Vermont
Dairy Farmers Win Key Proviso
For Extending And Expanding MILC Program
Also -- Long-Delayed Disaster
Aid Will Help Vt. Farmers With Flood Losses
WASHINGTON (Thursday, May 24) – In a high-stakes and
long-sought victory for Vermont’s dairy farmers, legislation needed to pave
the way for a full extension and expansion of the MILC program – the safety
net that helps dairy farmers ride out downturns in milk prices – is finally
on its way to becoming law.
The House and Senate Thursday were expected to pass a
mid-year supplemental appropriations bill that includes legislation backed
by the Vermont Congressional Delegation and authored by Sen. Patrick Leahy
(D) that will extend the funding baseline for the MILC program – a condition
for extending the program in the new Farm Bill now being drafted in
Congress. The President is expected to
sign the bill.
The MILC (Milk Income Loss Contract) provisions are
included in domestic appropriations that are part of a spending bill that
also includes funding for U.S. operations in Afghanistan and Iraq, Katrina
relief efforts and for other purposes. The members of the Vermont
Delegation – Leahy, Sen. Bernie Sanders (I) and Rep. Peter Welch (D) – voted
no on the overall package because benchmarks were weakened for removing U.S.
troops from Iraq.
The bill also includes about $3 billion in farm
disaster relief funds long awaited by farmers in Vermont and in other states
but which were blocked last year by the Republican-led Congress, and it also
sets aside another $16 million to help dairy farmers in Vermont and other
states.
The Leahy MILC legislation provides a 10-year baseline
that ensures mandatory funding for the MILC program and would lay the
groundwork for reauthorizing and expanding the program in this year’s Farm
Bill. Leahy, Sanders and Welch worked closely together to advance the
Senate's MILC provisions as part of their partnership in building a
coalition of support for extending and improving the MILC program in the
multi-year Farm Bill.
Leahy, a senior member of the Senate Appropriations
Committee which handled the bill, said, “This is the key to all else we will
do this year to keep the MILC program alive. We fought long odds to get
this done because we know how vital this safety net is to Vermont and
Vermont’s farmers.”
Sanders said, “Family dairy farmers in Vermont and across the country
are up against the wall. Because of arcane congressional budget rules, this
one-month extension of the MILC program will provide the funding we need
during the Farm Bill to create an even stronger safety net for our
hard-pressed dairy farmers. We still have a big fight ahead of us but this
is an extremely important step forward.”
Welch said, "Our farmers are hanging on by their
fingernails and we are committed to doing whatever we can to support the
future of Vermont farmers. This baseline extension represents major
progress, but Senator Leahy, Senator Sanders and I are in this fight for
Vermont agriculture for the long-haul."
Leahy, Sanders and Welch also said this bill likely was
the last chance to enact the farm disaster aid, which will help Vermont
farmers recover from last year’s flood losses. “This relief is overdue, but
it’s still needed,” said Leahy. “These are tough times for farmers, and our
job has been to find a way around the obstacles the White House has set on
farmers’ road to recovery.”
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