Working to protect the Mississippi River and its watershed in the Twin Cities area
Photo: USDA
As Congress takes up the 2012 Farm Bill, it stands to make dramatic cuts to conservation funding while eliminating the longstanding link between crop subsidies and conservation programs that protect land and water from runoff pollution.
Along with our conservation partners, FMR continues to advocate for Congressional action that ensures our natural resources and taxpayers are protected. We urge Congress to amend the 2012 Farm Bill to:
As federal policies put water quality and habitat at risk, agricultural communities are beginning to question the wisdom of the massive expansion of crop insurance programs being pushed through Congress. Below are just a few of this spring’s news and editorial highlights from ag communities around the country:
“The total acres in the Northern Plains states that will be coming out of CRP [the Conservation Reserve Program] is more than 3 million acres, or 4,687.5 square miles which is about the size of Connecticut.”
“Congress continues to find ways to throw money at farmers, whether they need it or not.”
“The Senate bill would…eliminate the link between crop subsidies and compliance with conservation programs.”
“The centerpiece of the Senate farm plan is an expansion of crop insurance, because it looks both great and cheap. Two recent examinations of it, however, say it's neither.”
“In Montana, over the past four years, [Conservation Reserve Program-protected] acres have decreased roughly 789,000 acres…the number of acres coming out has accelerated every year.”