CONGRESS SIDELINES SPECIALTY CROP FUNDING IN TAX LEGISLATION

Published online: Jan 03, 2013
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WASHINGTON, D.C.-The passage of a fiscal package late Tuesday evening excluded key specialty crop priorities. While the bill does avert the dreaded "fiscal cliff," efforts to roll a new five-year Farm Bill into the bill were rejected in favor of a nine month extension of the 2008 law. The extension does not include funding for certain expiring programs such as the Specialty Crop Research Initiative and Clean Plant Network.

 

The tax package bill was passed by a vote of 89-8 in the Senate, and was approved in the House with a vote of 257-167.

 

The Farm Bill will need to be redrafted in the coming months and reconsidered by both chambers before the Sept. 30, 2013 deadline. The Specialty Crop Farm Bill Alliance will continue to communicate the importance of specialty crop programs to lawmakers on Capitol Hill as this process moves forward in the 113th Congress.

 

"While we are frustrated, we look forward to working with both committees and the dozens of members of Congress who helped complete the 2012 Farm Bill," said John Keeling, National Potato Council executive vice president and CEO, and Alliance Co-Chair. "As has been the case for more than a decade, we will be working to ensure that innovative investments for the 50 percent of American agriculture represented by specialty crops are fairly accounted for in the Farm Bill."