
Debra Eschmeyer, a farmer and activist has given her permission to reprint and circulate this important article.
Old MacDonald Has a Farm Bill
 Old MacDonald Has a Farm Bill
By Debra  Eschmeyer
 We’ve all noticed higher grocery  bills, but did you know Congress passed a $307 billion farm bill in late May  that has a much bigger impact on what you will eat for dinner tonight than what  you chose to place in the grocery cart?
 The farm bill has a hand in all  that happens before the swallow. The bag of Tyson chicken wings (grain  subsidies), gallon of Horizon Organic milk (forward contracting), and pound  of Fuji   apples  (country of origin labeling) are all regulated in some fashion by this policy  determining how our food is raised and who profits.
 But does the massive legislation  support family farmers? Increase food access in urban food deserts? Or feed the  40 million poor and hungry in the United  States  ?
 Yes and no. Reauthorized and  revamped every five years, farm law has its roots in the 1930’s New Deal efforts  to handle the overproduction of agricultural commodities while maintaining  stable prices. Although most of the money in the current bill, around 75%, goes  to nutrition programs such as food stamps, the politics of writing the bill is  still driven by commodities such as corn, rice, wheat, cotton, and  soybeans.
 One way to interpret farm policy  is to follow the money. According to the Institute for Agriculture and Trade  Policy, Cargill’s profits increased nearly 1000 percent from $280 million in  FY1997-98 to $2.34 billion by FY2006-07. Add to that pile of profits the $35  billion in indirect subsidies that the industrial animal factories (owned and  controlled by corporations like Cargill) reaped by being able to buy feed crops  at 20-25 percent below the cost of production.
 Farm-bloc legislators were  challenged this time around to make the connection between the current farm  policy’s cheap corn complex and the growing problem of diabetes and obesity.  Unfortunately, prior policy plunders were not weeded out of the current farm  bill. As the House Agriculture Committee Chairman Collin Peterson (D-MN)  explicitly stated that except for some "minor changes," the new farm bill is  "very much like the current law that we have been operating  under."
 For those farm bill  pugilists—sustainable agriculture groups, anti-hunger advocates, faith-based  organizations, conservationists, community gardeners, and grassroots family  farmer coalitions—that tried to have their voices heard above the industrial  agriculture cacophony, the final 2008 Farm Bill is bittersweet. Bitter due to  the numerous multifunctional reforms that never came to fruition while corporate  agribusiness deepened their roots and sweet for the minor victories for  sustainable agriculture, nutrition, and conservation.
 The policies that survived through  countless revisions, late night conferences, numerous listening sessions,  lobbyist wrangling, and earmarks are far from the wish lists various groups  envisioned. However, more than one thousand food and farm organizations came  together and requested that Congress override the President’s promised veto. As  stated in their joint letter to Congress:
 "Communities across the nation,  from urban to rural, have waited too long for this legislation. The Conference  Report makes significant farm policy reforms, protects the safety net for all  of America  's food producers, addresses  important infrastructure needs for specialty crops, increases funding to feed  our nation's poor, and enhances support for important conservation initiatives.  This is by no means a perfect piece of legislation, and none of our  organizations achieved everything we had individually requested. However, it is  a carefully balanced compromise of policy priorities that has broad support  among organizations representing the nation's agriculture, conservation, and  nutrition interests."
 Passing through the House with a  margin of 306 to 110 and the Senate 82 to 13, the votes in both chambers were  far past the majority needed to defeat President Bush’s veto. Formally called  the Food, Conservation, and Energy Act of 2008, the 673 pages of legislative  prowess represent a precarious balancing act of principles and  politics.
 Below are samples of positive  seeds of change planted in the new Farm Bill:
 §         Community Food Projects and  Geographic Preferences:  The new Farm Bill provides $5  million in mandatory annual funding for innovative Community Food Projects for  matching grants to community groups building sustainable local food systems  addressing hunger, nutrition, and meeting food security goals. There is also new  statutory language clearly stating that preference can be given to local  purchasing of agriculture products for schools serving meals that receive  federal assistance, resolving a conflict in USDA’s interpretation of the 2002  farm bill.
 §         Local Food  Initiatives: Another provision provides funding  for new local and regional food supply networks including $33 million in mandatory funds  for the Farmers Market Promotion Program, $56 million for the Seniors Farmers  Market Nutrition Program, and $1.2 billion to expand the Fresh Fruit and  Vegetable Program that will enable 3 million low income children across the  country to have access to healthier food options.
