- There is no way for you not to notice the high price of food products in your local store, your local franchised dollar store, and lower priced supermarket (ex. Aldi, Ledos, etc.) based in your region.
- Prices are not dropping. There is an interrelationship in every aspect of the 'from farm to plate'.
- Every aspect of farming from seedlings, to water allocation, to the price we pay at the grocery.
- From November 2022 to January 2023. The price of a dozen eggs jumps from $1.99/dozen to more then $4.25/dozen.
What’s in the 2018 Farm Bill? The Good, The Bad and The Offal…Our biggest takeaway is this: in a time of farm crisis, this farm bill will not right the ship.
| UNDERSTANDING THE
  FARM BILL Every five years, the federal government reviews the food and farm landscape and renews the Farm Bill. Who the bill benefits – and how – is the subject of decades of debate. Farm Aid breaks it
  down with a Farm Bill
  101, ways to take action, and key takeaways.        NOTE:   Google ‘farm bill
  101’  for a list of information to
  understand the U.S. Farm Bill and its’ ramifications across the board in all
  sectors.   The future of
  family farm agriculture requires a dramatic shift in policy towards  
 By those
  standards, this farm bill fails. That said, farmers and ranchers cannot wait
  another day for the programs that ended when the last farm bill expired on
  September 30. The time is now to get them back up and running! Check out Farm Aid’s Take in our Understanding the Farm Bill Hub for more details on how we got here. JUMP TO A SECTION: 
 FARMER LIVELIHOODS The 1-800-FARM-AID hotline has had its busiest year yet, with more farmers calling us stressed, desperate and with a shrinking number of viable options for keeping their farms running. The 2018 Farm Bill could have risen to the occasion by  o   restoring commonsense measures like supply
  management (which would curb the overproduction that is causing the dairy
  crisis) and  o   recommit to fair pricing policies that cover
  farmers’ cost of production,  o instead of using taxpayer money to compensate for extreme, costly and avoidable market volatility that puts farmers at risk of going out of business. But this bill won’t do that. Despite a few bright spots, when it comes to the core challenges facing the farm economy, the 2018 Farm Bill fails spectacularly, and in some cases, actively takes steps backward by giving even more taxpayer money to the wealthiest farm operations. THE BRIGHT SPOTS: * Farm and Ranch Stress Assistance Network: This
  important program intending to deal with the rising levels of stress and
  mental health concerns in farm country was actually authorized in the 2014
  Farm Bill, but never received the funding it so desperately needed, and so
  never got going.The 2018 Farm Bill makes important improvements to the
  program – such as explicitly providing access to tribal communities – and
  authorizes up to $10 million each year until 2023. Upon passage of the bill,
  we will be working hard to make sure those dollars end up in the right hands
  – with the network of service providers we depend on to help farmers in
  crisis navigate their options and receive the support they deserve. Language
  in the bill also directs USDA and the Department of Health and Human Services
  to examine the problem of occupational stress among farmers and individuals
  who work in agriculture to develop a long-term strategy and response. LUKE-WARM: * The Dairy Margin Protection Program: MPP, a safety net program for dairy farmers now renamed Dairy Margin Coverage was overhauled to make it more useful to dairy farmers across the board but particularly to smaller-scale producers, (those with production of 5 million pounds or less per year—about equivalent to 240 cows). Premiums will be further reduced for farmers. This is a welcome improvement to a program that was all but useless or inaccessible for the many dairy farmers in crisis who have contacted us over the past year, but the 2018 Farm Bill still does not deliver the supply management policy that would deliver fair prices to farmers. UNCONSCIONABLE: * Boondoggle for the big guys: The 2018 Farm Bill widens loopholes for wealthy mega-farms to exploit commodity and crop insurance subsidies, allowing nieces, nephews, and cousins who may have never worked on the farm to receive taxpayer-funded subsidies. This will continue to drive consolidation in the farm sector, allowing the biggest farms to keep growing and gobble up smaller and midsized operations that are so critical to the wellbeing of rural communities. LOCAL FOOD SYSTEMS
  & HEALTHY FOOD ACCESS WHAT WE LIKE: * We love LAMP: A number of scrappy programs that spurred local and regional food systems over the last decade have consistently been fighting for funding. This farm bill combines two of our favorites – the Value-Added Producer Grant (VAPG) program and Farmers Market and Local Food Promotion Program (FMLFPP) – into a new program called the Local Agriculture Market Program (LAMP). The Farm Bill provides these programs with permanent funding and makes significant policy improvements. The 2018 Farm Bill
