President Signs Major Jobs Bill; Legislation Makes Landmark Reforms in Agriculture Policy, Saves $23 Billion
East Lansing, MI – President Barack Obama today signed into law the bipartisan 2014 Farm Bill at a special signing ceremony on Michigan State University’s campus. The president joined Sen. Debbie Stabenow (D-MI), the farm bill’s lead Senate author and Chairwoman of the U.S. Senate Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition and Forestry for the ceremony. Farmers, conservations leaders, and local food advocates were also on hand. The legislation represents rare bipartisan agreement that will help to create jobs and grow the agriculture economy. The bill reduces the deficit by $23 billion and represents the most significant reform of American agriculture policy in decades.
Michigan State University is America’s first land grant college and one of the nation’s leading agricultural research institutions.
“Michigan State is America’s first land grant college and one of the leading agricultural research institutions in the nation, so it’s only fitting that the President would sign this landmark legislation at MSU,” Chairwoman Stabenow said. “This is not your father’s Farm Bill. This bill represents a new direction for American agriculture policy, reforming agriculture programs to reduce spending by $23 billion. The bill makes historic investments in land and water conservation, increases options for local and healthy foods, and protects food assistance for families who need help. This bill touches every American in every part of the country – from the food we eat, to the water we drink and the air we breathe.”
The Farm Bill, formally entitled the Agricultural Act of 2014, reforms food and agricultural policy by eliminating direct payments and other subsidy programs that pay farmers every year whether they need it or not. The bill instead provides responsible risk management tools that support farmers only when there is need, such as a weather disaster. This transformation provides the bulk of the Farm Bill’s deficit reduction. The Farm Bill also streamlines and consolidates programs to end duplication and make programs more efficient. These reforms allow for the strengthening of key initiatives that help farmers and small businesses reach new markets and create American jobs.
The bill protects food assistance for families who need temporary help putting food on the table. The farm bill reduces food stamp spending by a total of roughly 1% solely by addressing fraud and misuse. Changes to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) do not remove anyone from the program and ensures that every person receives the benefits they are intended to get under the current rules of the program.
The bill makes historic investments in conservation, bioenergy production, research, local and healthy food initiatives, organics and maintains critical food assistance for families in need. A broad coalition of stakeholders has endorsed the bill (click here to see a list), including farm organizations, conservation and environmental groups, sportsmen, forestry groups, seniors coalitions, church organizations, international food aid advocates, nutrition and hunger leaders, clean energy organizations, rural development leaders and veterans advocates, among others.
Overview of the Agricultural Act of 2014
Enacting the Agricultural Act of 2014 will reform agriculture programs, reduce the deficit, and help farmers, ranchers and business owners grow the economy. The legislation:
Ends Direct Payments, Strengthens Risk Management
The Agricultural Act of 2014 reforms farm programs and saves taxpayer dollars by ending direct payments and other farm programs. The bill provides risk management tools that help American farmers and ranchers survive weather disasters and market volatility. The bipartisan agreement cuts farm program spending by $23.3 billion.
The bill also strengthens crop insurance, which is an essential cost-effective risk management tool. With crop insurance, farmers invest in their own risk management by purchasing insurance policies so they are protected in difficult times. Crop insurance also helps protect Americans from spikes in food prices. Without crop insurance farmers would have no way to recover from disaster unless the government steps in and provides unplanned disaster assistance. The effectiveness of crop insurance was underscored during the historic droughts of 2012, which impacted more than 80% of the country. Crop insurance protected farmers without the need for an emergency disaster relief bill.
Additionally, the bill provides a permanent livestock disaster assistance program for producers affected by natural disasters, and also covers producers who were affected by recent droughts, winter storms that hit the Northern Plains last year, and spring freezes that affected fruit growers in the Midwest.
Streamlines Programs, Strengthens Conservation
The Agricultural Act of 2014 consolidates 23 existing conservation programs into 13 programs while strengthening tools to protect and conserve land, water and wildlife. By streamlining programs, the farm bill provides added flexibility and ensures conservation programs are working for producers in the most effective and efficient way – an approach supported by nearly 650 conservation organizations from all 50 states. These reforms increase resources for top priorities while reducing the deficit by $6 billion.
Protects SNAP for Families, Reduces Fraud and Misuse
The bipartisan farm bill conference agreement maintains critical assistance for families while stopping fraud and misuse to achieve savings in the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP). The farm bill agreement closes a loophole being used by some states to artificially inflate benefits for a small number of recipients. Additionally, the bipartisan agreement stops lottery winners from continuing to receive assistance, increases program efficiency, cracks down on trafficking, fraud and misuse, and invests in new pilot programs to help people secure employment through job training and other services. CBO estimates this section of the bill will save $8 billion. Savings in this section are reached without removing anyone from the SNAP program, and will ensure that every person receives the benefits they are intended to get under the current rules of the program.
Grows the Agricultural Economy
The Agricultural Act of 2014 reduces the deficit while strengthening top priorities that help to grow the agricultural economy. The bill:
The Farm Bill makes investments in key priorities that help protect famers from disaster and help create agriculture jobs – including strengthened risk management programs like crop insurance, bio-energy production, bolstering research, expanding fruit and vegetable programs. These investments total $14.2 billion.
With all spending cuts and investments, the 2014 Farm Bill reduces the deficit by a net total of $23 billion.
For more information, and a summary of the Agricultural Act of 2014, please visit the Senate Agriculture Committee’s website at http://www.ag.senate.gov/issues/farm-bill.