Weekly Update from the Texas Seed Trade Association | |
The Texas Seed Trade Association welcomes its newest member PureSeed represented in Texas by Alexandra Stepanova.
Pure Seed is a wholesale company selling warm and cool season turfgrass and forages developed by Pure-Seed Testing. From the development of the varieties, to the grower who produces the seed, to the coating, packaging and shipping of the seed, Pure Seed is a fully integrated family ran business based in the heart of Oregon's Willamette Valley.
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FARM BILL IS NOT ONE OF THE SENATE'S PRIORITIES
POLITICO reports:
Iowa Republican Sen. Chuck Grassley suggested that Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer could make the farm bill a top priority "to do between now and the summer," but warned such a move is "not likely to happen."
On Friday, Schumer appeared to tip his hand by making no mention of the farm bill in a "dear colleague" letter laying out the Senate's top priorities for the weeks and months ahead.
In the letter, Schumer laid out a series of bills the Senate will try to advance in the coming months.
According to Schumer, the upper chamber will take action on "bipartisan bills that enhance our national security, advance online safety for kids and promote innovation, expand the Child Tax Credit, work on a path forward on Tik Tok legislation, combat the fentanyl crisis, hold failed bank executives accountable, address rail safety, ensure internet affordability, safeguard cannabis banking, outcompete the Chinese government, lower the cost of prescription drugs like insulin while expanding access to health care, and more."
Conspicuously absent was any mention of the farm bill.
What's the holdup? In short, the farm bill has repeatedly been pushed to the backburner as Congress has struggled to function smoothly. Government funding talks dragged on for six extra months, the House was derailed for weeks after it deposed its Speaker and Congress has given greater priority to other stalled legislation, like foreign aid bills to help Ukraine repel Russia's invasion and replenish military aid for Israel.
The farm bill, meanwhile, has not been considered at the committee level despite a marathon of hearings in both the House and Senate. Behind the delay is a drawn-out funding battle. The farm bill's budget is flat -- meaning there is no additional money at the committee's disposal.
To add additional funds, lawmakers are hoping to roll about $15 billion worth of Inflation Reduction Act funding for climate-smart agriculture into the farm bill baseline, making it permanent and removing the deadlines for spending it. But Republicans want to loosen climate-smart restrictions on the money, allowing it to be used for a broader set of practices. In the House, Republicans want to reallocate some of the funds to the farm safety net programs that assist farmers in the event of an economic downturn.
Democrats so far have rebuffed both proposals, insisting that climate-related guardrails on the IRA funds must remain intact. That's left both sides in a stalemate that shows no sign of resolving anytime soon.
The current extension to the 2018 farm bill will expire on Sept. 30.
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FARMERS FILE SUIT AGAINST USDA, CHALLENGE CONSTITUTIONALITY OF PAYMENTS BASED ON RACE AND SEX
Source: Southeastern Legal Foundation
AMARILLO, TX -- On behalf of Texas farmers, Southeastern Legal Foundation (SLF), together with Mountain States Legal Foundation (MSLF), filed a motion for preliminary injunction in federal court to stop the Biden Administration Department of Agriculture (USDA) from unconstitutionally and unlawfully funneling disaster and pandemic relief funds to certain farmers based on race and sex.
Farming is a difficult livelihood. One of the biggest hurdles farmers face is challenging weather conditions that are out of their control, so Congress frequently provides relief to hard-hit producers and regions. Since 2020, Congress has provided over $25 billion in emergency disaster and pandemic relief funds to USDA to distribute to farmers.
But rather than help farmers like Plaintiffs Alan and Amy West, Bryan Baker, and Rusty Strickland--who have owned their family farms for decades and have suffered from the effects of droughts and the COVID-19 pandemic--USDA is harming them by favoring other producers at their expense based on factors including race and sex that were not authorized by Congress.
USDA provides more relief money to "socially disadvantaged" farmers, which includes women, American Indians or Alaskan Natives, Asians or Asian-Americans, blacks or African-Americans, Hispanics or Hispanic-Americans, and Native Hawaiians or other Pacific Islanders.
In short, farmers who fail to meet the "socially disadvantaged" criteria--including Plaintiffs--received far less assistance for their losses than if they were of a different race or sex. Such discrimination violates basic equal protection principles enshrined in the Constitution. USDA is acting unlawfully and without congressional authorization. If Congress wanted an executive agency to distribute funds in such an arbitrary and discriminatory way, it would have said so clearly.
On behalf of farmers Rusty Strickland, Alan and Amy West and their farm, and Bryan Baker and his farm, SLF and MSLF are suing USDA for violating the Fifth Amendment Equal Protection Clause and the Administrative Procedure Act. SLF and MSLF are representing these farmers free of charge.
SLF Executive Director Kimberly Hermann states, "On the day President Biden took office, he declared that his administration would adopt a 'whole-of-government equity agenda.' Equality is a constitutional mandate which does not permit intentional discrimination, but equity relies on racial classifications to achieve outcomes across racial categories. USDA is attempting to control outcomes with intentional discrimination, but this cannot stand under our laws."
SLF Vice President of Litigation Braden Boucek states, "USDA is just one of several agencies under the Biden Administration acting as though it can act independently of Congress. The American people, through Congress, trusted USDA to help victimized farmers with disaster relief, not hurt them further by discriminating based on race and sex. The Constitution exists to curb the power of runaway bureaucracies. We are holding USDA accountable in court and will not rest until constitutional balance is restored."
Editor's Note: We've made many references over the last several years of the astonishing amount of money being made available to the ag sector by USDA representing new spending by the current administration. Using your money to attempt to solidify a voting base is not new, nor was in it invented by the Biden administration, but it does seem to have been taken to new heights lately.
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The articles, views, and opinions expressed in the Weekly Update do not necessarily reflect the policies of the Texas Seed Trade Association or the opinions of its members. | | | | |