Leahy, Sanders And Welch Slam Bush Administration
For Targeting MILC Program
In White House’s New Veto Threat To The Farm Bill
WASHINGTON (Friday, Nov. 9) – The
three members of the Vermont Congressional Delegation -- Sen.
Patrick Leahy (D), Sen. Bernie Sanders (I) and Rep. Peter Welch
(D) -- are pushing back against a new Bush Administration veto
threat against expansion of the MILC program, the basic safety
net for dairy farmers when prices plummet. The Administration
included its objections to expanding the MILC program in a new
veto warning message lodged this week against the Senate’s
version of the Farm Bill.
The Senate began debating a new
five-year Farm Bill this week and continues work on the bill
next week. The Bush Administration’s new “Statement of
Administration Policy” (SAP) on the Senate’s Farm Bill includes
the following objections to the MILC program provisions in the
Senate bill: “The bill also increases the payment rate for the
Milk Income Loss Contract (MILC) program and increases the
quantity of milk that is eligible to receive MILC payments.
These increases likewise do not signify reform, result in more
market distorting policy, and increase government costs.”
Leahy, the Senate Agriculture
Committee member with the most seniority and a former chairman
of the panel, authored and included the extension and expansion
of the MILC program in the Senate’s Farm Bill. Sanders and
Welch have worked with Leahy in forging bipartisan Senate and
House coalitions in support of extending the MILC program. The
House-passed version of the Farm Bill includes an extension but
not also an expansion of the MILC program.
Leahy said, “The Bush
Administration is not letting up in their assault on dairy
farmers,” said Leahy. “They opposed our Dairy Compact, and they
have dug in their heels about strengthening the MILC program.
Dairy farmers are only a market cycle away from hard times that
can drive them off the land and out of business. It is
unconscionable that President Bush now wants to undercut the
safety net that stands between dairy farmers and ruinous
downturns in their hard-earned income.”
Sanders said, “Once again, the
White House is putting its far-right ideology ahead of the needs
of the country. In this case, the President’s irresponsible
promised veto will hurt family farmers, hungry children, and the
environment. While this Farm Bill is not everything that I
would want, it makes needed improvements in our nutrition
programs, extends and improves the MILC program that is so
important to family dairy farmers, and it puts additional
emphasis on conservation and renewable biofuels. Americans said
very clearly last November that they want change. President
Bush should honor the wishes of the American people and withdraw
his veto threat. The Bush Administration seems to have no
trouble finding money to pay for the war in Iraq and tax cuts
for the wealthy, but somehow there's just not enough money for
hungry children.”
Welch said, “The
President is once again demonstrating his reckless and
out-of-touch priorities. We are working hard to assure fairer
milk prices, cut commodity payments for wealthy Western farmers,
support farm-to-school programs, and fund food stamps.
President Bush is yet again a roadblock to progress.”
The 2007 Senate Farm Bill would extend the MILC program for the
life of the bill, 2008 to 2012, while expanding the program in
two ways that are especially important to Vermont dairy
producers. Leahy made this possible earlier this year by
pushing through a funding baseline for an extension of the MILC
program. The Senate Farm Bill would raise the payment
percentage under the program, and it would expand program
eligibility to fully cover about 90 percent of dairy farmers.
The bill also includes a wide variety of other Vermont
priorities, including more support for farmers who want to make
the transition to organic production, added help for the cleanup
of Lake Champlain through conservation assistance partnerships
with farmers, and more resources for anti-hunger programs like
the Vermont Food Bank.
A summary of Vermont highlights in
the Senate Farm Bill is available on the Leahy website at:
http://leahy.senate.gov/press/200710/102407a.html