After waging a successful battle against
unreasonable proposals to regulate farm dust and teenagers who work on family
farms and ranches, U.S. Senator Claire McCaskill today moved to amend the Farm
Bill to include strong new safeguards against any future attempts at unnecessary
and burdensome federal rules on farmers and ranchers.
McCaskill, who was born and raised in small
town Missouri, introduced an amendment to the Farm Bill that would dramatically
strengthen the authority of a farm policy advisory position at the Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA)—a position that currently exists, but that is not
required by law. McCaskill’s measure would establish a framework in which that
official would serve as an important check against new unnecessary federal
regulations that would negatively impact agriculture.
“We can keep batting down each unreasonable or
unneeded regulation on our farms and ranches like a game of whack-a-mole, or we
can tackle the root issue head on—that farmers and ranchers need a seat at the
table when these decisions are made,” McCaskill said. “That’s exactly the gap my
plan would bridge—by making sure the EPA has an in-house agriculture advisor at
all times, and giving that position real authority. That way, before any new
rule can be issued that will affect the jobs and livelihoods of farming families
across rural America, whoever thinks the rule is a good idea would be forced to
hear—and respond to—some common sense from folks who know the business of
agriculture.”
McCaskill’s amendment would require the EPA’s
Chief Agriculture Counsel to weigh in on behalf of farmers and ranchers on any
proposed new regulations that would have a significant impact on agriculture,
and would require the EPA Administrator to issue a written response to any
concerns raised by the advisor. McCaskill also introduced a separate amendment
today, along with Sen. Amy Klobochar (D-Minn.), which would allow the U.S.
Secretary of Agriculture to appoint farmers or ranchers to the EPA’s Science
Advisory Board, doubling the number of members with a background in agriculture
serving on the Board.
The Farm Bill currently being debated in the
Senate would protect agriculture jobs and reduce the national deficit by $23
billion by streamlining and consolidating federal programs and ending
unnecessary farm subsidies, while preserving important resources for farm and
ranch families and strengthening the crop insurance program—issues which are
critical to the livelihoods of Missouri’s farmers and ranchers.
McCaskill also renewed her support today for
two other proposals that would bar the federal government from issuing future
rules regulating farm dust and limit the ability of teenagers to work on family
farms and ranches. McCaskill is also supporting an amendment to prohibit the EPA
from requiring duplicative permits for pesticide use.
A copy of McCaskill’s amendment to boost the
authority of the EPA’s farm policy advisor is available on her website
HERE.
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