Members Of Congress Advocate For Farmers, Demand Passage Of Updated Farm Bill On The House Floor

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Transcript
00:00:00 The gentleman from Pennsylvania, Mr. Thompson, is recognized for 60 minutes as the designee of the majority leader.
00:00:07 Without objection, if you will have the microphone there, thank you.
00:00:23 Well, thank you again, Mr. Speaker.
00:00:27 You know, turmoil in the Middle East heightened over the weekend, and my prayers are with all involved.
00:00:33 I trust our nation's leadership can rise to the task at hand.
00:00:37 However, in another matter of food and national security, this evening
00:00:42 I'm taking the opportunity to discuss how farmers, ranchers, foresters, and consumers deserve certainty.
00:00:48 Agriculture remains the backbone of America,
00:00:52 but our nation's dedicated producers have been burdened with fractured supply chains,
00:00:57 considerable input costs, relentless inflation, natural disasters, volatile markets, and labor shortages.
00:01:04 Each is consistently worsened by ill-conceived, half-baked
00:01:09 executive action by unelected bureaucrats in Washington.
00:01:13 Our nation's farmers are bearing the brunt of it, and adding insult to injury,
00:01:18 we're now a net importer
00:01:22 facing the most significant decline in farm income in our history.
00:01:26 Farmers impact our everyday lives,
00:01:29 so how do we support those who provide so much to our families, to our nation, and to our world?
00:01:35 The answer is a five-year farm bill.
00:01:38 The Committee on Agriculture spent the last three years listening to concerns of America's producers and turning their words into
00:01:46 legislation.
00:01:48 We've received input, ideas, and suggestions from stakeholders and members alike through our public portals and listening sessions across the country.
00:01:56 Through this transparent and exhaustive process,
00:01:59 we have produced a bipartisan product that will provide effective tools to our producers by bolstering the safety net,
00:02:06 strengthening nutrition programs and access
00:02:08 opportunities, and revitalize rural America.
00:02:13 Since our last farm bill was passed in 2018, our producers have faced countless challenges.
00:02:18 The needs of farm country are self-evident.
00:02:21 We have developed a bill to meet them and a responsibility to fund them. For nearly a year,
00:02:27 I've tried to educate my colleagues and the
00:02:29 hand-holding has
00:02:33 yielded nothing.
00:02:35 With that, my colleagues and I are here tonight to showcase our works and
00:02:41 our work and show that the House Republicans have done their job.
00:02:44 Mr. Speaker, I yield three minutes to the gentleman from Ohio,
00:02:49 Mr. Miller.
00:02:52 I appreciate his service on the House Agriculture Committee. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. It's an honor to serve alongside you.
00:02:58 And thank you for yielding the time for this evening's special order.
00:03:01 I'd like to emphasize the importance of passing an updated a farm bill that supports our agricultural industry by strengthening the farm safety net,
00:03:08 bolsters rural economies, and meets the growing food security and affordability difficulties that are impacting American families.
00:03:15 Mr. Speaker,
00:03:17 agriculture and food related industries are responsible for almost 1.4 trillion dollars of the United States gross domestic product.
00:03:24 Yet, American farmers, specifically, farmers in my district face daunting challenges in providing a
00:03:30 stable and affordable food supply to our nation. In Ohio,
00:03:34 I've heard farmers and ranchers concerns about continued inflationary pressures,
00:03:38 regulatory hurdles, limited trade markets, animal health, and a broad range of other issues.
00:03:44 Through the House Agricultural Committee's busy schedule over the past 16 months,
00:03:49 I've seen the importance of policies that keep the farm safety net strong,
00:03:53 incentivize conservation,
00:03:56 encourage innovative research initiatives, support specialty crops, allow farmers to grow our energy resources, and much more.
00:04:03 Mr. Speaker, the United States Department of Agriculture recently reported that our nation has lost over
00:04:08 140,000 farms in the last five years.
00:04:11 This is unsustainable. The USDA's most recent farm income forecast reflects the urgent need to act. The report anticipates a
00:04:19 25% decrease in farm income from 2023 to 2024,
00:04:23 one of the largest year-to-year dollar reductions in net farm income on record.
00:04:29 Failure to pass an updated farm bill could exacerbate these already growing problems and have a devastating impact on our economy and food supply chains.
00:04:37 The United States food and agricultural sector has an economic output of over 8.6 trillion dollars and cannot afford to wait.
00:04:44 I hope that my colleagues will recognize the magnitude of these issues and help us to pass a sound farm bill quickly.
00:04:51 I thank the chairman and I thank you and I yield back.
00:04:55 I thank the gentleman and for his leadership and dedication to America's and I know Ohio's number one industry. Now
00:05:02 pleased to recognize the gentleman from the Kansas Big One,
00:05:05 the chairman of the subcommittee on livestock, dairy, and poultry.
00:05:10 Mr. Mann for three minutes.
00:05:13 Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Thanks for your leadership of our committee in this effort.
00:05:16 I rise to call on this Congress to pass a comprehensive five-year farm bill.
00:05:22 This is my 25th time to come to the House floor to address the importance of a five-year farm bill that is long enough to
00:05:28 provide certainty and short enough to respond to the market changes and strengthen the safety net.
00:05:32 America's farmers, ranchers, and agriculture producers deserve it.
00:05:36 America's food and national security depend on it and this Congress must deliver it. In the almost five and a half years since the last
00:05:42 farm bill was signed into law, the world has drastically changed. Since 2018,
00:05:47 we've experienced a global pandemic, seen a war unfold between Russia and Ukraine, and now Israel and Hamas, and
00:05:53 witnessed President Biden's failed trade agenda cause market fluctuations that no one could have imagined. Top of that,
00:06:00 President Biden's spending spree and senseless war on American energy has driven inflation to historic levels. No matter how many times
00:06:07 administration officials and political pundits say that input costs and inflation rates are coming down, our
00:06:13 ag producers know that these levels are still sky-high in comparison to the last farm bill in 2018. As
00:06:19 Congress considers these conditions, we must also anticipate future market fluctuation as best we can.
00:06:24 That is why my priorities for the farm bill are to strengthen and protect crop insurance,
00:06:28 incentivize agriculture trade, and conduct rigorous oversight.
00:06:32 Last year's drought and market conditions caused producers in Kansas to abandon the highest number of acres of wheat since World War One, and
00:06:39 I witnessed a 35% decrease in annual wheat
00:06:43 harvested acre in my district. A good crop insurance program and strong safety net help ag producers in situations like these, and
00:06:50 help producers reliably stock our grocery store shelves,
00:06:53 maintain a robust food supply, and keep people fed.
00:06:56 It's one of our nation's best examples of a public-private partnership, and
00:07:00 Congress must use a scalpel and not a sledgehammer when ensuring its continued success for generations to come.
00:07:05 Ag trade promotion helps America's remain competitive and secure as well. Back in February, I introduced legislation that would allocate additional
00:07:13 resources to trade promotion programs in this farm bill. Between 1977 and 2019,
00:07:17 these trade programs added 13.7% of additional
00:07:22 export revenue to the value of U.S. ag products, and helped to create more than half a million American jobs.
