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Congress establishessets national food and agriculture policy through periodic omnibus farm bills. The 115th115th Congress has the opportunity to set the establish the future direction forof farm and food policy because many of the provisionprovisions in the current farm bill (the Agricultural Act of 2014, (P.L. 113-79) expire in 2018. The 2014 farm bill consists of 12 titles that address commodity price and incomeaddresses a broad range of farm and food programs and policies, including commodity support, crop insurance, conservation, domestic food assistance, trade and international food aid, credit, rural development, research, horticulture, forestry, and bioenergy, among othersbioenergy, and various other provisions.
The House Agriculture Committee approved its version of omnibus farm legislation for FY2019-FY2023—H.R. 2, the Agriculture and Nutrition Act of 2018—on April 18, 2018, which was subsequently amended during floor action. In terms of cost, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) scored the programs in the bill with mandatory spending, such as nutrition programs, commodity support programs, major conservation programs, and crop insurance, at $867 billion over a 10-year budget window (FY2019-FY2028), which is equivalent to its baseline scenario in which existing farm bill programs would be extended with no changes.
H.R. 2 would reauthorize most existing programs for five years through FY2023. Overall, the bill provides continuity with the existing framework of farm and food programs, even as it modifies numerous programs, alters the amount and type of program funding certain programs receive, and exercises the Committeecommittee's discretion not to reauthorize others.
For example, Among its many policy provisions, H.R. 2 would make changes to the eligibility requirements for individuals participating in the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), including expanding the population that is subject to work requirements, while requiring states to offer employment or training opportunities and increasing funding to the states for those purposes. Among the changes to commodity programs, an escalator provision could raise the effective reference price for crops enrolled in the Price Loss Coverage program (PLC) under certain market conditions. H.R. 2 also would also amend payment limits and the adjusted gross income limit on eligibility for farm program payments to expand the list of producer exemptions from payment and income limits. Payment limits on certain disaster assistance programs also wouldwould also be raised. The Dairy Margin Protection Program for milk producers is recast as the Dairy Risk Management Program, featuring an expanded range of coverage choices and lower premium rates on the first 5 million pounds of annual milk production.
Within the conservation title, H.R. 2 would repeal the Conservation Stewardship Program (CSP) that, which has an enrollment of 70 million acres, and uses some of the savings to increase funding for the Environmental Quality Incentives Program (EQIP). It also raises the acreage enrollment limit under the Conservation Reserve Program (CRP). The bill further increases the loan limits for guaranteed farm ownership and operating loans. Bioenergy programs that comprise a separate title in the 2014 farm bill are included in a title on rural infrastructure and economic development. Also, while many of these bioenergy programs currently areare currently authorized for mandatory funding in addition to being authorized for discretionary funds, H.R. 2 authorizes only discretionary funding.
For rural communities, the bill authorizes the Secretary of Agriculture to reprioritize certain loan and grant programs to respond to specific health emergencies, and to develop prevention, treatment, and recovery services. It also wouldwould also require the Secretary to promulgate minimum acceptable standards for broadband service from the present day up to 30 years into the future.
In sum, the Committee-passed bill launches the debate in Congress over the policy direction and program details for the next five years.
Congress has been active in establishing federal policy for the agricultural sector on an ongoing basis since the 1930s. Over the years, as economic conditions and technology have evolved, Congress has regularly revisited agricultural policy through periodic farm legislation. Over these decades, the breadth of policy areas addressed through such farm bills have expanded beyond providing support for a limited number of agricultural commodities to include establishing programs and policies that address a spectrum of related areas, such as agricultural conservation, credit, rural development, domestic nutrition assistance, trade and international food aid, organic agriculture, and support for beginning and veteran farmers and ranchers, among others.
The bill reported out of the House Agriculture Committee reported on April 18, 2018, as amended on the floor—the Agriculture and Nutrition Act of 2018, H.R. 2—continues this tradition, broadly addressing agriculture and food policy across 11 titles that cover commodity support programs, agricultural conservation, farm and food trade and international food aid, domestic nutrition assistance, credit, rural infrastructure and economic development, research and extension, forestry, horticulture, and miscellaneous other policy issuesother policies and initiatives. The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) projects that spending on mandatory programs under H.R. 2 would total $867 billion over the 10-year period, FY2019-FY2028, which equals the cost of extending the current 2014 farm bill for 10 years.
H.R. 2 would supersede the current slate of farm programs and policies authorized by the 2014 farm bill, P.L. 113-79, many of which will expire in 2018 unless Congress acts to reauthorize them, or to extend them. Certain programs, such as crop insurance, are permanently authorized and would continue to operate in the absence of new farm legislation, or an extension of the current farm bill. But if the current farm law were to expire, many other programs, —such as commodity support programs that provide a safety net for producers of major agricultural commodities, such as corn and wheat, milk, sugar, and others, —would be governed by so-called permanent laws, which do not expire, and that date from the late 1930s and 1940s.
These permanent laws, including the Agricultural Adjustment Act of 1938 (P.L. 75-430) and Agricultural Act of 1949 (P.L. 81-439), emphasize supply controls to support price support regimes that would raise prices of these basic farm commodities well above existing market levels. A change in farm policy along these lines from the market-driven and export-oriented model that characterizes most existing commodity support programs could prove to be broadly disruptive for farmers, farm input suppliers, agricultural exporters, food manufacturers, and consumers. Many other programs, such as conservation programs and rural development programs, would cease to function. In the past, when Congress has faced the prospect of expiring farm legislation without enacting successor legislation, it has acted to extend the existing policies, as it did when the 2002 and 2008 acts expired.
This report provides a title-by-title summary of the policies and provisions in the House Committee-passed bill, H.R. 2, and compares them with current law. Following an analysis of the budgetary implicationimplications of H.R. 2, summaries, a summary of major changes that H.R. 2the bill would make in each of the bill'sits 11 titles is provided at the beginning of this report. These summaries are followed by side-by-side comparison tables for each of the bill's 11 titles that summarizebriefly describe the provisions in H.R. 2 and compare them with current law.
Policy Issue |
Name |
|
Phone |
Farm Bill Budget |
[author name scrubbed] |
[email address scrubbed] |
[phone number scrubbed] |
Commodity Support |
[author name scrubbed] |
[email address scrubbed] |
[phone number scrubbed] |
[author name scrubbed] |
[email address scrubbed] |
[phone number scrubbed] |
|
Dairy Policy |
Joel Greene |
[email address scrubbed] |
[phone number scrubbed] |
Sugar Policy |
Mark McMinimy |
[email address scrubbed] |
[phone number scrubbed] |
Crop Insurance |
[author name scrubbed] |
[email address scrubbed] |
[phone number scrubbed] |
Disaster Assistance |
[author name scrubbed] |
[email address scrubbed] |
[phone number scrubbed] |
Conservation and Environment |
[author name scrubbed] |
[email address scrubbed] |
[phone number scrubbed] |
Agricultural Trade Programs |
[author name scrubbed] |
[email address scrubbed] |
[phone number scrubbed] |
International Food Aid |
[author name scrubbed] |
[email address scrubbed] |
[phone number scrubbed] |
Domestic Food and Nutrition Assistance |
[author name scrubbed] |
[email address scrubbed] |
[phone number scrubbed] |
Agricultural Credit |
[author name scrubbed] |
[email address scrubbed] |
[phone number scrubbed] |
Rural Development |
[author name scrubbed] |
[email address scrubbed] |
[phone number scrubbed] |
Agricultural Research |
[author name scrubbed] |
[email address scrubbed] |
[phone number scrubbed] |
Forestry |
[author name scrubbed] |
[email address scrubbed] |
[phone number scrubbed] |
Agriculture-Based Biofuels/Bioenergy |
[author name scrubbed] |
[email address scrubbed] |
[phone number scrubbed] |
Horticulture and Organic Agriculture |
[author name scrubbed] |
[email address scrubbed] |
[phone number scrubbed] |
Livestock/Animal Agriculture |
Joel Greene |
[email address scrubbed] |
[phone number scrubbed] |
Textiles |
Michaela Platzer |
[email address scrubbed] |
[phone number scrubbed] |
Pesticide Regulation |
[author name scrubbed] |
[email address scrubbed] |
[phone number scrubbed] |
Endangered Species |
[author name scrubbed] |
[email address scrubbed] |
[phone number scrubbed] |
Hazardous Chemical Management |
[author name scrubbed] |
[email address scrubbed] |
[phone number scrubbed] |
Clean Water Act |
[author name scrubbed] |
[email address scrubbed] |
[phone number scrubbed] |
A farm bill authorizes funding in two ways. It authorizes and pays for mandatory outlays with multiyear budget estimates when the law is enacted. It also sets the parameters for discretionary programs and authorizes them to receive future appropriations, but does not provide funding. Mandatory programs often dominate farm bill policy and the debate over the farm bill budget.
The budgetary impact of mandatory spending proposals is measured relative to an assumption that certain programs continue beyond the end of the farm bill. The benchmark is the Congressional Budget Office (CBO)CBO baseline—a projection at a particular point in time of future federal spending on mandatory programs under current law. The baseline provides funding for reauthorization, reallocation to other programs, or offsets for deficit reduction.2
When a new bill is proposed that would affect mandatory spending, the score (cost impact) is measured in relation to the baseline. Changes that increase spending relative to the baseline have a positive score; those that decrease spending relative to the baseline have a negative score. Budget enforcement uses these baselines and scores, and may follow "PayGo" and other budget rules (that in part may require no increase to the federal deficit).3
In April 2018, CBO released a baseline for farm bill programs with mandatory spending that will be used for the rest of the legislative year.4 It projects that, if current law were extended, farm bill programs would cost $867 billion over the next 10 years, FY2019-2028, 77% of which is in the nutrition title for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP). The remaining $203 billion baseline is for agricultural programs, mostly in crop insurance, farm commodity programs, and conservation. Other titles of the farm bill contribute less than 1% of the baseline (Figure 1), some of which are funded primarily with discretionary spending.
Relative to this baseline, CBO released its score of H.R. 2H.R. 2, the House Agriculture Committee-reported farm bill, on April 13, 2018.5 CBO estimates that H.R. 2 is essentially budget neutral over the procedural 10-year budget window (Table 2). The bill would increase mandatory (direct) spending by $458 million and is offset by increases in revenue of $465 million, reflecting fees paid by contractors in the SNAP electronic benefits transfer (EBT) program.
Under H.R. 2, the baseline of the three largest titles (nutrition, crop insurance, and commodities) is projected to remain within roughly 0.5% of current law. Within individual titles, the conservation and nutrition titles would experience larger shifts among programs within their respective titles. For example, the conservation title's 10-year baseline would be reduced by $795 million (-1.3%), reflecting a $12.6 billion reduction (21%) from repealing the Conservation Stewardship Program (CSP), which is the offset for increases in other conservation programs (Table 3). The nutrition title's 10-year baseline would increase by $463 million (+0.07%), although this includes reductions of $20 billion (3%) in benefits that are reallocated to other programs in the nutrition title. Moreover, the overall nutrition title increase, $463 million, is more than offset by the projected $465 million increase in revenue attributed to that title.
Bioenergy programs, thatwhich had their own title in recent farm bills, are addressed in the rural development title of H.R. 2, where their mandatory funding is eliminated (-$517 million over 10 years). Animal disease and preparedness programs, including a vaccine bank, receive new mandatory funding (+$450 million) in the miscellaneous title. Farm safety net program outlays would be essentially flat overall, with crop insurance title reductions CRS Report R41303, Reauthorizing the Secure Rural Schools and Community Self-Determination Act of 2000 (-$161 million over 10 years) nearly offsetting net increases in farm commodity title programs ($+193 million).6
For several of the subset of programs in the 2014 farm bill that received mandatory funding but do not have a baseline beyond the end of FY2018,7 H.R. 2 would provide new mandatory funding. Two research title programs would receive $250 million in mandatory funds, while trade title programs would receive $450 million and be provided with permanent baseline. A food insecurity program in the nutrition title would receive $472 million in mandatory funding and gain permanent baseline.
Figure 1. CBO Baseline Under Current Law, by Title (10-year projected outlays, FY2019-FY2028, billions of dollars) |
![]() |
Source: CRS, using CBO April 2018 Baseline (unpublished). |
Table 2. Budget for a 2018 Farm Bill: Baseline and Scores, by Title
(outlays in millions of dollars, 10-year total FY2019-FY2028)
House bill H.R. 2 |
|||
2014 Farm Bill Titles |
CBO Baseline |
CBO Score |
Baseline + Score |
Commodities |
61,151 |
+193 |
61,344 |
Conservation |
59,754 |
-795 |
58,959 |
Trade |
3,624 |
+450 |
4,074 |
Nutrition |
663,828 |
+463 |
664,291 |
Credit |
-4,558 |
0 |
-4,558 |
Rural Developmenta |
168 |
0a |
168 |
Research |
604 |
+250 |
854 |
Forestry |
10 |
0 |
10 |
Energya |
612 |
-517a |
95 |
Horticulture |
1,547 |
+10 |
1,557 |
Crop Insurance |
78,037 |
-161 |
77,876 |
Miscellaneous |
2,423 |
+566 |
2,989 |
Subtotal |
867,200 |
+458 |
867,658 |
Increases in Revenue |
- |
+465 |
465 |
Total |
867,200 |
-7 |
867,193 |
Source: Source: CRS, using the CBO baseline (April 2018) and CBO Cost Estimate of H.R. 2 (April 13, 2018).
a. H.R. 2 combines rural development and energy into a Rural Infrastructure and Economic Development title. This table retains the separate titles, consistent with the 2014 farm bill and CBO baseline.
Table 3. CBO Score of H.R. 2, by Section
(Projected change in outlays relative to April 2018 baseline, FY2019-FY2028, millions of dollars)
Provision in H.R. 2 |
FY2019-28 |
Provision in H.R. 2 |
FY2019-28 |
Title I |
Emergency Food Assistance |
499 |
|
Agriculture Risk Coverage |
-143 |
National Gateway |
601 |
Agriculture Risk Coverage |
-111 |
Nutrition Education |
632 |
Dairy Program |
-20 |
Transitional Benefits |
895 |
Nonrecourse Marketing Assistance Loans |
0 |
Retailer-Funded Incentives Pilot |
1,204 |
Agriculture Disaster Assistance |
11 |
Child Support; Cooperation with Agencies |
3,494 |
Economic Assistance for Textile Mills |
23 |
Earned Income Deduction |
4,640 |
Implementation |
25 |
Workforce Solutions: Administration |
7,650 |
Price Loss Coverage |
408 |
Subtotal, Title IV |
463 |
Subtotal, Title I |
193 |
Title V |
0 |
Title II |
Title VI |
||
Repeal Conservation Stewardship Program |
-12,618 |
Rural Energy for America Program |
-435 |
Conservation Reserve Program |
-23 |
Biorefinery Assistance |
-82 |
Wetlands Mitigation Banking |
10 |
Subtotal, Title VI |
-517 |
Other Conservation Programs |
614 |
Title VII |
|
Regional Conservation Partnership Program |
1,308 |
Beginning Farmer and Rancher Development |
100 |
Agricultural Conservation Easement |
2,221 |
Organic Agriculture Research and Extension |
150 |
Environmental Quality Incentives Program |
7,693 |
Subtotal, Title VII |
250 |
Subtotal, Title II |
-795 |
Title VIII |
0 |
Title III |
Title IX |
||
International Development Program |
450 |
National Organic Program Tech. Update |
5 |
Subtotal, Title III |
450 |
Organic Production and Market Data |
5 |
Title IV |
Subtotal, Title IX |
10 |
|
Workforce Solutions: Benefits |
-9,190 |
Title X |
|
Standard Utility Allowances Receipts |
-5,250 |
Education and Risk Management Assistance |
-125 |
Update to Categorical Eligibility |
-5,035 |
Increase Cat. Coverage Fee to $500 |
-72 |
Duplicative Enrollment Database |
-588 |
Research and Development Priorities |
-45 |
State Performance Indicators |
-432 |
Program Administration |
-18 |
Benefit Recovery |
<0.5 |
Whole Farm Applied to Beginning Farmers |
9 |
Tolerance Level for Payment Errors |
<0.5 |
Treatment of Forage and Grazing |
90 |
Mobile Technologies |
12 |
Subtotal, Title X |
-161 |
SNAP Benefit Transfer Data Report |
30 |
Title XI |
|
Interactions |
30 |
Noninsured Assistance Program |
-37 |
Simplified Homeless Housing Costs |
76 |
Outreach to Socially Disadvantaged |
50 |
Adjustment to Recovered Funds Retained |
102 |
Textile Trust Fund |
103 |
Basic Allowance for Housing |
116 |
National Animal Disease Preparedness |
450 |
Implementation Funds |
150 |
Subtotal, Title |
566 |
Processing Fees |
154 |
Total Changes in Direct Spending |
458 |
Adjustment to Asset Limitations |
201 |
Increases in Revenue |
465 |
Food Insecurity Nutrition Incentive Program |
472 |
Net Effect on the Deficit |
-7 |
Source: CRS, sorted within titles using the CBO Score of H.R. 2, April 13, 2018,
Title I commodity programs authorize support programs for dairy, sugar, and covered commodities—including major grain, oilseed, and pulse crops—as well as agricultural disaster assistance. Major field-crop programs include the price loss coverage (PLC) and agricultural risk coveragePrice Loss Coverage (PLC) and Agricultural Risk Coverage (ARC) programs and the marketing assistance loan program. Marketing Assistance Loan (MAL) program. The dairy program involves protecting a portion of the margin between milk and feed prices. The sugar program provides a combination of price support, border protection, and producer production allotments. Four disaster assistance programs that focus primarily on livestock and tree crops were permanently authorized in the 2014 farm bill. These disaster assistance programs provide federal assistance to help farmers recover financially from natural disasters, including drought and floods. Title I also includes several administrative provisions that: suspend permanent farm law from 1938 and 1949; assign payment limits for individuals, joint ventures or partnerships, and corporations; specify the adjusted gross income (AGI) threshold for program payment eligibility; and identify other details regarding payment attribution and eligibility.
The House Agriculture Committee's reported farm bill, H.R. 2,H.R. 2 extends authority for current commodity programs, but with some modifications to programs for covered commodities and dairy, as well as agricultural disaster assistance. The sugar program is extended, but otherwise is unchanged. H.R. 2 but is otherwise unchanged. H.R. 2 also amends both payment limits and the AGI limit to expand the list of producer exemptions from payment and income limits under certain conditions.
In general, program changes affecting covered commodities under H.R. 2 make PLC a more attractive option for producers than ARC. In particular, H.R. 2 includes an escalator provision that would raise a covered commodity's effective reference price (used in the PLC payment formula) by as much as 115% of the statutory PLC reference price based on 85% of the 5five-year Olympic average9 of farm prices. In addition, producers participating in PLC that experienced at least 20 consecutive weeks of severe drought during 2008-2012 would be allowed to update their program yields (used in the PLC payment formula). In contrast, producers enrolled in the county-level ARC program (or the stacked income protection plan for cotton, (STAX)) would be ineligible for crop insurance coverage under an area yield and loss basis or the supplemental coverage option. (SCO). Furthermore, the individual, farm-level ARC program is eliminated.
