WikiLeaks Document Release
                http://wikileaks.org/wiki/CRS-RS22013
                                               February 2, 2009



                        Congressional Research Service
                                       Report RS22013
                  Agricultural Issues in the 109th Congress
                        Ralph M. Chite, Resources, Science, and Industry Division

                                                October 6, 2006

Abstract. A number of issues affecting U.S. agriculture have been or are being addressed by the 109th
Congress. The Deficit Reduction Act of 2005 (P.L. 109-171), enacted in February 2006, included a net reduction
in spending on U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) mandatory programs of $2.7 billion over five years, and
the reauthorization of a dairy income support program. Other issues of importance to agriculture during the
second session of the 109th Congress include the consideration of emergency farm disaster assistance; multilateral
and bilateral trade negotiations; concerns about agroterrorism, food safety, and animal and plant diseases (e.g.,
"mad cow" disease and avian flu); high energy costs; environmental issues; agricultural marketing matters; the
reauthorization of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission; and farm labor issues.
                                                                                                                    Order Code RS22013
                                                                                                                 Updated October 6, 2006




                                             Agricultural Issues in the 109th Congress
                                                                      Ralph M. Chite
                                                              Specialist in Agricultural Policy
                                                          Resources, Science, and Industry Division

                                        Summary

                                             A number of issues affecting U.S. agriculture have been or are being addressed by
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                                        the 109th Congress. The Deficit Reduction Act of 2005 (P.L. 109-171), enacted in
                                        February 2006, included a net reduction in spending on U.S. Department of Agriculture
                                        (USDA) mandatory programs of $2.7 billion over five years, and the reauthorization of
                                        a dairy income support program. Other issues of importance to agriculture during the
                                        second session of the 109th Congress include the consideration of emergency farm
                                        disaster assistance; multilateral and bilateral trade negotiations; concerns about
                                        agroterrorism, food safety, and animal and plant diseases (e.g., "mad cow" disease and
                                        avian flu); high energy costs; environmental issues; agricultural marketing matters; the
                                        reauthorization of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission; and farm labor issues.


                                        Farm Production Support
                                              Budget and Spending. Pressure to reduce the federal budget deficit required
                                        Congress to consider reductions in spending on USDA programs. The 109th Congress has
                                        addressed USDA spending levels on two fronts: in budget reconciliation and in the annual
                                        agriculture appropriations bill. The Deficit Reduction Act of 2005 (P.L. 109-171, enacted
                                        February 8, 2006) contains net reductions in USDA mandatory spending of $2.7 billion
                                        over five years. Nearly half of this reduction was achieved through a change in the timing
                                        of farm commodity payments, and most of the balance consists of cuts to conservation,
                                        rural development, and research spending. Separately, the full House has passed and the
                                        Senate Appropriations Committee has reported their respective versions of the FY2007
                                        Agriculture appropriations bill (H.R. 5384), which will provide annual funding for nearly
                                        all USDA agencies and programs. (See CRS Report RS22086, Agriculture and FY2006
                                        Budget Reconciliation; and CRS Report RL33412, Agriculture and Related Agencies:
                                        FY2007 Appropriations.)

                                             Farm Disaster Assistance. Several major weather events in 2005 and 2006,
                                        particularly Hurricanes Katrina and Rita and a widespread drought, have caused the 109th
                                        Congress to consider emergency disaster assistance for farmers this year. In response to
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                                        the 2005 hurricanes, Congress so far has provided about $1.6 billion in agricultural
                                        assistance in two emergency supplemental acts (P.L. 109-148 and P.L. 109-234). To date,
                                        Congress has not authorized any emergency crop or livestock payments for 2005 or 2006
                                        production losses outside of the Gulf states. However, the Senate-reported version of the
                                        FY2006 agriculture appropriations bill (H.R. 5384) contains $4.0 billion in various forms
                                        of farm assistance, including payments for major crop and livestock losses caused by any
                                        2005 disaster. Similar provisions for non-hurricane states were contained in the
                                        Senate-passed version of an FY2006 supplemental bill (H.R. 4939), but were deleted in
                                        conference because of a threatened Administration veto of the measure. (See CRS
                                        Report RS21212, Agricultural Disaster Assistance.)

