Concerns raised at Farm Bill hearing

Bob Scott (left) director of the Arkansas Cooperative Extension Service, visits with Sen. John Boozman and Bruce McGowan, interim dean of the School of Agriculture, Fisheries and Human Sciences at the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff, following a Farm Bill field hearing June 17 at Jonesboro. (Special to The Commercial/Mary Hightower, University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture)
Bob Scott (left) director of the Arkansas Cooperative Extension Service, visits with Sen. John Boozman and Bruce McGowan, interim dean of the School of Agriculture, Fisheries and Human Sciences at the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff, following a Farm Bill field hearing June 17 at Jonesboro. (Special to The Commercial/Mary Hightower, University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture)

Eleven witnesses testifying at a Farm Bill field hearing in Arkansas sought stronger protections amid high production costs, as well as support for conservation measures, programs to increase broadband in rural areas, and programs to fight hunger.

U.S. Sen. Debbie Stabenow of Michigan and Sen. John Boozman of Arkansas -- chair and ranking member, respectively, of the Senate Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition and Forestry -- hosted the field hearing at Arkansas State University on June 17. Field hearings provide congressional leaders and their staff an opportunity to hear directly from a wide variety of stakeholders from across this broad spectrum of interest areas.

The witnesses at the June 17 hearing represented agriculture and related interests, including commodities, specialty crops and infrastructure elements such as water, energy and internet access, all which have been funded in part by the current Farm Bill, signed into law in 2018.

A field hearing was also held in April at Michigan State University.

"The primary concern for farm groups leading into an expected 2023 Farm Bill is, not surprisingly, record high input prices," said John Anderson, head of agricultural economics and agribusiness for the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture and the Dale Bumpers College of Agricultural, Food and Life Sciences.

"The high costs of production render the current output-price-based support programs in the current Farm Bill largely ineffective," he said. "Producer groups are expressing strong interest in some form of cost-based indexing for reference prices and/or some kind of margin protection that accounts for rising prices of major inputs -- mainly fuel and fertilizer."

Anderson said, "the challenge for the Congressional ag committees with this kind of program design will be finding money in the budget to pay for it."

Nathan Reed, a Lee County farmer and chair of the American Cotton Producers, said the Agriculture Risk Coverage and Price Loss Coverage in the 2018 Farm Bill "has worked well for growers and should continue in future Farm Bills."

"Agricultural markets are cyclical, and an effective safety net is imperative for the inevitable times of low prices," Reed said.

Mark Morgan, a fifth-generation farmer who owns Peach Pickin' Paradise in Johnson County, urged changes in insurance products for specialty crop growers. Specialty crops are defined as fruits and vegetables, tree nuts, dried fruits and horticulture and nursery crops, including floriculture.

"The insurance buy-ups available to growers for better coverage are cost prohibitive, due to high premiums," he said, adding that program requirements for the Non-Insured Crop Disaster Assistance Program, or NAP, "are often unworkable."

"This leaves many specialty crop producers with no risk protection at all. A more economical insurance program or improvements made to the NAP program would greatly benefit peach growers in Arkansas," Morgan said.

The Farm Bill funds more than just farm programs.

It also includes nutrition programs such as the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), and WIC (Women, Infants and Children) special supplemental nutrition program, that account for about 80 percent of Farm Bill spending, Anderson said.

The Farm Bill also includes support for, among other things, conservation programs, rural development initiatives such as broadband, alternative energy development, animal disease management and mitigation, and land-grant research and outreach efforts.

A replay and copies of witness statements are available at https://www.agriculture.senate.gov/hearings/2023-farm-bill-perspectives-from-the-natural-state.

To learn more about Division of Agriculture research, visit the Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station website: https://aaes.uark.edu. Follow the agency Twitter at @ArkAgResearch.

Mary Hightower is with the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture.

  photo  U.S. Sen. Debbie Stabenow of Michigan, smiles as she shows the duck call U.S. Sen. John Boozman gave her. Stabenow, chair, and Boozman, ranking member, of the Senate Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition and Forestry, hosted the Farm Bill field hearing June 17 at Arkansas State University at Jonesboro. (Special to The Commercial/Mary Hightower, University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture)
 
 

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