The marketing assistance loanMAL program would be retained as is under H.R. 2 2, but any program benefits would be exempted from inclusion under both payment limits and the AGI limit. Payment limits would also be affected by H.R. 2 2's treatment of eligible payment entities. Under current law, partnerships and joint ventures are treated as collections of individuals, each with their own payment limitlimits, whereas a corporation is treated as a single individual subject to a single payment limit. H.R. 2 2 would alter the treatment of certain corporations by defining a "qualified pass through entity" (QTPE) as including partnerships, joint ventures, limited liability corporations (LLCs), and S corporations.10 This would allow each separate owner of a QTPE (meeting all program eligibility criteria) to have their ownan individual payment limit. Also, H.R. 2 2 would redefine family farmsfarm to include first cousins, nieces, and nephews, thus increasing the potential pool of individuals eligible for an individual payment limit on family farming operations.
With respect to agricultural disaster assistance programs, H.R. 2 amends the limits on payments received under the programs and waives the AGI requirement if more than 75% of the producer's income comes from farming, ranching, or silviculture. The bill also expands payments for livestock losses caused by disease.
H.R. 2 expands producer coverage choices under the current Margin Protection Program (MPP) and renames it the Dairy Risk Management Program (DRMP). Like MPP, the DRMP pays participating dairy producers the difference (when positive) between a producer-selected margin and the national milk margin (calculated as the all-milk price minus an average feed cost ration). Under H.R. 2, the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA)H.R. 2, USDA is required to conduct studies on whether the feed cost ration is representative of actual feed costs used in the margin calculation, and on the cost of corn silage versus the feed cost of corn. The bill also directs USDA to report alfalfa hay prices in the top- five milk producing states.
Under current law, for a $100 administrative fee, participating dairy producers automatically receive payments on 90% of their first 5 million pounds or less of milk production when the milk margin falls below $5.00 per hundredweight (cwt.). Under DRMP, the catastrophic margin is lowered to $4.00/cwt. Also, under current law dairy producers select: a margin protection level in $0.50/cwt. increments from $4.00/cwt. to $8.00/cwt.; and a percent coverage ranging from 25% to 90% of the farm's historical milk production. Premiums paid by producers vary with coverage levels selected and across two production tiers: Tier I is the first 5 million lbs.pounds of milk production; Tier II is milk production above 5 million lbs. pounds. Under DRMP, additional margin levels of $8.50/cwt. and $9.00/cwt. are available for Tier I. Premiums are reinstated for the $4.50/cwt. and $5.00/cwt. margins under Tier I, while premiums are reduced substantially for the other Tier I margins ranging from $5.50/cwt. to $8.00/cwt., and the percent coverage range is extended to 5% to 90% of a farm's milk production history. Premiums for Tier II would be left unchanged. A difference under DRMP from current law is that dairy producers would make a single one-time election of a margin coverage level and a percentage of milk production to cover—this. This election would last the duration of the farm bill.
H.R. 2 would also: repeal the Dairy Product Donation Program; extend through FY2023 the Dairy Forward Pricing Program, the Dairy Indemnity Program, and the Dairy Promotion and Research Program; and eliminate the provision prohibiting dairy producers from participating in both the DRMP and the Livestock Gross Margin-Dairy insurance program, although dual coverage cannot be on the same milk production. Finally, H.R. 2 amends the formula for the Class I skim milk price used for calculating the Class I price under Federal Milk Marketing Orders.
USDA administers a number of agricultural conservation programs that assist private landowners with natural resource concerns. These can be broadly grouped into working land programs, land retirement and easement programs, watershed programs, emergency programs, technical assistance, and other programs. The House Agriculture Committee-reported farm bill (H.R. 2) amends portions of programs in all of these categories; however. However, the general focus is on the larger working lands, land retirement, and easement programs. All current conservation programs are reauthorized with the exception of the largest—the Conservation Stewardship Program (CSP)CSP—which is repealed. New spending on the conservation title is projected to increase by $656 million over 5-years,five years but over 10- years would be reduced by nearly $800 million.
In general, working land programs provide technical and financial assistance to assist farmers to improve land management practices. The two largest working lands programs—Environmental Quality Incentives Program (EQIP) and CSP account for more than half of all conservation program funding.12 H.R. 2 repeals CSP, which currently has an enrollment of more than 70 million acres. CSP provides financial and technical assistance to producers to maintain and improve existing conservation systems, and to adopt additional conservation activities in a comprehensive manner on a producer's entire operation. A more limited version of the CSP stewardship contract is included in EQIP with the proviso that no more than 50% of EQIP funding may be used for these contracts. Existing CSP contracts would remain active until completion. Repealing CSP is the primary driver behind the projected decline in spending under the conservation title over ten-years10 years, since CSP contracts are 5five years in duration and would all be completed by FY2023. The House Committee-reported billH.R. 2 also amends EQIP by expanding options for irrigation entities;, removing a requirement that 60% of payments relate to livestock production;, limiting the EQIP Conservation Innovation Grants (CIG) to $25 million;, and increasing the overall funding in annual increments through FY2023 to $3 billion from $1.75 billion in FY2018.
Land retirement and easement programs provide federal payments to private agricultural landowners for permanent or long-term land-use restrictions. The Conservation Reserve Program (CRP), the largest land retirement program, is reauthorized and amended by H.R. 2. CRP provides annual rental payments to producers to replace crops on highly erodible and environmentally sensitive land with long-term resource-conserving plantings. Total CRP enrollment would be authorized to increase incrementally through FY2023 to 29 million acres from the current limit of 24 million acres. In order to offset this increased enrollment level, the bill would reduce payments to participants, allow for a one-time early termination of select CRP contracts without penalty in FY2019, and reduce incentives for continuous contracts and reenrollment. A number of other changes are made to CRP that would further expand grazing and commercial uses on CRP acres. The Agricultural Conservation Easement Program (ACEP), USDA's easement program, is also reauthorized and amended by H.R. 2. ACEP provides financial and technical assistance through two types of easements: agricultural land easements that limit nonagricultural uses on productive farm or grasslands, and wetland reserve easements that protect and restore wetlands. Most of the changes to ACEP focus on the agricultural land easements in which USDA enters into partnership agreements with eligible entities to purchase agricultural land easements from willing landowners. H.R. 2 would provide additional flexibilities to ACEP eligible entities; it also would. It would also remove planning requirements, waive the adjusted gross incomeAGI requirement, allow for mineral development and participation in environmental markets, and increase overall funding to $500 million annually.
The 2014 farm bill created the Regional Conservation Partnership Program (RCPP), which enrolls land through existing conservation programs in partnership with eligible partners. Under RCPP, partners define the scope and location of the project;, provide 50% or more of the project cost;, and work with eligible landowners to enroll in existing conservation programs. H.R. 2 expands funding for the program as well as the existing set of conservation programs covered under program. The House Committee-reported billH.R. 2 would also provide for longer partnership agreements and project renewal options.
The trade title deals with statutes concerning U.S. international food aid and agricultural export programs. Under the farm bill authority, U.S. international food assistance is distributed through three main programs: (1) Food for Peace (emergency and nonemergency food aid); (2) Food for Progress (agricultural development programs); and (3) the McGovern-Dole International Food for Education and Child Nutrition program (school lunch and feeding programs). The largest of these, the Food for Peace (FFP) program, receives about $1.5 billion in annual appropriations. Traditionally, these three programs have relied on donated U.S. agricultural commodities as the basis for their activities; however. However, recent farm bills have increasingly added flexibility to purchase food in local markets or to directly transfer cash or vouchers to needy recipients. The Food for Peace programFFP is administered by the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), while the other two programs are administered by the Foreign Agricultural Service (FAS) of the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA).
H.R. 2 2 reauthorizes all of the international food aid programs, along with several associated fellowship programs. The Food for Peace (FFP) programFFP is amended to: remove a minimum monetization requirement of 15% of FFP funds; raise the minimum requirement used for nonemergency programs to $365 million (up from $350 million) or not more than 30% of FFP funding; and require food vouchers, cash transfers, and local and regional procurement of non-U.S. foods to avoid market disruption in the recipient country. H.R. 2 also extends authority for several other related international programs—including the Farmer-to-Farmer program, Bill Emerson Humanitarian Trust, Cochran Fellowships, Borlaug Fellowships, and Global Crop Diversity Trust.
Current U.S. export promotion programs include the Market Access Program (MAP), the Foreign Market Development Program (FMDP), the Emerging Markets Program (EMP) and Technical Assistance for Specialty Crops (TASC). These programs are administered by USDA's FASthe Foreign Agricultural Service. Under H.R. 2, all four export programs—MAP, FMDP, EMP, and TASC—are combined into a single program named the International Market Development Program (IMDP), while maintaining existing activities and eligibility requirements.14 IMDP would be authorized to receive $255 million in annual mandatory Commodity Credit Corporation (CCC) funds for FY2019-FY2023. Of that, no less than $200 million shall be spent on promotional activities for both generic and branded U.S. agricultural products; no less than $35 million on promotional activities for generic commodities; no more than $9 million for technical assistance to specialty crop groups looking to export their crops; and no more than $10 million on promoting U.S. agricultural goods to emerging markets. These funding levels reflect current spending across MAP, FMDP, TASC and EMP. H.R. 2 further creates the Biotechnology and Agricultural Trade Program in Title III, to assist with the removal of non-tariff and other trade barriers to U.S. agricultural products produced with biotechnology and other agricultural technologies. Finally, H.R. 2 reauthorizes direct credits or export credit guarantees for the promotion of agricultural exports to emerging markets of not less than $1 billion in each fiscal year through 2023.
The Nutrition title in the House committee-reported 2018 farm billH.R. 2 proposes a number of policy changes to SNAP and related programs, while in some respects continuing current policy and operations. The bill would reauthorize SNAP and related programs for five years, through the end of FY2023. Altogether, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO)CBO estimates that the Nutrition title would increase spending by $463 million over 10 years (FY2019-FY2028). Certain individual policies are estimated to have large effects on SNAP spending, especially those expected to impact SNAP eligibility and benefit calculation.
The committee-reported billH.R. 2 proposes a number of changes to the determination of households' financial and nonfinancial eligibility for SNAP benefits. Three of these policies were debated during committee markup:
In addition to these three eligibility changes, the proposal increases asset limits and changes how vehicles and savings accounts are counted. It also amends the way certain income is counted or excluded, increases the deduction for earned income, and requires households' cooperation with child support enforcement.
The bill includes measures intended to address SNAP retailer and recipient fraud and to improve payment accuracy. This includes establishing a Duplicative Enrollment Database, making changes to the Quality Control system, and increasing USDA's oversight of state performance. The bill repeals funding for performance bonuses, which, under current law, financially rewards states' performance. The bill also proposes a number of policy changes for SNAP's electronic benefit transfer (EBT)EBT system and benefit redemption.
The bill proposes some changes to SNAP-related grants. It would make some amendments and increases funding for bonus incentives for fruits and vegetables, under the (renamed) Gus Schumacher Food Insecurity Nutrition Incentive (FINI) Program. It would also authorize and fund a pilot for retailers to receive federal funding for operating bonus incentive projects that incentivize fruit, vegetable, and milk purchases. It also proposes some changes to USDA's operations and funding of the Nutrition Education and Obesity Prevention Grant Program (SNAP-ED).
For many of the food distribution programs and other nutrition title programs and policies, the bill would extend them through FY2023 without substantive policy changes. The Emergency Food Assistance Program (TEFAP) would receive an increase of approximately $45 million (adjusted annually for inflation) each year, and TEFAP would also include authority for a "Farm to Food Bank Fund." The Fresh Fruit and Vegetable Program would be renamed to "Fruit and Vegetable Program," and participating schools could serve fresh, canned, dried, frozen, or pureed fruits and vegetables.
The House Agriculture Committee-reported farm billThe National School Lunch Program and School Breakfast Program are not reauthorized in this bill. However, an amendment incorporated on the House floor requires USDA to review and change its 2012 regulations updating school meal nutrition standards and 2016 regulations adding nutrition standards to foods sold outside the meals programs.
Title V, Credit16
H.R. 2 would make several permanent changes and reauthorize provisions in the Consolidated Farm and Rural Development Act that governs the USDA farm loan programs, make several permanent changes to the Farm Credit Act that governs the Farm Credit System, and reauthorize the State Agricultural Loan Mediation Program through FY2023.
For the farm loan programs of the USDA Farm Service Agency (FSA), the Agriculture Committee-reported billFSA, H.R. 2 would add specific conditions that the Secretary may use to reduce the requirement for three years of farming experience in order for beginning farmers to qualify for loans (e.g., coursework, military service, mentoring). It raises the maximum loan size for guaranteed farm ownership loans and guaranteed farm operating loans from a statutory base of $700,000 in FY1996 ($1.4 million in FY2018 after adjusting for inflation) to a higher base of $1.75 million per borrower, which inflation adjusts to an effective maximum guaranteed loan amount of about $3.5 million in FY2019. The bill also makes several technical corrections.
For the government-chartered, cooperative Farm Credit System (FCS), the House Committee-reported billH.R. 2 would eliminate a host of obsolete references to outdated names and transition periods from the 1980s and 1990s. It adds clarification that FCS entities may share privileged information with the Farm Credit Administration (FCA) for regulatory purposes without altering the privileged status elsewhere. It expands FCA's jurisdiction to hold accountable "institution-affiliated parties," (e.g., including agents and independent contractors) and makes the scope retroactive for a six-year period. For FarmerMacthe Federal Agricultural Mortgage Corporation (FarmerMac), it increases the acreage exception from 1,000 acres to 2,000 acres for the dollar limit to remain a qualified loan, subject to a study by the FCA. It also directs the FCA to study the risks and capitalization of loans in the FCS and FarmerMac portfolios. Finally, it deletes the compensation limit for Farm Credit SystemFCS bank boards of directors.
For the State Agricultural Loan Mediation Program, the Committee-reported billH.R. 2 reauthorizes the program to FY2023 so that it may continue to provide matching grants for mediation of credit and certain other agricultural disputes.
The Rural Infrastructure and Economic Development title of the House Agriculture Committee-passed 2018 farm bill (H.R. 2) amends the Rural Development Act of 1972 (P.L. 92-419) to propose a new Subtitle A, Improving Health Outcomes in Rural Communities. The four sections of the proposed subtitle would permit the Secretary of Agriculture, after consultation with public health figures, to announce a temporary reprioritization of certain rural development loans and grants to assist rural communities in responding to a specific rural health emergency. The announced emergency would expire either when the Secretary has determined that the emergency has ended, or 360 days after the announcement, whichever date is earlier. While the emergency is in effect, 10% of the funds available for the Distance Learning and Telemedicine Program would be made available to identify and treat individuals affected by the emergency. Under the Community Facilities program, priority would be given to entities providing prevention, treatment, and recovery services to those affected by the emergency. The subtitle would also reauthorize the Farm and Ranch Stress Assistance Network, and authorize a new loan and grant program to help establish group health plans offered by agricultural associations.
Subtitle B of the House-passed billH.R. 2 makes changes to the Enhancing Broadband Telecommunications Services in Rural Areas Program. Provisions under this subtitle would establish minimum acceptable standards of broadband service of 25 megabits per second downstream transmission capacity and 3three megabits per second upstream transmission capacity, and develop projections of broadband service 5five, 10, 15, 20, and 30 years into the future. Other provisions would require broadband infrastructure loan guarantees, provide incentives to reach more isolated rural areas by establishing a residential density measure for loan guarantee applicants, permit the Rural Utility Service to obligate, but not disburse broadband funding support, and give priority to applicants who would provide broadband service to areas not predominantly for business. Other provisions would authorize loans for middle-mile broadband infrastructure, modify build-out requirements for loan applicants from 3 to 5three to five years, and reduce reporting requirements for borrowers.
Subtitle C of the bill concerns provisions for rural communities, business development, and rural infrastructure. Its provisions would prioritize project applications that support implementation of strategic plans on a multijurisdictionalmulti-jurisdictional basis and reserve a portion of funds for such projects, raise the maximum loan amount for water and waste water projects, increase funding for water and waste water technical assistance, and reauthorize a range of rural development programs authorized under the Consolidated Farm and Rural Development Act.
Subtitle D reauthorizes programs under the Rural Electrification Act of 1936 (P.L. 74-605), including expanding 911 access in rural areas, and extending the rural economic development loan and grant program. Subtitle E amends and reauthorizes all of the agricultural energy programs in the 2014 farm bill that previously werewere previously in a separate title, extending most through FY2023. H.R. 2 also modifies the type of funding available for these programs. In prior farm bills, many of these programs were provided with mandatory funding, whereas H.R. 2 authorizes only discretionary funding.
Subtitle F reauthorizes the Value-Added Grants program and increases its discretionary funding authorization. The regional development commissions established in the 2008 farm bill are also reauthorized, and the current definition of "rural area" for the Rural Housing Service's programs is retained until the 2030 decennial census. Subtitle G repeals several unfunded programs, including the Rural Telephone Bank, the Rural Collaborative Investment Program, and the Delta Region Agricultural Development Grants Program. Subtitle H makes technical correctioncorrections to certain provisions of the Consolidated Farm and Rural Development Act (P.L. 92-419), and the Rural Electrification Act.
USDA is authorized under four major laws to conduct agricultural research at the federal level, and to provide support for cooperative research, extension, and post-secondarypostsecondary agricultural education programs in the states through formula funds and competitive grants to land-grant universities. The House Agriculture Committee-passed farm bill, H.R. 2, reauthorizes funding for these activities through FY2023, subject to annual appropriations.
With respect to the land-grant entities, H.R. 2 authorizes a new scholarship program for the 1890 land-grant institutions. A provision in the bill would also prohibit any further entities from being designated as eligible to receive formula funding under the Hatch Act (24Stat24 Stat. 440), Smith-Lever Act (P.L. 63-95), and McIntire-Stennis Act (P.L. 87-788). Permissible indirect cost recovery for federal funding of agricultural research and extension would increase to 30% from 22% of funding.
Several new research areas in the High Priority Research and Extension program are designated to be a high-priorityhigh priorities: macadamia tree health, national turfgrass research, fertilizer management, cattle fever ticks, and laying hen and turkey research. The bill also reauthorizes the Organic Agriculture Research and Extension Initiative, and increases mandatory funding levels to $30 million annually for FY2019-FY2023. The Specialty Crop Research Initiative (SCRI) would bereauthorizedbe reauthorized through FY2023, and continues to include carve-out funding for the Emergency Citrus Disease Research and Extension Program. The SCRI also expands program eligibility to include "size-controlling rootstock systems for perennial crops" and "emerging and invasive species," among other production practices and technologies.
The Agriculture Committees have jurisdiction over forestry issues generally, as well as over some—but not all—National Forest System (NFS) lands managed by the USDA Forest Service (FS).20 Previous farm bills have primarily addressed forestry research and assistance programs, and have sometimes included provisions addressing management of federal forest land. The forestry title in H.R. 2 would reauthorize and modify several existing assistance programs, and establish new assistance programs, and it also contains several provisions that would address management of the NFS, by the Forest Service, in the Department of Agriculture and the public lands managed by the Bureau of Land Management (BLM), in the Department of the Interior.
Forestry assistance programs are authorized under two main laws: the Cooperative Forestry Assistance Act (CFAA)21 and the Healthy Forests Restoration Act of 2003 (HFRA).22 Most federal forestry assistance programs are permanently authorized to receive such sums as necessary in annual discretionary appropriations, and thus do not require reauthorization in the farm bill. The House billH.R. 2, however, would amend two forestry assistance programs by replacing their permanent authority to receive annual appropriations with an authorization limit through FY2023. H.R. 2 would also also would establish some new assistance programs, —generally by providing explicit statutory authorization and congressional direction for current programs that are operating under existing, but broad, authorizations. The bill would also reauthorize funding for the National Forest Foundation.