00:07:28 It is no secret that perhaps more than any other profession,
00:07:31 ag producers face endless hurdles as they work tirelessly to raise our livestock,
00:07:34 grow our food, and put fuel in our cars. This next farm bill must not handicap them with additional overly restrictive regulation.
00:07:42 Instead,
00:07:43 Congress must get out of their way and support them with the tools they need to protect the future of American food and agriculture.
00:07:49 If you think about a safety net, the higher the risk, the higher the fall, and the stronger the safety net that you need to survive.
00:07:55 The livelihoods of American producers and consumers are on the line right now,
00:07:59 and that means our food security and NASA security are on the line as well.
00:08:03 American farmers, ranchers, and agriculture producers need certainty like never before, and
00:08:08 Congress must deliver for them with a five-year farm bill. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, for having this special order hour tonight.
00:08:15 Well, I thank the gentleman. Now, please recognize the gentleman from Iowa, Mr. Feenstra, for three minutes.
00:08:23 Thank you, Chairman Thompson.
00:08:27 Mr. Speaker,
00:08:29 the farm bill continues to be a vital investment to our producers, our competition with China, and our American economy.
00:08:38 An important component of this farm bill is a crop insurance program.
00:08:41 Before coming to Congress, I sold crop insurance in my hometown of Hull, Iowa.
00:08:47 I confidently say that this program is a crucial piece to the safety net of the farming community.
00:08:54 When severe weather strikes, like we had in Iowa with the derecho several years ago, the economy can take a turn very quickly.
00:09:01 Crop insurance protects that farmer during the most
00:09:06 unpredictable times.
00:09:07 That's why we must pass the farm bill that includes this robust investment in federal crop insurance program.
00:09:14 I was proud to introduce legislation that would help deliver a discount to help the next generation of Iowa farmers
00:09:21 who utilize this important management tool.
00:09:24 With nearly 40% of American farmland expected to change hands in the next two decades,
00:09:30 this bill will make investments to the next generation and not allow our farmland to fall into the hands of our foreign adversaries.
00:09:38 My bill and the farm bill at large will help keep families rooted in rural communities,
00:09:44 continue Iowa's proud tradition of farm families, and keep China away from our farmland.
00:09:51 I represent the second largest agricultural producing district in the country that has over
00:09:57 60,000 active farm crop insurance policies.
00:10:01 I will continue to be a strong voice for
00:10:04 agriculture and ensure that we pass a strong farm bill for Iowa and the nation that enhances crop insurance and assists
00:10:12 the next generation.
00:10:14 Thank you Chairman Thompson for your leadership.
00:10:16 I look forward to working with my colleagues to get this farm bill passed this year to provide certainty for our farmers,
00:10:22 producers, and rural communities. Thank you and I yield back.
00:10:26 Well, I thank the gentleman for his
00:10:29 leadership in agriculture. Now, please recognize the gentleman from Minnesota One
00:10:34 who serves as chairman of the subcommittee on nutrition, foreign agriculture, and horticulture,
00:10:41 Representative Brad Fenstead.
00:10:43 Thank You Mr. Chairman and thank you Mr. Speaker.
00:10:46 As a proud fourth-generation farmer raising the fifth generation,
00:10:51 I know firsthand the importance of writing and passing a strong farm bill that is written by farmers for farmers.
00:10:58 It's written by rural America for rural America. Without farmers hard work and dedication,
00:11:04 we would not have the safe, affordable, nutritious food that stocks our shelves every day.
00:11:08 Food security is national security and through strong farm policy,
00:11:14 we will limit our dependence on foreign countries and maintain the most abundant and highest quality food supply in the world.
00:11:21 In recent years, the ag industry has faced
00:11:23 increased volatility as a result of COVID-19 pandemic, weather-related disasters, and international conflict.
00:11:30 Today, the producers I represent in southern Minnesota are dealing with sky-high
00:11:34 excuse me, sky-high input costs and increased regulatory burdens as well as a
00:11:41 27% decline in net farm income and a 30 billion dollar ag trade deficit,
00:11:46 creating a highly leveraged financial environment in farm country.
00:11:51 The farm bill provides our farmers with a roadmap of what the next five years of farm policy will look like and it is critical
00:11:58 that we act to protect our family farmers and ensure that they can pass their operations down to that next generation.
00:12:04 Our farmers are part of one of the most honorable professions and as only 2% of the American population,
00:12:10 we must provide farm country with the support it needs.
00:12:15 Chairman Thompson, as well as the House Agriculture Committee, has been working tirelessly
00:12:19 to write a farm bill that meets their needs and the needs of all Americans.
00:12:23 I'm committed to standing shoulder to shoulder with my colleagues in Congress and the ag community
00:12:28 to pass a farm bill that will shape the future of farm policy,
00:12:32 including protecting and strengthening crop insurance,
00:12:35 farmers number one risk management tool,
00:12:38 revitalizing rural America, improving voluntary
00:12:43 incentive-based conservation programs, and ensuring that taxpayers dollars are used responsibly.
00:12:49 Mr. Speaker,
00:12:51 Mr. Chairman, I thank you for your leadership and the direction that you're providing the ag committee and I look ready to go to work with you.
00:12:57 Thank you, Mr. Speaker and I'll yield back.
00:12:59 Well, I thank the gentleman and now pleased to recognize from the state of Tennessee,
00:13:04 the Tennessee 6th Congressional District, Representative John Rose.
00:13:08 Thank You Chairman Thompson and Mr. Speaker.
00:13:12 In America, we can almost always count on the grocery store's shelves being full.
00:13:17 Too often, many overlook just how blessed we are to live in a country with such an abundance of food.
00:13:24 Today, as Americans, we enjoy the most abundant,
00:13:28 affordable, and safe supply of food in the history of humankind.
00:13:33 That's because of the farmers, ranchers, producers, and suppliers who put in the hours and take the risks to
00:13:41 produce the food and fiber we count on.
00:13:44 It's also in part because of the farm safety net programs included in the Farm Bill
00:13:50 that ensure that we continue producing enough to feed
00:13:55 American citizens. As an eighth generation Tennessee farmer and former Tennessee Commissioner of Agriculture,
00:14:03 I can attest that programs in the Farm Bill, like the federal crop insurance program, are critical to
00:14:09 ensuring we maintain the abundant and affordable supply of food in the United States.
00:14:14 These farm safety net programs provide risk protection and income support for farmers who experience natural
00:14:21 disasters, adverse growing conditions, and
00:14:24 fluctuations in market prices.
00:14:27 We must remember in these times of rampant inflation and ever-rising
00:14:31 prices for farm inputs that our farmers are price takers.
00:14:36 They don't have the luxury of passing their rising input costs on in the form of higher prices.
00:14:42 The crop insurance program
00:14:45 specifically helps farmers pay their private insurance premiums, which are often too expensive for small family farmers.
00:14:52 In 2021, premium assistance covered 62% of premiums on average for those who qualified.
00:15:01 This assistance is available for most field crops, several specialty crops, and some livestock producers.
00:15:07 However, in their current form, these programs are far from perfect and far from meeting the growing need of our nation's producers.
00:15:15 Emergency assistance and routine support payments are often determined by arbitrary and outdated formulas.