                                              Farm Bill and Commodity Support Programs. Farm income and price
                                        support programs are dictated primarily by Title I of the 2002 farm bill (P.L. 107-171),
                                        which expires in 2007. The House and Senate Agriculture Committee are conducting
                                        field hearings this year, with more intensive deliberations and markup expected in both
                                        committees in 2007. At issue is whether Congress will extend the current farm support
                                        policy, or if the pressures of tight federal spending constraints, concerns about the
                                        distribution of farm program benefits, and the threat of potential World Trade
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                                        Organization (WTO) challenges to farm price and income support spending will compel
                                        Congress to consider significant changes to existing farm policy. (See CRS Report
                                        RL33037, Previewing a 2007 Farm Bill, and CRS Report RS21999, Farm Commodity
                                        Policy: Programs and Issues for Congress.)

                                             Payment Limits. Most crop payments are subject to annual per-person limits.
                                        Past legislative efforts to reduce the maximum amount of payments that producers can
                                        receive have been thwarted by strong opposition from southern cotton and rice growers.
                                        In the 109th Congress, S. 385 and H.R. 1590 would reduce payment limits to a total of
                                        $250,000 and count commodity certificates and loan forfeiture toward the limits. A Senate
                                        floor amendment to add payment limits to the Deficit Reduction Act of 2005 (P.L.
                                        109-171) failed by a procedural vote of 46-53. The Administration's FY2007 budget
                                        request contains a legislative proposal that would tighten crop payment limits. (See CRS
                                        Report RS21493, Payment Limits for Farm Commodity Programs: Issues and Proposals.)

                                              Dairy. The Milk Income Loss Contract (MILC) program provides payments to dairy
                                        farmers when farm milk prices are below a specified target level. A provision in the
                                        FY2006 budget reconciliation act (P.L. 109-171) extended MILC program authority for
                                        two years, through September 30, 2007, but prohibits any MILC payments beyond August
                                        31, 2007. Consequently, under current budget rules, the program will have no baseline
                                        budget spending allocated to it beyond its expiration date. A provision in the
                                        House-reported version of the FY2007 Agriculture appropriations bill (H.R. 5384) would
                                        have allowed payments in September 2007 and preserved the program's budget baseline
                                        for the next farm bill debate in 2007. Because of its budget implications, the provision
                                        was deleted on the House floor. Separately, Congress also completed action on a measure
                                        (P.L. 109-215, S. 2120) that requires the regulation of a certain large dairy operation in
                                        the West that was previously exempt from paying federally mandated minimum farm milk
                                        prices. (See CRS Report RL33475, Dairy Policy Issues.)

                                             WTO Cotton Case. In March 2005, a WTO appellate panel ruled against the
                                        United States in a dispute settlement case brought by Brazil, stating that elements of the
                                        U.S. cotton program are not consistent with U.S. trade commitments. In response,
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                                        Congress included a provision in the Deficit Reduction Act of 2005 (P.L. 109-171)
                                        authorizing the elimination of the Step-2 cotton program on August 1, 2006. Following
                                        the indefinite suspension of the WTO Doha Round of multilateral trade negotiations in
                                        July 2006, Brazil has pressed for further reductions in U.S. cotton support in response to
                                        the panel ruling. On September 28, 2006, the WTO established a compliance panel in
                                        response to a request by Brazil to determine whether current U.S. actions are sufficient
                                        to comply with the original WTO rulings and recommendations. As a result, additional
                                        permanent modifications to U.S. farm programs may still be needed to fully comply with
                                        the "actionable subsidies" portion of the WTO ruling. Such changes ultimately would be
                                        decided by Congress, most likely in the context of the 2007 farm bill. (See CRS Report
                                        RS22187, U.S. Agricultural Policy Response to WTO Cotton Decision.)