The House bill also would H.R. 2 would also address federal and tribal forest management issues. For example, the bill would direct the Secretary of Agriculture to exempt unprocessed dead and dying trees on NFS lands in California from the export prohibition for 10 years. Subtitle B would amend the Secure Rural Schools and Self-Determination Act of 2000 (SRS),23 a program whichthat authorizes payments to counties containing NFS lands and certain BLM lands.24 The bill also wouldwould also change how the Forest ServiceFS and BLM comply with the requirements under the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA)25 and the consultation requirements under the Endangered Species Act (ESA)26 for specified management activities. For example, the bill would establish ten10 categories of actions that would not be subject to the requirements to prepare an environmental assessment or environmental impact statement under NEPA. (Six (six apply to both FS and BLM actions; four apply to just FS actions). .) H.R. 2 would also also would authorize federally- recognized Indian tribes to enter into good neighbor agreements with the FS and BLM and to request to conduct forest management activities on NFS lands, among other provisions.
H.R. 2 reauthorizes many of the existing farm bill provisions supporting farming operations in the specialty crop, certified organic agriculture, and local foods sectors. These provisions cover several programs and provisions benefitting these sectors, including block grants to states, support for farmers markets, data and information collection, education on food safety and biotechnology, and organic certification, among other market development and promotion provisions. Other provisions in the House Agriculture Committee-reported billH.R. 2 would amend certain regulatory requirements under some federal statutes.
H.R. 2 makes changes to funding for farmers markets and local foods promotion. Whereas the 2014 farm bill provided $30 million in mandatory CCC funding for each of fiscal years 2014FY2014 through 2018FY2018 for the Farmers Market Promotion Program (FMPP) and Local Food Promotion Program (LFPP), , H.R. 2 reauthorizes discretionary appropriations for these programs in the amount of $30 million annually for FY2019-FY2023. The bill does not provide any mandatory funding beyond FY2018.28
H.R. 2 also makes changes to USDA's National Organic Program (NOP). It would enact several provisions in H.R. 3871 (Organic Farmer and Consumer Protection Act of 2017), including: limiting the types of operations excluded from NOP certification, requiring electronic import documentation, establishing mechanisms for collaborative investigations and enforcement, requiring increased documentation and reporting, and increasing USDA accreditation authority over certifying agents, among other changes. In addition, it requires USDA to establish procedures for expedited petitions under the NOP's "National List of Approved and Prohibited Substances," and amends the eligibility and consultation requirements of the National Organics Standards Board (NOSB). . H.R. 2 reauthorizes NOP appropriations above current levels, increasing to $24 million by FY2023, and reauthorizes funding for the Organic Production and Market Data Initiatives It also provides $5 million for technology upgrades to improve tracking and verification of organic imports. H.R. 2 does not reauthorize current mandatory funding for the National Organic Certification Cost Share Program, although the program remains authorized.
CBO estimates a total budget authority of $850 million (FY2019-FY2023) for programs in the Horticulture title. Under H.R. 2, CBO estimates an increase in mandatory spending of $10 million (FY2019-FY2023) for programs under this title, which would cover data collection and technology updates under NOP. Provisions affecting the specialty crop and certified organic sectors, however, are not limited to the Horticulture title, but are contained within several other titles of the new law. These include programs in the research, nutrition, and trade titles, among others. For example, under H.R. 2, CBO estimates an increase in mandatory spending of $101 million (FY2019-FY2023) for the Organic Agriculture Research and Extension Initiative in the bill's Research title. Other programs in the Research title, such as the Specialty Crop Research InitiativeSCRI, would maintain current funding levels of more than $320 million (FY2019-FY2023). Budget estimates for other programs outside Title IX that benefit the specialty crop, certified organic agriculture, and local foods sectors, —such as the Fresh Fruit and Vegetable Program (Snack Program) and Section 32 purchases for fruits and vegetables under the Nutrition title, among other farm bill programs, —are not available.
Title IX includes several exemptions from certain regulatory requirements, amending existing provisions in the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act (FIFRA, 7 U.S.C. 136 et seq.), the Clean Water Act (33 U.S.C. §1251 et seq.), the Plant Protection Act (7 U.S.C. 7701 et seq.), and the Occupational Safety and Health Act (OSHA, 29 U.S.C. 651 et seq.). H.R. 2 amends FIFRA to clarify federal and state roles in the regulation of pesticides, to exempt certain pesticide discharges from point source discharge permitting requirements, and to not require that the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) consult with other federal agencies regarding pesticide registrations and their potential impact on endangered species. H.R. 2 would also enact into law H.R. 1029 (Pesticide Registration Improvement Enhancement Act of 2017), amending FIFRA to extend the authority to collect pesticide fees and other purposes. Finally, H.R. 2 amends the Plant Protection Act regarding the use of methyl bromide in response to an emergency event, and also amends OSHA to exempt agricultural retailers from process safety management requirements.
Crop insurance is designed cover economic losses from a variety of natural causes, as well as certain adverse market developments. The federal crop insurance program makes available subsidized crop insurance to producers who purchase a policypolicies to protect against losses in yield, crop revenue, margin, or whole farm revenue. The crop insurance title of the House Agriculture Committee's reported bill (H.R. 2) makes several modifications to the existing federal crop insurance program, which is permanently authorized by the Federal Crop Insurance Act. According to CBO, the crop insurance title of H.R. 2 would decrease authorized spending for crop insurance relative to baseline levels by $70 million during the FY2019-FY2023 period. The largest component for projected savings ($52 million) is attributed to eliminating the crop insurance education and information program for targeted states carried out by the Risk Management Agency (RMA) and the Agricultural Management Assistance (AMA) Programprogram. Up to $15 million per year of CCC funds could be saved from the elimination of the AMA program alone. Additional savings ($32 million) occur by increasing the administrative fee for catastrophic risk protection (commonly referred to as CAT fees) from $300 per crop per county to $500. CBO also projects another $23 million in savings from provisions that would eliminate several past research and development (R&D) priorities, discontinue R&D partnerships, and reduce CCC funding for R&D contracting from $12,500,000 to no more than $8,000,000 annually.
Among other adjustments, H.R. 2 expands coverage for forage and grazing by allowing separate crop insurance policies to be purchased for crops that can be both grazed and mechanically harvested on the same acres during the same growing season. Such separate policies can be independently indemnified for each intended use. CBO projects this expanded coverage to cost the government $40 million during the FY2019-FY2023 period. Similarly, by redefining "beginning farmer or rancher" as having actively operated and managed a farm or ranch for less than 10 years, the federal subsidy benefits available for the purposes of research, development, and implementation of whole farm insurance plans on such participating operations would result in a projected additional cost of $4 million during FY2019-FY2023.
Crops for which the producer has elected agriculture risk coverage (ARC),ARC or that are enrolled in the stacked income protection plan (STAX), would be ineligible for coverage based on an area yield and loss basis, or for the supplemental coverage option (SCO). . H.R. 2 also clarifies requirements for FCIC approval of reimbursement for the development of private submissions for modifying old plans of insurance or creating new plans of insurance.
The Miscellaneous title of the House Agriculture Committee-reported farm bill, H.R. 2, contains seven subtitles: Livestock; Beginning, Socially Disadvantaged, and Veteran Producers; Textiles; United States Grain Standards Act; Noninsured Crop Disaster Assistance Program; Protect Interstate Commerce; and Other Matters.
The livestockLivestock subtitle would establish the National Animal Disease Preparedness and Response Program to address the risk of the spread of animal pests and diseases, and the National Animal Health Vaccine Bank to prioritize the acquisition of foot-and-mouth disease vaccine. H.R. 2 would provide a combined $250 million in mandatory funding in FY2019 for these two new programs and to operate the National Animal Health Laboratory Network, as well as $50 million for the same purposes each year from FY2020- to FY2023. The livestock subtitle also wouldwould also authorize appropriations for the National Aquatic Health Plan, amend a program for veterinarian training, and require USDA to conduct a study on the Food Safety and Inspection Service's guidance and outreach to small and very small meat processing plants.
The Beginning, Socially Disadvantaged, and Veteran Producers subtitle includes mandatory funding of $10 million each year from FY2019- to FY2023 for its outreach and assistance program for socially disadvantaged and veteran farmers and ranchers. H.R. 2 would prioritize youth agricultural employment and volunteer programs, and establish an Agricultural Youth Organization Coordinator position to promote the role of youth-serving organizations and school-based agricultural education programs. The bill would also create a Commission on Farm Transition to study issues affecting the transition of farm operations from established farmers and ranchers to the next generation.
The textileTextile subtitle would repeal the trust funds for Pima Agriculture Cotton and Agriculture Wool Apparel Manufacturers. It also wouldwould also repeal grant funding under the Wool Research and Promotion program. In place of these funds, H.R. 2 would establish the Textile Trust Fund to reduce injury for domestic users of imported pima cotton and wool fabric whose tariffs may exceed the tariffs on certain finished imported pima cotton and wool apparel. For each calendar year, 2019- from 2019 to 2023, USDA would transfer $8 million and $15 million to the trust fund for domestic manufacturers who import pima cotton and wool fabric, respectively, and $2.25 million for grants for wool research and promotion. In addition, for FY2019, H.R. 2 would provide $2 million for strengthening and enhancing the U.S. sheep industry.
The United States Grain Standards Act (USGSA) would restore exceptions in grain inspection regulations that were implemented in 2003, and revoked in 2015, that allowed grain to be inspected by more than one designated official agency.
The Noninsured Crop Disaster Assistance Program (NAP) subtitle would amend NAP crop eligibility to include crops that may be covered by crop insurance, but only under whole farm policies. It also would also raise the service fees and reauthorize buy-up coverage through crop yearsyear 2023.
The Protect Interstate Commerce subtitle would prohibit a state or local government from setting standards or conditions on agricultural commodities produced in another state if the commodities are produced or manufactured in accordance with federal or state laws and regulations. The bill provides that producers, consumers, trade associations, or governments, and other agents may bring an action against the standard or condition in the appropriate court.
The Other Matters subtitle would make technical amendments to various laws to account for USDA reorganizational changes that created the Under Secretary for Trade and Foreign Agricultural Affairs, the Under Secretary for Farm Production and Conservation, and the Assistant to the Secretary for Rural Development. H.R. 2 would also also would create a Food Loss and Waste Reduction Liaison within the Office of the Secretary, a Century Farms Program under the Secretary that recognizes farms in continuous operation for at least 100 years, and a National Agriculture Imagery Program within the Farm Service Agency. The subtitle further wouldwould further prohibit the slaughter of dogs and cats for human consumption, and would require a report on the importation of dogs.
In addition, the subtitle would require a report on including natural stone in a promotion and research program, and a report on agriculture innovation in gene editing and precision plant breeding. It would amend the hiring authority for cotton classification employees to allow for non-competitive rehiring of qualified individuals, and add South Carolina to the Virginia/Carolina region of the Peanut Standards Board.
Current Law/Policy |
House Ag. Comm.-Reported Bill (H.R. 2) |
Commodity Program Terms |
|
Actual |
Same as current law. |
|
Same as current law. |
|
Same as current law. |
Base |
Individual crop-specific base acres are retained, as in effect as under the 2014 farm bill subject to any reallocation, adjustment, or reduction as described in Section 1112. |
County |
No comparable definition. |
Covered |
Wheat, oats, and barley (including wheat, oats, and barley used for haying and grazing), corn, grain sorghum, long |
Effective |
Same as current law. |
No comparable definition. |
Effective |
Extra |
Same as current law. |
Generic |
No comparable provision. |
Individual |
No comparable definition. |
No comparable definition. |
Marketing |
Medium |
Same as current law. |
Other |
Same as current law. |
Payment |
Same as current law. |
Payment |
For a covered commodity, the yield used to make PLC payments under the 2014 farm bill |
Price Loss Coverage (PLC). |
Same as current law. |
Producer. |
Same as current law. |
Pulse |
Same as current law. |
Reference
|
Same as current law Reference |
Secretary. |
Same as current law. |
Seed cotton. |
Same as current law. |
State. |
Same as current law. |
Temperate |
Same as current law. |
Transitional |
Same as current law. |
United States. When used in a geographical sense, all of the |
Same as current law. |
United States |
Same as current law. |
|
|
Base Acres |
|
One- |
No comparable provision. Base acres (subject to the previous one-time reallocation choice) are included through the retention of crop-specific base acres under prior law. |
Seed If a farm has no such recent history, then the farm owner allocates the farm's generic base to unassigned crop base for which no ARC or PLC payments may be made. If a farm has such a recent history, then the farm owner allocates the farm's generic base among seed cotton and other covered commodities as If a farm owner fails to make an election for generic base, then the farm owner shall be deemed to have elected to allocate all generic base acres in accordance with formulation (A) above. |
No comparable provision. Seed cotton base acres are included indirectly through the retention of crop-specific base acres under prior law. |
Adjustments to |
The same as current law. |
Prevention of |
The same as current law. |
Reduction of |
Reduction of base acres is the same as current law |
No comparable provision. |
Treatment of |
No comparable provision. |
Reconstitution of farm to expand base. |
Payment Yields |
|
Payment For other covered commodities, see the discussion under 7 U.S.C. 9013 (c)-(e). |
To make PLC payments, this provision continues the Secretary's authority to establish payment yields for each farm for any designated oilseed that does not have a payment yield under the 2014 farm bill. |
Absence of |
Authorizes the Secretary to establish a payment yield if no payment yield is otherwise established for a covered commodity using the program payment yields of similarly situated farms. |
Updating |
Yield update for drought-affected counties. |
Payment |
The average yield for seed cotton per planted acre equals 2.4 times the average yield for upland cotton per planted acre. |
Payment Acres |
|
Payment Generic base is eligible for payments if a covered crop is planted on the farm. |
Continues the establishment of payment acres for PLC and county-level ARC payments for each covered commodity on the farm at 85% of the base acres. No reference is made to the individual farm-level ARC program or its associated payment acres. |
Exclusion from |
No comparable provision. |
Minimal |
Same as current law. |
Effect of No reduction to payment acres shall be made under this subsection, as determined by the Secretary, if FVWR are grown solely for conservation purposes and not harvested for use or sale |
Same as current law. |
Unassigned |
Requires the Secretary to maintain information on unassigned crop base acres on a farm under the one-time reallocation of base acres under the 2014 farm bill and prevention of excess base acres. |
Producer Election |
|
Producer |
For the 2019 Failure to make a unanimous election for the 2019 crop year results in no program payments to the farm for the 2019 crop year, and producers on the farm are deemed to have elected PLC for all covered commodities on the farm for the 2020 Prohibits farm reconstitution to void or change an election made under this section. |
Price Loss Coverage (PLC) Program |
|
|
Requires the Secretary to make PLC payments on a covered-commodity-by-covered-commodity basis where all of the producers on a farm have elected PLC for crop years 2019-2023 when the effective price for a crop year is less than the effective reference price. |
PLC Effective Price |
|
Effective price. |
Same as current law. |
Effective |
Same as current law. |
Effective |
Same as current law. |
PLC Payment Rate and Payment Amount |
|
PLC |
Same as current law. |
PLC |
If PLC payments for a covered commodity are triggered for any of crop years 2019-2023, the payment amount equals the |
Timing of PLC |
Same as current law. |
Agricultural Risk Coverage (ARC) Program |
|
ARC payments for a crop year are triggered if the actual crop revenue is less than its ARC guarantee. Both the actual crop revenue and ARC guarantee are calculated differently based on the producer's election choice: either county- or farm-level ARC. |
Requires the Secretary to make ARC payments if all of the producers on a farm have elected ARC for crop years 2019-2023 if a covered commodity's crop-year actual crop revenue is less than its ARC guarantee. (Refers only to the county-level ARC |
Actual County coverage for a crop year of a covered commodity: actual crop revenue per acre Individual (farm-level) coverage |
Defines actual crop revenue specific to county-level ARC for a crop year for a covered commodity as the product of the actual average county yield per planted acre for a covered commodity times the higher of the MYAP or the national average marketing assistance loan rate. By omission, individual (farm-level) ARC expires at the end of the 2018 crop year. |
ARC For county ARC coverage for a covered commodity for a crop year For individual ARC coverage for a crop year |
Same as current law. By omission, individual (farm-level) ARC expires at the end of the 2018 crop year. |
Yield |
Same as current law. |
Reference |
Same as current law. |
ARC |
The payment rate for a covered commodity is equal to the lesser of |
ARC |
If ARC payments are required to be paid for any of the 2019 |
Timing of ARC |
Same as current law. |
Additional
|
Sets forth additional duties of the Secretary, including using available information and analysis to check for anomalies in the determination of ARC payments; calculating a separate actual crop revenue and agriculture risk coverage guarantee for irrigated and nonirrigated covered commodities; assigning an actual or benchmark county yield for planted acres for a covered commodity for a crop year using |
Producer Agreements |
|
Producer Eligibility for PLC and ARC payments and marketing loans requires producers to comply with conservation |
Same as current law. |
Termination of |
Same as current law. |
Annual |
Same as current law. |
Eligibility for ARC payments for individual (i.e., the whole-farm, farm-level) coverage (as opposed to the crop-specific, county-level ARC program) requires a producer to submit annual production reports for each covered commodity that is covered by the farm's ARC individual program—as produced on all farms in the same State. [7 U.S.C. 9018(d)] |
No comparable provision. |
Effect of |
Same as current law. |
The Secretary shall provide adequate safeguards to protect the interests of tenants and sharecroppers |
Same as in current law. |
Nonrecourse Marketing Assistance Loan Program |
|
Nonrecourse |
Authorizes nonrecourse loans for loan commodities for 2019 |
Peanuts |
Same as current law. |
Loan as follows:Wheat, $2.94 per bu. Corn, $1.95 per bu. Grain sorghum, $1.95 per bu. Barley, $1.95 per bu. Oats, $1.39 per bu.