00:15:23 It's why this proposed Farm Bill makes these programs more adaptive to inflation.
00:15:30 Rising input costs continue to burden our nation's farms big and small,
00:15:34 which is why the enhancements in this bill will improve the farm safety net for our farmers and agricultural producers.
00:15:42 I am committed to improving these commodity programs by increasing reference prices and creating a more robust
00:15:49 crop insurance program.
00:15:51 Congress has the ability to update our farm policy by crafting a
00:15:57 bipartisan Farm Bill that aligns the safety net with the needs of producers,
00:16:02 expands market access, and strengthens program operations to demand
00:16:06 transparency and accountability for the American taxpayer.
00:16:10 In a divided Congress, this would be a major win for the American people and the Tennesseans I represent.
00:16:19 Throughout the Farm Bill process,
00:16:21 I have remained committed, as have my colleagues, to delivering for them, and I thank the Chairman for his persistence and
00:16:28 dedication to ensure our farmers are not left behind.
00:16:31 Rest assured,
00:16:34 Republicans in the House Agriculture Committee will not quit working on passing this bill until the job is done.
00:16:41 You have our word. Because it's the very least our farmers who work day in and day out deserve.
00:16:49 Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and thank you, Mr. Speaker, and I yield back.
00:16:51 Well, I thank the gentleman from Tennessee and now pleased to
00:16:56 recognize a farmer from Washington State,
00:16:59 from Washington's
00:17:02 4th Congressional District, also serves as the chair of our Western Caucus,
00:17:07 which is a force to be reckoned with when it comes to rural issues and the shared
00:17:15 dedication towards those rural issues with the Agriculture Committee. Representative Dan Newhouse, please recognize for three minutes.
00:17:21 Thank you, Chairman Thompson.
00:17:23 Thanks for those kind remarks on the Congressional Western Caucus, and thanks for being such a strong member of the Western Caucus.
00:17:30 Mr. Speaker, I rise today to discuss the importance of a Farm Bill, the importance of a Farm Bill that
00:17:36 addresses the needs, the priorities, and the concerns of rural America. As
00:17:41 Chairman of the Congressional Western Caucus, and probably even more importantly as a third-generation
00:17:47 farmer myself, my son being now the fourth generation,
00:17:51 I know the difficulties farmers and ranchers face in day-to-day operations.
00:17:57 Agriculture is the lifeblood of our nation. The government's role should be to support the agricultural industry and
00:18:05 their efforts to feed and fuel our country, and the Farm Bill does just that.
00:18:11 Today, farmers and ranchers understand all too well the consequences of a heavy-handed federal bureaucracy.
00:18:19 Today, we are at a crossroads.
00:18:22 We are being pushed to the limits.
00:18:25 Agricultural operations, both large and small, have been impacted by excessive regulations and tax burdens
00:18:34 that have proved challenging for everyday life.
00:18:36 That's why at this critical moment, we cannot turn our backs on the men and women who've made American agriculture successful.
00:18:46 Western Caucus members have been consistent about their priorities for a successful Farm Bill.
00:18:52 These include supporting production agriculture in every way possible,
00:18:58 improving voluntary conservation programs to ensure that those closest to the land
00:19:04 can manage it the way that they know the best,
00:19:07 enhancing forest health and management, and
00:19:10 strengthening America's rural communities through investment and development.
00:19:15 Throughout this entire process, I've been impressed with the Agriculture Committee's attention to produce the best Farm Bill possible.
00:19:25 I've been especially encouraged by Chairman Thompson's due diligence to go out and gather community perspectives,
00:19:32 evaluate current programs, and advocate for policies to be included in the legislation
00:19:38 with rural America first and foremost in mind.
00:19:41 He's been to my state several times. I think he's been to almost every single state in the Union.
00:19:47 Under Chairman Thompson's leadership, the committee has strived to produce a comprehensive and effective Farm Bill
00:19:54 that accomplishes many of the priorities that the Western Caucus members advocate for.
00:19:59 This legislation will send a message to America's farmers and ranchers that we will still have their backs,
00:20:07 and I will continue to support them just as they support our nation. Thank you, Mr. Speaker, and I yield back.
00:20:14 I thank the gentleman from Washington State. Thanks for his hospitality, too.
00:20:18 Being able to tour your farming operation and a lot of others while I was there.
00:20:24 Now, please recognize just a great champion advocate from Iowa for America's number one industry, which is agriculture.
00:20:33 And he represents Iowa's third congressional district, Representative Zacknum. Please recognize him for three minutes.
00:20:39 Thank you, Mr. Speaker, and thank you, Chairman Thompson, as well as our colleagues on the Ag Committee.
00:20:45 As a sixth generation Iowan and part of a century family farm, collectively we know the hands, hearts, and hard work
00:20:52 of Iowa farmers feed and fuel the world. Now, every Iowan is impacted by this upcoming Farm Bill
00:20:59 and the agricultural policy that's included, whether it's as part of the supply chain, in the grocery store checkout line,
00:21:05 or at a dinner table, as I, with my six kids, know very well based on our grocery bills.
00:21:10 Unfortunately, input costs are up, surging 35% in recent years, and inflation is driving those profits down.
00:21:19 Now, we know this. Farmers are not price makers, they are price takers, and too often, as the Chairman has highlighted,
00:21:27 they end up bearing the brunt of those cost increases.
00:21:29 It was reported earlier this year that Iowa pork producers alone are experiencing their worst loss in 25 years amid a difficult economy.
00:21:39 Producers are facing enough difficulties without worrying about D.C. being the one that hurts their business.
00:21:45 They deserve far better than to be saddled with the consequences of politicians here in D.C. who might not be doing their job.
00:21:52 And so that is why it's important that we must pass a bipartisan Farm Bill as soon as possible.
00:21:57 And I'm grateful for our Chairman taking the reins on this.
00:22:00 As farmers deserve to have the certainty they need to continue running their operations after a busy harvest season,
00:22:06 it is critical that this Farm Bill include key provisions, including strengthening the farm safety net
00:22:13 for the more than 85,000 family farms in my home state of Iowa and so many more around the country.
00:22:19 We must support also the next generation of farmers, both access to capital as well as beginning their own farm operation.
00:22:26 Increase rural economic development with access to credit for grants, loans, and improved infrastructure,
00:22:31 including improvement for rural broadband.
00:22:34 Bolstering innovation in security and agriculture by expanding cybersecurity resources,
00:22:39 where ag is one of the top three sectors under attack today, and importantly,
00:22:43 preventing places like China from purchasing farmland right here in America.
00:22:49 Ultimately, we must help the farmers, the best stewards of our land, conserve their farmland as our national resource.
00:22:56 And unleashing America's energy independence begins with a fight for biofuels in places like Iowa.
00:23:02 So Mr. Chairman, I'll continue to fight for Iowa's farmers and producers as we move forward.
00:23:06 I look forward to working with you and this team.
00:23:08 It's time for Congress to come together, pass a farm bill for the betterment of our farmers,
00:23:13 producers, communities, and families like yours and mine.
00:23:17 Thank you, Mr. Speaker. I yield my time.
00:23:19 Representative Nunn, thank you so much for your leadership.