  also reauthorizes the Rural Energy for America Program (REAP), which will
  receive $50 million per year in mandatory funds in perpetuity, the National
  Sustainable Agriculture Information Service / Appropriate Technology Transfer
  for Rural America (ATTRA), Business and Industry Loan Guarantees Local &
  Regional Food Enterprise Set-aside, an expands the Healthy Food Financing Initiative. DISAPPOINTING: * Farm to
  School: The 2018 Farm Bill fails to provide additional mandatory funding
  for the USDA Farm to School Grant Program and does not provide for the
  regulatory flexibility that would allow school food authorities to procure
  local and regional food and farm products. SOIL, WATER & CLIMATE For the better
  part of a century, farm bills have acknowledged the crucial role that
  government dollars can play in developing conservation programs that steward
  our natural resources. Funding for these programs has expanded over the last
  three decades, as more farmers seek to learn on-farm conservation skills,
  invest in the long-term health of our soil, water and climate, and build a
  more resilient agricultural system in the face of climate change. THE GOOD: * Organic:
  There are important improvements for certified organic growers in this farm
  bill, such as increases in the Organic Initiative payment cap within the
  Environmental Quality Incentives Program (EQIP), a new organic allocation
  within the Conservation Stewardship Program (CSP) – the largest federal conservation
  program— and $5 million in mandatory funding for the collection of organic
  production data.The bill also increases funding for the Organic Agriculture
  Research and Extension Initiative (OREI) to $50 million a year in permanent
  funding by 2023, with a total of $395 million in funding over ten years.
  Finally, the bill included $24 million in mandatory funding for National
  Organic Certification Cost Share from 2019-2023, although this was far less
  than advocates had requested. MIXED BAG: * Hand outs for
  factory farms: While this bill decreases livestock set-asides within EQIP
  that were being funneled to the factory farm industry, it does not remove
  these loopholes entirely and does not include any of the much-needed reforms
  that would limit taxpayer dollars being used to subsidize factory farms. …THE OH-SO-UGLY: * Borrowing
  from the future: You may have to read the fine print to realize that this
  Farm Bill establishes cuts over the long-term for CSP past the year 2023,
  amounting to over $5 billion in advance cuts to the CSP and EQIP for the next
  farm bill. EQUAL OPPORTUNITY FOR ALL FARMERS For too long, the
  lion’s share of federal farm bill dollars has gone to a narrow segment of farmers
  and farm types. Farmers of color and female farmers have experienced
  discrimination when seeking access to credit, conservation and other farm
  programs. In far too many cases, this discrimination has led to farm families
  going out of business and losing their land. WHAT WE LIKE: * Hello, FOTO!
  The final farm bill combines the Beginning Farmer and Rancher Development
  Program (BFRDP) and Outreach and Assistance for Socially Disadvantaged and
  Veteran Farmers and Ranchers Program (also known as “Section 2501”) into the
  new Farming Opportunities Training and Outreach (FOTO) program. The improved
  program has permanent funding of $50 million annually, shared equally between
  the two programs. MIXED BAG: · Set asides: This bill maintains, but fails to increase, allocated dollars set aside for socially disadvantaged and beginning farmers in major conservation programs (CSP and EQIP). ·       
  No money, more
  problems: The bill removes mandatory
  funding for the Rural Microentrepreneur Assistance Program, an important
  program for farmers and ranchers of all kinds. It also does not provide
  mandatory funding for Individual Development Accounts (IDAs), which are
  important for beginning farmers. | 
| Washington,
  D.C.  20020 | 
 | 
| bEMA International | |
| Cooperation, Collaboration, Communication,
  Coordination, Community engagement, and  Partnering (C5&P) | |
| A 501 (c) 3 organization | |
| “We
  are now faced with the fact that tomorrow is today.  We are confronted with the fierce urgency
  of now.  In this unfolding conundrum of
  life and history there is such a thing as being too late.  Procrastination
  is still the thief of time. 
  Life often leaves us standing bare, naked and dejected with a lost
  opportunity.  This
  may well be mankind’s last chance to choose between chaos or community.”  Dr.
  Martin Luther King, Jr., ‘Where Are We Going From Here:  Chaos or
  Community’.  
 | 

 











 