Long Medium Soybeans, $5.00 per bu. Other oilseeds, $10.09 per cwt. for Dry peas, $5.40 per cwt. Lentils, $11.28 per cwt. Small chickpeas, $7.43 per cwt. Large chickpeas, $11.28 per cwt. Graded wool, $1.15 per lb. Nongraded wool, $0.40 per lb. Mohair, $4.20 per lb. Honey, $0.69 per lb. Peanuts, $355 per ton. [7 U.S.C. 90321] |
Continues the loan rates for commodities in current law for the 2019 |
Upland |
The simple average of the adjusted prevailing world price for the |
Single |
Same as current law. |
Seed |
Same as in current law. |
Term of |
Same as current law. |
Repayment of |
Same as current law. |
Special |
Same as current law. |
Prevailing |
Same as current law. |
Payment of |
Extends current law for crop years 2019 |
Repayment |
Same as current law. |
Authority to |
Same as current law. |
Loan |
Extends current law for crop years 2019 |
Payments in |
Extends current law for crop years 2019 |
Special |
Continues both provisions in the same manner as current law without an expiration date beginning on August 1, 2019. |
Economic |
Extends without an expiration date the economic adjustment assistance to users of upland cotton at the rate of |
Special |
Continues the authorization through July 31, 2024, of the special competitive provisions for |
Availability of |
Continues the authorization for recourse loans for certain crops for the 2019 |
Adjustment of |
Continues the authorization to adjust loan rates in the same manner as current law |
Sugar Program |
|
Price Maintains sugar loan rates through the 2018 crop year at |
Same as current law except that all price |
Flexible |
Same as current law except that all provisions are extended through the 2023 crop year. |
Import |
Same as current law except that all provisions are extended through the 2023 crop year. |
Dairy Programs |
|
Repeal or Reauthorization of Dairy Programs |
|
Dairy Product Donation Program (DPDP). Requires USDA to purchase dairy products at prevailing market prices when the dairy margin (milk price-feed costs) is $4.00 per |
Repeals DPDP. |
Dairy Forward Pricing Program. Authorizes a dairy forward pricing program. Prices paid by milk handlers under forward contracts are deemed to satisfy the minimum price requirements of federal milk marketing orders. Forward contracts |
Extends program through FY2023. Allows for new contracts until September 30, 2023, but no contract can extend beyond September 30, 2026. |
Dairy Indemnity Program. Authorizes payments to dairy farmers when a public regulatory agency directs removal of raw milk from the market because of contamination by pesticides, nuclear radiation or fallout, or toxic substances and other chemical residues. Expires September 30, 2018. |
Extends program through FY2023. |
Dairy Promotion and Research Program. The Dairy Production Stabilization Act of 1983 authorized a generic dairy product promotion, research, and nutrition education program, funded by a mandatory $0.15 |
Extends program through FY2023. |
Dairy Risk Management Program (DRMP) for Dairy Producers |
|
No comparable provision. |
Review of |
No comparable provision. |
Corn |
No comparable provision. |
Collection of |
Treatment of |
In The dairy risk management payment to the |
Relation to |
Amends the provision to allow dairy producers to participate in the renamed |
Production |
The DRMP uses the highest annual milk marketings during calendar years 2011, 2012, or 2013 for production history for participation through 2023. USDA is to adjust production history to reflect increases in national average milk production for calendar years ending before January 1, 2019. |
No comparable provision. |
Limitation on |
Margin |
Amends subsection (a) by deleting Deadline for |
Margin |
Amends the section by adding $8.50 and $9.00 thresholds for the first 5 million pounds of milk production. |
Margin |
Amends the section by striking 25%. Dairy operations may elect a coverage percentage, in 5% increments, |
Premiums for |
Amends the producer coverage threshold premiums, per cwt., for the first 5 million pounds of milk production to |
Time for |
In a technical correction, the subsection title is amended to Method of Payment of Premiums. (§1401(h)(2)) |
No comparable provision. |
Effective |
Duration. The margin protection program ends on December 31, 2018. |
Deletes |
Conforming Amendments Related to Program Name |
|
Subtitle D—Dairy, Part I—Margin Protection Program for Dairy Producers. |
Amends the heading to read "Part I—Dairy Risk Management Program for Dairy Producers." (§1401(i)(1)) |
Definitions. Section 1401 of the Agricultural Act of 2014 (P.L. 113-79) defines certain terms of the dairy |
Deletes paragraphs 5 and 6 of 7 U.S.C. 9051 and inserts new paragraphs that define the |
Calculation of |
Amends the section by striking |
Establishment of |
The section heading is amended by deleting |
Participation of |
Strikes |
Production |
|
Margin |
|
Premiums for |
|
Effect of |
Strikes |
Administration and |
Strikes |
Federal Milk Marketing Orders |
|
Terms— |
Class I The amended pricing takes effect on the first day of the first month beginning more than 120 days after enactment. The amendment is not subject to |
Agricultural Disaster Assistance Programs |
|
The Livestock Indemnity Program |
Expands payments to include losses from disease that is caused or transmitted by a vector and is not controlled by vaccination or other acceptable management practices. |
Total payments received under the Livestock Forage Disaster Program (LFP) and Emergency Assistance for Livestock, Honey Bees, and Farm-Raised Fish Program (ELAP) are limited to $125,000 for any crop year. |
Excludes ELAP from the $125,000 per crop year payment limit. LFP remains subject to a $125,000 per crop year payment limit. |
No comparable provision. |
Adds exclusion to the adjusted gross income limit ( |
Payment Limits |
|
Payment limitations. Payments made to a legal entity are reduced proportionately by the ownership share of any person or legal entity that has otherwise exceeded the applicable payment limitation. |
Retains the payment limit of $125,000 per year for all covered commodities (with a separate limit for peanuts) to a person or legal entity Any benefits arising from marketing loan gains, LDPs, and forfeiture of crops held under marketing assistance loans are not subject to a payment limit. Amends the definition of All changes made to payment limits shall apply starting with the 2019 crop year. |
Family member. |
Revises the definition of family member to include first cousins, nieces, and nephews. |
No comparable provision. |
Defines a qualified pass |
Treatment of joint ventures and partnerships. |
Treatment of QPTE. |
Adjusted Gross Income (AGI) Limitation. |
|
AGI |
Amends AGI limitation to no longer apply to any benefits under the Exempts QPTEs from the AGI limitation. Provides authority to Secretary to waive AGI limitation, on case-by-case basis, to protect environmentally sensitive land of special significance. Applies the |
Administrative Programs |
|
General |
Continues these provisions as current law, noting that promulgation of implementing regulations shall occur not later than 90 days after enactment. |
Adjustment |
Same as current law. |
Suspension of |
Extends the suspension of permanent price authority in the Agriculture Marketing Adjustment Act of 1938 and the Agricultural Act of 1949 for the 2019-2023 crop years for covered commodities, cotton, and sugar |
Prevention of |
Same as current law. |
Assignment of |
Same as current law. |
Tracking of |
Same as current law. |
Signature |
Same as current law but with the addition of a |
Personal |
Extends current law to include the provisions of this bill. |
Implementation. |
Same as current law for all provisions except:
USDA shall use CCC funds to ensure that PLC and ARC payments are fully made prior to enforcing in any year where discretionary spending limits are enforced via sequestration or other budgetary means. |
Exemption from |
Expands the federal grant financial reporting requirement exemption for NRCS conservation programs to all USDA commodity and conservation programs administered by the Farm Service Agency and the NRCS. As written, the applicability of the exemption is unclear given that the exemption was provided for regulations directed at federal agencies in administering grant programs rather than for specific grant program regulations. |
Current Law/Policy |
House Ag. Comm.-Reported Bill (H.R. 2) |
Wetland Conservation |
|
Program |
Requires the Secretary to consider all possible exemptions before denying program benefits to producers found to be out of compliance. |
Minimal |
Requires that categorical minimal effect exemptions be published no later than 180 days after the date of enactment. |
Wetland |
Provides the wetland mitigation banking program with an additional $10 million in mandatory funding authority for FY2019 |
Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) |
|
Authority. |
Reauthorizes CRP through FY2023. |
Enrollment. CRP is authorized to enroll up to 27.5 million acres in FY2014 |
Increases enrollment limits to 25 million acres in FY2019 |
CRP grassland enrollment is capped at 2 million acres between FY2014 |
Creates a minimum CRP grassland enrollment level of 3 million acres by the end of FY2023. Incrementally increases the enrollment of grassland acres to 1 million acres in FY2019 |
No comparable provision. CRP acres are enrolled based on the relative environmental benefits of the land offered. |
Minimum |
CRP contracts are 10 |
Amends the duration for CRP contracts by requiring select continuous enrollment contracts to enroll for 15 |
All expiring CRP land is eligible for reenrollment in the program. |
Limits reenrollment for land devoted to hardwood trees to only one reenrollment. |
Farmable Wetland |
Reauthorizes |
Owners and operators of |
Deletes the prohibition on commercial use. |
Under |
Reduces the annual rental rate and deletes the additional incentives for filterstrips. |
Duties of |
Adds |
Duties of the Secretary. Certain specified activities are permitted on CRP land. Managed harvesting is allowed if it |
Expands permitted harvesting and grazing activities on CRP land. Caps the reduction in annual rental rate for managed harvesting at 25% and does not allow vegetative cover to be harvested for seed. Amends the frequency of harvesting to not more than once every Adds a new provision that allows for grazing on CRP land during the FSA determined "normal grazing period" under the Livestock Forage Disaster Program (LFP) without regard to primary nesting season if there is a 50% reduction of the normal carrying capacity determined under LFP. |
No comparable provision. |
Adds a new provision providing that when a natural disaster or adverse weather event has the same effect as a management |
Payments. Land enrolled in CRP is eligible to receive cost-share assistance for practices implemented. Cost-share payments are limited to 50% of the actual or average cost of establishing the practice and no more than 100% of the total cost. Hardwood trees, windbreaks, shelterbelts, and wildlife corridors are eligible for additional cost-share payments. |
Reduces cost-share assistance. Cost-share payments are limited to 40% of the actual or average cost of establishing the practice |
Incentive payments are allowed for up to 150% of the total cost of thinning and other practices to promote forest management or enhance wildlife habitat. |
Reduces incentive payments to not more than 100% of the total cost of thinning and other practices to promote forest management or enhance wildlife habitat. |
Land enrolled in CRP is eligible to receive an annual rental payment. In determining the amount to be paid, the Secretary has discretion in determining the amount necessary to encourage enrollment. |
Adds a requirement that when determining the amount of annual rental payments the Secretary must consider the impact on the local farmland rental market. |
CRP enrollment is conducted through the submission of bids by owners and operators of eligible land. Annual rental payments under CRP contracts are determined by the Secretary in accordance with the rental rate criteria (see below). |
Reduces annual rental payments based on enrollment type. Newly enrolled acres receive not more than 80% of the average county rental rate (described below). Reenrolled land receives not more than a percentage of the average county rental rate for the year of reenrollment subject to the following schedule:
| )
Enrollment of hardwood tree acres are to be considered on a continuous basis. |
Deletes provision. |
CRP rental rates are based on soil productivity and the county average rental rate. |
Requires NASS to conduct a county average rental rate survey annually and publish the survey estimate not later than September 15 |
No comparable provision. |
|
Contracts. Owners and operators were allowed to terminate their CRP contracts in FY2015 without penalty if the contract had been in place for at least five years. Land not eligible for early release includes filterstrips, waterways, strips adjacent to riparian areas, windbreaks, shelterbelts, erodibility index of more than 15, hardwood trees, wildlife habitat, duck nesting habitat, pollinator habitat, upland bird habitat buffer, wildlife food plots, State Acres for Wildlife Enhancement |
Amends the early termination provisions to allow producers with a CRP contract in place for five or more years to terminate the contract in FY2019. |
Transition Incentives Program |
Amends the CRP transition option to allow new owners to start the organic certification process up to three years before the CRP contract expires. Requires that financial and technical assistance be provided to the new owner to carry out a conservation plan. |
Landowners may enroll in Conservation Stewardship Program (CSP) and conduct activities required under CSP in the final year of the CRP contract without violating the terms of the contract. |
Amends the provision to allow for enrollment in EQIP and |
Environmental Quality Incentives Program (EQIP) |
|
Definitions. |
Amends the definition of Adds |
Establishment and |
Reauthorizes EQIP through FY2023. |
Requires that 60% of payments go to practices related to livestock production and that a minimum of 5% of annual funds go to payments benefiting wildlife habitat through FY2018. |
Deletes carve |
EQIP may fund irrigation efficiency practices. Priority is given for applications that reduce water use on the operation |
Amends the provision by specifying that payments may be provided for water conservation scheduling technology or management, irrigation-related structural practices, or transition to water-conservation crops or rotations. Adds a new provision allowing USDA to contract with irrigation districts, irrigation associations, and acequias if the watershed-wide project will effectively conserve water. Only eligible land or land owned by the irrigation entity is eligible. |
No directly comparable provision. Under CSP, contracts (five years in length with the option of renewal) are based on meeting or exceeding a stewardship threshold on the entire agricultural operation. Participants must meet two priority resource concerns upon entry and meet or exceed one additional priority resource concern by the end of the contract. Contract renewal participants must meet the threshold for two additional priority resources concerns |
Stewardship |
Limitation on |
Extends the EQIP payment limit ($450,000) for FY2019-FY2023 |
Conservation Innovation Grants (CIG) and payments. CIG is a competitive grant program within EQIP. Grants are provided, on a matching basis, to implement innovative conservation practices. |
Limits CIG to no more than $25 million annually. Amends eligible uses to include persons participating in an educational activity through an institution of higher education. |
Requires that $25 million of EQIP funds annually (through FY2018) be used to address air quality concerns. |
Reauthorizes and increases the air quality funding carve-out to $37 million of EQIP annually between FY2019 |
No comparable provision. |
Requires up to $25 million of EQIP funds for FY2019-FY2023 be used for on-farm conservation innovation trials to test new or innovative conservation approaches |
Report. A report is required no later than |
Adds a requirement that USDA use the required CIG reports to establish and maintain a public conservation practice database. |
Other Conservation Programs |
|
Conservation of Private Grazing Land Program. Authorizes appropriations of $60 million annually through FY2018. |
Extends authorization of appropriations at $60 million annually through FY2023. |
Grassroots Source Water Protection Program. Authorizes appropriations of $20 million annually through FY2018 and a one-time authorization for $5 million in mandatory funding to remain available until expended. |
Extends authorization of appropriations at $20 million annually through FY2023 and authorizes an additional $5 million in mandatory funding in FY2019 to remain available until expended. |
Voluntary Public Access and Habitat Incentive Program. |
Adds authorization for $50 million in mandatory funding for |
Small Watershed Rehabilitation Program. Authorizes appropriations of up to $85 million annually for FY2008-FY2018 and $250 million in mandatory funding for FY2014 to remain available until expended. |
Extends annual authorization of appropriations of $85 million annually through FY2023. |
Watershed Protection and Flood Prevention (Watershed Operations). |
Adds a new section authorizing $100 million annually in mandatory funding between FY2019 and FY2023 to remain available until expended. |
No directly comparable provision. National Feral Swine Damage Management Program. APHIS administers the program to manage damage caused by feral swine in the United States. APHIS works with states, tribes, federal agencies, universities, organizations, and the public Feral Swine Initiative. Administered by NRCS in select states through EQIP. The initiative offers planning and management practice implementation to affected landowners. |
Creates a new Feral Swine Eradication and Control Pilot Program. USDA is required to study the extent of damage from feral swine, develop eradication and control measures and restoration methods, and provide cost-share funding to agricultural producers in established pilot areas. NRCS and APHIS must coordinate the pilot through NRCS State Technical Committees. Cost-share assistance is limited to 75% of the cost of eradication and control measures or restoration. Authorizes $100 million in mandatory funding for the period FY2019-FY2023. Requires funding to be split equally between NRCS and APHIS |
Emergency Conservation Program |
Adds a reference to wildfires in a list of natural disasters. Adds a new provision allowing producers repairing or replacing Adds a new section similar to existing regulations limiting the cost-share to 75% of the total allowable cost |
Funding and Administration |
|
Commodity Credit Corporation (CCC). Authorizes the use of funds (mandatory), facilities, and authorities of the |
Extends the CCC authority between FY2014 and FY2023. Specific funding levels for programs are outlined below. |
CRP |
Extends the specific authorizations of $10 million for thinning incentive payments and $33 million for transition contracts between FY2014 |
ACEP |
Reauthorizes the authority for the CCC to fund ACEP for $500 million annually between FY2019 |
Conservation Security Program |
Deletes provision. |
CSP |
Authorizes the CCC to carry out CSP contracts enrolled prior to enactment. |
EQIP |
Reauthorizes the authority for the CCC to fund EQIP, including: $2 billion in FY2019 |
Availability of |
Reauthorizes mandatory funding made available for CRP, ACEP, CSP, and EQIP between FY2019 |
Technical |
Deletes reporting requirements. |
Regional |
Deletes provision. |
Assistance to |
Reauthorizes the EQIP set-aside through FY2023 and deletes the reference to CSP. |
Report on |
Reauthorizes reporting requirements through FY2023, adds reports on annual and current enrollment statistics, and removes references to CSP. |
Delivery of |
Adds a definition of third-party provider |
Technical |
Adds an alternative certification process for TSPs requiring the acceptance of other professional certification criteria that meets or exceeds the TSP certification criteria. |
Administrative |
Deletes provision and adds a similar provision to |
No comparable provision. |
Source |
Establishment of |
Adds land-grant colleges to the list of required representatives. |
Agricultural Conservation Easement Program (ACEP) |
|
Establishment and |
Amends the purpose of ACEP agricultural land easements by adding that the purpose of protecting agricultural use by limiting nonagricultural uses applies specifically for those uses that negatively affect agricultural uses and conservation values. For grasslands, the purpose is amended from protecting grasslands by restoring and conserving land to restoring or conserving land. |
Definitions. Five terms are defined under ACEP: agricultural land easement, Agricultural land easement is defined as an easement that protects the natural resources and the agricultural nature of the land Eligible land is defined separately for agricultural land easements and wetland reserve easements. Agricultural land easements include land |
Amends the definition of agricultural land easement by removing the requirement that landowners farm according to an approved agricultural easement plan. Amends the definition of eligible land. Increases the percentage of nonindustrial private forest land that may be enrolled in an agricultural land easement to 100%. Removes the requirement under wetland reserve easements that USDA consult with the Department of the Interior on the wildlife benefits and wetland functions and values. Adds a definition for monitoring report for agricultural land easements. |
Agricultural |
Deletes the requirement that technical assistance be used pursuant to an agricultural land easement plan and instead be used to implement the program. |
Eligible entities are required to provide contributions equivalent to the federal share |
Amends the |
The evaluation and ranking criteria for agricultural land easement applications is required to maximize the benefit of federal investment under ACEP. |
Adds a requirement that USDA adjust the evaluation and ranking criteria for geographic differences among states. |
ACEP agricultural land easement enrollment is through eligible entities that enter into cooperative agreement of |
Amends the minimum terms and conditions by limiting the right of enforcement for USDA |
|
Amends the certification process to allow certified entities to use their own terms and conditions for agricultural land easements. Amends the certification criteria to automatically certify land trusts accredited by the Land Trust Accreditation Commission with more than five agricultural land easements under ACEP. |
USDA, if requested, may provide technical assistance for compliance with the terms and conditions of the easements and to implement an agricultural land easement plan. |
Deletes reference to the agricultural land easement plan. |
Wetland |
Adds that a grazing management plan may be used if consistent with the wetland reserve easement plan and is reviewed at least every five years. |
Administration. Certain land is ineligible for ACEP easements, including land owned by the |
Amends ineligible land where an ACEP easement would be undermined to consider only on-site conditions. |
USDA may subordinate, exchange, modify, or terminate any ACEP easement if it |
Amends the subordination, exchange, modification, and termination requirements by providing separate criteria for modifications and terminations. Modifications may be made if they would have a neutral or increased conservation effect and are consistent with the original intent of the easement and purposes of ACEP. Terminations may be made if the current land owner and easement holder agree and the termination would be in the public interest. |
No comparable provision. |
Waives the |
Regional Conservation Partnership Program (RCPP) |
|
Definitions. Six terms are defined under RCPP: covered program, Covered program is defined as ACEP, EQIP, CSP, and the Healthy Forests Reserve Program Eligible activity is defined as activities for water quality and quantity improvement, drought mitigation, flood prevention, water retention, air quality improvement, habitat conservation, erosion control and sediment reduction, forest restoration, and others defined by USDA. |
Amends the definition of covered program by adding CRP and Watershed Protection and Flood Prevention operations and removing CSP. Amends the definition of eligible activity by adding resource-conserving crop rotations and protection of source waters for drinking water. |
Regional |
Amends the length of partnership agreements to include agreements longer than five years. Amends the project assessments to require partners to quantify the project's environmental outcomes. Adds a renewal option for projects that have met or exceeded the project's objectives. |
Assistance to |
Extends the payments for dryland farming conversion and nutrient management to match the extended partnership agreements. Expands the AGI waiver to also waive a covered program's payment limitation. |
Funding. Authorized to receive $100 million in mandatory funding annually for FY2014-FY2018. |
Increases mandatory funding authority to $250 million annually for FY2019-FY2023. |
No comparable provision. |
Report. Adds a requirement for USDA to provide partners and producers guidance on how to quantify and report environmental outcomes associated with conservation practice adoption. Requires a report on the progress of quantification. |
Critical |
Deletes provision. |
Repeals and Transitional Provisions; Technical Amendments |
|
Conservation Security Program. Authorized in the 2002 farm bill and replaced by the Conservation Stewardship Program in the 2014 farm bill. The program enrolled acres in |
Repeals the Conservation Security Program. |
Conservation Stewardship Program (CSP). Provides financial and technical assistance to producers to maintain and improve existing conservation systems, and adopt additional conservation activities. Under CSP, participants must meet a "stewardship threshold" for a set number of priority resource concerns when they apply for the program |
Repeals |
Desert |
Repeals the Desert Terminal Lakes program. |
No comparable provision. |
Provides technical amendments and spelling corrections. |
Current Law/Policy |
House Ag. Comm.-Reported Bill (H.R. 2) |
Food for Peace Act (All section references in this subsection are to this act.) |
|
Labeling. |
Extends the labeling requirement to commodities and food procured outside of the United States |
Food |
Extends authority to fund this section through FY2023. |
Local |
Amends this section to provide for |
Minimum |
Extends authority, with waiver authority, for requiring minimum levels of food quantities be available for emergency and non-emergency assistance through FY2023. |
Food |
Extends the authority for the Food Aid Consultative Group through FY2023. |
Regulations and |
Requires that the Administrator shall issue all necessary regulations and revisions to agency guidelines with respect to changes in the operation or implementation of the U.S. food assistance programs not later than 270 days after enactment of the Agricultural and Nutrition Act of 2018. |
Program |
Extends authority to fund this section through FY2023. Amends this section by replacing the $17 million cap on funds with a maximum of 1.5% of the funds made available under Title II of the Food for Peace Act for each of FY2019 |
Assistance for |
Changes the heading of this section to "International Food Relief Partnership" and extends the program authority to FY2023. |
Impact on |
Amends this section to ensure that no modalities of assistance—importation of donated commodities or food vouchers, cash transfers, or local and regional procurement |
Prepositioning of |
Extends authority for prepositioning of donated agricultural commodities through FY2023. |
Annual |
Amends |
Agreements to
|
Extends the deadline for agreements to finance sales or to provide other assistance until December 31, 2023. |
Minimum |
Amends the Food for Peace Act to provide a minimum annual outlay for nonemergency food assistance of not less than $365 |
Micronutritient |
Extends authority for the micronutrient fortification program through FY2023. |
John Ogonowski and Doug Bereuter Farmer-to-Farmer (F2F) Program. |
Clarifies that the nature of assistance provided by the Includes retired extension staff of USDA in the list of entities that may work in conjunction with agricultural producers and farm organizations on a voluntary basis. Includes explicit language to reinforce that longer-term and sequenced assignments and partnerships are allowed within the F2F Continues minimum fiscal Provides that funds used to carry out F2F programs shall be counted Reauthorizes the authorization of appropriations until 2023. |
Other Food Aid Programs |
|
Local and Regional Food Aid Procurement Program.