                                              Conservation Programs. Spending for conservation programs, which help
                                        producers protect and improve natural resources on some farmed land and retire other
                                        land from production, have grown rapidly since the 2002 farm bill, reaching a total of
                                        more than $5.2 billion in FY2005. This growth in spending reflects the expanded reach
                                        of conservation programs, which now involve many more landowners and types of rural
                                        lands. Budget pressures forced the 109th Congress to weigh the benefits of these programs
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                                        against growing costs. The Deficit Reduction Act of 2005 (P.L. 109-171) reduced
                                        spending on several mandatory conservation programs by a combined $934 million over
                                        five years. Another topic that continues to attract congressional interest is implementation
                                        of the Conservation Security Program, enacted in 2002. Some stakeholders have
                                        questioned why USDA has implemented the program in only a few watersheds, and why
                                        Congress has limited funding even though the program was enacted as a true entitlement.
                                        The environmental, conservation, and agriculture communities have started to identify
                                        conservation policy options that might be considered in the next farm bill. The House and
                                        Senate Agriculture Committees have started to examine selected conservation issues in
                                        recent hearings. (See CRS Report RL33556, Soil and Water Conservation: An Overview.)

                                              Energy. Although not as energy-intensive as some industries, agriculture is a major
                                        consumer of energy -- directly, as fuel or electricity, and indirectly, as fertilizers and
                                        chemicals. In early September 2005, energy prices jumped to record levels in the wake
                                        of Hurricanes Katrina and Rita. By raising the overall price structure of production
                                        agriculture, sustained high energy prices could result in significantly lower farm and rural
                                        incomes in 2006, and are generating considerable concern about longer-term impacts on
                                        farm profitability. Agriculture also is viewed as a potentially important producer of
                                        renewable fuels such as ethanol and biodiesel, although farm-based energy production
                                        remains small relative to total U.S. energy needs. The energy bill (P.L.109-58) enacted
                                        in July 2005 includes a renewable fuels standard (RFS) for biofuels that grows from 4
                                        billion gallons in 2006 to 7.5 billion gallons in 2012. The RFS, along with tax credit
                                        incentives, is expected to encourage significant increases in U.S. ethanol production. (See
                                        CRS Report RL32677, Energy Use in Agriculture: Background and Issues; and CRS
                                        Report RL32712, Agriculture-Based Renewable Energy Production.)

                                        Agricultural Trade Policy
                                             Trade Negotiations. U.S. trade policy seeks to improve market access for U.S.
                                        agricultural products through multilateral, regional, and bilateral trade agreements. U.S.
                                        officials also seek to hold countries to commitments made under existing agreements, and
                                        to resolve disputes impeding farm exports. The Administration is participating in the
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                                        current Doha Round of multilateral trade negotiations, which have focused on the so-
                                        called three pillars of agricultural trade liberalization: trade-distorting domestic subsidies,
                                        market access, and export competition. Negotiators have been unable to reach a
                                        compromise agreement on reducing subsidies or expanding market access for agricultural
                                        products. The expiration of Trade Promotion Authority for fast-track consideration of
                                        trade agreements next year makes the end of 2006 the effective deadline for getting an
                                        agreement ready for congressional consideration. The United States has insisted that it
                                        will not improve its offer on domestic subsidy reduction unless the EU improves its
                                        market access offer and the G-20 countries show a willingness to open their markets not
                                        only to agricultural products but to industrial products and services as well. (See CRS
                                        Report RL33144, WTO Doha Round: The Agricultural Negotiations.)

                                             The 109th Congress passed legislation (P.L. 109-53) to implement the Dominican
                                        Republic-Central America-U.S. free trade agreement (DR-CAFTA) despite strong
                                        opposition from the U.S. sugar industry, which fears those countries would gain increased
                                        access to the U.S. market. Separately, and also negotiating new free trade agreements
                                        with Panama, the Andean countries, Thailand, and the Southern African Customs Union,
                                        among others. (See CRS Report RL32110, Agriculture in the U.S.-Dominican
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                                        Republic-Central American Free Trade Agreement.)

