WASHINGTON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--
Today, Citizens Against Government Waste (CAGW) named House Agriculture
Committee Chairman Frank Lucas (R-Okla.) and Ranking Member Collin
Peterson (D-Minn.) its July 2012 Porkers of the Month for sponsoring the
Federal Agriculture Reform and Risk Management Act (FARRM). Like its
counterpart in the Senate, FARRM is a massive waste of taxpayer dollars
at a time of record profits for farmers, maintains the
command-and-control system that has been in place for decades, and falls
far short of the $180 billion in savings for the Farm Bill that was
included in the House-passed budget resolution. The bill would reduce
Farm Bill spending to $957 billion over ten years, a difference of $35.1
billion and a paltry savings of 3.5 percent.
While FARRM terminates many of the wasteful programs that were
eliminated in the Senate bill, such as the Average Crop Revenue Election
(ACRE) program, direct payments, and counter-cyclical payments, many
profligate programs are left largely unreformed and new ones have been
created. For example, the Price Loss Coverage Program (PLC), set to
replace the egregiously wasteful system of direct payments, would
reimburse farmers for revenues lost due to lower commodity prices. In
today’s climate of historically high prices, PLC will almost certainly
come at a very high cost to taxpayers when prices inevitably drop.
“Recent arguments urging the farm bill’s immediate passage due to
droughts across the country should be ignored,” said CAGW President Tom
Schatz. “Taxpayer-subsidized crop insurance prevents those farmers who
have enrolled from losing more than 15 percent of their expected
revenue, and a raft of private options, such as hedging, forwarding, and
diversification, remain available. Further, the farm bill covers much
more than farm supports, as evidenced by the fact that 79 percent of
farm bill expenditures go to food stamps. Passing a bad farm bill will
not end the drought, but will do a great deal of damage to future food
and farm policy.”
Left intact is the absurd Market
Access Program (MAP), which could more accurately go by the name
Corporate Welfare Access Program. MAP hands taxpayer dollars in the form
of advertising subsidies to successful agricultural firms like
Butterball, Tyson, Monsanto, and Sunkist Growers, Inc. to help them sell
their wares abroad. Also untouched is the sugar program, which has been criticized by
Citizens Against Government Waste (CAGW) many times for
inflating the price of sugar and benefiting the wealthiest one percent
of sugar farmers at the expense of consumers.

“The renewal of the farm bill should be viewed by members of Congress as
an opportunity to address duplication, cut wasteful spending, and make
reforms to allow the free market to function efficiently,” added Schatz.
“Instead, taxpayers are likely to get stuck with a bill that hardly
rocks the boat for a part of the federal budget that, in an already
waste-addled government, stands out for its inefficiency.”
For planting a lousy farm bill at Congress’s feet and sowing the seeds
of future wasteful spending, CAGW names Chairman Frank Lucas and Ranking
Member Collin Peterson its July 2012 Porkers of the Month.
CAGW is a nonpartisan, nonprofit organization dedicated to eliminating
waste, fraud, abuse, and mismanagement in government. Porker of the
Month is a dubious honor given to lawmakers, government officials, and
political candidates who have shown a blatant disregard for the
interests of taxpayers.

Citizens Against Government Waste
Leslie K. Paige,
202-467-5334
or
Luke Gelber, 202-467-5318
Source: Citizens Against Government Waste (CAGW)
| Copyright: | Copyright Business Wire 2012 |
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