 §         GMO  Oversight:  New mandates to strengthen USDA  oversight of GMO crops will help prevent the disaster that occurred when an  unauthorized genetically modified rice strain entered the U.S.   rice crop  and caused massive losses to export markets. The new regulatory framework will  reduce the potential for future GMO contamination events at field trial test  sites. 
 §         First Ever Livestock  Title: Provides  much needed protections for independent ranchers and farmers raising livestock  under contract, which includes preventing mandatory arbitration clauses for  livestock/poultry contracts; allowing a three-day period to cancel contracts;  and requiring contracts to disclose the requirement of large capital  investments.
 §         Diversity  Initiative:  The Farm Bill gives significant  recognition to the importance of minority and socially disadvantaged farmers.  There are specific targets for minority and socially disadvantaged farmer  participation in conservation, farm credit, Value Added Producer Grants, and the  Beginning Farmer and Rancher Programs.   Minority Outreach and  Education (Section 2501) authorized in the 1990 farm bill receives for the first  time mandatory funding at $75 million over 4 years.  This  competitive grant program to community based organizations and educational  institutions helps minority and socially disadvantaged farmers access USDA  programs through effective outreach programs.
 §         Beginning Farmer and Rancher  Development Program:  Provides $75 million over four  years in mandatory money for competitive grants to groups providing technical  assistance and other services to beginning farmers and ranchers. This program  was created in the 2002 Farm Bill but was never funded.
 §         Country-of-Origin Labeling and  Interstate Meat Shipment:  The Farm Bill  includes language to implement long-awaited COOL requirements for produce, beef,  pork, chicken, lamb and goat that will go into effect in September 2008. COOL  was included in the 2002 Farm Bill, but food industry, USDA and meatpackers’  opposition have delayed its implementation. There are also provisions allowing  for the interstate shipment of state-inspected beef that meets federal  inspection standards. Both of these policies represent victories for consumers  and farmers aiming to rebuild local food systems.
 §         Organic  Agriculture: The  bill provides $78 million in mandatory funds for the Organic Research and  Extension Initiative, which enhances the ability of organic producers and  processors to grow and market organic food, feed, and fiber. For those  transitioning to organic production, $22 million in mandatory funding is  provided for the next five years.
 The above positive provisions  represent alternatives to the current food system without replacing the  industrial model, which will take even more advocacy for good food policy in the  next farm bill and beyond.
 On one of my farm bill lobby  visits to Washington , DC  , I spoke to several Congressional Offices  advocating for fair prices on behalf of family farmers. After one of my  meetings, a young amiable congressional staffer with a mixed countenance of pity  and arrogance, proceeded to tell me, “We aren’t looking to revolutionize the  food system, Deb, let alone the farm bill.”
 Well, I am looking to  revolutionize the food system, and I am not alone. Yes, we have an uphill  battle.  Biotech giant Monsanto Co. spent nearly $1.3  million in just the first quarter of 2008 to lobby on farm bill provisions to  protect their investments, but there are thousands of grassroots organizations  working for public policy that will protect and strengthen the future of our  food supply, environment, public health, and  communities.
 I’m on the frontline of this food  revolution as a beginning organic farmer and food justice advocate. Will this farm bill help me with  the infrastructure I need to process my chickens? Or provide me with the  confidence that my sustainably raised food will be price competitive so that all  people with empty and deep pockets alike have access to good, fair, and  affordable food?
 I’ll let you know in five years,  but in the meantime, I’ll keep planting those seeds of change and hope you’ll  join me in cultivating more palatable food policy.
 For more information on farm  bills: http://nationalaglawcenter.org/farmbills.
 Debra Eschmeyer is the Marketing  & Media Manager of the National Farm to School Network and the Center for  Food & Justice. She works from a fifth-generation family farm in Ohio  , where she continues  her passion for organic farming raising heirloom fruits, vegetables, and  chickens.
 Prior to joining CFJ, Debra was  the Project Director at the National Family Farm Coalition in Washington , DC  where she  focused on U.S.   agricultural policy and food  sovereignty initiatives among grassroots domestic and international rural  advocacy and other social justice networks. She was also the Asia Program  Coordinator for the Critical Ecosystem Partnership Fund at Conservation  International and the Humanitarian Grants Asia Coordinator for Rotary  International.
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