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boutons_deux
07-19-2012, 08:43 AM
Here are seven ways the House farm bill slams the middle class:

1) The bill’s cuts to nutrition assistance will cost us jobs. A Center for American Progress report shows that every $1 billion cut in the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program costs our economy nearly 14,000 jobs. With $1.3 billion in cuts in the first year alone, the bill’s cuts to nutrition aid would cost our economy 19,000 jobs in 2014.

2) The bill will increase poverty by kicking more than 2 million struggling Americans off of food assistance. In 2011 the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program kept more than 4 million Americans out of poverty and lessened the extent of poverty for millions more. The average amount of supplemental nutrition assistance is just $1.50 per person per meal, but this sustenance keeps many families on the edge from falling into poverty.

3) The bill’s cuts in nutrition aid will undermine long-term economic growth. Hunger is expensive. In fact, in 2010 hunger cost the U.S. economy more than $167 billion from lower educational outcomes, lost worker productivity, increased health care expenses, and other associated costs. By eliminating 1 billion meals for struggling families in the first year of nutrition cuts alone, the House farm bill will likely increase hunger and hardship and cost our economy billions in the long term—a consequence that affects all of us.

4) The bill cuts school lunches from poor kids to pay for an expensive new entitlement for agribusiness. The House farm bill spends $9.5 billion to create an expensive new crop insurance program primarily benefiting large agribusiness while cutting more than 280,000 children off of automatic access to free school lunches. These same kids would also lose the supplemental nutrition assistance that feeds them at home.

5) The bill cuts off pathways to the middle class by kicking families off of food aid if they accrue minimal savings to pull themselves out of poverty. The bill eliminates a provision known as categorical eligibility that gives states the flexibility to waive stringent asset tests for families eligible for nutrition assistance. These savings can allow a family to put away money for car repairs so they can get to work, for tuition to train for a better job, or simply to make it through a rainy day or a family crisis. Rather than rewarding families for striving to provide a better life for their kids, requiring asset tests penalizes families for efforts to pull themselves out of poverty and creates more administrative paperwork for state governments.

6) The bill cuts $90 a month from 500,000 households struggling to make ends meet.Both the House and Senate versions of the farm bill eliminate a provision known as heat and eat, which helps households with high utility bills avoid impossible choices between putting food on the table or paying their heating or cooling bills. Eighty-four percent of all supplemental nutrition assistance goes to a household with a child, senior, or person with a disability, so these cuts would have a disproportionate impact on vulnerable populations.

7) The bill deprives family farmers and small businesses of assistance to help them save money by using energy more efficiently and to diversify their income via clean energy investments. The bill would halt mandatory funding for the Rural Energy for America program, which invests in the development of advanced biofuels, farmer-owned wind facilities, and other clean energy programs (Title IX, Sections 9002-9013). This program has created or saved 23,000 jobs since its inception and attracts $4 in private investment for every $1 of government help. These vital rural energy programs have not been funded without mandatory authority.

In short, the House farm bill will cost us jobs, undermine long-term economic growth, increase poverty, and exacerbate child hunger. Congress should reject these and all cuts to nutrition aid and pass a farm bill that strengthens America’s middle class.


http://www.americanprogress.org/issues/2012/07/farm_bill_hurts.html

This a perfect example of how Repugs misgovern.

boutons_deux
07-19-2012, 09:55 AM
Agribusiness Sneaks Deregulation Of Genetically Modified Foods Into Farm Bill

Buried in the House Farm Bill, approved by the House Agriculture Committee on Friday, is the agribusiness industry’s latest attempt to shed regulations restricting new genetically engineered (GE) crops. While the bill’s massive food stamps cuts elicited widespread outcry, the industry quietly inserted provisions to rush new crops onto the market after only a cursory review of their safety.

Three sections (10011, 10013, and 10014) tucked into the middle of the bulky bill work together to eliminate any real review of GE crops. This “Monsanto Rider” got its name from the corporation with a choke-hold on most of the country’s staple crops; Monsanto owns the patents to genetically engineered strains of soybean, corn, sugar beet and cotton, to name a few, as well as many controversial chemical herbicides. Here are some of the rider’s most egregious game-changers:

Environmental law does not apply. Review of GE crop impacts under the National Environmental Policy Act, Endangered Species Act, or any other environmental law is outlawed. Monsanto has particular beef with NEPA; in 2010 a federal court forced the USDA to conduct a study of Monsanto’s “Round-up Ready” alfalfa, which banned farmers from planting or selling the crop for four years. The USDA eventually approved the crop, even after finding that “gene flow” between GM and non-GM alfalfa is “probable,” threatening organic dairy producers and other users of non-GMO alfalfa, and that there is strong potential for the creation of Roundup-resistant “superweeds” that require ever-higher doses of toxic herbicides.
No outside scrutiny allowed. The bill makes the USDA the sole authority on GE crops, immunizing applications from review by other federal agencies or outside groups. Furthermore, the USDA is not allowed to accept money to fund a study from anyone who petitions for additional analysis — even if a judge orders one.
Impossible deadlines. While the USDA has never denied a single application for GE crop approval, the industry is making sure that they never will. Currently, new crops can at least be slowed down by lengthy environmental studies and expert review. But the House Farm Bill forces the USDA to approve or deny any application within one year (with an optional extension of 180 days).
Approval time bombs. If the USDA fails to meet the deadline, the crop gets automatically approved for commercialization, entirely skipping the review process.