00:23:22 Now please recognize a gentleman from Georgia 8.
00:23:25 He is the subcommittee chair on the Agriculture Committee for General Farm Commodities, Risk Management, and Credit.
00:23:32 He's also vice chair of the full Agriculture Committee and a most recently appointed member of the Rules Committee.
00:23:38 I appreciate him joining us. I know Rules is busy tonight.
00:23:43 So please recognize Representative Austin Scott for three minutes.
00:23:46 Well, thank you, Chairman G.T. Thompson. You're doing a wonderful job.
00:23:51 Mr. Speaker, I rise today to express my unwavering support for our nation's farmers
00:23:55 and to emphasize the importance of the farm bill.
00:23:58 Let me be clear. If you're a person who eats, and I suspect everyone is, then you should care about the farm bill.
00:24:06 The farm bill sets a foundation of support for America's farmers and ranchers
00:24:10 who produce the food and the fiber that we depend on on a daily basis.
00:24:14 Right now, farmers are struggling with rising input costs that make it more difficult for them to produce the food that we need.
00:24:20 The House Agriculture Committee must make major improvements to Title I in the farm bill
00:24:24 and address the impact that high input prices are having on America's farm families.
00:24:30 The farm safety net in Title I has decreased due to the increases in production costs,
00:24:35 and current reference prices for most commodities do not reflect the increased costs of farming today.
00:24:42 The current statutory reference prices were established in the 2014 farm bill using 2012 cost of production data.
00:24:52 I want to say that again. We're using the 2012 data to determine the point at which support under price loss coverage kicks in
00:25:00 if the market prices fall below the reference price during a time when producers are seeing record high input costs.
00:25:07 This has created a no-win situation for our farmers, and it is vital to our country that they are able to do their jobs.
00:25:14 No part of the farm safety net should guarantee a profit. The farmers know this.
00:25:19 It's something our producers agree on. But if reference prices don't move,
00:25:23 then our producers are effectively left with no stop-loss assistance in the event of a commodity collapse.
00:25:30 Supporting our farmers through increased reference prices in the farm bill means that we support those who grow the crops to sustain our food supply.
00:25:37 Without reference price increases in this next farm bill, there's not enough assistance from Congress and the USDA
00:25:43 for many farm families in our country to continue to grow the food and the fiber that we depend on.
00:25:48 As the Chairman of the General Farm Commodities Risk Management and Credit Subcommittee,
00:25:52 I'm committed to making significant improvements to Title I and give the support that our farmers deserve.
00:25:58 Thank you, and thank you for your work, GT, on this farm bill. I yield back.
00:26:03 Thank you, gentlemen. Now please recognize the gentleman from Alabama, too,
00:26:07 Representative Barry Moore, member of the House Agriculture Committee.
00:26:10 Representative Mr. Moore, for three minutes.
00:26:14 Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Consumer prices have gone up 19.4 percent since Biden took office,
00:26:20 and inflation 3.5 percent in the last year.
00:26:22 Producers simply can't afford this administration's bad policies.
00:26:26 My top priority this farm cycle has been addressing reference prices, which Mr. Scott just referred to.
00:26:32 Safety net programs are the bedrock of risk management for producers, and current reference prices
00:26:38 are not sufficient to help producers manage risk against these razor-thin margins thanks to Bidenomics.
00:26:44 As input prices go up and commodity prices go down, producers rely on these reference prices
00:26:50 and a farm safety net to stay in business.
00:26:54 I have seen this in my own family, hearing about the challenges my cousin, who is a young farmer,
00:26:58 has had just getting started.
00:27:00 I heard similar concerns during the farm bill listing sessions that I had all across the district.
00:27:05 That's why we need these inclusions in the farm bill.
00:27:09 They will deliver for producers in Alabama and across America.
00:27:12 We need this legislation to fund the farm safety net, promote market development,
00:27:18 increase feral swine control efforts, and modernize data collection for our foresters,
00:27:23 protect crop insurance, and expand rural broadband deployment.
00:27:28 I urge my colleagues to help our producers battle Biden's inflation.
00:27:32 Beforehand, I want to say I hope you'll all join me in praying for Israel
00:27:36 in the wake of this horrific attack they faced this weekend.
00:27:39 May God bless them, and thank you, Mr. Chairman, for your leadership.
00:27:42 And with that, sir, I'll yield back.
00:27:43 >> I thank the gentleman.
00:27:44 Mr. Speaker, can I inquire how much time remains?
00:27:47 >> The gentleman has 33 minutes remaining.
00:27:53 >> Very good.
00:27:54 Please recognize the gentleman from – Representative Mark Alford from Missouri 4th
00:28:01 Congressional District for three minutes.
00:28:03 >> Well, thank you, Mr. Speaker, and thank you so much to our distinguished Chairman,
00:28:09 G.T. Thompson.
00:28:10 And I want to thank him especially for bringing our listening tour for the Ag Committee to
00:28:15 the great state of Missouri this past August.
00:28:16 We had a great time.
00:28:17 People got to have their say on what they wanted in the farm bill,
00:28:22 and it was a truly bipartisan effort.
00:28:25 I'll never forget Jonathan Jackson coming there from the Ag Committee in Sedalia
00:28:31 and milking a cow for the very first time.
00:28:34 It was truly a sight to behold.
00:28:36 Look, I'm not a farmer.
00:28:38 I don't even play one on TV.
00:28:40 But I am an American who understands the importance of agriculture,
00:28:45 that our food security is our national security.
00:28:49 And that's why, Mr. Speaker, today I rise to express my strong support of passing a
00:28:53 robust farm bill, a lifeline for our nation's farmers and for the nourishment of our citizens.
00:28:59 My home state of Missouri boasts 87,000 farms,
00:29:03 the second highest number of farms in the United States of America.
00:29:06 Ag is the backbone of our nation, and through the Supplemental Nutritional Assistance Program,
00:29:12 SNAP, we bridge the gap between the produce of our farmers and the tables of more than
00:29:18 41 million Americans.
00:29:21 You see, SNAP is more than just a program, Mr. Speaker.
00:29:26 It is a pact with our citizens, ensuring that no truly deserving, qualified American goes
00:29:32 to bed hungry.
00:29:33 Yet it's our duty.
00:29:36 It's our duty to safeguard the integrity of SNAP.
00:29:39 It is our duty to make sure that every dollar is spent judiciously,
00:29:43 reaching only the hungry and not lost to fraud, waste, and abuse.
00:29:48 Mr. Speaker, it's estimated that about $34 million per day is lost to erroneous payments,
00:29:54 some $13 billion a year, where in some cases recipients intentionally cheat the system
00:30:00 to obtain more benefits than they are eligible for.
00:30:02 These fraudulent activities strain the program's resources and undermine its integrity,
00:30:08 affecting those who are generally in need.
00:30:10 Our farmers are held to integrity standards through their use of programs like crop insurance.
00:30:15 It is incumbent that states and recipients are held to similar standards.
00:30:21 With more than 80% of the Farm Bill's funding dedicated to SNAP, any fraud is unacceptable.
00:30:28 We must incentivize people to live a healthy lifestyle, eliminate waste, and firmly tackle
00:30:33 abuse without punishing those truly in need.
