The Delaware Gazette

Deal reached for stopping spike in milk prices

ALAN FRAM

MARY CLARE JALONICK

Asso­ci­ated Press

WASHINGTON — 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.

AP News Posted by on Dec 30 2012. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS Feed. Comments can be made below.

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