Tuesday, June 18, 2013

Speak Your Piece: Farm Bill Blues

06/20/2012

vilsack and md farmer Bob Nichols/USDA U.S. Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack (left) walked with Lin Spicer through timberland on Spicer's farm in Church Creek, Maryland. Spicer has taken part in a conservation program to improve his pines, the sort of program likely to be cut in the current Farm Bill.

Count me among the disappointed. Or pessimistic. Or both.

Bill Bishop’s recent discussion of President Obama’s “rural term paper” suggests the continued withdrawal of Washington from large segments of rural America. The administration’s support of the Senate version of the 2012 Farm Bill, which, at the moment lacks a rural development title and reduces funding for food programs and conservation, is problematic at best. The apparent support for cuts in food programs is reprehensible.

The Farm Bill, as currently presented, is designed for the few, not the many. Apparently, this is acceptable to the administration. That’s disappointing, especially from an administration that says it believes in rural communities and people.

mass ebt New Jersey Division of Family Development New Jersey's Electronic Benefit Card (today's "food stamp")

If rural development is eliminated from the 2012 Farm Bill, with the administration’s endorsement, we are moving beyond unconstitutional post office closures; we will be abandoning policies that have evolved for more than a century, accelerating since the early 1970s. We are talking ultimately about limiting opportunities to improve the quality of life for the majority of rural residents who are not farmers. If food programs for the poor are reduced, those cuts will fall more heavily on rural communities where, even in good times, job opportunities are limited and poverty can be grating. Cuts in conservation programs are coming even as we need to use our land more intensively for food and energy.

Tuesday afternoon, rural development funding was retained in the Senate version of the Farm Bill, but at a much reduced amount from the previous bill. An amendment restored $150 million for development purposes; since 1996, farm bills have had an average of $413 million for rural development. The House must still concur with the Senate bill. 

A “rural equals agriculture” policy strategy has predominated in this country at least since it was enshrined in Theodore Roosevelt’s Country Life Commission Report of 1909. Even Roosevelt’s friends and advisors recognized the mistake, and by 1920 they were talking about programs for rural communities that included small cities, towns, and villages. They came to understand a holistic approach that included education, human services, clean water, sewage systems, transportation, and a host of other factors that improve the quality of rural life.

surplus food Wiki The New Deal Needy Family Program distributed suplus food. Food benefits comprise a major part of the Farm Bill's allocation and may be drastically cut.

Theodore Roosevelt’s cousin, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, got it pretty close to right in the 1930s. His administration took into account not only the plight of the nation’s farmers during the Depression but also the desperation of nonfarmers. His diverse policies stressed immediate relief accompanied by rural community-building that included bold experimentation. Facing a calamitous economic slowdown, Roosevelt accepted the seemingly contradictory wisdom of going into debt to invest in America’s future. The lesson is lost in Washington.

Peculiar conditions during the current economic downturn have made rural America relatively prosperous in many ways, especially in the farming sector. But, if you live in rural America, you don’t have to look far to see just how limited and shallow that prosperity is.

The future may prove me wrong, but the farm/energy economy that the Obama Administration is relying on to drive rural development is highly cyclical: boom now, bust later -- or sooner. The current boom has been driven by low interest rates and a global competition for energy and food. These are not new factors, and we need to remember that.

corn field Scott Olsen A field near Roscoe, Illinois: Corn and farmland prices have hit historic highs in recent months, but prices are cyclical. The new Farm Bill seems to be counting on a continuing boom.

Meanwhile, the larger economy is still teetering, and the farm economy remains vulnerable. The Farm Bill includes a much-needed experiment in risk management to escape the mess of farm subsidies. Here’s hoping it works, because this bill hacks away at other safety nets.

I am disappointed with the Senate and the President. My pessimism about rural America is running high. Will the loss of rural development funding be a disaster? Hard to say -- it’s such a pittance anyhow. Will people be hungrier as a result of cuts to food assistance programs? Probably, and that’s inhuman. Will we immediately feel the effects of soil erosion and declining water quality? That will take time, but it will be costly in the long run.

Timothy Collins is assistant director for research, policy, outreach, and sustainability at the Illinois Institute for Rural Affairs at Western Illinois University in Macomb. Opinions expressed here are his and his alone.