00:30:36 That's why, Mr. Speaker, it's time to wash SNAP with a program that is pro-work,
00:30:43 pro-accountability, pro-sustenance, and pro-health.
00:30:48 That's exactly what Chairman Thompson and my colleagues on the House Ag Committee
00:30:52 have been working on.
00:30:54 It is time to pass the Farm Bill that backs our hard-working farmers and ranchers and
00:31:00 keeps our food assistance programs both strong and honest.
00:31:05 Thank you, Mr. Speaker, and I yield back.
00:31:07 Well, I thank the gentleman.
00:31:08 Thanks for his passion for, I know, Missouri's number one industry, which is agriculture,
00:31:15 and the number one industry in this great nation.
00:31:18 Now, I'm pleased to recognize a farmer, a mom, a wife, a grandmother, who represents
00:31:26 Illinois' 15th Congressional District, a member of the Agriculture Committee, Representative
00:31:31 Mary Miller, recognized for three minutes.
00:31:34 Thank you, Chairman Thompson.
00:31:36 Thank you for your leadership on the Agriculture Committee.
00:31:39 As one of the few family farmers left in Congress, I understand firsthand the challenges faced
00:31:47 by farmers.
00:31:48 My husband and I expanded our farm in the '80s when interest rates were at their highest
00:31:54 and the farm safety net wasn't as strong as it is today.
00:31:57 Crop insurance has given us and many fellow farmers the security needed to mitigate risks
00:32:07 and continue producing the food and fuel that keeps America running.
00:32:12 We must be steadfast in our commitment to protecting the needs of farmers and rule America
00:32:19 in the Farm Bill, including protecting crop insurance.
00:32:23 Today, our family farm faces the same challenges as many across the country.
00:32:30 Increasing land prices are making it nearly impossible for our sons to expand.
00:32:36 Biden's EPA threatens our no-till practice, which is best for soil conservation.
00:32:43 Inflation and Biden's relentless attack on American energy has increased our input costs.
00:32:50 With all the uncertainty that farmers face, they need the certainty of a five-year Farm
00:32:58 Bill.
00:32:59 Over the past year, we have diligently laid the groundwork to pass a robust Farm Bill
00:33:05 that safeguards farmers' interests, while Biden has been focusing on the Green Bad Deal
00:33:12 and DEI nonsense.
00:33:14 It is vital for us to pass a Farm Bill that puts farmers first.
00:33:20 Thank you, and I yield back.
00:33:22 >> Well, I thank the gentlelady for her service and her dedication to agriculture.
00:33:29 Now, I'm pleased to recognize the gentleman from Indiana's 4th Congressional District.
00:33:36 He is the chairman for the Subcommittee on Conservation, Research, and Technology.
00:33:42 Dr. Jim Baird, please recognize the chairman for three minutes.
00:33:48 >> Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and I appreciate all that you do for our committee.
00:33:55 And Mr. Speaker, since my first day here in Congress, I've been a relentless advocate
00:34:02 for hardworking farmers, ranchers, producers, and agricultural professionals who form the
00:34:08 backbone of our country.
00:34:10 It is their dedication and resilience that fuels our economy and feeds the entire nation.
00:34:16 Today, the world relies on American producers more than ever.
00:34:20 As geopolitical tensions abroad disrupt supply chains and heighten the threat of global food
00:34:28 insecurity, it has never been more important to give our producers the peace of mind that
00:34:34 they deserve.
00:34:35 That's why I'm pleased to see we are making progress on this year's Farm Bill and beginning
00:34:40 to move this legislation through the committee.
00:34:55 This has not been a simple process.
00:34:58 However, I am thankful for Chairman Thompson and everyone on the Ag Committee for their
00:35:02 hard work.
00:35:05 Over the past year, we have held listening sessions with stakeholders across the country
00:35:10 to build on the success of the 2018 Farm Bill and prepare for the future of American agriculture.
00:35:16 As chairman of the Agriculture Subcommittee on Conservation, Research, and Biotechnology,
00:35:22 I am actually aware of the opportunities we have to deliver new agricultural innovations
00:35:28 that will address food insecurity, eliminate hunger, and grow the economy.
00:35:33 It is my hope that we can continue crafting this legislation, that we will prioritize
00:35:39 agricultural research that will reduce our dependence on foreign inputs, create thousands
00:35:45 of good-paying jobs, and utilize our nation's abundant agricultural resources.
00:35:50 I look forward to working with my colleagues on the Agriculture Committee to ensure that
00:35:56 we meet the needs of all of our producers and prioritize research that will help America
00:36:02 be the global leader in agriculture.
00:36:04 With that, Mr. Speaker, I yield back.
00:36:06 The Vice President (Chairman Thompson)
00:36:07 I thank the gentleman.
00:36:08 And I thank you for your leadership on the committee and with your subcommittee as well.
00:36:13 Mr. Barry
00:36:13 Thank you, sir.
00:36:13 The Vice President (Chairman Thompson)
00:36:14 Thank you, Dr. Barry.
00:36:14 Now, I'm pleased to recognize a good friend, a member of the House Agriculture Committee
00:36:20 from California's 1st Congressional District.
00:36:23 I had the privilege of spending quite a bit of time with Mr. LaMalfa.
00:36:30 We had a very, what I would have to describe as a very emotional visit to Paradise, California,
00:36:36 that where so many lives, almost 100 lives were lost due to wildfire and an opportunity to ride
00:36:45 in a combine on his rice fields in Northern California.
00:36:52 And all of it, I really appreciate the opportunity.
00:36:54 He serves as the Chairman of the House Agriculture Forestry Subcommittee from California's 1st
00:37:00 Congressional District.
00:37:01 Representative Doug LaMalfa.
00:37:02 LaMalfa, and we'll recognize for three minutes.
00:37:06 Mr. LaMalfa
00:37:07 Well, thank you, Mr. Chairman.
00:37:08 I greatly appreciate your work on this committee and the hard work on the Farm Bill and the
00:37:14 demeanor with which you bring it.
00:37:15 You know, you bring people together with your effort on this and the, all of us coming together
00:37:20 have these field hearings and listening sessions around the country since the beginning of
00:37:25 last year in this session.
00:37:27 So I think that's been very productive and points out a strong bipartisan effort to make
00:37:31 this Farm Bill come together and be successful this year.
00:37:36 And we need it to do so because we need that certainty for all industries.
00:37:40 So I'm pleased to be able to be the Chairman of the Subcommittee on Forestry.
00:37:45 Thanks to Chairman Thompson on that.
00:37:49 That's a very important issue in Northern California where my district is, but all over
00:37:53 the West and indeed for the whole country.
00:37:56 Now, we should be deeply concerned about the state of our nation's timber industry, the
00:38:02 industry itself, as well as the condition of our forests.
00:38:05 We have many mills closing down lately because they can't economically make it.
00:38:10 And it's not due to their businesses practices per se, but more so the practices of the Forest
00:38:16 Service and the available lands and timber harvest they need.
00:38:20 This demands our immediate attention in the Farm Bill.
00:38:24 And as many people don't know, USDA oversees the US Forest Service.
