Vermont Field Hearing Set
For March 12 As Congress Gears Up
To Write The Next Farm Bill
ST. ALBANS, Vt.
(Saturday, Feb. 24) – One of the first congressional hearings setting
the stage for Congress’s rewrite of a new multi-year Farm Bill has been
set for March 12 in Vermont, at the request of Sen. Patrick Leahy (D).
The hearing, to begin
at 10 a.m. on Monday, March 12, in the House Chamber of the Vermont
State House in Montpelier, will be chaired by Leahy, the second-ranking
Democratic member of the Senate Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition, and
Forestry. The session will be an official hearing by the Senate
Agriculture Committee, and Leahy has invited Sen. Bernie Sanders (I) and
Rep. Peter Welch (D) to join him in hearing testimony at the State House
session.
Welch announced the
hearing on Saturday on behalf of the Vermont Congressional Delegation at
the 88th Annual Meeting of the St. Albans Cooperative
Creamery.
The current Farm Bill
expires this fall. Deliberations on the next Farm Bill began earlier
this month with an opening hearing in Washington by the Senate
Agriculture Committee, with Agriculture Secretary Mike Johanns.
Leahy said: “I
requested this committee field hearing to make sure there is an
opportunity to get detailed Vermont and Northeast priorities on several
Farm Bill provisions. Establishing a formal Agriculture Committee
hearing record is essential to winning the best dairy policy for Vermont
and the Northeast. In addition to dairy issues, we want to cover a
number of other areas important to Vermont agriculture early in the
process.”
Sanders said:
“Earlier this week, we had a wide-ranging informal listening session in
South Burlington, and now we will begin gathering official testimony to
build the record for meeting Vermont’s needs in the next Farm Bill. I
know that all of us in the Vermont Congressional Delegation are
committed to getting the very best deal possible for family dairy
farmers in Vermont and across the nation.”
Welch said: "Our
Vermont farmers deserve the strongest advocacy possible in Washington.
I am committed to working hard with Senator Leahy and Senator Sanders to
bring home the best dairy program possible in this year's farm bill. A
Vermont-based hearing on the Farm Bill is a great step toward helping us
assure an even stronger Vermont voice in this process."
The hearing will
include testimony from several panels of witnesses representing a broad
cross section of the Vermont agricultural community who will be invited
to provide information and perspective on issues of particular
importance to Vermont in the Farm Bill, including dairy policy,
conservation programs, forestry, organic agriculture, rural development,
and nutrition issues.
Leahy said the Senate
Agriculture Committee will leave the official hearing docket open after
the hearing for Vermonters to submit written or electronic testimony.
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