                                             Other Trade Issues. Other ongoing issues of interest to Congress include rules
                                        of trade for the products of agricultural biotechnology (see CRS Report RL32809,
                                        Agricultural Biotechnology: Background and Recent Issues); the scope of restrictions that
                                        should apply to agricultural sales to Cuba (see CRS Report RL33499, Exempting Food
                                        and Agriculture Products from U.S. Economic Sanctions: Status and Implementation);
                                        and funding for U.S. agricultural export and food aid programs (see CRS Report
                                        RL33553, Agricultural Export and Food Aid Programs).

                                        Protecting the Food Supply
                                             Agroterrorism. The potential of terrorist attacks against agricultural targets
                                        (agroterrorism) is increasingly recognized as a national security threat. "Food defense"
                                        -- hardening the critical infrastructure against possible attack -- has received increased
                                        attention since 2001. Through increased appropriations, laboratory and response
                                        capacities are being upgraded. National response plans now incorporate agroterrorism.
                                        Yet some in Congress want additional laws or oversight to increase the level of food
                                        defense, particularly regarding interagency coordination, response and recovery
                                        leadership, and ensuring adequate border inspections. (See CRS Report RL32521,
                                        Agroterrorism: Threats and Preparedness.)

                                              Food Safety. Approximately 76 million people get sick and 5,000 die from
                                        food-related illnesses in the United States each year, it is estimated. Congress frequently
                                        conducts oversight and periodically considers legislation on food safety and could do so
                                        again. Some Members continue to be interested in the control of animal diseases that also
                                        threaten human health; the regulation of bioengineered foods, human antimicrobial
                                        resistance (which some link partly to misuse of antibiotics in animal feed), and the safety
                                        of fresh produce. In the 109th Congress, for example, S. 729 and H.R. 1507 propose to
                                        consolidate U.S. food safety oversight under an independent U.S. agency. H.R. 3160 and
                                        S. 1357 clarify USDA's authority in prescribing performance standards for the reduction
                                        of pathogens in meat and poultry products. (See CRS Report RL31853, Food Safety
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                                        Issues in the 109th Congress; and CRS Report RL32922, Meat and Poultry Inspection:
                                        Background and Selected Issues.)

                                              BSE. Bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE or "mad cow disease") continues
                                        to attract interest, with eleven native North American cases (three in the United States)
                                        confirmed through early October 2006. Authorities characterize the risk to human health
                                        from these cases as extremely low. However, the beef industry has suffered economically
                                        due to foreign borders being closed to U.S. beef. The appearance of BSE in North
                                        America in 2003 raised meat safety concerns and disrupted trade for cattle and beef
                                        producers. A major issue for Congress has been how to rebuild foreign markets for U.S.
                                        beef. Other issues include whether additional measures are needed to further protect cattle
                                        and the public, and concerns over the relative costs and benefits of such measures for
                                        consumers, taxpayers, and industry. (See CRS Report RS22345, BSE ("Mad Cow
                                        Disease"): A Brief Overview.)

                                             Avian Influenza. Since 2003, highly pathogenic avian influenza (H5N1) has
                                        spread from Asia into Europe, the Middle East, and Africa; however, no cases of H5N1
                                        have been found yet in the United States. Because avian flu is highly contagious in
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                                        domestic poultry and can be carried by wild birds, on-farm biosecurity is important.
                                        Controlling avian flu in poultry is seen as the best way to prevent a human pandemic from
                                        developing. Congress responded to the threat by providing an emergency FY2006
                                        supplemental appropriation (in P.L. 109-148) to combat avian flu, including $91 million
                                        for USDA operations. This supplements the regular funding of $28 million for FY2006,
                                        which includes $15 million in unused funds from prior years. For FY2007, USDA
                                        requests $82 million for avian flu. (See CRS Report RS21747, Avian Influenza:
                                        Agricultural Issues.)

                                        Marketing
                                              Country of Origin Labeling (COOL). Mandatory COOL for fresh meats,
                                        produce, and peanuts was scheduled to take effect September 30, 2006. However, the
                                        FY2006 Agriculture Appropriations Act (P.L. 109-97) again postponed mandatory COOL
                                        for two additional years. Some Members continue to support mandatory COOL, and a
                                        few of them would prefer that it take effect sooner (S. 1331) or be expanded to processed
                                        meats (S. 135). Others have sought to replace mandatory COOL with voluntary labeling
                                        programs. A bill (H.R. 2068) sponsored by the chairman of the House Agriculture
                                        Committee (and an identical Senate bill, S. 1333) would make COOL labeling voluntary
                                        for fresh meats. S. 1300 would make COOL voluntary for meat, fish, and produce. (See
                                        CRS Report 97-508, Country-of-Origin Labeling for Foods.)

