President Obama
Signs Aid for Dairy Farmers
WASHINGTON, October 21 – President Barack Obama today
signed legislation to provide $350 million in emergency assistance for
hard-pressed dairy farmers.
Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) sponsored an amendment
that added the dairy funds to the Department of Agriculture
appropriations bill. He joined the president at the White House for the
Oval Office bill-signing ceremony.
The measure provides $290 million for direct support
to dairy farmers. Another $60 million will be used to purchase
cheese and other dairy products for food banks and nutrition programs.
Sanders and Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) and Rep. Peter
Welch (D-Vt.) said additional measures are needed to bring price
stability to the dairy industry and to help preserve family farms.
“Dairy farmers are in desperate need. We must help
them as soon as possible,” said Sanders.
Leahy, a senior member of the Senate Appropriations
Committee, called the bill “another timely lifeline for dairy farmers
who are struggling just to stay afloat through this crisis.”
Rep. Peter Welch, cochairman of the Congressional
Dairy Farmers Caucus, said the measure 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 Agriculture Secretary Tom
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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