FARMERS CALLING FOR A FARM BILL NOW

Sep 14, 2012  |  Today's News

More than 90 farm groups have signed on to support ‘Farm Bill Now,’ a message that requires members of the U.S. House of Representatives to get down to the business of taking care of the 2012 Farm Bill. Illinois corn farmers, along with farmers everywhere, are doing their work. It’s too bad that Congress can’t get their work done, too.

A website has been created to provide information on this issue. Find out more at www.farmbillnow.com. Look for further communications from the Illinois Corn Growers Association on this issue as it may become important for a united message of calls from the combine to Congress.

From the www.farmbillnow website: “Calling the farm bill the ‘farm bill’ suggests its impact is limited only to farms and to the rural areas to which they are so closely tied. It’s really a jobs bill. A food bill. A conservation bill. A research bill. An energy bill. A trade bill. In other words, it’s a bill that affects every American.

The farm bill affects our nation’s ability to provide the necessities of life for a global population projected to pass 9 billion by 2050. Here at home, it affects an industry that provides 23 million—or 1 in every 12—American jobs.

The farm bill has broad impact on our citizens and our economy. It provides healthy foods to millions of schoolchildren and nutritious options to families in need. It develops and expands trade with valuable foreign markets. By reducing spending significantly compared to prior farm bills, the proposals pending right now in Congress address the need to get our nation’s fiscal house in order.

And yes, it benefits American farms—98 percent of which are owned and operated by families. It helps big farms and small farms, major crops and specialty crops, organic farmers and conventional farmers, cattle ranchers and cotton ginners, farmers markets and national suppliers, and the vast range of other pursuits that make up American agriculture. This year, it would help farmers tackle the challenges posed by the worst drought in a generation.

While Congress waits to finish the farm bill, we are united in asking all Americans to encourage legislators—home for summer town hall meetings and speeches—to finish this vital legislation before the current farm and food law expires in September. After all, it’s your bill too.”