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Farm
Bureau challenges seven bills
Elizabeth Larson
Capital Press
August 21, 2007
The California Farm Bureau said it and its members plan to fight a
number of bills moving through the state Legislature that will harm
family farmers and ranchers.
A statement issued by the California Farm Bureau said the organization
already has delivered letters to legislators about seven bills that it
says will make it more difficult for farmers to provide "safe,
affordable food and farm products in a sustainable manner."
"Consumers depend on
California
farmers and ranchers for the products they
need every day, and farmers depend on state government to establish
policies that allow us to thrive," California Farm Bureau President
Doug Mosebar said in a written statement. "Family farmers and
ranchers will make sure our policymakers understand how these proposals
would harm us."
The Farm Bureau statement urged legislators to vote down the following
seven bills:
- Senate Bill 180 (Migden, D-San Francisco): Strips farm employees of
their right to a secure, secret-ballot election by substituting an
unprotected process known as "majority sign-up election."
- SB 719 (Machado, D-Linden): Undermines government accountability by
expanding the San Joaquin Unified Air Pollution Control Board to include
appointed members who would be neither accountable to district residents
nor elected by constituents.
- SB 974 (Lowenthal,
D-Long
Beach
): Threatens the business climate by imposing
new taxes on all containerized cargo moving through
California
ports, with the resulting increase in
shipping costs putting the state's farmers and ranchers at a competitive
disadvantage.
- Assembly Bill 8 (Núñez, D-
Los Angeles
): Imposes a tax on farmers, ranchers and
other small employers to fund health-care coverage for those who do not
purchase it themselves.
- AB 377 (Arambula, D-Fresno): Holds farmers responsible for illegal
activities of farm labor contractors, over which farmers have no
control, by requiring contractors to disclose on employees' pay stubs
the name and address of the farm that secured the contractor's services;
- AB 1100 (Ruskin, D-Redwood City) and SB 63 (Migden, D-San Francisco):
Threatens the availability of production practices by requiring meat or
milk from cloned animals or their progeny to be labeled, essentially
banning new technology with benefits to farmers, ranchers and consumers.
Sandy Elles, executive director of the Napa County Farm Bureau, said
protecting agriculture-friendly business is always a consideration for
the organization.
In
Napa
County
, she said they're concerned about the
progress of SB 180, which limits farmworker voting rights in the process
of voting for labor union representation.
She said she hopes the bill doesn't pass the legislature because the
democratic and fundamental right of elections needs to be protected.
The Farm Bureau reported that it will tabulate legislators' votes on
each of the priority bills and will keep track of those votes on its
legislative scorecard, which is meant to help constituents evaluate
their individual representatives.
Elizabeth Larson is based in
Lucerne
. E-mail: elarson@capitalpress.com.
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NOTE: In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. section 107, any copyrighted
material herein is distributed without profit or payment to those
who have
expressed a prior interest in receiving this information for
non-profit
research and educational purposes only. For more information go
to:http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml
Source:
http://www.capitalpress.info/main.asp?SectionID=94&Sub
SectionID=801&ArticleID=34613&TM=40153.91
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