FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
April 17, 1997
Contact: Dave Redmond
(202) 225-4050
WASHINGTON, D.C. - HEEDING
THE CONCERNS OF THOUSANDS OF FARMERS, THE HOUSE COMMITTEE ON AGRICULTURE
TODAY OVERWHELMINGLY PASSED LEGISLATION PROVIDING A ONE-YEAR BRIDGE
CONTRACT FOR FARMERS WHOSE CONSERVATION RESERVE PROGRAM (CRP)
CONTRACTS ARE EXPIRING, AND FOR WHOM THE UNCERTAINTY OF ENROLLMENT
IN CRP HAS LIMITED FALL PLANTING FLEXIBILITY.
Audio tape of Chairman Smith's opening statement at the Committee's
business meeting today can be obtained by calling (202) 226-3977.
The bill, H.R. 1342, which was introduced by Agriculture Committee
Chairman Bob Smith (R-OR), allows farmers, whose CRP contracts
are expiring in September and who would in the absence of CRP
produce a fall-planted crop, to enter into a one-year contract
while the U.S. Department of Agriculture evaluates their CRP bid.
If the farmer's land is ultimately accepted into CRP, the contract
would automatically convert to a standard ten-year contract; if
the land is rejected, it would come out of CRP after the one-year
contract's end which could be re-bid in a subsequent signup.
"This bill is not an extension. It is a technical correction
that will allow farmers to know now that they can be in the CRP
for the coming crop year. If the Secretary awards them a new ten-year
contract, then they would be taken care of. If not, then they
would be out of the program after the coming year and their CRP
acres would return to the pool to be awarded to someone else.
It's only fair to provide certainty for those farmers who, through
no fault of their own, have such little planting flexibility.
Our job now is to act quickly, get this bill on the House floor,
and keep the process moving," Smith said.
Under CRP, which was reauthorized in the 1996 Farm Bill, landowners
enter into contracts with the USDA to place highly erodible and
other environmentally sensitive cropland in long-term conservation
practices for 10-15 years. In exchange, landowners receive annual
rental payments for the land and cost-share assistance for establishing
those practices. Of 32.9 million acres currently enrolled nationwide,
some 22 million acres are expiring September 30.
Smith represents Oregon's Second Congressional District, which
includes most of eastern, central, and southern Oregon, in the
U.S. House of Representatives.