|
Extends authority to fund this section through FY2023. [Sec. 3201] |
Bill Emerson Humanitarian Trust. |
Amends [Sec. 3203] |
Food for Progress Program. |
Expands eligible program cooperators to include a college or university as defined in 7 U.S.C. 3103(4). [Sec. 3204] |
McGovern-Dole International Food for Education and Child Nutrition.
|
Amends this section to ensure, to the extent practicable, that assistance will be provided on a timely basis so as to coincide with the beginning of the school year and when needed during the relevant school year. |
Other International Agricultural Programs |
|
Cochran Fellowship Program. |
Amends this section to permit study in foreign colleges or universities that have met certain criteria: have sufficient scientific and technical facilities [Sec. 3206] |
Borlaug Fellowship Program. As established by the Secretary of Agriculture, the Borlaug Fellowship Program provides fellowships for scientific training and study in the United States to individuals from eligible countries (i.e., developing country, as determined by the Secretary using a gross national income per capita test) |
Amends current law to permit U.S. citizens to receive Borlaug fellowships in order to assist eligible countries in developing school-based agriculture and youth extension programs and to permit study in foreign colleges or universities that have met certain criteria. Further, |
Global Crop Diversity Trust. |
Amends this section to limit the aggregate contribution of U.S. funds to the |
Export Promotion and Market Development |
|
Market |
International Market Development Program. Merges USDA's four market development and export promotion programs into one program. Maintains requirements for spending for components of MAP, FMDP, EMP, and TASC. Authorizes mandatory CCC funds of $255 million annually (FY2019-FY2023). Repeals individual |
Promotion of |
Reauthorizes program and funding through FY2023. |
No comparable provision . |
Biotechnology and Agricultural Trade Program. Establishes a program to assist with the removal of non-tariff and other trade barriers to U.S. agricultural products produced with biotechnology and other agricultural technologies. |
Current Law/Policy |
House Ag. Committee-Reported Bill (H.R. 2) |
Subtitle A |
|
Eligibility. Requires, for eligibility for direct loans, at least three years of farming experience |
Specifies conditions under which the Secretary may reduce the (A) To two years if the borrower (B) To one year with military leadership or management experience from completing a military leadership course. (C) Waived entirely if the beginning farmer meets two of the options (1)-(5) above, including mentoring in (5). |
Funding. Authorizes appropriations of $150 million annually for a conservation loan and loan guarantee program for FY2014-FY2018. |
Extends the authorization of appropriation to FY2023 and reduces it to $75 million annually. |
Loan Limit. Sets the loan limit per borrower for guaranteed farm ownership loans at $700,000, increased beginning with FY2000 by the inflation percentage since 1996 in the NASS Index of Prices Paid by Farmers. |
Raises the loan limit for guaranteed farm ownership loans to $1.75 million per borrower |
Subtitle B |
|
Loan |
Raises the loan limit for guaranteed farm operating loans to $1.75 million per borrower |
Authorizes a microloan program for loans less than $50,000. |
Changes |
Subtitle C |
|
Funding. Authorizes appropriations for the Beginning Farmer and Rancher Individual Development Account Program at $5 million per year through FY2018. |
Reauthorizes appropriations of the same amount per year through FY2023. |
Authorizes specific loan levels for direct and guaranteed farm ownership and farm operating loans through FY2018. |
Reauthorizes the same loan levels through FY2023. |
Carve |
Reauthorizes the same set |
Subtitle D |
|
The Down Payment Loan Program encourages retiring farmers and ranchers to sell their property to beginning farmers and ranchers with seller financing. The 2008 farm bill added |
Clarifies the location for the addition of |
For eligibility in the Emergency Loan Program, the 2014 farm bill added |
Clarifies the location in the second sentence for the addition of |
The Agricultural Credit Improvement Act of 1992 attempted to add flexibility for a |
Clarifies that a |
Approved |
Clarifies the definition of |
In the guaranteed loan program, the classification of "preferred certified lender" has authority to make certain decisions about loans that are not granted to all lenders that receive guarantees. |
Capitalizes the spelling of Preferred Certified Lender. |
An instruction in the 2014 farm bill attempted to change the reference to |
Clarifies in the definition of |
To apply certain definitions, Section 343(b) of the ConAct references |
Deletes reference to |
A paragraph in statute ended in an extra comma |
Deletes the extra comma at the end of the paragraph. |
Subtitle E: Amendments to the Farm Credit Act of 1971 (Farm Credit System) |
|
Update |
Revises the definition of entities that comprise the |
Allows a production credit association in a district with two such associations to serve borrowers who are denied credit by the other association |
Deletes this section, which is no longer applicable. |
Establishes a system of banks for cooperatives in the |
Deletes various references to a Central Bank for Cooperatives, United Bank of Cooperatives, and/or a National Bank of Cooperatives |
Establishes provisions relating to the funding and governance of the Farm Credit Banks through referring to district banks. |
Deletes the obsolete word |
Allows a bank for cooperatives to make loans to the Rural Electrification Administration. |
Inserts language recognizing a successor agency to the Rural Electrification Administration |
Establishes, and sets conditions for |
Deletes references to the now-obsolete Assistance Board, Financial Assistance Corporation, and funding. Terminates the Financial Assistance Corporation after December 31, 2018. |
During the tenure of the Assistance Board, a member of the Assistance Board shall be a non-voting member of the board of the Farm Credit System Funding Corporation. After termination of the Assistance Board, its successor, the Farm Credit System Insurance Corporation, shall not have a member on the Funding Corporation board. |
Deletes reference to the now-obsolete Assistance Board and retains language that the Insurance Corporation shall not have a member on the board of the Funding Corporation. |
Establishes provisions and conditions for the transition of various parts of the |
Deletes provisions that are transitional in nature |
Lists the |
Revises the lists to more generically refer to |
Defines terms relating to the restructuring of distressed loans. |
Applies the definitions that are used for distressed loans to the section about the "right of first refusal" for borrowers' rights. (12 U.S.C. 2219). |
Provides for the establishment and administration of |
Conforming |
Headquarters. Provides for the provision of headquarters and other facilities for |
Directs that the principal office of |
Privileged |
Provides authority for |
Scope of FCA |
Adds a provision that the scope of |
Defines various terms for the enforcement powers of |
Adds a definition for |
FarmerMac |
Increases the acreage exception to the dollar limit to be a "qualified loan" for FarmerMac from 1,000 acres to 2,000 acres. Effective one year after the study by |
Compensation of |
Deletes the section that establishes the limit on compensation of |
Use of |
Adds a paragraph that no funds of the Farm Credit System Insurance Corporation may be used to assist FarmerMac. |
Subtitle F: Miscellaneous |
|
State |
Reauthorizes appropriations of $7.5 million annually through FY2023. |
No comparable provision. |
FCA |
Current Law/Policy |
House Ag. Comm.-Reported Bill (H.R.2) |
Improving Health Outcomes in Rural Communities |
|
Project |
Authorizes the Secretary to announce a reprioritization of certain loan and grant programs to assist rural communities in responding to specific health emergencies (e.g., opioid abuse). Authorizes not less than 10% of the distance learning/telemedicine appropriation for telemedicine services to individuals affected by the emergency. Prioritizes the community facilities loan and grant program for developing prevention, treatment, and recovery services for individuals affected by the emergency. |
Distance |
Authorizes appropriations of $82 million annually FY2019-FY2023 for the distance learning and telemedicine program. |
Farm and Ranch Stress Assistance Network. In coordination with the Secretary of Health and Human Services, the Secretary is authorized to make competitive grants to establish a Farm and Ranch Stress Assistance Network to provide stress assistance programs for those engaged in agriculture-related occupations. Such sums as necessary authorized FY2008-FY2012. |
Reauthorizes such sums as necessary for FY2019-FY2023. Requires a review of the program within two years after the first grant is awarded. |
No comparable provision. |
Agricultural |
Connecting Rural Americans to High |
|
No comparable provision. |
Establishing |
No comparable provision. |
Incentives to |
Access to |
Amends Section 601 of the Rural Electrification Act to state that the Secretary "shall make loans and shall guarantee loans" for expanding broadband services. |
No comparable provision |
Smart |
Rural |
Renames the Rural Gigabit Program Innovative Broadband Advancement. Authorizes loans and grants for the purpose of demonstrating innovative broadband technologies or methods of broadband deployment that significantly decrease the costs of broadband deployment. Gives priority to projects involving multiple entities |
Unified |
Directs the Secretary to report annually to Congress on the extent of participation in the broadband loan and grant program. |
Rural Electrification Act's Telephone Loan Program. The Secretary is authorized to make loans to persons now providing or who may |
Authorizes the Secretary to obligate but not disburse funds for broadband projects before completion of otherwise required environmental, historical, or other reviews of the project. The Secretary is also authorized to de-obligate funds for projects if any such review will not be completed in a reasonable period of time. |
Evaluation |
Reduces the evaluation period from two evaluation periods to one. |
Priority to |
Removes priority for applicants that provide broadband service not predominantly for business service |
Buildout |
Amends requirements to have a broadband loan applicant agree to the buildout of the service in no later than five years rather than three years. |
Borrower |
Adds refinancing of loans for broadband services and other loans provided to purposes of telecommunications. |
Reporting |
Removes a reporting requirement that borrowers report the location of residences and businesses that will receive new broadband service, existing network service improvements, and facility upgrades. |
Authorization of appropriations. There is authorized to be appropriated to the Secretary to carry out this section $25 |
Authorizes appropriations for loans and loan guarantees at $150 million each |
No comparable provision. |
Middle |
No comparable provision. |
Outdated |
No comparable provision. |
Effective |
Rural Community, Business Development, and Infrastructure Programs |
|
No comparable provision. |
Regional |
No comparable provision. |
Expanding |
Access to |
Makes a rural area with a city of 20,000 or more ineligible for direct broadband loans. |
Special |
Authorizes the collection of loan fees for guaranteed loans in a fiscal year to equal the total subsidy costs for loan guarantees in that fiscal year. |
Collection of |
Authorizes the collection of loan fees for broadband guaranteed loans in a fiscal year to equal the total subsidy costs for loan guarantees in that fiscal year. |
Water, |
Raises the maximum amount of project financing from $100,000 to $200,000. Authorizes $15 million annually for FY2019-FY2023. |
Rural |
Directs technical assistance toward identifying options to enhance long |
Rural Water and Waste Water Circuit Rider Program. Provides funding to support technical assistance to water rural water systems. Authorizes funding of $20 million annually in FY2014 and each fiscal year thereafter. |
Authorizes funding at $25 million in FY2018 and for each fiscal year thereafter. |
Tribal |
Amends the provision by authorizing funding of $5 million |
Emergency and Imminent Community Water Assistance Program. Provides assistance to water systems in rural communities of 10,000 or less where there is a threat to potable water supplies. Authorizes funding of $35 million for each |
Amends the program to limit any until July 1 of the fiscal year except where a natural disaster has threatened potable water supplies. Authorizes funding at $27 million annually for FY2019-FY2023. |
Grants for |
Reauthorizes appropriations at $30 million annually for FY2019-FY2023. |
Household |
|
Solid |
Reauthorizes appropriations at $10 million |
Rural |
Reauthorizes the program at $65 million |
Rural |
Reauthorizes the program at $40 million for each of FY2019-FY2023. (§6213) |
Locally or |
Reauthorizes the program for FY2019-FY2023. |
Appropriate |
Reauthorizes the program at $5 million for each of FY2019-FY2023. (§6215) |
Rural Economic Area Partnership |
Reauthorizes the program for FY2019-FY2023. |
Intermediary Relending Program |
Reauthorizes the program at $10 million for each |
No comparable provision. |
Prison |
National Rural Development Partnership. A state-federal rural economic development coordinating entity operating through State Rural Development Councils and a National Rural Development Coordinating Committee. Authorizes appropriations of $10 million annually |
Reauthorizes the program at $10 million for each of FY2019-FY2023. (§6219) |
Grants for |
Reauthorizes the program at $1 million |
Rural Microentrepreneur Assistance Program. Provides grant support to third-party entities that assist rural entrepreneurs in establishing microenterprises in rural areas. Authorizes $40 million annually in discretionary spending for each of FY2009-FY2018, subject to appropriations, and $3 million in mandatory spending annually for FY2014-FY2018. |
Reauthorizes the program at $4 million in discretionary funding |
Health |
Reauthorizes the program at $3 million |
Delta Regional Authority. An |
Reauthorizes the program at $12 million |
Northern Great Plains Regional Authority. Authorizes an economic development commission that develops regional plans and makes loans and grants for infrastructure and economic development in five Great Plains |
Reauthorizes the program at $2 million |
Rural Business Investment Program. Modeled on the Small Business Administration's Small Business Investment Companies, the Rural Business Investment Program provides funding to help capitalize Rural Business Companies that, in turn, provide loans to rural businesses. Authorizes $20 million for each of FY2014-FY2018, subject to appropriations. |
Reauthorizes the program at $20 million for each of FY2019-FY2023. (§6225) |
Rural Electrification Act of 1936 |
|
Guarantees for |
Reauthorizes the program through FY2023. |
Expansion of |
Reauthorizes the program through FY2023. |
Improvements to the Guarantees Underwriter Program. States that a lender receiving a guarantee on a bond or note shall pay a fee to the Secretary. |
Amends the Rural Electrification Act of 1936 to authorize guaranteed payments on bonds or notes issued by cooperatives or other lenders on a not-for-profit basis if the bonds are used to make utility infrastructure loans |
Extension of |
Inserts a new section that authorizes grants and no-interest loans for purposes of supporting rural economic development projects. In addition to other funds available for the program, the provision also authorizes $10 million for each |
Farm Security and Rural Investment Act of 2002 (Bio-Energy Provisions) |
|
Authorized Programs |
|
Rural Energy Savings Program. Extends program through FY2018. Provides loans to rural families and small businesses to implement durable cost-effective energy efficiency measures. Authorized to be appropriated $75 million annually for |
Adds two requirements to the loans for eligible entities section—eligibility for other loans and accounting. Increases the loan interest to not exceed 5 percent. Authorizes to be appropriated $75 million annually for |
Biobased Markets Program. Extends program through FY2018. Requires federal agencies to purchase products with maximum biobased content (explicitly including forest products) subject to availability, flexibility, and performance standards. Minimum biobased content standards applied to federal contracts on case-by-case basis. Continued voluntary labeling. Authorized mandatory funding of $3 million annually for FY2014-FY2018 for biobased products testing and labeling. Authorized to be appropriated $2 million annually for |
Extends program through FY2023. Authorizes to be appropriated $2 million annually for FY2014-FY2023. No mandatory funding is authorized. Prohibits federal agencies from placing limitations on the procurement of wood and wood-based products. |
Biorefinery, Renewable Chemical, and Biobased Product Manufacturing Assistance Program. Extends program through FY2018. Assists in development of new and emerging technologies for advanced biofuels, renewable chemicals, and biobased products by providing loan guarantees—not to exceed 80% of project costs—for development, construction, and/or retrofitting of commercial-scale biorefineries. Authorizes mandatory funding of $100 million in FY2014 and $50 million each for FY2015 and FY2016. Authorizes to be appropriated $75 million annually for FY2014-FY2018. |
Extends program through FY2023. Expands the definition |
Repowering Assistance Program. Extends program through FY2018. Provides funds to replace the use of fossil fuels used to produce heat or power to operate biorefineries in existence as of the 2008 farm bill enactment date. Authorizes mandatory funding of $12 million for FY2014, available until expended. Authorizes to be appropriated $10 million annually for FY2014-FY2018. |
Extends program through FY2023. Authorizes to be appropriated $10 million annually for |
Bioenergy Program for Advanced Biofuels. Extends program through FY2018. Provides payments to producers to support and expand production of advanced biofuels by entering into contracts to pay producers for production of eligible advanced biofuels. Provides mandatory funding of $15 million annually for FY2014-FY2018. Authorizes to be appropriated $20 million annually (FY20014-FY2018) |
Extends program through FY2023. Modifies the equitable distribution portion of the program by limiting the amount of payments for advanced biofuel produced from a single eligible commodity to not exceed one-third of the total program funding available in a fiscal year. Authorizes to be appropriated $50 million annually for FY2019-FY2023. No mandatory funding is authorized. |
Biodiesel Fuel Education Program. Extends program through FY2018. Awards competitive grants to nonprofit organizations that educate fleet operators and the public on biodiesel benefits. Provides mandatory funding of $1 million annually (FY2008-FY2018). Authorizes to be appropriated $1 |
Extends program through FY2023. Authorizes to be appropriated $2 million annually for FY2019-FY2023. No mandatory funding is authorized. |
Rural Energy for America Program |
Extends program through FY2023. Limits mandatory funding to FY2014-FY2018. Authorizes to be appropriated $20 million annually for FY2014-FY2023. No mandatory funding is authorized. Provides a categorical exclusion for electric generating facilities with a capacity of |
Rural Energy Self-Sufficiency Initiative. Not included in the 2014 farm bill |
Repeals the initiative. |
Feedstock Flexibility Program. Extends program through FY2018. Allows the |
Extends program through FY2023. |
Biomass Crop Assistance Program. Extends program through FY2018. Provides payments to owners and operators of agricultural land and nonindustrial private forest land that establish, produce, and deliver biomass feedstocks to eligible processing plants. Modifies enrolled land eligibility requirements, limits one-time establishment payments, reduces the matching payment rate, and stipulates how much funding—10-50%— |
Extends program through FY2023. Authorizes to be appropriated $25 million annually for FY2019-FY2023. No mandatory funding is authorized. |
Miscellaneous |
|
Value- |
Eliminates mandatory funding and increases discretionary funding to $50 million annually FY2019- |
Agriculture Innovation Center Demonstration Program. Provides grant funding to producers for technical assistance in developing agricultural-based businesses based on value-added production. Authorizes funding of $1 million annually for FY2014-FY2018, subject to annual appropriations. |
Reauthorizes the program through FY2023 at the current appropriation. |
Regional |
Reauthorizes the |
Definition of |
Amends the definition by defining |
Program Repeals |
|
Elimination of
| )
Repeals unfunded programs |
Rural Telephone Bank. Establishes a corporate body called the Rural Telephone Bank whose general purpose is securing funds and making loans to support a telephone bank in rural areas. |
Repeals the Rural Telephone Bank. |
Launching Our Communities' Access to Local Television Act of 2000 |
Amends the |
Technical Corrections |
|
No comparable provision. |
Provides technical corrections related to various provisions of the Consolidated Farm and Rural Development Act, as amended. |
No comparable provision. |
Provides technical corrections related to various provisions of the Rural Electrification Act, as amended |
Current Law/Policy |
House Ag. Comm.-Reported Bill (H.R. 2) |
Subtitle A—National Agricultural Research, Extension, and Teaching Policy Act of 1977(NARETP) |
|
Agricultural |
Adds the objective of supporting international scientific collaboration that leverages resources and advances the food and agricultural interests of the United States. |
Non- |
Establishes a process of review within 90 days of enactment of each Non-Land Grant |
National |
Amends the membership composition of the Advisory Board. Directs the Advisory Board to make recommendations and to address long- and short-term national priorities consistent with various priorities of the Agriculture and Food Research Initiative and the NARETP Act. |
Citrus |
Extends the citrus disease subcommittee through |
Renewable |
Discontinues the renewable energy committee. |
Duties of the Secretary of Agriculture. Sets out the duties of the Secretary of Agriculture as concerns extension and agricultural research at 1890 land-grant colleges, including Tuskegee University. |
Directs the Secretary to transmit to Congress annually a report on the allocations made to, and matching funds received by, 1890 land-grant institutions. |
Grants and |
Reauthorizes appropriations for grants and fellowships for FY2019- |
Agriculture and |
Reauthorizes appropriations for FY2019- |
Education |
Reauthorizes appropriations for FY2019- |
Nutrition Education Program. Authorizes establishment of a |
Repeals the Nutrition Education Program. |
Continuing |
Reauthorizes appropriations for FY2019- |
