Morrow County Sentinel.com

Deal reached for stopping spike in milk prices

12.30.12 — WASHINGTON (AP) — The top lead­ers in both par­ties on the House and Sen­ate Agri­cul­ture com­mit­tees have agreed to a one-year exten­sion of the 2008 farm bill that expired in Octo­ber, a move that could head off a pos­si­ble dou­bling of milk prices next month.

Sen­ate Agri­cul­ture Com­mit­tee Chair­man Deb­bie Stabenow indi­cated that the House could vote on the exten­sion as early as Sun­day evening, though House lead­ers have not yet agreed to put it on the floor. In addi­tion to the one-year exten­sion that has the back­ing of the com­mit­tees, the House GOP is also con­sid­er­ing two other exten­sion bills — a one-month exten­sion and an even smaller bill that would sim­ply extend dairy pol­icy that expires Jan. 1.

Expi­ra­tion of those dairy pro­grams could mean higher prices at the gro­cery store within a few weeks. Agri­cul­ture Sec­re­tary Tom Vil­sack said Amer­i­cans face the prospect of pay­ing $7 for a gal­lon of milk if the cur­rent dairy pro­gram lapsed and the gov­ern­ment returned to a 1948 for­mula for cal­cu­lat­ing milk price supports.

A spokesman for House Speaker John Boehner said Sun­day after­noon that Repub­li­can lead­ers had not decided how they would pro­ceed on the farm exten­sion. Boehner has pushed back on pas­sage of a new five-year farm bill for months, say­ing there were not enough votes to bring it to the House floor after the House Agri­cul­ture Com­mit­tee approved it in July. The Sen­ate passed its ver­sion of a farm bill in June.

The prospect of the higher milk prices has moti­vated some action. The bipar­ti­san exten­sion also includes dis­as­ter assis­tance to farm­ers affected by a lin­ger­ing drought this year, along with exten­sions to other farm pro­grams that expired in October.

Instead of just extend­ing cur­rent dairy pol­icy, the exten­sion bill includes an over­haul of dairy pro­grams that was in both the Sen­ate and House com­mit­tee bills. The new dairy pro­grams include a new, vol­un­tary insur­ance pro­gram for dairy pro­duc­ers. Those who choose that new pro­gram would also have to par­tic­i­pate in a mar­ket sta­bi­liza­tion pro­gram that could dic­tate pro­duc­tion cuts when over­sup­ply dri­ves down prices — an idea that hasn’t gone over well with Boehner.

In July, he called the cur­rent dairy pro­gram “Soviet-style” and said the new pro­gram would make it even worse. Large food com­pa­nies that process and use dairy prod­ucts have backed Boehner, say­ing the pro­gram could limit milk sup­plies and increase their costs.

Stabenow blamed Boehner for get­ting to the point where an exten­sion is the only option. “The lack of action by the House Repub­li­can lead­er­ship has put us in a sit­u­a­tion where we risk seri­ous dam­age to our econ­omy unless we pass a tem­po­rary exten­sion,” she said.

One of the rea­sons Boehner has balked at bring­ing up a farm bill is dis­agree­ment in his cau­cus over how much money should be cut from food stamps, which make up roughly 80 per­cent of the half-trillion-dollar bill’s cost over five years. House Agri­cul­ture Chair­man Frank Lucas, R-Okla., has unsuc­cess­fully pushed his lead­er­ship for months to move on the leg­is­la­tion despite the dis­agree­ment over food aid.

On Sun­day, Lucas said he hoped the exten­sion would pass both cham­bers quickly as GOP lead­er­ship mulled their options.

It is not per­fect, no com­pro­mise ever is, but it is my sin­cere hope that it will pass the House and Sen­ate and be signed by the pres­i­dent by Jan­u­ary 1,” he said.

Randa Wagner Posted by on Dec 30 2012. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS Feed. Both comments and pings are currently closed.

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