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This Week’s Commodity Comments: August 4, 2015
Bay Foundation Issues Statement In Stream Fencing Court Case
From the Field: What are Other State Farm Bureaus Doing to Promote Agriculture?
Last week I and all of the other field staff attended the 2015 Farm Bureau Southern Region Field Staff Conference in Gatlinburg, TN. This conference is held every three years in different locations throughout the southern region which encompasses the states from Virginia and Kentucky to Texas and Oklahoma. One of the best things about these conferences and others like it is the networking. The sharing of ideas and experiences with the same job is always beneficial. I am proud to report that Virginia Farm Bureau is doing a lot of things right and have many programs in place that some states are just now getting around to implementing.Follow Virginia Farm Bureau on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram
Instagram: https://instagram.com/vafarmbureau/
This Week’s Commodity Comments: July 29, 2015
Stallman: Secret Documents Show EPA Dismissed Concerns about WOTUS Rule
Sen. Jim Inhofe, chairman of the Environment and Public Works Committee, asked the Corps of Engineers to provide documents that came to his attention concerning the EPA’s and Corps’ development of the rule. The Corps provided the documents, but asked that they be kept from public view. Evidently, they show that Corps staff had questions about the validity of EPA’s economic analysis and the rule’s unworkability due to lack of clarity concerning what “waters” were to be regulated. The documents also show that staff’s concerns, even those based on the view that the rule didn’t go as far as they would like, were ignored or overridden. Chairman Inhofe remarked that while the rule was “purportedly a joint effort of EPA and the Corps,” it appears that the Corps was cut out of the process.
Unfortunately, this isn’t very surprising. All of this seems to validate much of what we have been saying about the serious flaws in EPA’s economic analysis, and about how difficult it is for anyone, including apparently the Corps, to know what is a “water” and which “waters” are regulated under the rule.
The fact that these documents exist and that the Corps has asked the committee to keep them hidden from the public begs the question: what else is out there? What other internal agency documents might reveal what’s behind the flawed economic analysis, or other factors that shaped the rule? What EPA documents have not been revealed that would shed light on how the agency made decisions and whether it genuinely considered the public’s concerns?
It’s time for some transparency.
House Approves the Safe and Accurate Food Labeling Act of 2015
The House on Thursday approved H.R. 1599, the Safe and Accurate Food Labeling Act of 2015, on a 275 to 150 vote. Passage of this legislation is a priority issue for Farm Bureau.
“Congress stood with farmers and ranchers today in supporting innovation that helps the environment and keeps food prices down for everyone,” AFBF President Bob Stallman said in a statement. The legislation protects consumers from confusing and misleading GMO labels and will create a national, voluntary labeling standard based on science and common sense.
This Week’s Commodity Comments: July 22, 2015
Stallman Announces Departure in January
“It has been a tremendous honor to serve the nation’s Farm Bureau members and represent agriculture and rural America,” Stallman said. “After 16 years as AFBF president, six as Texas Farm Bureau president and several more in other Farm Bureau roles, it is time to hand over the reins of leadership—a decision that is made easier by knowing the great leadership and foundation that exist to continue moving Farm Bureau forward. I am as optimistic as ever about the future of American agriculture and Farm Bureau.”