Extension at 1890 |
Amends by striking paragraph 4 that prohibits 1890 colleges from carrying forward to the succeeding fiscal year more than 20% of the funds they receive in a given fiscal year. |
Agricultural |
Amends by establishing a scholarship grant program at 1890 institutions for accepted students who intend to pursue a career in agribusiness, energy and renewable fuels, or financial management. |
Grants to |
Reauthorizes appropriations for FY2019- |
Grants to |
Reauthorizes appropriations for FY2019- |
Education |
Reauthorizes appropriations for FY2019- |
No comparable provision. |
Land- |
Competitive |
Reauthorizes appropriations for FY2019- |
Limitation on |
Amends the provision to allow indirect cost recovery charged against any agricultural research, education, or extension grant awarded to increase from 22% of total federal funds received to 30% of funding. |
No comparable provision. |
Research |
Authorization of |
Reauthorizes Hatch Act funding to state agricultural experiment stations at the current level for FY2019- |
Authorization of |
Reauthorizes such sums as necessary to carry out extension programs of |
Supplemental and |
Extends program and funding levels through FY2023. Amends the program to include canola and alternative crops "for agronomic rotational purposes and for use as a habitat for honey bees and other pollinators," among other changes. |
Capacity |
Reauthorizes appropriations for FY2019- |
Aquaculture |
Reauthorizes appropriations for FY2019- |
Rangeland |
Reauthorizes appropriations for FY2019- |
Special |
Authorizes appropriations of $30 million |
Distance |
Reauthorizes appropriations for FY2019- |
Matching |
Strikes paragraph 5, which excludes competitive, special, and facilities research grants from the matching requirement. |
Subtitle B—Food, Agriculture, Conservation, and Trade Act of 1990 |
|
Best |
Reauthorizes appropriations for FY2019- |
Integrated |
Reauthorizes appropriations for FY2019- |
Technical |
Reauthorizes appropriations for FY2019- |
National Training Program. Authorizes a National Training Program in Sustainable Agriculture to provide education and training for Cooperative Extension Service agents and other professionals involved in the education and transfer of technical information concerning sustainable agriculture. Authorizes $20 million annually for FY2013- |
Reauthorizes appropriations for FY2019- |
National Genetics Resources Program. Authorizes a National Genetics Resources Program with an appropriation of $1million annually for FY2013- |
Reauthorizes appropriations for FY2019- |
National Agricultural Weather Program. Authorizes a National Agricultural Weather Program with an authorized appropriation of $1 million annually for FY2014- |
Reauthorizes appropriations for FY2019- |
Agricultural |
Adds the phrase |
High |
Retains, amends, and/or adds research areas as a "high-priority |
Organic Agriculture Research and Extension Initiative. Establishes the Organic Agriculture Research and Extension Initiative |
Reauthorizes program and increases annual CCC funding levels to $30 million for FY2019-FY2023. |
Farm |
Amends to permit the Secretary to make competitive research and extension grants for the purpose of improving farm management knowledge and skills of agricultural producers by maintaining a national, publicly available farm financial management |
Assistive Technology Program for Farmers with Disabilities. Authorizes demonstration grants to support cooperative programs between State Cooperative Extension Service agencies and private nonprofit disability organizations to provide on-the-farm agricultural education and assistance directed at accommodating disability in farm operations for individuals with disabilities who are engaged in farming and farm-related occupations and their families. |
Clarifies language to make the provision apply to veterans engaged in farming or pursuing new farming opportunities. |
National Rural Information Center Clearinghouse. Establishes within the National Agricultural Library, in coordination with the National Institute of Food and Agriculture, a National Rural Information Center Clearinghouse to provide and distribute information and data to any industry, organization, or |
Reauthorizes appropriations for FY2019- |
Subtitle C—Agriculture, Research, Extension, and Education Reform Act of 1998 |
|
Ending |
Removes limitation on funding that restricts USDA from providing additional grant funding once an entity has received |
National |
Reauthorizes appropriations through FY2023. |
Integrated |
Reauthorizes appropriations for FY2019- |
Support |
Reauthorizes appropriations for FY2019- |
Grants for |
Reauthorizes appropriations for FY2019- |
Specialty Crop Research Initiative |
Extends |
Food Animal Residue Avoidance Database Program. Establishes a database to provide livestock producers, extension specialists, scientists, and veterinarians with information to prevent drug, pesticide, and environmental contaminant residues in food animal products. |
Reauthorizes appropriations for FY2019- |
Office of Pest Management Policy. Establishes the Office of Pest Management Policy to coordinate USDA's policies and activities related to pesticides and pest management tools. Authorizes appropriations of such sums as necessary through FY2018. |
Reauthorizes appropriations for FY2019- |
Forestry |
Reauthorizes appropriations for FY2019- |
Subtitle D—Food, |
|
Agricultural Biosecurity Communication Center. Establishes a communication center within USDA to collect and disseminate information and prepare for an agricultural disease emergency, agroterrorist act, or other threat to agricultural biosecurity |
Reauthorizes appropriations for FY2019- |
Assistance to |
Reauthorizes appropriations for FY2019- |
Research and |
Reauthorizes appropriations for FY2019- |
Agricultural Biosecurity Grant Program. Authorizes a competitive grant program to promote the development of teaching programs in agriculture, veterinary medicine, and disciplines closely allied to the food and agriculture system to increase the number of trained individuals with an expertise in agricultural biosecurity. |
Reauthorizes appropriations for FY2019- |
Grazinglands Research Laboratory. Establishes a research laboratory for grazingland research. |
Amends provision to state that the Grazinglands Research Laboratory shall not be declared excess or surplus federal property for the 15-year period beginning on the date of enactment of the FCE Act. The amendment increases the time period from 10 years to 15 years. |
Natural |
Reauthorizes appropriations for FY2019- |
Sun |
Reauthorizes appropriations for FY2019- |
Subtitle E—Amendments to Other Laws |
|
Critical Agricultural Materials Act |
Reauthorizes appropriations for FY2019- |
Equity in Educational Land-Grant Status Act of 1994. Establishes land-grant aid to colleges. |
Amends provision to define 36 |
Research Facilities Act. Defines and authorizes funding for agricultural research facilities. |
Amends the Research Facilities Act (7 U.S.C. 390(1)) by striking |
Competitive, Special, and Facilities Research Grant Act. Authorizes a competitive grants program at USDA to address various areas of importance to the agricultural production, food, and nutrition sectors. |
Amends the |
Renewable Resources Extension Act of 1978. Authorizes $30 million annually for FY2002-FY2018 for forestry-related extension activities. |
Reauthorizes appropriations for FY2019- |
National Aquaculture Act of 1980. Authorizes appropriations of $1 million annually for FY1991-FY2018 to the Departments of Agriculture, Commerce, and the Interior to support research on aquaculture. |
Reauthorizes appropriations for FY2019- |
Beginning Farmer and Rancher Development Program. Authorizes a beginning farmer and rancher development program to provide training, education, outreach, and technical assistance initiatives for beginning farmers or ranchers. Authorizes $20 million in mandatory funding annually for FY2014-FY2018 |
Reauthorizes mandatory and discretionary appropriations for FY2019-FY2023. Amends to require that grant recipients provide a match in the form of cash or in-kind contributions equal to 25% of the grant funds provided. The Secretary is authorized to waive the matching requirement to effectively reach an underserved area or population. Amendment adds new subsection outlining the purposes of the competitive grants. Requires that not less than 5% of the funds be made available to socially disadvantaged farmers and ranchers, limited resource farmers and ranchers, and farm workers who desire to become farmers and ranchers. Also requires not less than 5% of the funds be made available to support programs and services that address the needs of veteran farmers. |
Federal |
Reauthorizes appropriations for FY2019-FY2023. No change to current law. |
Biomass |
Reauthorizes appropriations of $20 million for each fiscal year for FY2019-FY2023. |
Subtitle F—Other Matters |
|
Enhanced Use Lease Authority Program. Concerns the National Agricultural Library's authority under a pilot program to lease non-excess property. |
Transitions the lease authority program from a pilot program to a permanent program |
Functions and |
Declares that certain duties of the Secretary with respect to coordination of research across disciplines and to address the priority research areas of the Agriculture and Food Research Initiative. |
Reinstatement of District of Columbia |
Amends Section 209 of the District of Columbia Postsecondary Education Reorganization Act to pay no more than one-half of the total cost of providing certain extension work. |
No comparable provision. |
Farmland |
No comparable provision. |
Transfer of |
Smith-Lever Act of 1916, Sections 3 and 4; Hatch Act of 1887, Section 3; National Agricultural Research, Extension, and Teaching Policy Act |
Amends provisions requiring submission of plans of work by land-grant institutions with respect to the use of formula funds and state matching funds provided under the Hatch Act, Smith-Lever Act, and similar formula funds provided to the 1890 land-grant universities. Provides that the procedures of such plans of work are not subject to audits to determine their sufficiency. |
Department of Agriculture Reorganization Act of 1994, Section 251. |
Exempts entities receiving certain funds from time and effort reporting requirements under Part 200 of Title 2 of the Code of Federal Regulations with respect to the use of such funds. |
No comparable provision |
Provides that USDA, in consultation with |
Current Law/Policy |
House Ag. Comm.-Reported Bill (H.R. 2) |
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Subtitle AReauthorization and Modification of Certain Forestry Programs |
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Funding. Authorizes up to $10 million in annual appropriations between FY2008 and FY2018 to implement the requirements for statewide forest resource assessments and strategies. |
Reauthorizes funding at the current authorized level of up to $10 million annually through FY2023. |
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Permanently authorizes such sums as necessary to be appropriated to carry out the Forest Legacy Program |
Eliminates permanent authority to receive annual appropriations of such sums as necessary |
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Permanently authorizes such sums as necessary to be appropriated to carry out the Community Forest and Open Space Conservation program. The program provides financial assistance to local governments, federally |
Eliminates permanent authority to receive annual appropriations of such sums as necessary |
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Permanently authorizes up to 5% of the funds made available for all CFAA programs to be appropriated to carry out a program to support innovative regional or national forest restoration projects that address priority landscapes. The Landscape Scale Restoration program received average annual appropriations of $14 million from FY2014 through FY2018. |
Eliminates the existing program and establishes a State and Private Forest Landscape-Scale Restoration program to provide technical and financial assistance for landscape-scale restoration projects on state, tribal, or private forest land. Authorizes the program to receive $10 million annually through FY2023, subject to appropriations. |
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Authorizes up to $5 million annually through FY2018 for the Rural Revitalization Technologies program. |
Reauthorizes the program at the current authorized level of up to $5 million annually through FY2023. |
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Authorizes financial assistance for communities to plan and install wood energy systems in public buildings and authorizes appropriations of $5 million annually through FY2018. The program has never received appropriations. |
Expands the program to provide financial assistance for the installation of public or private wood energy systems or the construction of manufacturing or processing plants that use or produce innovative wood products. Changes the name to the Community Wood Energy and Wood Innovation Program. Authorizes the program to receive $25 million annually through FY2023, subject to appropriations. |
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Establishes the Healthy Forests Reserve Program (HFRP) to assist private and tribal landowners in restoring and enhancing forest ecosystems using 10-year agreements, 30-year contracts, 30-year easements, and permanent easements for the purposes of species recovery, improving biodiversity, and enhancing carbon sequestration as outlined in restoration plans. Authorizes appropriations for HFRP of $12 million annually through FY2018. Authorizes the use of procedures intended to expedite the environmental analysis, administrative review, and judicial review for specified priority forest health projects within |
Expands the purposes, eligibility requirements, and enrollment priorities of the program to include species recovery and habitat conservation considerations. Authorizes federally-recognized Indian tribes to sell permanent easements on lands they own in fee simple. Specifies that restoration plans may include a variety of land management practices if necessary to achieve habitat restoration objectives. Reauthorizes HFRP at the current authorized level of $12 million annually through FY2023, subject to appropriations. Permanently authorizes the procedures for priority projects within designated treatment areas, adds hazardous fuels reduction projects as a priority project category subject to the expedited procedures, and expands the availability of the NEPA categorical exclusion (CE) to projects up to 6,000 acres. [Sec. 8107] |
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Authorizes the Secretary of Agriculture to provide matching funds to the National Forest Foundation (NFF) for administrative expenses through FY2018. Sec. 410(b) authorizes $3 million in annual appropriations through FY2018 to provide matching funds for the NFF. [16 U.S.C. 583j] |
Reauthorizes the Secretary's authority to provide matching funds for NFF administrative expenses and appropriations at the current authorized level of $3 million through FY2023. [Sec. 8108] |
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The Secure Rural Schools and Community Self-Determination Act of 2000 (SRS, P.L. 106-393), as amended, requires that 50% of the funds authorized by Title II of SRS are used on road maintenance, decommissioning, or obliteration; or stream or watershed restoration projects. [16 U.S.C. 7124(f)] |
Changes the requirements to provide that 50% of the funds are to be used on timber or forest product sales, fire risk reduction, water supply, or forest stewardship projects. [Sec. 8201] |
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Establishes local Resource Advisory Committees (RACs) to coordinate, review, and recommend Title II projects to the Secretary of Agriculture to implement on NFS lands through FY2018, and specifies that RACs shall consist of 15 members, with 5 members representing a balance of specified community interests. Members must reside within the state in which the RAC has jurisdiction. [16 U.S.C. 7125] |
Extends the authorization for RACs through FY2023 and reduces the membership requirement to 9 members, with 3 members representing the specified community interests. Restricts membership to the county or adjacent counties within the RAC jurisdiction. Authorizes the Secretary to designate an appointee to perform certain functions. [Sec. 8202] |
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No comparable provision. |
Adds a new Sec. 209 to SRS, establishing a program for 10 select RACs to retain and use the revenues generated by projects they propose, through FY2023. [Sec. 8203] |
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No comparable provision. |
Defines relevant terms and specifies that the Secretary concerned refers to the Secretary of Agriculture, for NFS lands, or the Secretary of the Interior, for the public lands. [Sec. 8301] |
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No comparable provision. |
Excludes from the authorities established in the subtitle NFS or public lands that are designated wilderness areas, inventoried roadless areas except under specific conditions, or lands on which timber harvesting is prohibited by law. [Sec. 8302] |
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The Endangered Species Act (ESA, P.L. 93-205) requires consultation with the Secretary of the Interior to determine if a federal action may adversely impact a speciesor its habitatlisted as endangered or threatened [16 U.S.C. 1536] |
Provides for an expedited ESA consultation for forest management activities carried out under this subtitle on NFS or public lands, or, if the Secretary concerned determines that the activity is not likely to adversely affect a listed species or designated critical habitat, removes the requirement for consultation. [Sec. 8303] |
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No comparable provision. |
Authorizes the Secretary to choose which categorical exclusion (CE) to use if a forest management activity on NFS or public lands qualifies for multiple CEs under this subtitle. [Sec. 8304] |
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No comparable provision. |
Expands the purposes, eligibility requirements, and enrollment priorities of the program to include species recovery and habitat conservation considerations. Authorizes federally recognized Indian tribes to sell permanent easements on lands they own in fee simple. Specifies that restoration plans may include a variety of land management practices if necessary to achieve habitat restoration objectives. Reauthorizes HFRP at the current authorized level of $12 million annually through FY2023, subject to appropriations. Permanently authorizes the procedures for priority projects within designated treatment areas, adds hazardous fuels reduction projects as a priority project category subject to the expedited procedures, and expands the availability of the NEPA categorical exclusion (CE) to projects up to 6,000 acres. (§8107) Authorizes the Secretary of Agriculture to provide matching funds to the National Forest Foundation (NFF) for administrative expenses through FY2018. Section 410(b) authorizes $3 million in annual appropriations through FY2018 to provide matching funds for the NFF. (16 U.S.C. 583j) Reauthorizes the Secretary's authority to provide matching funds for NFF administrative expenses and appropriations at the current authorized level of $3 million through FY2023. (§8108) The Secure Rural Schools and Community Self-Determination Act of 2000 (SRS, P.L. 106-393), as amended, requires that 50% of the funds authorized by Title II of SRS are used on (1) road maintenance, decommissioning, or obliteration or (2) stream or watershed restoration projects. (16 U.S.C. 7124(f)) Changes the requirements to provide that 50% of the funds are to be used on timber or forest product sales, fire risk reduction, water supply, or forest stewardship projects. (§8201) Establishes local Resource Advisory Committees (RACs) to coordinate, review, and recommend Title II projects to the Secretary to implement on NFS lands through FY2018 and specifies that RACs shall consist of 15 members, with five members representing a balance of specified community interests. Members must reside within the state in which the RAC has jurisdiction. (16 U.S.C. 7125) Extends the authorization for RACs through FY2023 and reduces the membership requirement to nine members, with three members representing the specified community interests. Restricts membership to the county or adjacent counties within the RAC jurisdiction. Authorizes the Secretary to designate an appointee to perform certain functions. (§8202) No comparable provision. Adds a new Section 209 to SRS, establishing a program for 10 select RACs to retain and use the revenues generated by projects they propose, through FY2023. (§8203) No comparable provision. Defines relevant terms and specifies that the Secretary concerned refers to the Secretary of Agriculture for NFS lands or the Secretary of the Interior for the public lands. (§8301) No comparable provision. Excludes from the authorities established in the subtitle NFS or public lands that are designated wilderness areas, inventoried roadless areas except under specific conditions, or lands on which timber harvesting is prohibited by law. (§8302) The Endangered Species Act (ESA, P.L. 93-205) requires consultation with the Secretary of the Interior to determine if a federal action may adversely impact a speciesor its habitatlisted as endangered or threatened. (16 U.S.C. 1536) Provides for an expedited ESA consultation for forest management activities carried out under this subtitle on NFS or public lands or, if the Secretary concerned determines that the activity is not likely to adversely affect a listed species or designated critical habitat, removes the requirement for consultation. (§8303) No comparable provision. Authorizes the Secretary to choose which CE to use if a forest management activity on NFS or public lands qualifies for multiple CEs under this subtitle. (§8304) No comparable provision. Establishes a CE for projects up to 6,000 acres and for any combination of addressing an insect or disease infestation; reducing hazardous fuel loads; protecting a municipal water source; maintaining, enhancing, or modifying critical habitat to protect it from catastrophic disturbances; or increasing water yield on NFS or public lands. (§8311) No comparable provision. Establishes a CE for projects to prevent wildfire as a result of a catastrophic event or to use and generate revenue from the sale of forest products impacted by a catastrophic event on NFS or public lands, subject to a maximum project size of 6,000 acres and a requirement to prepare a reforestation plan. (§8312) No comparable provision. Establishes a CE for projects up to 6,000 acres to improve, enhance, or create early successional forests for wildlife habitat improvement and other purposes on NFS or public lands. Projects should maximize production and regeneration of priority