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December 21, 2001 * Volume 8 * Number
45
IN THIS ISSUE:
- Corn Growers
Pursue Goals as Adjournment Nears; White House Meets for Next Step
- NCGA's Support
of Corn to Cuba Gains National Recognition
- Trade Promotion
Authority Forwarded to Floor
- Corn Growers
Support The Biotechnology and Agricultural Trade Program
- NCGA Attempts
to Assuage Biotechnology Concerns
- NCGA Development
Director Attends Annual Seed Professionals Conference
- NCGA Spreads
the Message on Ethanol Co-Products
- NCGA's Indiana
Leadership Conference Molds Grower Leaders
- NCGA Continues
Support of Checkoff-Funded Research
- Corn Fiber Utilization
Project Continues With Checkoff-Funded Help
- Corn Growers
Send Letter to Santa
- There's Still
Time to Apply for NCGA Corn Board
Corn Growers
Pursue Goals as Adjournment Nears; White House Meets for Next Step
The Senate farm bill debate ended for the year on Wednesday, after the
body failed for the third time to invoke cloture (a procedural move
to limit debate). As promised by Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle,
D-SD, when the gavel fell on the measure that would have limited debate,
the Senate resumed dealing with other legislative business.
The Senate's action
leaves the farm bill in limbo, with no clear indication as to what the
future will bring for S. 1731, Sen. Tom Harkin's, D-IA, farm bill proposal.
However, officials at the White House have already started planning
for the next round of debate. Most indications point to a statement
from the Bush Administration reaffirming the increased spending levels
it had previously committed itself to ($73.5 billion over 10 years),
easing fears of a budget shortfall for the new agriculture legislation.
A letter from the White House restating the commitment is expected any
day. "We cannot continue with farm policy that contributes to lower
market returns while increasing the dependency on Uncle Sam. A new farm
bill must avoid the past when farmers' income was maximized by government
payments and not market prices," said NCGA President Tim Hume. "We will
continue to fight for new agriculture policy that is compatible with
the goals of the WTO, is market responsive, competitive, and environmentally
responsible, no matter when it finally reaches a vote."
As expected, Sens.
Thad Cochran, R-MS, and Pat Roberts, R-KS, introduced a substitute to
the commodity title. Although the Cochran - Roberts measure received
the support of the Bush Administration, the measure was soundly defeated.
Attempts to strike language that allows U.S. financial assistance for
agricultural trade with Cuba failed as well. As the week wound down,
and tensions flared, Sen. Tim Hutchinson, R-AR, introduced a substitute
proposal that was basically identical to the House passed version of
the farm bill. The Senator hoped to spur some kind of action in the
stalled farm bill debate, but was unsuccessful.
For more information
on the NCGA farm bill proposal, and the situation in the U.S. Senate,
click here.
NCGA's Support
of Corn to Cuba Gains National Recognition
For the first time since the Kennedy administration, Cuba has received
goods from the United States, in the form of corn and other humanitarian
aid due to the destruction wreaked by Hurricane Michelle in recent months.
NCGA has long supported the exemption of food, feed and other agricultural
products from unilaterally imposed sanctions, said Garry Niemeyer, a
corn grower from Glenarm, Ill., and member of NCGA's Production and
Stewardship Action Team. (More
On This Story)
Trade Promotion
Authority Forwarded to Floor
NCGA is encouraged the Senate Finance Committee formally forwarded the
Trade Promotion Authority (TPA) bill to the Senate floor, after the
Finance Committee approved the proposal earlier this month in committee
markup. The Senate bill was drafted by Finance Committee Chairman Sen.
Max Baucus, D-MT, and ranking member Sen. Charles Grassley, R-IA. The
fast track proposal closely resembles the version that passed out of
the House of Representatives, and is not expected to create as much
controversy as the measure experienced in the House. Proponents of TPA
believe this will lend credibility to U.S. trade negotiations, and encourage
prospective trade partners to enter agreements with the U.S. Senate
Majority Leader Tom Daschle, D-SD, must now schedule the TPA bill for
floor time.
NCGA is an active
advocate of Trade Promotion Authority, and encourages growers to learn
the many ways in which corn would benefit for the imposition of such
a rule. Log onto the Leader
Resource Center for more information.
DID YOU KNOW??
www.ncga.com offers up-to-date Ag
News, Weather and Market information. Customize weather information
to your local area. Check it out!
Corn Growers
Support The Biotechnology and Agricultural Trade Program
In
a letter sent Monday to the United States Senate, the AgBiotech
Planning Committee, of which the NCGA is a member, urged members' strong
support for Section 333 of the Senate farm bill, the Agriculture, Conservation
and Rural Enhancement Act of 2001. "We are beginning to see an intertwining
of trade and biotechnology. Section 333 of the Senate farm bill, S.