00:38:30 So that's why this element is in the Farm Bill.
00:38:33 So as I'm depicting here in these posters here, you see what the difference between
00:38:40 managed forests and unmanaged forests, what they look like.
00:38:43 So on the left is a forest that's been thinned and properly maintained.
00:38:47 On the right, a still green forest, but it's so dense, birds can't fly through it, deer
00:38:53 can't run through it, which this used to actually be the norm.
00:38:56 But over 50 plus years of neglect in our forested areas have allowed this to happen because
00:39:02 at the same time we put out fire, which is a good thing, except for when fire can be
00:39:08 a useful tool at the right time of year under the right conditions for forest thinning.
00:39:13 We need to have an active management on that.
00:39:15 Forest Service oversees 193 million acres in its purview, and at best it's treating
00:39:21 1% of those acres per year.
00:39:23 That's why it's extremely important we have private industry as a partner, indeed,
00:39:28 the quarterback of carrying the ball on this issue for this industry.
00:39:33 We recently had a field hearing in South Dakota with my colleague Dusty Johnson.
00:39:38 We met up with the Niman Enterprises, the Niman family, a family company who's been
00:39:43 there many years.
00:39:44 They've just announced layoffs now because they can't get the number of board feet
00:39:48 that need to sustain their business there.
00:39:50 It's not just about business, it's about getting the wood products and paper products
00:39:54 and being a partner in helping our forest to be safer, cleaner, healthier, the whole
00:40:00 works.
00:40:01 And so if they're having to lay people off, that means a small town of Spearfish, South
00:40:05 Dakota, is going to suffer badly economically.
00:40:08 It means our forest is going to suffer due to ultimately overcrowding like you see on
00:40:13 the right here and make it an extreme fire danger.
00:40:16 It's not a matter of if, it's a matter of when.
00:40:18 We need to have stronger activity, we need Forest Service to get cracking on this.
00:40:22 Part of the elements we've had in recent farm bills and this coming farm bill are a
00:40:27 continued expansion of categorical exclusions and utilizing.
00:40:32 These exclusions allow the bypassing of a lot of red tape and permitting and such.
00:40:39 It doesn't mean they're going to do anything environmentally unsoundly, it just means we
00:40:42 don't need to take two years to study every time we want to do a timber harvest.
00:40:45 We already know what to do.
00:40:46 They require NEPA so many times.
00:40:49 We need to have a faster process to get this done.
00:40:51 We're falling farther and farther behind.
00:40:53 We're losing the industry, we're losing the forests.
00:40:54 And so we need to have more categorical exclusions, we need to have more pilot projects like
00:41:00 we had at the south, the Tahoe area was about a 10,000 acre one.
00:41:05 Now what happened there is that work was done in thinning that area, fire hit that area
00:41:10 and it knocked the fire down to made it where it wasn't a devastating fire in that 10,000
00:41:13 acres.
00:41:14 It actually, we were able to put it out.
00:41:15 And so we have the ability to extend, expand the good neighbor policy which enabled local
00:41:22 governments and tribes to help manage the land for the Forest Service since they're
00:41:26 so far behind on this issue.
00:41:27 We have an expansion of that in the bill as well.
00:41:30 So what we're doing in the farm bill is just common sense things to make our forest
00:41:33 practices and forest health and have an industry at the same time.
00:41:38 Yes, it's good to talk about having an industry.
00:41:40 This isn't just big timber.
00:41:42 This is something that we need.
00:41:43 All these small towns in my area in northern California and all over the west that have
00:41:47 been boarded up, so to speak, from losing the industry.
00:41:51 We need folks to be able to come back and do this work to help us because just recently
00:41:56 the US is gone because China's reeling things back in from the number two importer.
00:42:00 Now the US is the number one importer of wood products.
00:42:03 What are we doing here?
00:42:04 We have so much burning up in our backyard and going to waste.
00:42:07 We need to put people to work in our country and our forests, make them better, safer,
00:42:11 and have an industry and jobs in this country.
00:42:13 So it's so important that we have these elements in this farm bill and we get it
00:42:18 passed along with all the other good things for agriculture, for farming, to have a stable
00:42:21 food supply.
00:42:22 Yes, he mentioned I was a rice grower myself in northern California five generations now.
00:42:28 We need all the above in order to have a stable food supply so our country is strong and secure.
00:42:33 The same goes with our forestry because you see success on the left here and impending
00:42:38 disaster on the right in this poster.
00:42:41 Mr. Chairman, thank you so much for the time and allowing me to be part of this tonight.
00:42:44 Well, I thank the gentleman from California for your leadership on forestry and all of
00:42:49 American agriculture.
00:42:50 Now please recognize one of our senior members on the Agriculture Committee from North Carolina
00:42:56 7, Representative David Rauser, for three minutes.
00:42:59 Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
00:43:00 Mr. Speaker, North Carolina is blessed to be one of the most agriculturally diverse
00:43:05 states in our great country.
00:43:07 Contributing more than $103 billion to our state's economy, agriculture has always been
00:43:13 North Carolina's number one industry.
00:43:16 But it's even bigger than that for this reason.
00:43:20 Food security is national security.
00:43:23 In other words, the economic impact of agriculture doesn't even come close to measuring its true
00:43:28 benefit to America and the world.
00:43:32 Today our farm families are struggling just like every other American is feeling the inflation
00:43:36 pinch.
00:43:38 In the case of American agriculture, it's even worse.
00:43:41 Our farm families are expected to see a 27 percent decrease in net farm income this year.
00:43:48 They're facing as much uncertainty as at any time in American history.
00:43:53 We have a crisis unfolding in farm country because of record high input and labor cost
00:43:59 driven by regulatory assault on the industry as well as stagnant or declining prices for
00:44:04 both crops and lobstock, eliminating any profit margin.
00:44:09 This by the way is at the same time every American household is paying more for food
00:44:14 than ever before.
00:44:17 This is why a strong farm bill is so critically important for both farmers and consumers.
00:44:23 It could not come at a more crucial time.
00:44:26 Important programs necessary to help our farm families survive, to feed and clothe America,
00:44:32 including a commodity title, healthy meals for low income families, rural development
00:44:36 programs so important to infrastructure and job growth in rural areas, animal disease
00:44:41 prevention, trade promotion, and key investments in research and extension services for our
00:44:46 producers along I might add with other important provisions.
00:44:51 All must be updated and improved to meet today's challenges in American agriculture.
00:44:57 We have the safest, most affordable food supply in the world and we must keep it that way.
00:45:04 A strong farm bill is key for that to continue.
00:45:07 A strong farm bill is America first.
00:45:11 We should never forget that.
00:45:13 So thank you Mr. Chairman for being such a strong leader and critical voice for agriculture
00:45:18 as we work towards a farm bill that properly addresses the challenges of those who provide
00:45:24 for our food and fiber.
00:45:26 I yield back.
00:45:27 Thank you gentleman for his leadership and dedication to this great industry that serves
00:45:33 every American family.
00:45:35 Now please recognize the gentleman from New York 23rd, yeah 23rd congressional district,
00:45:43 a neighbor of mine, neighbor of the north, Representative Nick Langworthy for three minutes.
