- US accepts Seoul's decision to stop beef imports if mad cow disease is found
- Farm Bill Receives Massive Wave of Support
- Floor Vote Expected on Farm Bill
- Wind Can Play Major Role In Electrical Power
- Climate-Related Genes-Patent Pending
- Bush issues statement on farm bill veto, calls for current law extension
- Knight: COOL Will be Implemented During 2008
- Kansas Farm Income Showed Steep Gains in 07
- Winter wheat matures slower than normal with cool spring
- U.S. Pork and Beef Exports Continue Expansion
- Senate to Focus on Controlling Energy Prices
- A New WTO Ag Text is Imminent
- Census Information Still Sought
- Tight Supplies, Strong Demand Continue
- Scottsbluff FFA Annual Banquet
- NCGA Urges the House and Senate to Support the Farm Bill Conference Report
- U.S. farm-bill limits touch few growers--Reformers
- Sunflower Study Underway
- Congress showing more understanding of bad consequences of horse slaughter ban
- Immigration arrests at Iowa meat plant top 300
- Sweet sorghum promoted as smart biofuel
- US senator eyes deal to help pass Colombia pact
- WTO chief says trade deal still possible in 2008
- Argentine soy market stays gridlocked due strike
- Farrowing Basics School Offered June 17-18 at UNL
- Two UNL Extension Organic Farm Tours Offered June 17 or 18
- Brazil to ease farm debt repayment to raise output
- Argentine farmers turn to governors in tax conflict
Despite falling just a few votes shy of seeing their payment limit reform included in the Senate version of the farm bill - Senators Chuck Grassley and Byron Dorgan have not given up on getting reform in the final legislation. Now they’re asking Senate Ag Chair Tom Harkin and Deputy Ag Secretary Chuck Conner to consider a possible payment limitations compromise dubbed “Dorgan-Grassley II.” A letter sent to Harkin and Conner notes the continued difficult in finding acceptable funding mechanisms that meet the demands for farm bill funding - and suggests the adoption of their four-point program might close the gap.
According to the letter - the four-point proposal would bring negotiators closer to a politically acceptable compromise by reducing payment limits and income limits only when prices are above target price - softening the impact of reduced limits on cotton, rice and peanuts - incorporating the Administration proposal to lower AGI limits, but with a feature to increase the savings by reducing payments on cash rented land owned by high income landlords - and incorporating the primary control and actively engaged in farming provisions of Dorgan-Grassley I.
The Senators say the Congressional Budget Office has estimated preliminary savings of 1.186-billion dollars over 10 years for the four-point program.
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