USA - 2018 farm bill may be close to completion[:ru]U

03.12.2018 280 views
A 2018 farm bill may be close to completion as the two houses of Congress have mostly resolved their division over work requirements for food benefits and are moving forward with the legislation. The bill, sent in August to a conference committee that included representatives from the Senate and the House, could be back to a full vote from the Senate and the House by late next week, said Frank Lucas, U.S. representative for Oklahoma’s third district. “Many of us really, really want to have the farm bill out of the legislative process in the House and the Senate before we get to the final push next week on the funding of the rest of the federal government that’s not been funded so far for the remainder of this fiscal year, which will run through the end of September 2019,” Lucas said. “We want to be done before that because there are elements in there — the president’s priorities on border security, different attitudes in both chambers about spending on different things — we want to be done before we slam into that circumstance,” he said. Lucas said he estimates the bill will be out of the committee by Tuesday or Wednesday, at which point it will move back into each chamber of Congress. Lucas said he expects the Senate, which will vote first on the bill, to pass the legislation “overwhelmingly,” and that the House will likely pass the bill through a “coalition of Republicans and Democrats” that won’t include very conservative or very liberal representatives. The main issue that held the bill up in the conference committee were the stricter work requirements and restrictions House Republicans wanted to implement for those receiving Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) benefits. Lucas said he believes the final bill will include “a minimal amount of reform” on those benefits. Some of the suggested reforms would have mandated that all able-bodied adults up to age 60 be subject to federal work requirements (20 hours a week of work or job training) to receive SNAP benefits. These requirements, alongside a few other new guidelines, were estimated to eventually cause 2 million SNAP recipients to receive reduced benefits or stop receiving them altogether. In Oklahoma alone during fiscal year 2017, 385,183 households relied on SNAP benefits, according to the Oklahoma Policy Institute. These requirements had passed in the House’s version of the farm bill in June because House Republicans backed them, but hadn’t come up in the Senate’s version of the bill, and had received negative feedback from House Democrats. House Republicans “were pushing these reform efforts essentially by ourselves,” Lucas said, and eventually some realized the need to prioritize other farm bill benefits over the potential reforms. “Something like 75 percent of the spending this time will be on the feeding programs. That other 25 percent — the commodity title, crop insurance, research, rule development, conservation — those are the programs that make sure we can raise the food and fiber we need,” Lucas said. “Those are the programs that sustain the economic base in rural America. You can’t throw away the ability to feed our fellow neighbors and clothe them because you don’t get your way on the other side of the ledger, so to speak.” This farm bill will cover the next five years, Lucas said. Aside from funding programs to fight food insecurity, the bill also covers crop insurance, conservation programs, commodity titles and price protections, among other things. Lucas said Oklahomans can expect most of the provisions around crop insurance and commodity title options to stay the same as they were in the last farm bill. While the 2014 farm bill expired two months ago, provisions covering specific crops will continue to cover those crops through their crop year and harvest, Lucas said. “A lot of times people think farm bills are only for folks who need food help and they’re only for the folks who raise the food,” Lucas said. “The bottom line is every consumer in the United States and around the world... eats cheaper, safer, more consistently, than any consumer in the history of the world, and that’s thanks to the miracle of modern agriculture, and that’s why we have to keep that miracle functioning, why we need a 2018 farm bill.” Source - https://www.news-star.com
05.06.2025

India - Agri Minister assures hailstorm-hit Shopian farmers of multi-channel compensation

In the wake of the recent devastating hailstorm that caused significant damage to crops in Chitragam area of south Kashmir’s Shopian district, Minister for Agriculture, Javed Dar on Tuesday visited the affected fields to assess the situation firsthand and to express solidarity with the distressed farming community.  

05.06.2025

USA - Pennsylvania sues US Department of Agriculture over funding cuts

Pennsylvania officials filed a federal lawsuit against the US Department of Agriculture (USDA) on Wednesday over its termination of the Local Food Purchase Assistance 2025 Cooperative Agreement (LFPA25 Agreement).  

05.06.2025

USA - ProAg’s $1M Reinsurance Loss Suit Faces Dismissal Bid Over Time Bar

What began as a routine insurance misstep has snowballed into a legal battle over timing, reinsurance, and blame.   

05.06.2025

Norwegian lawmakers reach agreement on aquaculture policy; core rules to remain in place for now

A cross-party majority in Norway’s Parliament has reached agreement on the government's new aquaculture policy, opting to retain the current biomass and traffic light system for regulating fish farming, while introducing incentive mechanisms to drive environmental improvements.  

05.06.2025

“World’s Largest” Farmer-Led Study Validates Plant-Based Regenerative Farming’s Potential

A major pan-European study led by the European Alliance for Regenerative Agriculture (EARA) has found that regenerative farming systems, many of which are entirely plant-based, can produce similar or better yields than conventional agriculture while drastically reducing inputs such as synthetic fertilisers and pesticides.

05.06.2025

Spanish startup Voltrac raises €2 million to launch autonomous tractor platform for agriculture and frontline logistics

Valencia-based DeepTech startup Voltrac has officially launched its autonomous, electric tractor platform designed for agriculture and frontline logistics, along with €2 million in funding.  

istanbul escort şişli escort tbilisi escort şişli escort şişli escort maslak escort istanbul escort beşiktaş escort taksim escort izmir escort ümraniye escort mecidiyeköy escort şişli escort taksim escort ümraniye escort kartal escort şirinevler escort maltepe escort istanbul escort ümraniye escort kadıköy escort vip escort mersin escort istanbul escorts ataköy escort avcılar escort beylikdüzü escort okmeydanı escort şişli escort tuzla escort işitme cihazı sex shop sex shop sex shop sex shop sex shop sex shop sex shop sex shop
istanbul escort