00:45:49 Well thank you very much Chairman Thompson for hosting tonight's special order hour,
00:45:55 focusing on the consequential piece of legislation for rural America, the farm bill.
00:45:59 And also thank you for your work making sure that we have an adequate farm bill in all
00:46:04 the travel and the efforts that you've put into this at this point.
00:46:08 In western New York and the southerns here, agriculture not only drives our economy but
00:46:13 it's a way of life and a proud tradition for many families that I'm proud to represent.
00:46:19 I fight for more than 6,000 farms in my district as we develop each piece of this legislation,
00:46:26 especially as they struggle with the high input costs and shrinking margins created
00:46:31 by President Biden's reckless economic policies.
00:46:34 More specifically the farmer, the dairy farms in my district, they need better policy solutions
00:46:40 that offer them a stronger safety net and more predictable pricing.
00:46:44 As outlined in the bill that I introduced earlier this Congress, HR 1756, the Dairy
00:46:49 Pricing Opportunity Act, we need to ensure that this next farm bill authorizes reporting
00:46:55 of the cost and the yield information from dairy processors.
00:46:59 It also has been great to see the recent recognition of the role of our farmers, ranchers and
00:47:04 dairies in what they play in our nation's nutrition and health.
00:47:08 This next farm bill should also aim to increase access to dairy products for SNAP recipients
00:47:12 as outlined in the Dairy Nutrition Incentive Act, which I'm co-leading with my colleague
00:47:17 from California, Representative Jim Costa.
00:47:20 It's important that we empower and encourage households to consume healthy but under-consumed
00:47:25 foods such as milk and other nutrient-rich dairy products.
00:47:29 Western New York and the southern tier have a proud history of dairy farming and I want
00:47:33 to ensure that dairy remains a core component of our efforts as 90% of Americans fall short
00:47:39 of meeting the recommended intake of dairy.
00:47:42 And similarly, I've been leading the effort to expand access to New York maple products
00:47:46 with my bipartisan Maple Act, as I'm proud to represent hundreds of maple farms and have
00:47:51 even had the chance to visit many of them last month during New York's Maple Week.
00:47:56 It's a great product and the legislation would add maple syrup to the eligible products under
00:48:00 the Senior Farmers Market Nutrition Program.
00:48:04 The farm bill doesn't stop at dairy production or specialty crops, it also focuses on developing
00:48:09 our rural communities that are so often forgotten here in Washington, D.C.
00:48:14 Title VI of the farm bill authorizes programs that are meant to foster economic growth in
00:48:19 our rural communities like the Rural Innovation Stronger Economy, or the RISE grant program.
00:48:26 This program has been instrumental in offering grant assistance to foster high-wage job creation
00:48:32 and accelerate the formation of new business in qualifying low-income rural areas.
00:48:38 While the RISE program has garnered success and popularity, it's important to recognize
00:48:42 that job accelerators typically provide specialized training for individuals seeking new skills
00:48:48 to secure employment in new business.
00:48:50 The explosion of cutting-edge technologies has presented rural areas with challenges
00:48:55 and adaptation, resulting in a widening workforce gap and diminishing economic prospects.
00:49:01 These challenges compound existing workforce issues in rural America, including limiting
00:49:05 access to education and workforce development opportunities and mismatches between available
00:49:11 jobs and the skills of our local workers.
00:49:13 In response to this need, we've introduced H.R. 7015, the Careers Act, to build upon
00:49:19 the RISE grant program by allowing funds to support career pathway programs in industry
00:49:25 or sector partnerships in specific industries, including public utilities, health care, manufacturing,
00:49:31 agribusiness, and others.
00:49:32 Opening this program to industry partnerships could create more collaboration between employers,
00:49:38 educators, and stakeholders to address workforce challenges and develop tailored training
00:49:43 programs ensuring a skilled workforce that meets industry needs.
00:49:47 The Careers Act champions skills development, innovation, and collaboration, empowering
00:49:52 rural communities to thrive.
00:49:55 We need to ensure that Title VI of this Farm Bill will do more to close the skills gap
00:50:00 and support our rural communities.
00:50:02 In all, I'm proud to be a voice for rural upstate New York, western New York, and the
00:50:07 southern tier, throughout the process of developing a final bill that not only supports American
00:50:12 agriculture but builds a better future for everyone.
00:50:15 Thank you, Mr. Chairman, for all your efforts, and I yield back.
00:50:18 Well, I thank the gentleman from New York, who is doing a great job serving this rural
00:50:24 America, his district, and American agriculture.
00:50:28 Now please recognize the gentleman, no stranger to agriculture, actually, being from the Central
00:50:33 Valley of California, a farmer himself, representing California's 13th congressional district,
00:50:41 Representative John Duarte.
00:50:42 Please recognize for three minutes.
00:50:44 Well, Chairman Thompson, it is an absolute honor to be here to support your Farm Bill,
00:50:50 and it's moving forward today.
00:50:52 As a fourth-generation California farmer, working side by side with my next generation,
00:50:57 the fifth-generation California farmers in my family, nothing is more important right
00:51:02 now than to get farm security and farm stability for American farmers.
00:51:08 As a California farmer, I've got some of my friends right now, best of breed friends,
00:51:13 calling me, telling me, if we can't get stability in our ag prices, if we can't get our costs
00:51:19 under control, if we can't get foreign markets opened up again, this might be our last year,
00:51:26 where the bank might have us sell property.
00:51:29 We're looking at a commercial real estate crisis in America today.
00:51:31 Well, let me tell you firsthand, there is a agricultural credit crisis coming in America
00:51:37 today because we're on the heels.
00:51:41 We're on the heels of COVID.
00:51:42 We're on the heels of supply chain disruption.
00:51:44 We're on the heels of Bidenflation.
00:51:47 Still under it.
00:51:48 And all of this is stacking up against farmers.
00:51:51 While American families have higher SNAP benefits than they've ever enjoyed before, and so many
00:51:56 of us on the Farm, the Ag Committee support SNAP program to keep American children and
00:52:02 families with robust nutrition, we have produce and protein leaving the dinner plates of working
00:52:09 families.
00:52:10 We have cereal companies today advertising breakfast cereal for dinner, again, as SNAP
00:52:16 benefits are higher than they've ever been, maintain their plussed up status after COVID.
00:52:22 And many of us on the Ag Committee support that, both sides of the aisle.
00:52:25 So what do we need?
00:52:26 We need a Farm Bill that produces American abundance, that produces, that promotes American
00:52:32 farmers' innovations, that allows American farmers to produce for national markets.
00:52:38 We're shut out of China with retaliatory ag tariffs.
00:52:41 We're fighting back on that.
00:52:42 But we need market access promotion.
00:52:45 We need the Specialty Crops Block Grants plussed up to help American farmers and specialty
00:52:50 crop producers find the new markets they need.
00:52:54 On the Gates Act, we want to solve big environmental problems, big ecological challenges with farming.
00:53:00 Well, we need to make sure the biggest farmers can do that.
00:53:03 So for those who are true farmers, that make over 25% of their income from agriculture,
00:53:08 we need to allow the conservation program access, irrespective of income limits.
00:53:15 We can do this.