species. (§8313) No comparable provision. Establishes a CE for projects to remove hazardous trees to protect public health or safety, water supply, or public infrastructure on NFS or public lands. (§8314) No comparable provision. Establishes a CE for forest restoration or improvement projects up to 6,000 acres to reduce the risk of wildfire on NFS or public lands, including the removal of specified vegetation, including conifer trees, through livestock grazing, prescribed burns, and mechanical treatments; performance of hazardous fuels management; creation of fuel and fire breaks; modification of fences for livestock grazing; installation of erosion control devices; construction and maintenance of livestock grazing infrastructure; various specified soil treatments; and use of herbicides in accordance with applicable land and resource management plan and agency procedures. (§8315) No comparable provision. Establishes a CE for projects up to 6,000 acres to improve forest resiliency, reduce hazardous fuels, or improve wildlife and aquatic habitat on NFS or public lands, including timber, salvage, and regeneration harvests; prescribed burning; stream restoration and erosion control; and road and trail decommissioning activities. Projects may include permanent roads up to three miles or temporary roads for up to three years. (§8316) No comparable provision. Establishes a CE for projects on NFS lands to construct, reconstruct, or decommission NFS roads up to three miles; reclassify or add NFS roads; reconstruct, rehabilitate, or decommission bridges; remove dams; or maintain facilities through the use of pesticides according to federal and state requirements. (§8317) No comparable provision. Establishes a CE for projects to operate, maintain, modify, reconstruct, or decommission existing developed recreation sites on NFS lands, including activities related to facility and site maintenance and road and trail construction, reconstruction, maintenance or decommissioning, subject to a maximum of three miles for permanent roads or three years for temporary roads. (§8318) No comparable provision. Establishes a CE for projects on NFS lands to construct, reconstruct, maintain, decommission, relocate, or dispose of an administrative site. Projects may include road and trail construction, reconstruction, or maintenance activities, subject to a maximum of three miles for permanent roads or three years for temporary roads. (§8319) No comparable provision. Establishes a CE for projects on NFS lands to issue new special use authorizations or renew or modify existing or expired special use authorizations for the use or occupancy of NFS lands under certain specified conditions. Specifies that the Secretary of Agriculture is not required to prepare a project file for such actions. (§8320) Establishes a CE for certain projects located within or in proximity to the wildland-urban interface or in areas classified as Condition Class 2 or 3 in Fire Regime groups I, II, or III. (16 U.S.C. 6591b(c)) Expands the availability of the CE to include projects located in areas classified as Condition Class 2 or 3 in Fire Regimes IV and V. (§8321) Permanently authorizes the Forest Service and BLM to enter into Good Neighbor Agreements with states to perform authorized forest restoration activities on NFS or public lands. (16 U.S.C. 2113a) Expands the availability of Good Neighbor Agreements to include federally recognized Indian tribes. (§8331) Authorizes the prioritization of hazardous fuel reduction projects on NFS lands. (16 U.S.C. 6513) Encourages the Secretary to use any funds appropriated for hazardous fuels management in excess of $300 million annually for projects on federal and nonfederal land, including the use of up to 20% or $20 million of any excess funds annually to provide financial assistance to states for cross-boundary hazardous fuels reduction projects. (§8332) Export prohibition. Prohibits the foreign export of unprocessed logs from the contiguous federal lands west of the 100th Meridian unless the Secretary concerned determines through a rulemaking process that certain grades or species of lumber are surplus to domestic needs. (16 U.S.C. 620a) Directs the Secretary to undertake a rulemaking to issue a determination exempting unprocessed dead and dying trees on NFS lands in California from the export prohibition for 10 years. (§8333) Authorizes the Secretary concerned to enter into an agreement with federally recognized Indian tribes to implement forest or rangeland projects on tribal lands or on federal lands adjacent to tribal lands. (25 U.S.C. 3115a(b)) Requires the Secretary concerned to respond to a tribal request within 120 days and, if the project is accepted, requires the project analysis to be completed within two years. (§8401) No comparable provision. Authorizes the Secretary concerned and federally recognized Indian tribes, on a demonstration basis, to enter into contracts to allow tribes to perform administrative, management, and other functions of the Tribal Forest Protection Act. (§8402) No comparable provision. Establishes a research, development, education, and technical assistance program to facilitate the use of wood products in construction projects. (§8501) No comparable provision. Establishes a pilot program through December 21, 2027, for owners or operators of rights-of-way on NFS land to develop and implement vegetation management plans and perform projects on NFS lands within and up to 75 feet from the right-of-way. (§8502) No comparable provision. Prohibits the Forest Service from considering certain criteria when considering if extraordinary circumstances exist that would potentially require further review and documentation under NEPA than would normally be required under a CE, such as wilderness designations, sensitive species, cumulative impacts, threatened or endangered species, or critical habitat. Eliminates the requirements to prepare an environmental impact statement for activities that would substantially alter a potential wilderness area. Directs the Forest Service to initiate rulemaking to implement these procedures within 60 days of enactment and issue final regulations within 120 days of enactment. (§8503) No comparable provision. States that nothing in this title or any amendments made to the title would impact the availability of funds or other resources for wildfire suppression. (§8504) The Wildfire Suppression Funding and Forest Management Activities Act, enacted as Title I of Division O of the FY2018 Consolidated Appropriations Act (P.L. 115-141), establishes a new mechanism for funding federal wildfire suppression activities. Makes technical amendments. (§8505) Funding. Authorizes up to $10 million in annual appropriations between FY2008 and FY2018 to implement the requirements for statewide forest resource assessments and strategies. (16 U.S.C. 2101a) Reauthorizes funding at the current authorized level of up to $10 million annually through FY2023. (§8101) Permanently authorizes such sums as necessary to be appropriated to carry out the Forest Legacy Program, which was created to protect forests from conversion to non-forest uses and received average annual appropriations of approximately $59 million from FY2014 through FY2018. (16 U.S.C. 2103c) Eliminates permanent authority to receive annual appropriations of such sums as necessary and instead authorizes the program to receive $35 million annually through FY2023, subject to appropriations. (§8102) Permanently authorizes such sums as necessary to be appropriated to carry out the Community Forest and Open Space Conservation program. The program provides financial assistance to local governments, federally recognized Indian tribes, and nonprofit organizations to establish community forests by acquiring and protecting private forests threatened by conversion to non-forest uses. It received an average of $2.4 million annually in appropriations between FY2014 and FY2018. (16 U.S.C. 2103d) Eliminates permanent authority to receive annual appropriations of such sums as necessary and instead authorizes the program to receive $5 million annually through FY2023, subject to appropriations. (§8103) Permanently authorizes up to 5% of the funds made available for all CFAA programs to be appropriated to carry out a program to support innovative regional or national forest restoration projects that address priority landscapes. The Landscape Scale Restoration program received average annual appropriations of $14 million from FY2014 through FY2018. (16 U.S.C. 2109a) Eliminates the existing program and establishes a State and Private Forest Landscape-Scale Restoration program to provide technical and financial assistance for landscape-scale restoration projects on state, tribal, or private forest land. Authorizes the program to receive $10 million annually through FY2023, subject to appropriations. (§8104) Authorizes up to $5 million annually through FY2018 for the Rural Revitalization Technologies program. (7 U.S.C. 6601(d)(2)) Reauthorizes the program at the current authorized level of up to $5 million annually through FY2023. (§8105) Authorizes financial assistance for communities to plan and install wood energy systems in public buildings and authorizes appropriations of $5 million annually through FY2018. The program has never received appropriations. (7 U.S.C. 8113) Expands the program to provide financial assistance for the installation of public or private wood energy systems or the construction of manufacturing or processing plants that use or produce innovative wood products. Changes the name to the Community Wood Energy and Wood Innovation Program. Authorizes the program to receive $25 million annually through FY2023, subject to appropriations. (§8106) Establishes the Healthy Forests Reserve Program (HFRP) to assist private and tribal landowners in restoring and enhancing forest ecosystems using 10-year agreements, 30-year contracts, 30-year easements, and permanent easements for the purposes of species recovery, improving biodiversity, and enhancing carbon sequestration as outlined in restoration plans. Authorizes appropriations for HFRP of $12 million annually through FY2018. (16 U.S.C. 6571-6578) Authorizes the use of procedures intended to expedite the environmental analysis, administrative review, and judicial review for specified priority forest health projects within designated insect and disease treatment areas, within the NFS through FY2018. Section 603(c) categorically excludes priority projects from the requirements to produce an environmental assessment or environmental impact statement under NEPA (P.L. 91-109) if the project was developed through a collaborative process, is located within or in proximity to designated landscapes and specified Fire Regime Condition Classes, and involves less than 3,000 acres. (16 U.S.C. 6591a-b) Expands the purposes, eligibility requirements, and enrollment priorities of the program to include species recovery and habitat conservation considerations. Authorizes federally recognized Indian tribes to sell permanent easements on lands they own in fee simple. Specifies that restoration plans may include a variety of land management practices if necessary to achieve habitat restoration objectives. Reauthorizes HFRP at the current authorized level of $12 million annually through FY2023, subject to appropriations. Permanently authorizes the procedures for priority projects within designated treatment areas, adds hazardous fuels reduction projects as a priority project category subject to the expedited procedures, and expands the availability of the NEPA categorical exclusion (CE) to projects up to 6,000 acres. (§8107) Authorizes the Secretary of Agriculture to provide matching funds to the National Forest Foundation (NFF) for administrative expenses through FY2018. Section 410(b) authorizes $3 million in annual appropriations through FY2018 to provide matching funds for the NFF. (16 U.S.C. 583j) Reauthorizes the Secretary's authority to provide matching funds for NFF administrative expenses and appropriations at the current authorized level of $3 million through FY2023. (§8108) The Secure Rural Schools and Community Self-Determination Act of 2000 (SRS, P.L. 106-393), as amended, requires that 50% of the funds authorized by Title II of SRS are used on (1) road maintenance, decommissioning, or obliteration or (2) stream or watershed restoration projects. (16 U.S.C. 7124(f)) Changes the requirements to provide that 50% of the funds are to be used on timber or forest product sales, fire risk reduction, water supply, or forest stewardship projects. (§8201) Establishes local Resource Advisory Committees (RACs) to coordinate, review, and recommend Title II projects to the Secretary to implement on NFS lands through FY2018 and specifies that RACs shall consist of 15 members, with five members representing a balance of specified community interests. Members must reside within the state in which the RAC has jurisdiction. (16 U.S.C. 7125) Extends the authorization for RACs through FY2023 and reduces the membership requirement to nine members, with three members representing the specified community interests. Restricts membership to the county or adjacent counties within the RAC jurisdiction. Authorizes the Secretary to designate an appointee to perform certain functions. (§8202) No comparable provision. Adds a new Section 209 to SRS, establishing a program for 10 select RACs to retain and use the revenues generated by projects they propose, through FY2023. (§8203) No comparable provision. Defines relevant terms and specifies that the Secretary concerned refers to the Secretary of Agriculture for NFS lands or the Secretary of the Interior for the public lands. (§8301) No comparable provision. Excludes from the authorities established in the subtitle NFS or public lands that are designated wilderness areas, inventoried roadless areas except under specific conditions, or lands on which timber harvesting is prohibited by law. (§8302) The Endangered Species Act (ESA, P.L. 93-205) requires consultation with the Secretary of the Interior to determine if a federal action may adversely impact a speciesor its habitatlisted as endangered or threatened. (16 U.S.C. 1536) Provides for an expedited ESA consultation for forest management activities carried out under this subtitle on NFS or public lands or, if the Secretary concerned determines that the activity is not likely to adversely affect a listed species or designated critical habitat, removes the requirement for consultation. (§8303) No comparable provision. Authorizes the Secretary to choose which CE to use if a forest management activity on NFS or public lands qualifies for multiple CEs under this subtitle. (§8304) No comparable provision. Establishes a CE for projects up to 6,000 acres and for any combination of addressing an insect or disease infestation; reducing hazardous fuel loads; protecting a municipal water source; maintaining, enhancing, or modifying critical habitat to protect it from catastrophic disturbances; or increasing water yield on NFS or public lands. (§8311) |
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No comparable provision. |
Establishes a CE for projects to prevent wildfire as a result of a catastrophic event or to use and generate revenue from the sale of forest products impacted by a catastrophic event on NFS or public lands, subject to a maximum project size of 6,000 acres and a requirement to prepare a reforestation plan. |
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No comparable provision. |
Establishes a CE for projects up to 6,000 acres to improve, enhance, or create early successional forests for wildlife habitat improvement and other purposes on NFS or public lands. Projects should maximize production and regeneration of priority species. |
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No comparable provision. |
Establishes a CE for projects to remove hazardous trees to protect public health or safety, water supply, or public infrastructure on NFS or public lands. |
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No comparable provision. |
Establishes a CE for forest restoration or improvement projects up to 6,000 acres to reduce the risk of wildfire on NFS or public lands, including the removal of specified vegetation, including conifer trees, through livestock grazing, prescribed burns, and mechanical treatments; performance of hazardous fuels management; creation of fuel and fire breaks; modification of fences for livestock grazing; installation of erosion control devices; construction and maintenance of livestock grazing infrastructure; various specified soil treatments; and use of herbicides in accordance with applicable land and resource management plan and agency procedures. |
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No comparable provision. |
Establishes a CE for projects up to 6,000 acres to improve forest resiliency, reduce hazardous fuels, or improve wildlife and aquatic habitat on NFS or public lands, including timber, salvage, and regeneration harvests; prescribed burning; stream restoration and erosion control; and road and trail decommissioning activities. Projects may include permanent roads up to |
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No comparable provision. |
Establishes a CE for projects on NFS lands to construct, reconstruct, or decommission NFS roads up to |
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No comparable provision. |
Establishes a CE for projects to operate, maintain, modify, reconstruct, or decommission existing developed recreation sites on NFS lands, including activities related to facility and site maintenance and road and trail construction, reconstruction, maintenance or decommissioning, subject to a maximum of |
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No comparable provision. |
Establishes a CE for projects on NFS lands to construct, reconstruct, maintain, decommission, relocate, or dispose of an administrative site. Projects may include road and trail construction, reconstruction, or maintenance activities, subject to a maximum of |
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No comparable provision. |
Establishes a CE for projects on NFS lands to issue new special use authorizations or renew or modify existing or expired special use authorizations for the use or occupancy of NFS lands under certain specified conditions. Specifies that the Secretary of Agriculture is not required to prepare a project file for such actions. (§8320) |
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Establishes a CE for certain projects located within or in proximity to the wildland-urban interface |
Expands the availability of the CE to include projects located in areas classified as Condition Class 2 or 3 in Fire Regimes IV and V. |
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Permanently authorizes the Forest Service and |
Expands the availability of Good Neighbor Agreements to include federally |
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Authorizes the prioritization of hazardous fuel reduction projects on NFS lands. |
Encourages the Secretary to use any funds appropriated for hazardous fuels management in excess of $300 million annually for projects on federal and nonfederal land, including the use of up to 20% or $20 million of any excess funds annually to provide financial assistance to states |
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Export |
Directs the Secretary to undertake a rulemaking to issue a determination exempting unprocessed dead and dying trees on NFS lands in California from the export prohibition for 10 years. |
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Subtitle DTribal Forestry Participation and Protection |
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Authorizes the Secretary concerned to enter into an agreement with federally |
Requires the Secretary concerned to respond to a tribal request within 120 days and, if the project is accepted, requires the project analysis to be completed within |
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No comparable provision. |
Authorizes the Secretary concerned and federally |
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Subtitle EOther Matters |
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No comparable provision. |
Establishes a research, development, education, and technical assistance program to facilitate the use of wood products in construction projects. |
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No comparable provision. |
Establishes a pilot program through December 21, 2027, for owners or operators of rights-of-way |
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No comparable provision. |
Prohibits the Forest Service from considering certain criteria when considering if extraordinary circumstances exist that would potentially require further review and documentation under NEPA than would normally be required under a CE, such as wilderness designations, sensitive species, cumulative impacts, threatened or endangered species, or critical habitat. Eliminates the requirements to prepare an environmental impact statement for activities that would substantially alter a potential wilderness area. Directs the Forest Service to initiate rulemaking to implement these procedures within 60 days of enactment and issue final regulations within 120 days of enactment. |
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No comparable provision. |
States that nothing in this title or any amendments made to the title would impact the availability of funds or other resources for wildfire suppression. |
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The Wildfire Suppression Funding and Forest Management Activities Act, enacted as Title I of Division O of the FY2018 Consolidated Appropriations Act (P.L. 115-141), establishes a new mechanism for funding federal wildfire suppression activities. |
Makes technical amendments. |
Current Law/Policy |
House Ag. Comm.-Reported Bill (H.R. 2) |
Specialty Crop, Organic Agriculture, and Local Foods Programs |
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Specialty |
Reauthorizes program and funding levels through FY2023. |
Farmers' Market and Local Food Promotion Program. Authorizes the promotion of (1) farmers' markets, community-supported agriculture programs, and other direct producer-to-consumer market opportunities |
Amends 7 U.S.C. 3005(g)(3) only, which |
Food |
Reauthorizes program and funding levels through FY2023. |
Block |
Reauthorizes program and funding levels through FY2023. Requires USDA enter into a cooperative agreement to conduct program evaluation with |
Plant Variety Protection Act. Provides legal intellectual property rights protection to breeders of new varieties of plants |
Amends the Plant Variety Protection Act to include certain protections for sexually reproduced varieties. |
National Organic Program (NOP). The Organic Foods Production Act Section 7407(d) of the 2002 farm bill, as amended, requires USDA to collect data under the Organic Production and Market Data Initiatives (ODI), providing $5 million in mandatory CCC funds in FY204 (to remain available until expended). |