                                             Farm Animal Protection. Both the Senate- and House-passed versions of the
                                        FY2006 agriculture appropriation bill (H.R. 2744) barred use of appropriated funds to
                                        pay for ante-mortem inspection of horses for food. The enacted version (P.L. 109-97)
                                        makes the funding ban effective only for approximately the last six months of FY2006;
                                        during this time the three foreign-owned plants in the U.S. that currently slaughter horses,
                                        primarily for European and Japanese consumers, are paying user fees for such inspection.
                                        Free-standing legislation to ban horse slaughter includes H.R. 503 (which passed the full
                                        House by a vote of 263-146 on September 7, 2006) and S. 1915. Among other pending
                                        farm animal welfare related-bills are S. 1779 and H.R. 3931, to prohibit nonambulatory
                                        livestock (also called "downers") from being used for human food; and H.R. 5557, to
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                                        require the federal government to purchase only food and fiber products that were raised
                                        in compliance with prescribed humane standards. (See CRS Report RS21842, Horse
                                        Slaughter Prevention Bills and Issues; and CRS Report RS21978, Humane Treatment of
                                        Farm Animals: Overview and Issues.)

                                        CFTC Reauthorization
                                              The Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) is an independent federal
                                        regulatory agency that regulates the futures trading industry. The CFTC is subject to
                                        periodic reauthorization; current authority expired on September 30, 2005. Congress
                                        traditionally uses the reauthorization process to consider amendments to the Commodity
                                        Exchange Act (CEA), which provides the basis for federal regulation of commodity
                                        futures trading. The House and Senate Agriculture Committees, with jurisdiction over
                                        CFTC, conducted hearings on CFTC reauthorization in March 2005. The full House
                                        passed its version of CFTC reauthorization (H.R. 4473) on December 14, 2005. Floor
                                        action on a Senate-reported measure (S. 1566) is pending. Among the issues in the debate
                                        are (1) regulation of energy derivatives markets, where some see excessive price volatility
                                        and a lack of effective regulation; (2) the market in security futures, or futures contracts
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                                        based on single stocks, where cumbersome and duplicative regulation is blamed for low
                                        trading volumes; (3) the regulatory status of foreign futures exchanges selling contracts
                                        in the United States; and (4) the legality of futures-like contracts based on foreign
                                        currency prices offered to retail investors. (See CRS Report RS22028, CFTC
                                        Reauthorization in the 109th Congress.)

                                        Farm Labor and Immigration Reform
                                              Hired farmworkers are an important component of agricultural production. Many of
                                        these laborers are under guest worker programs, which are meant to assure employers
                                        (e.g., fruit, vegetable, and horticulture growers) of an adequate supply of labor when and
                                        where it is needed while not adding permanent residents to the U.S. population. The
                                        connection between farm labor and immigration policies is a longstanding one,
                                        particularly with regard to U.S. employers' use of workers from Mexico. The 109th
                                        Congress is taking up the issue as part of a larger debate over initiation of a broad-based
                                        guest worker program, increased border enforcement, and employer sanctions to curb the
                                        flow of unauthorized workers into the United States. House and Senate immigration
                                        reform measures (H.R. 4437 and S. 2454) currently being debated have important
                                        implications for hired farm labor. Other bills (H.R. 884/S. 359 and H.R. 3857)
                                        introduced in the 109th Congress specifically address agricultural labor issues. (See CRS
                                        Report RL33125, Immigration Legislation and Issues in the 109th Congress; CRS Report
                                        95-712, The Effects on U.S. Farm Workers of an Agricultural Guest Worker Program;
                                        and CRS Report RL30395, Farm Labor Shortages and Immigrations Policy.)