00:53:18 Chairman Thompson, Speaker, thank you so much for the opportunity to promote the American
00:53:23 Farm Bill today.
00:53:24 We can get this done.
00:53:26 I yield back.
00:53:27 Mr. Speaker, can I inquire how much time, if any, remains?
00:53:34 You have seven minutes remaining.
00:53:36 Okay, very good.
00:53:37 Well, I thank the gentleman from California for being a valued member of the House Agriculture
00:53:42 Committee, for your work, your leadership, your service.
00:53:45 Mr. Speaker, we've just heard a multitude of reasons why we need to pass this Farm Bill.
00:53:50 This is a farm security, food security, and national security bill.
00:53:56 Food security is national security.
00:53:59 You know, I like to, my definition of American agriculture is pretty straightforward.
00:54:07 American agriculture today is science, technology, and innovation.
00:54:13 America's farmers have suffered enough.
00:54:15 They can't wait, and neither can we.
00:54:17 Over the past three years, the Committee on Agriculture has traveled all over the country
00:54:22 to both Republican and Democrat-held districts with one goal in mind, to listen and report
00:54:28 back.
00:54:29 Or as I like to say, use what God has given us, two ears, one mouth.
00:54:34 So when we go out, that's why we call them listening tours, to be able to take the opportunity
00:54:38 to listen from those folks, those hardworking families who are providing us food and fiber,
00:54:44 building materials, and energy resources all over this great nation.
00:54:48 We've been to at least 40 different states in one territory.
00:54:53 Probably some states, if you heard tonight, multiple times.
00:54:57 So I'm somewhere in the neighborhood of, had the privilege of chairing probably close to
00:55:02 85 listening sessions around this great nation.
00:55:06 Why would we do that?
00:55:07 Because we're building a Farm Bill listening to the voices outside the beltway of Washington,
00:55:14 to the people who work so hard, some of them seven days a week, to provide what is essential
00:55:20 for this great nation and for the families of this great nation.
00:55:24 Frankly, our process has been transparent, it's been collaborative, and it's been done
00:55:32 in good faith.
00:55:34 Mr. Speaker, I don't think there's a greater return on investment for a dollar spent in
00:55:38 Washington than one spent through the Farm Bill in agriculture.
00:55:42 And I'll say that lightly, I point to the facts of the number of jobs are created.
00:55:47 It's the number one industry in, quite frankly, in almost every state, and certainly in this
00:55:53 nation.
00:55:55 The economic activity is generated through the agriculture industry, both production
00:56:02 and processing, and everything really within the within that food supply chain.
00:56:08 The amount of taxes that are generated by farms, ranches, forestry operations, agribusinesses,
00:56:15 they're paid at every level of government to really fund what we hope are the essential
00:56:20 services.
00:56:21 It is the food security that is provided that results in national security.
00:56:26 There's no more slipperier slope to national insecurity than food insecurity.
00:56:31 That's obvious to see when you look around the world today.
00:56:33 We are blessed as a nation because of our agriculture industry and the hardworking families
00:56:39 that are working in it.
00:56:40 But it's also with American agriculture being based on science and technology innovation,
00:56:45 it's about a better environment and a cleaner climate.
00:56:50 When you look at the data that shows that American agriculture, and that's livestock,
00:56:57 that's plants, that's trees, because trees are a crop, result in the sequestration of
00:57:04 6.1 gigatons of carbon annually, which is 10.1% more than what it generates.
00:57:11 There's no better climate champions in the world than the American farmer, farmer, rancher,
00:57:17 forester.
00:57:18 And so we have a lot to be proud of when it comes to this industry.
00:57:23 And again, there's not a dollar that has a better return on investment than one that
00:57:28 is invested in American agriculture within this Farm Bill.
00:57:34 Recoups tremendously just in terms of the number of jobs, economic activity, and the
00:57:40 taxes that are generated as a result of those entities.
00:57:45 Too often in Washington, the naysayers and the pundits drown out our progress on key
00:57:51 issues.
00:57:52 Not on the Agriculture Committee.
00:57:54 There really is time to iron out the details, mark up the Farm Bill, and get it across the
00:58:00 floor and have the Senate do their job next.
00:58:06 We have, there's 12 titles to this Farm Bill, there's a lot to it.
00:58:10 And we understand that.
00:58:11 It's, it's very diverse, because it's everything that has to do with, with agriculture and
00:58:16 quite frankly, rural America.
00:58:19 It's got the safety net program and as I've said, food security is national security.
00:58:23 And a strong commodity title ensures that Americans can continue to produce the safest,
00:58:29 most abundant and most affordable food supply in the world.
00:58:33 In recent years, farm income has been on the decline.
00:58:36 USDA's own data expects farm income to fall by $80 billion by the end of 2022 to the end
00:58:43 of 2024.
00:58:45 This is the greatest two year loss in the net farm income in history.
00:58:50 This Farm Bill can do something about that.
00:58:53 Persistent inflation and rising costs of production warrant new investments in safety, farm safety
00:58:58 net.
00:58:59 A robust Title I aids the American producer in managing the risk of low prices or declining
00:59:04 farm revenues.
00:59:06 On the research side, if we, American agriculture is science, technology and innovation, the
00:59:12 Farm Bill promotes science, technology and innovation, which are necessary for training
00:59:15 the next generation of agriculturalists.
00:59:19 It's necessary for keeping American agriculture at the forefront of productivity and maintaining
00:59:24 our competitive age, competitive edge with China.
00:59:29 It helps us deal with sometimes deteriorating weather conditions.
00:59:37 It helps us in areas where soil health is not the finest to being able to turn that
00:59:41 around.
00:59:43 It helps us to be able to produce more on less acreage, which is what the trend has
00:59:47 been.
00:59:48 Trade, incredibly important part of the Farm Bill as well.
00:59:52 And the Farm Bill trade programs have worked to build and maintain and expand markets for
00:59:57 American agricultural products around the world.
01:00:00 American producers not only feed, fuel and clothe our nation, but provide for consumers
01:00:05 around the world.
01:00:07 And the Biden administration's trade agenda or lack thereof has left America's producers
01:00:11 with their hands tied, unable to engage in free trade and pursue new or expanded markets.
01:00:17 And so this Farm Bill is an opportunity to bolster those markets.
01:00:20 You've heard about forestry tonight.
01:00:23 The livestock program we've heard about this evening.
01:00:26 You know, Mr. Speaker, there's just, I'm looking forward here, without a doubt, before
01:00:33 May of getting this, moving this Farm Bill out of the House Agriculture Committee.
01:00:39 And then we'll get it to the floor, and we'll get it to the Senate, and we'll get it to
01:00:43 the President's desk.
01:00:44 And so we appreciate your presiding this evening, Mr. Speaker, and yield back whatever time
01:00:50 might remain.
01:00:52 The gentleman yields back.
01:00:54 Does the gentleman have a motion?
01:00:56 Yes, I do, Mr. Speaker.
01:00:58 I move that the House do now adjourn.
01:01:00 The question is on the motion to adjourn.
01:01:02 Those in favor say yea.
01:01:05 Those opposed say no.
01:01:06 The yeas have it.
01:01:07 The motion is adopted.

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