1 / 39

Karen Gefvert Director of Governmental Relations Wisconsin Farm Bureau Federation

Karen Gefvert Director of Governmental Relations Wisconsin Farm Bureau Federation. National Agricultural Issues. Farm Bill Water Resources Reform Development Act ( WRRDA ) Immigration Reform. Farm Bill. “Agricultural Act of 2014” - 3 years in the making. Senate 68-32 Johnson – No

ulric
Download Presentation

Karen Gefvert Director of Governmental Relations Wisconsin Farm Bureau Federation

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Karen GefvertDirector of Governmental RelationsWisconsin Farm Bureau Federation

  2. National Agricultural Issues • Farm Bill • Water Resources Reform Development Act (WRRDA) • Immigration Reform

  3. Farm Bill “Agricultural Act of 2014” - 3 years in the making • Senate 68-32 • Johnson – No • Baldwin - Yes • House 251-166 • Ryan – Yes • Pocan – No • Kind – No • Moore – No • Sensenbrenner – No • Petri – Yes • Duffy – Yes • Ribble - Yes

  4. Farm Bill • $954.4 Billion over 10 years • 79% is Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) • $23 Billion in cuts • $8 Billion from SNAP • $15 Billion from Agriculture

  5. What’s in the Farm Bill? FY2014-2023 Total Spending = $954.4 Billion

  6. Farm Bill • Eliminates Direct Payments • Repeals or consolidates almost 100 programs • Significant dairy reform • Strengthens crop insurance • Price Loss Coverage (PLC) • Ag Risk Coverage (ARC) • Stacked Income Protection Plan (STAX) • Supplemental Coverage Option (SCO)

  7. Farm Bill • Livestock Disaster Assistance • Livestock Indemnity Program • Livestock Forage Disaster Program • Payment Limits • Eligibility rules tightened (AGI) • Research & Specialty Crop Research • Cherry, Potato & Cranberry • Organic research, certification & data collection

  8. Farm Bill – Crop Insurance • Price Loss Coverage (PLC) • Payment to producer when the market price is below a fixed reference price for covered crops • Agricultural Risk Protection (ARC) • Provides a payment when either • A farm’s revenue from ALL crops OR • The County’s revenue for a crop is below 86% of a predetermined benchmark level of revenue

  9. Agriculture Risk Coverage (Individual Election) For ARC Benchmark Revenue Based On 5-Year Olympic Average County Yields/National MYA Prices (or Ref. Price) Whole Farm Program Producer Loss 14% Loss Coverage between 86% and 76% of revenue benchmark. ARC (65% Base Acres) Crop Insurance Stand-Alone (66% for 75% RP) Crop Insurance Premium Revenue based plan (paid out on base acres)

  10. Agriculture Risk Coverage (Area Election) For ARC Benchmark Revenue Based On 5-Year Olympic Average County Yields/National MYA Prices (or Ref. Price) Individual Crop Program Producer Loss 14% Loss Coverage between 86% and 76% of revenue benchmark. ARC (85% Base Acres) Crop Insurance Stand-Alone (66% for 75% RP) Crop Insurance Premium Revenue based plan (paid out on base acres)

  11. Farm Bill – Crop Insurance • Stacked Income Protection Plan (STAX) – COTTON ONLY • Supplemental Coverage Option (SCO) • Not available for crops enrolled in ARC or STAX • Option to purchase area coverage with an underlying individual policy or plan of insurance • Allows indemnities to be equal to a part of the deductible on the underlying policy or plan of insurance

  12. SCO Maximum premium cost is 35% of the value of the crop Producer Loss 14% Area Revenue Loss Required Before SCO Payment Occur SCO coverage (county) from 86% expected revenue to underlying insurance policy SCO Stand Alone SCO Stand-Alone (65%) Crop Insurance Premium Crop Insurance Stand-Alone (66% for 75% RP)

  13. Farm Bill – Crop Insurance • Crop Insurance in America • http://www.cropinsuranceinamerica.org/ • Learn About Crop Insurance • Just the Facts

  14. Dairy Program • Must be established by Sept. 1, 2014 • Program ends Dec. 31, 2018 • Voluntary • Margin Protection Program • No supply management

  15. Dairy Program • Calculation of Average Feed Cost and Actual Dairy Production Margins • National monthly feed costs will be calculated based on the following: • Corn – monthly Agricultural Prices report • Soybean meal – Market News – Monthly Soybean Meal Price Report • Alfalfa hay – Agricultural Prices report • Actual Dairy Production Margin Calculation • Shall be calculated on a consecutive 2 month period • Subtract the 2 month Average Feed Cost from the 2 month All-Milk Price

  16. Dairy Program • Participation in Program • All dairies are eligible • Multi-producer dairy operations will be considered a single dairy • Single producer who operates multiple dairies will be considered multiple dairies • Administrative fee of $100 charged to all participating dairies • Participation in Margin Protection Program OR Livestock Gross Margin for Dairy

  17. Dairy Program • Production History • Calculate production history = highest annual milk marketings of the dairy during any one of the 2011, 2012, 2013 calendar years • Adjustment to the production history will be done on an annual basis to reflect any increase in the national average milk production • New Dairies – in operation less than one year • Extrapolate to a yearly amount the volume of actual milk marketings for the months in operation OR • Estimate based on the herd size relative to the national rolling herd average

