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MICHIGAN WEATHER

Michiganders Testify at First Federal Farm Field Hearing



The first official action for the upcoming 2023 federal Farm Bill was held on Friday at Michigan State University. Senator Debbie Stabenow, chair of the U.S. Senate Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition and Forestry, hosted the Michigan field hearing. The Chairwoman was joined by Ranking Member John Boozman from Arkansas.

Congress passes a Farm Bill only once every five years. The current Farm Bill was passed with strong bipartisan support in 2018 and expires in September 2023.

Michigan Department of Agriculture and Rural Development (MDARD) Director McDowell was invited to participate in the hearing.

"I appreciated the opportunity to join the Senator as she works to make Michigan's farmers, producers and other stakeholders' voices heard and represented in this process," said McDowell. "The U.S. Farm bill holds critical funding for Michigan's key priorities around agriculture, conservation, rural economic development, research, and forestry."

Michigan dairy farmer Ashley Kennedy, a member of the Michigan Milk Producers Association, testified on behalf of MMPA and the National Milk Producers Federation (NMPF).

"I couldn't have come back to the family farm if it were not for many of these programs," said Kennedy, whose family milks 240 cows in east-central Michigan, at the field hearing held Friday at Michigan State University in East Lansing. "Being a part of the conversation is essential to see a future that reflects opportunity and success."

Addressing Senate Agriculture Committee Chairwoman Debbie Stabenow (D-MI), who presided over the hearing, Kennedy discussed her perspective as a third-generation farmer on the successes and shortcomings of current dairy policies and programs Congress must address in the next reauthorization. Kennedy thanked the committee, and Chairwoman Stabenow in particular, for overhauling the dairy safety net during the last farm bill and providing producers with access to crop insurance-like risk management tools, which puts dairy farmers on par with producers of other commodities.

Kennedy praised the Dairy Margin Coverage program as "essential to our farm and family's financial success last year" and called attention to recent improvements that accounted for modest production increases and better reflect dairy farmer feed costs.

Still, the lessons of the COVID-19 pandemic for the dairy sector in Michigan and nationwide need to be incorporated into the next reauthorization of federal farm programs, she said in her written testimony. The effects of federal programs on milk pricing deserve special attention, she said. "The combined effects of the change made to the Class I mover in the last farm bill, and the government's heavy cheese purchases, cost dairy farmers over $750 million in Class I skim revenue during the last six months of 2020."

The dairy industry, under NMPF leadership, is seeking consensus on a range of improvements to the Federal Milk Marketing Order system, including but not limited to the Class I mover, that can be taken to the U.S. Department of Agriculture for consideration in a national order hearing.

Beyond economic policy, Kennedy also advocated for additional investments in conservation programs to help dairy farmers build on their ongoing sustainability work; urged a doubling of funding for key trade promotion programs; and spoke to the importance of farm bill nutrition programs as "the bedrock of linking the food we produce as farmers to households across the country."

Kennedy closed by offering a personal take on the need for significant mental health policy in the farm bill. "Stress in rural America is not talked about enough, which is unfortunate, because it's a problem we can only solve by working together." Kennedy thanked the committee for reauthorizing the Farm and Ranch Stress Assistance Network in the last farm bill but urged that even more robust resources be provided.

The Senate Agriculture Committee is expected to hold an additional field hearing in Arkansas, the home state of Ranking Republican John Boozman, in the coming week.

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Categories: Michigan, Livestock, Dairy Cattle

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