February 13, 2002
Senate Passes Farm Subsidies Bill
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Filed at 1:53 p.m. ET

WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Senate passed an election-year farm bill Wednesday that boosts 
subsidies for
grain and cotton growers and doubles spending on conservation programs.

Unlike a House-passed bill, the Senate legislation would impose strict new limits on 
the payments
that any one farm could receive. Some subsidies are now essentially unlimited.

The Democratic-crafted Senate bill, which passed 58-40, also offers new subsidies to a 
variety of
commodities, including milk, honey, wool and lentils.

The Senate Agriculture Committee chairman, Sen. Tom Harkin, D-Iowa, called the bill 
``a tremendous
victory for the economy of rural America.''

Nine Republicans, primarily from Northeastern states that stand to benefit from the 
dairy subsidies,
voted for the bill. Two Democrats opposed it, including Blanche Lincoln of Arkansas, 
whose farmers
would be hurt by the payment caps.

The legislation also boosts spending on food stamps and other nutrition programs by 
more than $800
million a year, twice the level of the House bill. Legal immigrants who have lived in 
the country at
least five years would become eligible for food stamps under the Senate measure.

House and Senate negotiators will work out the final version of the bill in coming 
weeks, with input
from the White House. Bush administration officials have complained that the Senate 
bill is too
costly and says it would encourage overproduction of subsidized crops, but they also 
have criticized
the House measure.

Both the House and Senate versions represent dramatic departures from the 
Republican-authored 1996
farm law, which was designed to wean farmers from government subsidies.

The Senate bill ``creates incentives for overproduction by making larger payments to a 
few big
farms, thus guaranteeing overall lower prices for farm commodities and perpetual calls 
for more
assistance by federal lawmakers,'' said Sen. Richard Lugar of Indiana, the senior 
Republican on the
Senate Agriculture Committee.

The Senate legislation, which renews farm programs through 2006, authorizes $45 
billion in new
spending over the next five years, a 27 percent increase over current programs. The 
House authorized
a $38 billion increase over the same period.

There are numerous thorny issues for the House and Senate negotiators to resolve, 
including the
spending levels and payment limits.

``Everything is open'' to negotiation, Harkin said. ``Everything is on the table.''

A congressional budget agreement last year set aside $73.5 billion in new farm 
spending over the
next decade, a level the Bush administration supports. Administration officials, 
however, complain
that the Senate bill spends too much of that -- $45 billion -- before 2007. Congress 
would then be
forced to slash programs or increase spending.

On Tuesday, the Senate voted to include in the bill a new program that, in order to 
protect
endangered fish, would use subsidies to encourage farmers to reduce their use of 
irrigation water.

The $1 billion program was restricted to seven states -- Maine, New Hampshire, Nevada, 
New Mexico,
California, Oregon and Washington -- because of the opposition.

Opponents of the program fear federal involvement in disputes over water usage and 
endangered
species, but the Senate approved it on a 55-45 vote.

Sen. Harry Reid, D-Nev., predicted that ``all the other states will be fighting to get 
in'' the
water conservation program once they see the benefits.

The American Farm Bureau Federation, the nation's largest farm group, opposed the 
water subsidies,
saying the program will eventually subject farmers to new regulations.

The Senate on Tuesday also refused to back off a ban on meatpackers owning their own 
supplies of
livestock, turning aside warnings by the companies that the prohibition would cause 
upheaval in the
beef and pork industries.

The Senate narrowly approved the ban in December as an amendment to legislation 
extending federal
farm programs. Packers, who would have up to 18 months to sell off any livestock that 
they own, said
the restrictions make it harder for them to procure adequate supplies of top-quality 
meat.

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The bill is S.1731.

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