  18. Dairy Program • Margin Protection Payments • Payments are based on a consecutive 2 month period • Dairies shall determine their margin coverage level annually • Coverage levels are: • $4.00, $4.50, $5.00, $5.50, $6.00, $6.50, $7.00, $7.50, $8.00 • Percentage of coverage • 5% increments, starting at 25%, not to exceed 90% of the production history of the dairy

  19. Dairy Program • Payment threshold • A payment will be issued when, for a 2 consecutive month period, the Average Actual Dairy Production Margin < the coverage level selected by the dairy • Margin Protection Payment Calculation • Coverage level – Average Actual Dairy Production Margin (2 months) THEN • X by Coverage Percentage AND • X by the production history of the dairy divided by 6

  20. Dairy Program • Example: • Coverage Level = $6.00 • Average Actual Dairy Production Margin = $4.50 • Coverage Percentage = 60% • Production History = 20,000 cwt (20,000/6 = 3,333) • $6.00 - $4.50 = $1.50 x .60 = .90 x 3,333 = $3,000.00

  21. Dairy Program • Premiums for Margin Protection Program • The first #4 M will be calculated at a separate coverage level than anything in excess of #4 M. • Calculation of Premiums (paid annually) • Special Rule – for the first #4 M of milk produced, the premium will be reduced by 25% for years 2014 & 2015

  22. Dairy Program

  23. Dairy Program

  24. Dairy Program • Calculation of Premiums (paid annually) • Coverage Percentage x Production History x Premium per hundred weight of milk for coverage level selected

  25. Dairy Program • Example: • Coverage Percentage = 60% • Production History = 20,000 cwt • Premium per hundred weight selected = $0.04125 OR $0.055 • .60 x 20,000 x 0.04125 = $495 (Years 2014 & 2015 = 25% reduced rate) • .60 x 20,000 x 0.055 = $660 (Year 2016 and later)

  26. Dairy Program • Payment of Premium • There will be at least more than one method for dairies to pay the premiums

  27. Water Resources Reform Development Act • Legislative package that addresses: • Operational costs • Capital expenditures • Major rehabilitation for inland waterways and harbors • Importance: Farmers need a consistent transportation mechanism for inputs and outputs for their farming operations • Our infrastructure of waterways and ports are funded through two different trust funds: • Inland Waterways Trust Fund • Harbor Maintenance Trust Fund

  28. Water Resources Reform Development Act Senate 83-14 House 417-3 Ryan – Yes Pocan – Yes Kind – Yes Moore – Yes Sensenbrenner – Yes Petri – Yes Duffy – Yes Ribble - Yes • Johnson – No • Baldwin – Yes Status: Bills are in conference committee and likely to be passed in early 2014

  29. Water Resources Reform Development Act • Inland Waterways Trust Fund (IWTF) • Major rehabilitation projects on locks and dams • Cost-sharing between the fund and the federal government on a 50/50 basis • Operations and maintenance costs for inland waterways are paid for exclusively by the federal government • Currently a $0.20 per gallon tax on commercial barge fuel • $85 million annually for the IWTF • Federal assistance • $90 million • $175 million annual budget • $380 million is what is actually needed • $205 million annual deficit

  30. Water Resources Reform Development Act • Proposal by some agricultural organizations • Increasing the current barge fuel tax by 6- to 9-cents • In exchange, full funding from the federal government for project costs on all dams and rehabilitation that are currently cost shared with the IWTF • Average rehabilitation costs are about $50 million per lock and the estimated cost to replace the present system of locks throughout the country is over $125 billion

  31. Water Resources Reform Development Act • Our lock and dam system was designed to last 50 years, but is approaching 80-years-old • The current capacity of most locks is approximately half the size needed to meet the typical 15-barge towing capacity • Typical 15-barge tows (1200’) have to be broken in two to fit into the 600’ lock system currently in place • Time and efficiency are lost

  32. Water Resources Reform Development Act • Harbor Maintenance Trust Fund (HMTF) • Funded by taxes on the value of imports and domestic cargo that arrive in federally-maintained U.S. ports • Funds are used for dredging and dredged material disposal, jetties and breakwaters construction and maintenance • Collection of funds far exceeds what is spent • Surplus in the fund has historically been funneled to fill gaps in the federal government's general fund • Only 55 percent of the funds collected are actually used on harbor maintenance

  33. Water Resources Reform Development Act • The U.S. lock and dam system is severely outdated and in need of repair • Agriculture relies on the waterways system in order to economically transport agricultural inputs and outputs • It is crucial for farmers to have access to this major transportation thoroughfare and to ensure that it is modernized to be more efficient and reliable

  34. Immigration Reform • Senate • Comprehensive Package • House • Smaller pieces • Administrative delays in current H2A program led to: • Arrival of labor 22 days after needed • Loss of $320 million

  35. Immigration Reform • Senate • Blue Card Program • For experienced farm workers already in the country • Provides an option to work towards green card • Guest Worker Visa Program • Replaces current H2A program • Allows entrance to non-experienced farm labor through a 3 year visa as an agricultural worker • They can be hired on a contract or at-will basis • Labor Cap • Annual limit of just over 12,000 for 3 years

  36. Immigration Reform • House • Border Security & Interior Enforcement • Entry-Exit Visa Tracking System • Employment Verification and Workplace Enforcement • Reforms to the Legal Immigration System • Youth • Currently Individuals Living Outside the Rule of Law

  37. Wisconsin Farm Bureau Federation • http://wfbf.com/legislation-regulations/issue-backgrounders/ • Farm Bill, WRRDA & Immigration Reform

  38. Questions?

More Related