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Obama to focus
on family farms
President’s website outlines goals for administration
Cookson Beecher
Capital
Press
January 29, 2009
 |
| President Barack
Obama, right, speaks to reporters after a meeting with his top
economic advisers at his transition office in Washington, D.C.,
Jan. 6. From left are White House Chief of Staff-designate Rahm
Emanuel, Budget Director-designate Peter Orszag and Obama. -
Gerald Herbert/Associated Press |
At the stroke of noon on Inauguration Day, Jan. 20, President Barack
Obama's official website went up on the Internet, providing a look at
the new administration's agenda on a wide array of topics, among them
agriculture, rural areas, immigration reform and energy.
Acknowledging that rural communities face many challenges, Obama
nonetheless takes an optimistic tack, saying that rural communities can
look forward to "economic opportunities unlike anything we have
witnessed in modern history."
According to the website, Obama's ag agenda will help family farmers and
rural small businesses find profitability in the marketplace and success
in the global economy.
Tracy Taylor Grondine, spokesperson for the American Farm Bureau
Federation, said that overall the organization supports many aspects of
Obama's ag agenda, but with a few exceptions.
"We support all production agriculture and believe policies should not
be based on operation size or productivity level," Grondine said.
And while the organization supports a cleaner environment, Grondine said
the organization believes proven science should prevail in all
legislative and regulatory decisions, especially those concerning
confined animal feeding operations.
Grondine also said the organization is pleased with the new
administration's emphasis on rural development and renewable fuels.
"We look forward to working with President Obama's administration to
meet these challenges and create better opportunities for U.S.
agriculture and rural America," Grondine said.
Charlie Ingram, director of legislative and regulatory affairs for the
National Association of State Departments of Agriculture, agrees, saying
that he's pleased that agriculture and rural issues are important to the
new administration.
"They have put forth a number of good ideas and proposals in a lot of
areas," he said. "We're ready to work with the new administration and
the new secretary of agriculture on these issues."
Here are the priorities the Obama administration plans to work on, based
on the belief that achieving them "will help ensure economic
opportunities for family farmers."
• Create a strong safety net for family farmers. Fight for farm programs
that provide family farmers with stability and predictability. Implement
a $250,000 payment limitation so we help family farmers - not large
corporate agribusiness. Close the loopholes that allow mega farms to get
around payment limits.
• Prevent anti-competitive behavior against family farms. Pass a packer
ban. When meatpackers own livestock, they can manipulate prices and
discriminate against independent farmers. Strengthen anti-monopoly laws
and strengthen producer protections to ensure independent farmers have
fair access to markets, control over their production decisions, and
transparency in prices.
• Regulate confined animal feeding operations. Strictly regulate
pollution from large livestock farms, with fines for those that violate
tough standards. Support meaningful local control.
• Establish country of origin labeling. Implement country of origin
labeling so American producers can distinguish their products from
imported ones.
• Encourage organic and local agriculture. Help organic farmers afford
to certify their crops and reform crop insurance to not penalize organic
farmers. Promote regional food systems.
• Encourage young people to become farmers. Establish a new program to
identify and train the next generation of farmers. Provide tax
incentives to make it easier for new farmers to afford their first farm.
• Partner with landowners to conserve private lands. Increase incentives
for farmers and private landowners to conduct sustainable agriculture
and protect wetlands, grasslands and forests.
• Support rural economic development and small business development.
Provide capital for farmers to create value-added enterprises, like
cooperative marketing initiatives and farmer-owned processing plants.
Establish a small business and micro-enterprise initiative for rural
America.
• Connect rural America. Modernize a Federal Communications Commission
program that supports rural phone service so that it promotes affordable
broadband coverage across rural America as well.
• Promote leadership in renewable energy. Ensure that our rural areas
continue their leadership in the renewable fuels movement.
Staff writer Cookson Beecher is based in Sedro-Woolley, Wash. E-mail:
cbeecher@capitalpress.com.
On the net
To read Obama's agenda, go to www.whitehouse.gov/agenda and click on the
topic of interest. Agriculture is included in the "rural" category.
Rural-life priorities
President Barack Obama also wants to work toward improving the quality
of rural life. The priorities for achieving that include:
•Combat methamphetamine. Continue the fight to rid our communities of
meth and offer support to help addicts heal.
•Improve health care. Work to ensure a more equitable Medicare and
Medicaid reimbursement structure that often gives rural health care
providers less money for the very same procedure performed in urban
areas. Attract providers to rural America by creating a loan forgiveness
program for doctors and nurses who work in underserved rural areas.
Promote health information technologies like telemedicine.
•Improve rural education. Provide incentives for talented individuals to
enter the teaching profession, including increased pay for teachers who
work in rural areas. Create a Rural Revitalization Program to attract
young people to rural America and retain them. Increase research and
educational funding for land grant colleges.
•Upgrade rural infrastructure: Invest in the core infrastructure -
roads, bridges, locks, dams, water systems and essential air service -
that rural communities need.
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