Emergency Dairy
Aid Approved by Congress
WASHINGTON, October 8 – By a vote of 76 to 22, the
Senate today passed and sent to President Obama legislation to provide
$350 million in emergency assistance for hard-pressed dairy farmers. The
House last night approved the same $121 billion agriculture spending
bill for the 2010 budget year.
The bill includes $290 million for direct support to
dairy farmers using guidelines to be determined by Agriculture Secretary
Tom Vilsack under an expedited process. Another $60 million would
be used to purchase cheese and other dairy products for food banks and
nutrition programs, spurring prices for raw dairy products by drawing
down supplies of the commodity.
“I am glad the bill was approved. My hope now is
that Secretary Vilsack will move as rapidly as possible and get support
out to dairy farmers who are in desperate need,” said Sen. Bernie
Sanders (I-Vt.). Sanders sponsored the amendment in the Senate tacking
the dairy funds onto the Department of Agriculture appropriations bill.
Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) is a senior member of the
Senate Appropriations Committee which handled the Senate’s work on the
bill. He said, “This is another timely lifeline for dairy farmers who
are struggling just to stay afloat through this crisis. These
direct payments are a fast and efficient way to deliver help right to
the farm. Right now another day of dairy farming means another day
of losses, and we need both short-term and long-term solutions to break
these vicious downward price spirals. Secretary Vilsack knows what
dairy farmers are going through, and I expect that USDA will move
promptly to put these emergency funds from the Sanders Amendment to
use.”
Rep. Peter Welch (D-Vt.), cochairman of the
Congressional Dairy Farmers Caucus, said, “Vermont’s dairy farmers need
assistance, and they need it now. I’m relieved that Congress has acted
to provide this critical funding, and I’m hopeful that Secretary Vilsack
will act swiftly to ensure it reaches Vermont farmers soon. While this
emergency assistance will not solve the long-term problems the industry
faces, it will provide much-needed temporary support to these
hardworking, dedicated members of our community.”
The average price farmers received for their milk fell
this year to $11.30 per hundredweight, down from $19.30 in July 2008.
It costs farmers at least $18 per hundredweight to produce milk. As
prices plunged, family dairy farms in Vermont and around the country
went out of business.
Dairy farmers got a temporary boost from the
Agriculture Department last July 31 when Secretary Vilsack – after
meeting with the senators from Vermont and other dairy states – approved
a three-month price hike that was expected to increase farmers’
revenue nationwide by $243 million.
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