Chuck Abbott of the Food & Environment Reporting Network has a trio of new articles this week about agricultural issues. Here's a short summary of each:
Former Iowa governor Tom Vilsack, confirmed in a landslide Senate vote Tuesday for his second stint as agriculture secretary, is coming out of the gate with a "blockbuster" to-do list, Abbott writes in the first article.
Vilsack, who will be the Biden administration's chief link to rural America, "has a panoramic approach to farm prosperity and rural economic development as a cabinet secretary with initiatives that include biofuels and broadband access," Abbott writes. "He also argues that Democrats, for lasting political success, need to be more active in rural areas and find areas of agreement with rural voters, who are heavily Republican. The rural vote was instrumental in Donald Trump’s election as president in 2016."
The Agriculture Department aims to further Biden's goal to make U.S. agriculture the first in the world to achieve net-zero greenhouse-gas emissions through initiatives such as paying farmers to conserve land and plant cover crops. Vilsack said in his Feb. 2 Senate committee confirmation hearing that he believes farmers are "prepared" and "anxious" to adopt greener practices as long as they're voluntary, market-based, and incentive-based, Abbott reports.
Abbott's second piece explores farmers' views on eco-friendly farming practices, as reported by ag leaders at the USDA's Agricultural Outlook Forum last week. Zippy Duvall, president of the American Farm Bureau Federation, the nation's largest farming group, said that farmers expect to be paid for climate-change initiatives but not if they take money from traditional crop subsidies.
Chuck Connor, president of the National Council of Farmer Cooperatives and a former USDA deputy secretary, agreed: "You cannot do climate on the backs of the American farmer . . . They just simply don’t have the resources for that." Abbott notes that "farm country opposition was a prominent factor in the defeat a decade ago of a cap-and-trade program to combat climate change."unintended impacts." They also questioned whether disadvantaged farmers' financial woes were pandemic-related. Rep. Trent Kelly of Mississippi called it reverse discrimination.
"The relief plan also allots $1 billion for land access, 'heirs property' issues and legal aid for socially disadvantaged farmers," Abbott reports.
from The Rural Blog https://ift.tt/2P0inbe Chuck Abbott covers Vilsack's to-do list, climate-change farm subsidies, and minority farmer debt relief - Entrepreneur Generations
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