Monsanto paid well for these radical additions. OpenSecrets.org reported that in the first three months of this year, the corporation spent $1.4 million lobbying Washington. Last year, Monsanto spent about $6.3 million total, more than any other agribusiness firm except the tobacco company Altria. Even if the Farm Bill provisions are killed in the Senate, another “Monsanto Rider” was already inserted into the FY 2013 Agriculture Appropriations bill. The company also recently took its aspirations across borders to Mexico, where political pressure has pushed the government to give Monsanto’s genetically modified corn a planting permit.

http://thinkprogress.org/health/2012/07/16/519351/agribusiness-sneaks-deregulation-of-genetically-modified-foods-into-farm-bill/

Monsanto and Dupont making cartelistic moves essentially to rent almost of tainted, toxic food production and x-icides.

But USA is a nation of rentiers anyway :lol

boutons_deux
07-19-2012, 09:55 AM
...

TeyshaBlue
07-19-2012, 11:41 AM
This a perfect example of how Repugs misgovern.

:lmao
http://www.politico.com/blogs/on-congress/2012/07/lawmakers-press-house-leaders-on-farm-bill-129450.html

More than 60 House lawmakers from both parties are urging leaders to promptly bring the farm bill to the floor.

The letter is aimed at pressuring House Republican leaders, who so far have hesitated to schedule the 600-page legislation that sets the nation's agriculture policy and is critical for lawmakers from rural districts.

"We need to continue to tell the American success story of agriculture and work to ensure we have strong policies in place so that producers can continue to provide an abundant, affordable and safe food supply," wrote Reps. Kristi Noem (R-S.D.) and Peter Welch (D-Vt.) in the letter.

The coalition of signers is as bipartisan as it gets in this Congress: 38 Republicans and 24 Democrats. One is Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers (R-Wash.), a member of House Republican leadership. The missive was addressed to Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio), House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.), House Majority Leader Eric Cantor (R-Va.) and House Minority Whip Steny Hoyer (D-Md.).

boutons_deux
07-19-2012, 12:04 PM
The bill is written by Repugs (their lobbyists) and won't get passed if the Repugs don't vote for it.

Wild Cobra
07-19-2012, 12:14 PM
The bill is written by Repugs (their lobbyists) and won't get passed if the Repugs don't vote for it.
It won't be law of it doesn't pass the democrat controlled senate or if yOmama vetoes it either.

Grow up ShazBot.

TeyshaBlue
07-19-2012, 12:26 PM
The bill is written by Repugs (their lobbyists) and won't get passed if the Repugs don't vote for it.
Or if the Dems don't vote for it. :rolleyes

It's Chairwoman Stabenow's (D-MI) baby. :lol

Wild Cobra
07-19-2012, 12:29 PM
It's Chairwoman Stabenow's (D-MI) baby. :lol
LOL...

ShazBot...

vWB3czWRN1Q

boutons_deux
07-19-2012, 02:10 PM
Special Interests Spent $173.5 Million On The 2008 Farm Bill

Food & Water Watch, a food safety non-profit, estimates that special interests including agribusinesses, commodity groups, and food manufacturers spent $173.5 million on the 2008 Farm Bill — more than $500,000 a day during the 110th Congress. This vast sum makes the 2008 Farm Bill one of the decade’s most well-financed legislative fights, more than health care reform ($120 million by the Center for Public Integrity’s estimate) and just short of the Dodd-Frank financial reforms ($250 million, according to the Center for Responsive Politics).

According to the report, many of the lobbyists were former politicians:

Special interests hired an army of well-connected lobbyists to press their case with Congress, including 45 former members of Congress, at least 461 former congressional and executive branch staffers (including 86 that worked for former agriculture committee members or the U.S. Department of Agriculture) and a host of K Street firms.

The former House Agriculture Committee Chairman and Ranking Members that oversaw the 2002 Farm Bill, Larry Combest (R-Texas) and Charlie Stenholm (D-Texas), each received more than $1 million in fees to lobby on the Farm Bill. In 2007, nine of the top 10 Washington firms lobbied on the Farm Bill including Patton Boggs, Akin Gump and Barbour Griffith & Rogers.

Far from being limited to agriculture and trade groups, Wall Street also got in on the spending frenzy, dropping $10.8 million on commodity futures trading rules. Energy interests topped that sum, with $23 million from the fossil fuel, ethanol and biodiesel industries.

While half the money was spent on core farm policies, much of it went to inserting a slew of sweet deals into the bill. For instance, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Kentucky) inserted a tax break for thoroughbred racehorses estimated to cost $126 million over a decade after the National Thoroughbred Racing Association and Churchill Downs spent $136,000 on lobbying.

Since the drafting of the 2012 Farm Bill started, the money flow has only intensified. According to CQ’s First Street database, 1,063 organizations reported to be lobbying on the farm bill from the beginning of 2011 through the first quarter of 2012, on track to surpass the 1,200 groups that lobbied in 2008 by the end of the year.

http://thinkprogress.org/economy/2012/07/19/548691/special-interests-2008-farm-bill/

boutons_deux
07-20-2012, 05:49 AM
How The House Farm Bill Guts Important Food Safety Protections

[T]he amendment would “prohibit any state or local government” from “impos[ing] a standard or condition on the production or manufacture of any agricultural product sold or offered for sale in interstate commerce” if 1) production of the agricultural product also occurs in another state; and 2) the standard is in addition to the production or manufacture to federal law and the laws of the state is which such production occurs.” This impenetrable language simply means that states would be prevented from regulating just about any agricultural product in commerce – contrary to the well-grounded constitutional principles of state police power to protect the health and safety of its citizens within the state.

http://thinkprogress.org/economy/2012/07/16/519461/house-farm-bill-guts-food-safety/

Corporate-American profit trumps Human-American health, always.