1731, authorizes a valuable and important program called the Biotechnology
and Agricultural Trade Program," said Tim Hume, a Walsh, Colo., corn
grower and president of NCGA. (More
On This Story)
NCGA Attempts
to Calm Biotechnology Concerns
Biotechnology remains the hot dish of the month in the food industry.
Studies, reports and misleading claims run rampant in newspaper headlines
and magazines across the country. Leading news sources in the United
States banter biotech language around an unfamiliar public, often frightening
consumers with statements that have no factual basis, relying instead
on accusations that agriculture is engaged in a "weird science" that
is somehow bad for people. The United States government is growing concerned,
and so is the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), the agency in charge
of overseeing the safety of the U.S. food supply. NCGA is not opposed
in principle to either labeling or traceability. NCGA supports the right
for consumers to know. Labeling should not be mandatory and/or should
be based on scientific principle. For a look at important biotechnology
issues, log on to the NCGA
Leader Resource Center.
NCGA Development
Director Attends Annual Seed Professionals Conference
The NCGA was there when the ASTA recently held its annual conference
recently in Chicago, Ill. The event is the largest gathering of seed
professionals in the world and features the industry's largest trade
show, Seed Expo 2001. Tom Slunecka, director of development for the
NCGA, was on hand for the event and said the meeting was very productive.
"There are a lot of great people at this event every year," he said,
"and NCGA has made a positive statement to them about our involvement
in seed issues." (More
On This Story)
NCGA Spreads
the Message on Ethanol Co-Products
Ethanol is quickly becoming the fuel of choice in the U.S., as a safer,
cleaner-burning alternative to MTBE, a petroleum based product. A valuable
co-product of dry grind ethanol distillation is distillers grain, which
can be used as a protein supplement in livestock feed. The NCGA recognizes
the importance of co-products and recently sent NCGA Livestock Services
Manager Tracy Snider to Austin, Tex., to speak at the Texas Ethanol
Conference. (More
On This Story)
DID YOU KNOW??
http://www.ncga.com offers a comprehensive Legislative Action Center.
Contact your elected state and national representatives online and track
key legislation.
NCGA's Indiana
Leadership Conference Molds Grower Leaders
Representatives of the NCGA journeyed to Indiana this week at the request
of the Indiana Corn Growers Association to host a leadership seminar
focusing on media and presentation training. The conference, sponsored
by Syngenta Crop Protection, was held Tuesday and Wednesday in Indianapolis.
(More
On
This Story)
NCGA Continues
Support of Checkoff-Funded Research
The NCGA is continuing to leverage corn checkoff dollars with the maximum
benefit to the nation's corn growers. The U.S. Department of Energy
(DOE) is sponsoring a $1.7 million project to turn corn into 1,3-propanediol,
a polymer that can be used to create a new form of synthetic fiber similar
to polyester. (More
On This Story)
Corn Fiber Utilization
Project Continues With Checkoff-Funded Help
Corn fiber utilization represents untapped potential for agricultural
researchers and is one of several projects the NCGA is involved in,
leveraging corn checkoff funds with U.S. Department of Energy grants
to find new uses for corn. (More
On This Story)
Corn Growers
Send Letter to Santa
Dear Santa...
We at the National Corn Growers Association (NCGA) have been really,
extra-special good this year. We've promoted cleaner burning ethanol
to protect the environment and checkoff-funded research to use more
of our abundant corn crop to provide consumers with better goods. We've
also worked to share accessibility of biotechnology crops and to play
nicely with our international trading partners. Because we've been good,
we have a few things we'd like to have in our stockings on Christmas
morning: (More
On This Story)
There's Still
Time to Apply for NCGA Corn Board
With any great organization, there are great leaders to guide them.
The NCGA Corn Board is a group of fifteen great grower leaders who work
together to make decisions that affect the 32,000 members of the nation's
premier corn grower association. They, in turn, represent the interests
of more than 300,000 U.S. corn growers. The deadline for applications
has been extended to Dec. 31 so you can still be a part of that process
by applying for a position on the NCGA Corn Board.
To qualify, applicants
must be an NCGA member, a corn producer (owner, manager or operator)
and a checkoff contributor, if applicable. To receive application materials
for yourself or someone else, please call Kathy Baker at the St. Louis
office, 636-733-9004, ext 111, or email at baker@ncga.com.
NCGA THIS WEEK
- Dec. 24-25 NCGA
offices in St. Louis and Washington D.C., will be closed for Christmas.
NCGA would like to wish you a happy and safe holiday!
- Dec. 26-28 NCGA
offices will be open for regular office hours.
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