether it does make a substantial change for ending stocks or not here.”

This Friday, Oct. 14, we will receive the November supply-and-demand forecast. It was supposed to be released on Monday, but the shutdown postponed it again. Also, on Friday, the USDA will release the latest crop production report. And then, on Friday, Nov. 21, the NASS will publish the November Cattle-on-Feed report.

Why it Matters for Producers

The Senate package avoids a Farm Bill “cliff” by extending the 2018 law into the next fiscal year and steadies agency budgets. It preserves tools like CCC financing that underpin disaster and commodity programs. The combination of full-year USDA funding and a farm bill extension reduces operational uncertainty heading into winter marketing and 2026 planning.

Farm-Level Takeaway: If the House concurs and the President signs, USDA services and Farm Bill programs resume at full speed, with authorities extended for another year.
Tony St. James, RFD-TV Markets Specialist

Related Stories
Producers across the country balanced winter weather disruptions, shifting export demand, and tightening margins as year-end decisions come into focus.
Reviewing risk management now can help dairy and livestock producers enter 2026 with clearer margins and fewer surprises.
Canada’s new voluntary Grocery Sector Code of Conduct will take effect on Jan. 1, a goodwill effort to promote fairness and transparency between retailers and support farms that sell directly to stores.
With record grain harvests and rising global ethanol demand, leaders across the ag and energy sectors are pushing for year-round E15 sales to mitigate the strain on grain trade.
Small, locally focused wineries are finding resilience through direct sales and regional loyalty rather than scale alone.
Pork producers warn that proposed definitions of “ultra-processed” food in guidelines from the “Make America Healthy Again” plan could negatively impact industry-standard bacon, sausage, and feed practices.

Tony St. James joined the RFD-TV talent team in August 2024, bringing a wealth of experience and a fresh perspective to RFD-TV and Rural Radio Channel 147 Sirius XM. In addition to his role as Market Specialist (collaborating with Scott “The Cow Guy” Shellady to provide radio and TV audiences with the latest updates on ag commodity markets), he hosts “Rural America Live” and serves as talent for trade shows.

LATEST STORIES BY THIS AUTHOR:

Strong production and rising stocks may pressure ethanol margins unless demand or exports continue to improve.
Rising import pressure and tougher export competition are likely to persist into 2026, supporting domestic supplies while capping export growth.
Without additional support, many soybean operations will continue to face financial stress as they prepare for the 2026 crop.
Placements and marketings beat expectations, but declining on-feed totals and feeder constraints keep the supply story supportive for cattle prices into 2026. Dr. Derrell Peel, with Oklahoma State University, joined us to break down cattle-on-feed numbers and provide his broader market outlook.
USDA Rural Development Director for Kentucky, Travis Burton, joined us to discuss the Princeton facility (formerly Porter Road Meats), now backed by the USDA, and its role in expanding domestic meat processing capacity.
Farm CPA Paul Neiffer joined us to break down the recent Fifth Circuit Court decision overturning a prior Tax Court decision on self-employment tax for limited partners, the ruling’s impact on farmers, and potential next steps in Congress.