Comments

The way forward?

Tim, thanks, as always, for your insightful commentary. A question for you that I've wrestled over with rural policy friends: how could the federal government address this rural=agriculture issue at the structural level?

That is, should rural development be decoupled from USDA, and either given its own agency or tacked onto Interior or whatever? Should we stop trying to bundle rural development funds in with the farm bill, and what would be the political risks of this strategy (given the political necessity of reauthorizing SNAP, at a minimum)? I'd be curious to hear your thoughts.

Wrestling with questions

Thanks for the questions:

What to do with rural development (rd) is a substantive issue, and I'm glad the Senate has put it back in the bill. The House doesn't seem predisposed toward rd at the moment. We'll see what happens when it comes to hammering out both versions of the bill into one.

Seems to me that USDA has always been uncomfortable with rd just because it is a department of agriculture. Yet, at some levels, it has become more comfortable with rd over the decades. The USDA rd folks I work with in Illinois are fantastic, for example.

But we are living in times of significant transition that challenge the role of government with an administration that says it is committed to rural areas. But the commitment appears to be a rural=ag approach. As Chuck Fluharty might say, this administration and Congress have an urban background and, while they seem to try to understand rural issues and opportunities, they don't really get it.

I guess we have a number of options that could provide possible funding streams for rd, but don't hold your breath:

1) Get rid of rd altogether, my biggest fear and totally unacceptable.

2) Keep rd within USDA and possibly change the name to Agriculture and Rural Development. Highly unlikely.

3) Put rd into Housing and Urban Development, but it would have to be called either Housing and Urban and Rural Development or Housing and Regional Development, with a clear legislative mandate to serve rural areas effectively. High risk of losing rural development in the HUD urban-focused culture.

4) Set up a separate rural and regional development agency to cooperate with HUD. Dubious in these times.

5) Legislate the mission of the Economic Development Administration to specifically include rural economic community development, including infrastructure and people-building programs. This could be merged into sustainable development and economically distressed and underserved communities EDA missions. Like this idea, but doubt if it is politically feasible.

6) Reinvigorate Rural Partners or create an organization based on the Appalachian Regional Commission model. This could also be a quasi-governmental organization that could be affiliated with associations for governors, counties, municipal officials, development, or other related groups. This organization would require a permanent leadership structure to facilitate state and community activities currently handled by USDA and other agencies. Like this idea, too, but it's, as they like to say, dead on arrival.

Tim

 

 

from Sandy Rosenblith

 

We're posting this email from Sandy Rosenblith, with her permission:

Tim, you and Chuck Hassebrook are right. The vast majority of Rural Americans who don't farm

are being marginalized at an alarming rate by national policy makers, politicians,  pundits, bureaucrats and media.

The Farm Bill just provides the latest evidence. Stereotypes, misinformation and disinformation are gaining widespread currency in the power and money centers. Worse, it seems that Rural America is largely in the dark about the situation, few rural voices are being raised to tell the real story, educate the powers-that-be and hold them accountable.

I'm not talking about partisan politics. On the right, the conservative Cato Institute is pushing to eliminate federal rural development programs on the theory that rural people are better off

than city dwellers because they get more federal funding. False on both counts. But that doesn't stop other conservatives from embracing this agenda. Look at the Farm Bill amendment US Senator Demint (R-SC) proposed. He wanted to bar USDA from making loan guarantees despite the fact these have helped keep the housing market afloat--to the tune of more than 130,000 loans and $16.8 billion in FY 2011.

On the left, Bruce Katz from the Brookings Institution, rails against the undue influence exercised by small towns and our small town mentality. By his lights these prevent the country

from concentrating its assets in metro areas where returns will be maximized. This thinking overlooks the essential contributions rural makes to the health and strength of the whole, including food, energy, water, even a disproportionate segment of our armed forces, as well as the magnificent scenery and cultural treasures that drive a very productive tourism industry, reinforce our values and feed our souls.

Our rural population is nearly as big as the population of France, but if they and their supporters

don't stand up for themselves and speak clearly and forcefully on their own behalf, then Rural America will slide down the slippery slope to national policy, political and economic irrelevance.

It is not too late, but time is of the essence.