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File photo A new five-year farm bill will have a major — and mostly positive — impact on farmers in the Upper Midwest, according to people tracking the federal legislation. But the bill will also have an impact on conservation and food programs nationwide.
File photo / The Free Press


Published November 09, 2007 11:47 pm - The farm bill has a dramatic effect on nearly all of the land in the United States, which affects air and water quality.

A farm bill with balance
Farm bill affects ‘100 percent’ of Americans

By Mark Fischenich
The Free Press

MANKATO

Scott Sparlin of New Ulm knows he wasn’t part of a mass audience when he sat glued to the television this week, watching the Senate debate of the new five-year farm bill.

“Probably one in 30,000 — maybe,” Sparlin said, taking a stab at what proportion of southern Minnesotans also were watching the discussion on C-SPAN.

His estimate of the percentage of Americans who will be impacted by that debate — and how it shapes policies relating to farming, the environment, food programs and health — is an easier one to make.

The bill will impact 100 percent of Americans, Sparlin said. For one, the bill has a dramatic effect on nearly all of the land in the United States, which affects air and water quality.

“When 92 percent of your land mass is agricultural, let’s ask ourselves if agricultural practices and the farm bill will affect our environment,” said Sparlin, the executive director of the Coalition for a Clean Minnesota River. “... There’s a lot of complexity to (federal farm policy), and it affects every one of us.”

Back from a trip to Washington to lobby senators on conservation programs in the bill, or ones that he thinks should be in the bill, Sparlin is mildly satisfied with the way the legislation is shaping up.

“I’d say between ‘OK’ and ‘pretty good,’” he said of its overall grade.

Folks other than major agricultural businesses seemed to have had a bit more opportunity to shape the bill, he said. And existing programs for promoting conservation of ag land, protecting streams from agricultural run-off and restoring flood plains along rivers are largely continued and in some places expanded.

And there might be some more improvements when, after the Senate gets its bill passed, the House and Senate work out a compromise bill in a conference committee.

“That’s what I’m really hoping for,” said Sparlin, who is also coordinator for the Friends of the Minnesota Valley Watershed. “Nothing’s going to be perfect.”

Kevin Paap, a Garden City farmer and the president of the Minnesota Farm Bureau, also is paying close attention to the debate as he awaits the final version of the $288 billion legislation. Paap and other farmers have been waiting for a while.

Minnesota Congressman Collin Peterson, whose district stretches from the Canadian border all the way to Sibley County, is chairman of the House Agriculture Committee and promised long ago that he’d have the House bill done by the end of July so that lawmakers could discuss the legislation with constituents during the long congressional recess in August.

“Everybody thought, ‘Yeah, you bet, nobody ever got that done,’” Paap said.

But Peterson got House approval of his bill on July 27, and the people back home gave it rave reviews. Progress in the Senate has been slower, and the Bush administration is now threatening to veto the bill — an increasingly common threat as the Democratic Congress clashes with the Republican president over spending bills.

With Peterson overseeing the formation of the House bill and Iowa Sen. Tom Harkin chairing the Senate Ag Committee, farmers in the Upper Midwest were hopeful their interests would be protected in the legislation.



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