November
7 , 2003
Contact:
Kara Flynn
(202) 347-3600, ext. 207
flynnk@nppc.org
Cellular: (202) 347-3600
SENATE PASSES MAJOR FARM BILL ROLL BACK IN EQIP PROGRAM
WASHINGTON,
D.C.—November 7, 2003—A provision to decrease the payment
limit for the Environmental Quality Incentives Program (EQIP) from $450,000
over ten years to $300,000, ties the hand of pork producers attempting
to implement costly new technologies to manage nutrients on their farms,
said National Pork Producers Council (NPPC) President Jon Caspers.
“NPPC
fought for the higher payment limit in the 2002 Farm Bill in order to
ensure that critical funds would be available for producers to comply
with federal, state and local environmental regulations,” said
Caspers, a pork producer from Swaledale, Iowa. “Congress’
decision to change the EQIP rules only a year and a half after the bill
was passed is a step in the wrong direction. If the Senate is truly
concerned about the environment, they are taking away the one tool that
will ultimately assist producers in improving their environmental performances.”
The
provision to decrease the payment limitation for EQIP was authored by
Sen. Charles Grasssley (R-Iowa) and included as part of S. 1427, the
FY’ 2004 Agriculture Appropriations bill.
“We’re
very disappointed that the Senate opened the 2002 Farm Bill and literally
no one opposed it,” Caspers said. “It makes you wonder if
farm commodity program payments are next on the chopping block. With
new regulations being implemented frequently at the state and federal
level, we are concerned that the continued existence of some pork producers
will be threatened. Timely access to EQIP and other U.S. Department
of Agriculture (USDA) environmental programs is of great assistance
in helping producers who are continually challenged on the regulatory
front.”
Congress will now take both versions of
the bill to a conference committee to reconcile differences before final
passage. NPPC will work to strip this provision out of the final bill
during Conference negotiations.
The
National Pork Producers Council (NPPC) is one of the nation’s
largest livestock
commodity organizations. It has producer members in 44 affiliated state
associations and provides a unified voice for America’s pork producers
on a wide range of industry and public policy issues. NPPC’s website
is at www.nppc.org.