Amends NOP to include provisions in H.R. 3871 (Organic Farmer and Consumer Protection Act of 2017), including the following: limits the types of operations excluded from NOP certification; requires electronic import documentation; establishes mechanisms for collaborative investigations and enforcement; requires increased documentation; increases accreditation authority of NOP over certifying agents; requires audits of satellite offices; ensures coordination and access to data; and requires additional reporting. |
Pecan |
Adds |
Food |
Requires USDA to submit a report to the House and Senate Agriculture Committees examining the effect of a final FDA regulation, ''Food Labeling: Revision of the Nutrition and Supplement Facts Labels'' (81 Federal Register 33742) and whether the nutrition facts panel on the labeling of packaged food regarding ''added sugar'' should apply for foods with added honey and maple syrup |
Regulation of Pesticides and Other Agricultural Chemicals |
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Role of |
Amends FIFRA to define |
Pesticide
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| )
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Authorizes EPA to initiate proceedings to cancel a pesticide registration or change a pesticide's classification if the agency determines that the proper use of the registered pesticide jeopardizes the survival of a federally listed species or alters critical habitat in a way that affects the survival and recovery of such species. |
Unlawful |
Clarifies that any taking of federally listed species incidental to the lawful use of a pesticide that EPA has determined not to jeopardize the survival of such species or alter their critical habitat shall not be considered unlawful under ESA. |
Authority of |
Amends requirements regarding state pesticide registrations and federally listed species considerations. Repeals EPA authority to suspend the authority of a state to register pesticides for not exercising adequate controls. |
No comparable provision. |
Directs EPA to publish, and revise as appropriate, a work plan and processes for completing determinations on whether the registration of a pesticide would jeopardize the survival of federally listed threatened or endangered species |
Use and Pesticide general permits |
Amends FIFRA to prohibit EPA or a state from requiring a permit for point source discharges of a pesticide registered under FIFRA into navigable waters except in specific circumstances provided under new CWA Section 402(s). Amends the CWA to prohibit EPA or a state from requiring a permit for point source discharges of a pesticide registered under FIFRA into navigable waters. Defines circumstances where a permit would be required (e.g., pesticide applications in violation of FIFRA, stormwater discharges, industrial or treatment works effluents, and certain vessel discharges) |
Pesticide |
Enacts into law H.R. 1029 of the 115th Congress, entitled the |
Methyl |
Requires USDA to establish a process to determine authorized methyl bromide uses in response to an emergency event. Amends the definition of an emergency event. Sets limitations on use per emergency event to allow for up to 20 metric tons of methyl bromide to be used per event at a specific location. |
Definition of |
Requires OSHA to revise the PSM standard to formally define |
Report on |
Requires USDA |
Current Law/Policy—Crop Insurance |
House Ag. Comm.-Reported Bill (H.R.2) |
Treatment of Forage and Grazing |
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Catastrophic |
Strikes the exception that provides that catastrophic risk protection plans shall not be available for crops and grasses used for grazing. |
Ineligible producers. Makes producers ineligible to receive both catastrophic risk protection benefits and other assistance for the same loss under any program administered by the Secretary of Agriculture, with the exception of certain emergency loans. |
Provides an exception to the limitation on multiple benefits for the same loss for coverage described in the new |
No comparable provision. |
Expanded coverage for forage and grazing. |
Administrative Basic Fee |
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CAT |
Increases the administrative basic fee from $300 to $500 per crop per county. |
Prevention of Duplicative Coverage |
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Additional |
Provides that crops for which the producer has elected agriculture risk coverage Adds conforming amendments. |
Repeal of Authority for Performance-Based Premium Discounts |
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Performance- |
Repeal the authority for performance-based discounts for producers. Adds conforming amendments. |
Addition of Producer Option to Limit APH Decreases |
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Calculation of APH |
Requires FCIC to establish underwriting rules that would give producers the choice to limit their APH decreases to 10% of the previous year's APH. Requires actuarially sound premiums to cover the additional risk. |
Program Administration |
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Funding for reviews, compliance, |
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Reimbursement of Private Submissions |
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Research, |
Allows for reimbursement of "reasonable and actual research and development costs" related to policies that have been approved by the FCIC |
No comparable provision. |
Resubmission of |
Research and Development |
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Priorities. Authorizes FCIC to conduct activities or contract for research and development efforts to maintain or improve existing policies or develop new policies. Directs FCIC to conduct or contract for specific types of coverage for specific crops or livestock. |
Strikes 16 completed studies and research and development contracts. Defines Requires FCIC to contract with one or more qualified entities to conduct research and development on (1) a policy to |
Funding. Under |
Amends |
Education and Risk Management Assistance |
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Underserved Partnerships for Agricultural Management Assistance (AMA) Program. Authorizes the AMA program, which provides financial and technical to producers in 16 specified states for conservation practices, risk mitigation, and market diversification. Provides $15 million in annual mandatory funding in FY2008-FY2014 |
Eliminates the crop insurance education and information program for targeted states carried out by Directs the FCIC insurance fund to transfer $5 |
Current Law/Policy |
House Ag. Comm.-Reported Bill (H.R. 2) |
Subtitle A— |
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Animal Health Protection Act (AHPA). |
Requires USDA to establish the National Animal Disease Preparedness and Response Program to address the risk of the introduction and spread of animal pests and diseases that affect the U.S. livestock and related industries, including export expansion. Directs USDA to sign cooperative agreements To the extent practicable, activities include USDA will notify entities of information required to enter into cooperative agreements, requirements for the use of funds, and criteria to evaluate the activities. USDA may consider entities' ability to contribute Requires recipients to use funds according to cooperative agreements. Recipients may enter sub-agreements with state entities responsible for animal disease prevention, surveillance, and response. Requires recipients to submit to USDA reports describing the purposes and results of activities no later than 90 days after completion of activities. Requires USDA to establish a National Animal Health Vaccine Bank to protect U.S. agriculture and food systems against terrorist attack, major disaster, and other emergencies. Requires the Vaccine Bank to maintain sufficient quantities of animal vaccine, antiviral, therapeutic, or diagnostic products for rapid response to animal disease outbreak that would have a damaging effect on human health or the economy. Directs it to leverage existing mechanisms and infrastructure of the National Veterinary Stockpile of For FY2019, requires mandatory funding of $250 million from the |
National Aquatic Animal Health Plan. Authorizes USDA to enter into cooperative agreements for the purpose of detecting, controlling, or eradicating diseases of aquaculture species and promoting species-specific best management practices on a cost-share basis. The Secretary may use authorities from AHPA |
Authorizes appropriations of such sums as necessary to administer the program through FY2023. |
Veterinary |
Amends the section to include "veterinary teams |
No comparable provision. |
Report on Food Safety Inspection Service (FSIS) The report is to include |
Subtitle B— |
|
Outreach and |
Reauthorizes $10 million in mandatory spending each year for FY2019- |
Office of Advocacy and Outreach. Leads USDA in implementing outreach and assistance to socially disadvantaged farmers and ranchers and veteran farmers and ranchers. |
Renames the Office of Advocacy and Outreach as the Office of Partnerships and Public Engagement. Amends the section to improve access to USDA programs to |
No comparable provision. |
Commission on |
The Department of Agriculture Reorganization Act of 1994 authorizes the Secretary |
Agricultural |
Subtitle C— |
|
Pima Agriculture Cotton Trust Fund. Establishes a trust fund in the Treasury of the United States for the purpose of reducing the injury to domestic manufacturers resulting from tariffs on cotton fabric that are higher than tariffs on certain apparel articles made of cotton fabric. The Secretary may make payments to nationally recognized associations that promote pima cotton use, yarn spinners who produce ring spun cotton yarns, and manufacturers that cut and sew cotton shirts in the United States and that certify that they used imported cotton fabric in 2013. Payments to spinners and manufacturers are based on a production ratio and must be certified through affidavit. The Secretary shall transfer $16 million for each of the calendar years 2014-2018 from the |
Repeals the Pima Cotton Trust Fund. |
Agriculture Wool Apparel Manufacturers Trust Fund. Establishes a trust fund in the Treasury of the United States for the purpose of reducing the injury to domestic manufacturers resulting from tariffs on wool fabric that are higher than tariffs on certain apparel articles made of wool fabric. Annual payments based on one of four funding mechanisms are to be made to eligible domestic manufacturers of wool fabric and processors of wool material. The Secretary shall transfer up to $30 million in CCC funds for each of the calendar years 2014-2019 to the Agriculture Wool Trust. The funds remain available until expended. |
Repeals the Wool Apparel Manufacturers Trust Fund. |
Wool Research, Development, and Promotion Trust Fund. |
Repeals Wool Research and Promotion Grants Funding. |
No comparable provision. |
In addition, the Textile Trust Fund is established for the purpose of reducing economic injury to domestic manufacturers resulting from tariffs on wool fabric that are higher than tariffs on certain apparel articles made of wool fabric. Payments to eligible wool manufacturers and processors must be certified through affidavit. For each of the calendar years 2019-2023, the Secretary shall transfer $8 million of CCC funds to the Textile Trust Fund for eligible manufacturers of pima cotton, $15 million to eligible wool manufacturers, and $2.25 million in grants for wool research and promotion. Funds are to remain available until expended. |
Sheep Production and Marketing Grant Program. Establishes a competitive grant program through USDA's Agricultural Marketing Service to improve the sheep industry, including infrastructure, business, resource development, or innovative approaches for long-term needs. Provided $1.5 million in CCC mandatory funds for FY2014 to remain available until expended. |
Authorizes $2 million of CCC funds for FY2019 for the purposes of strengthening and enhancing the production of sheep and sheep products in the United States, with funds remaining available until expended. |
Subtitle D— |
|
United States Grain Standards Act (USGSA). Establishes official marketing standards for grains and oilseeds Exceptions to |
Restores exceptions created in the 2003 regulation |
Subtitle E—Nonisnsured Crop Disaster Assistance Program |
|
National Crop Assistance Program. Authorized to receive such sums as necessary in mandatory funding to make insurance available to growers of crops that are not insurable under the federal crop insurance program. Provides a payment to an eligible producer whose actual production is less than 50% of the established (historical) yield for the crop. Producers pay a fee of $250 per crop per county |
Amends the definition of Increases the service fees to $350 per crop per county Reauthorizes buy-up coverage through FY2023 |
Subtitle F—Other Matters |
|
In May 2017, USDA announced an agency reorganization that created an Under Secretary for Trade and Foreign Agricultural Affairs, an Under Secretary for Farm Production and Conservation, and an Assistant to the Secretary for Rural Development. The duties of the new Under Secretaries were previously assigned to the Under Secretary of Farm and Foreign Agricultural Affairs and the Under Secretary for Natural Resources and Environment. The duties of the Assistant to the Secretary were formerly assigned to the Under Secretary for Rural Development |
References to the former Under Secretary of Agriculture for Farm and Foreign Agricultural Services in various laws are changed to either the Under Secretary of Agriculture for Production and Conservation or the Under Secretary for Trade and Foreign Agricultural Affairs. References to the Under Secretary for Rural Development in various laws are amended by inserting |
Food for Peace Act. |
Removes Under Secretary of Agriculture for Farm and Foreign Agricultural Services |
Department of Agriculture Reorganization Act of 1994. |
Removes Under Secretary of Agriculture for Farm and Foreign Agricultural Services |
Department of Agriculture Reorganization Act of 1994. |
Removes Under Secretary of Agriculture for Farm and Foreign Agricultural Services |
Higher Education Act of 1965. |
Removes Under Secretary of Agriculture for Farm and Foreign Agricultural Services |
Agricultural Act of 1961 and Consolidated Farm and Rural Development Act. |
In the definitions, |
Agricultural Marketing Act of 1946. |
|
Native American Business Development, Trade Promotion, and Tourism Act of 2000. |
|
Rehabilitation Act of 1973. ( |
|
Department of Agriculture Reorganization Act of 1994. Ends the Secretary of Agriculture's authority to reorganize USDA two years after the enactment of the |
Amends the code to insert Section 772 establishes the position of Under Secretary of Farm Production and Conservation, which replaces the Under Secretary of Agriculture for Farm and Foreign Agricultural Services. Section 772 also amends 5 U.S.C. 5314, which lists Level III positions of the Executive Schedule, by striking Under Secretary for Farm and Foreign Agricultural Services and inserting Under Secretary of Farm Production and Conservation and Under Secretary of Agriculture for Trade and Foreign Agricultural Affairs. |
|
Amends the subsection by raising the exclusion to $75,000. |
No comparable provision. |
National Agriculture Imagery Program. Requires USDA, through the Farm Service Agency, to carry out a national agriculture imagery program to annually acquire aerial imagery during the agricultural growing season. Requires the data to |
Commodity Promotion, Research, and Information Act of 1996. Authorizes the establishment of commodity promotion and research programs (i.e., checkoff programs). |
Report on |
Peanuts Standards Board. Establishes a board consisting of producers and industry representatives from peanut |
South Carolina |
|
Authorizes USDA to establish, within the Office of the Secretary, a Food Loss and Waste Reduction Liaison to coordinate federal programs to measure and reduce the incidence of food loss and waste, provide information and resources, and raise awareness of the liability protections for donated foods. |
Cotton |
Amends the cotton classification section by allowing employees who are hired to classify cotton to work up to 240 days in a service year |
No comparable provision. |
Century Farms Program. Establishes a program under which the Secretary of Agriculture recognizes any farm or ranch, as defined in Cooperative Services Grant Programs, that has been in continuous operation for at least 100 years, and has been owned by the same family for at least 100 consecutive years, as verified through appropriate documentation. |
No comparable provision. |
Report on |
No comparable provision. |
Report on |
No comparable provision. |
Prohibition on |
Subtitle G— |
|
No comparable provision. |
Prohibition |
Federal |
Amendments Adopted as of May 18, 2018
Title/Amendment
Summary Description
Title I, Commodities
H.Amdt. 606
Exempts APHIS as one of the agencies (along with Natural Resources Conservation Service and the Farm Service Agency) to which exempted producers would not be required to make annual reports on their agricultural enterprises. Exempted producers are producers or landowners eligible to participate in any conservation or commodity program administered by the Secretary.
Amends the Title I ARC and PLC programs under current law by streamlining their sign-up process. USDA is directed to change the regulatory requirements from an annual sign up to a `one and done' process through crop year 2023 for ARC and PLC only.
Title II, Conservation
Amends a new provision under EQIP allowing USDA to contract with irrigation districts, irrigation associations, and acequias to also include drainage districts. Expands payments for water conservation activities under EQIP to also include the use of existing drainage systems or to upgrade drainage systems to provide irrigation or water efficiency.
Adds a sense of Congress statement encouraging partnerships at the watershed level between nonpoint sources and regulated point sources to advance the goals of the Federal Water Pollution Control Act (Clean Water Act).
Amends the Soil and Water Resources Conservation Act of 1977 (P.L. 95-192) to require USDA to conduct two comprehensive appraisals of soil, water, and related natural resources (completed by year-end 2022). Adds a new requirement for assessing and monitoring USDA programs and initiatives and their progress in reaching natural resource and environmental objectives. Requires a report in the third fiscal year after enactment and periodically thereafter. Authorizes appropriations equal to 1% of all mandatory conservation program funding (excluding CRP).
Title III, Trade
Amends the Farmer-to-Farmer (F2F) program (7 U.S.C. 1737) to add specificity to the types of technical assistance provided by American volunteers under this program. Also establishes both a geographically defined crop yield metrics system for evaluating the degree of F2F program success and a grant program to facilitate new partnerships and innovative activities under the F2F program.
Title IV, Nutrition
Amends the current law definition of food to allow the purchase of multivitamin-mineral dietary supplements (as defined by the amendment) with SNAP benefits.
H.Amdt. 606 (Nutrition)
Amends Nutrition title of reported H.R. 2 provisions as follows:
Adds to the Nutrition title two sections that were not in H.R. 2 as reported:
Adds language seeking to ensure that if an individual becomes ineligible to participate in SNAP as a household member due to failure to meet the work requirements, the remaining household members (including children), shall not become ineligible to apply to participate in the supplemental nutrition assistance program due to such individual's ineligibility.
Amends SNAP law to disqualify individuals convicted of specified federal crimes (including murder, rape, and certain crimes against children) and state offenses determined by the Attorney General to be substantially similar from receiving SNAP, regardless of whether they are fleeing felons or compliant with the terms of their sentence.
Requires the Secretary of Agriculture to conduct a feasibility study on developing a Thrifty Food Plan to calculate the funding for the Nutritional Assistance Program for Puerto Rico.
Amends SNAP law to provide states the authority to contract out certification or any other SNAP administrative function. Contractor must have no direct or indirect financial interest in an approved retail food store.
Amends a 2014 farm bill provision on service of Indian and Alaska Native traditional foods in public facilities, expanding the list of specified public programs and facilities included and protected from liability.
H.Amdt. 618
Amends a provision of the 2008 farm bill to require the Secretary to again carry out a study of the feasibility and effects of including Puerto Rico in SNAP as opposed to the Nutrition Assistance for Puerto Rico block grant. Provides $1 million in mandatory funding and an authorization for additional discretionary funding.
Title VI, Rural Infrastructure and Economic Development
H.Amdt. 590
Amends the Consolidated Farm and Rural Development Act to permit funding for the Community Facilities program to include refinancing a debt obligation of a rural hospital as an eligible loan or loan guarantee if the assistance would help preserve access to health service in a rural community and improve the financial position of the hospital.
H.Amdt. 591
Amends the Consolidated Farm and Rural Development Act and the Rural Electrification Act of 1936 to exclude the first 1,500 individuals residing in housing located on a military base from being included in determining whether an area is "rural" or a "rural area." Also amends the Rural Electrification Act of 1936 for purposes of the Distance Learning and Telemedicine program to define rural area as any area other than a city or town that has a population of greater than 50,000 inhabitants, any urbanized area contiguous and adjacent to a city or town of 50,000 inhabitants, or any city or town with a population greater than 20,000.
H.Amdt. 592
Adds a new section to the Rural Development Title to establish a task force under the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to review the connectivity and technological needs of precision agriculture. The task force will consult with the Secretary and collaborate with public and private stakeholders to develop policy recommendations, recommend new rules or amendments to the FCC to achieve the goals of the task force, and recommend specific steps that the FCC should consider to ensure that available farm data are reflected in existing or future programs of the FCC supporting broadband deployment, and to direct available funding to unserved agricultural lands where needed. Directs the Secretary to submit to the task force a list of all federal programs available for the expansion of broadband access on unserved agricultural land. Defines composition of the task force and directs it to submit a report to the chairman of the FCC detailing steps being taken to measure the availability of broadband access service on agricultural land.
Title VII, Research
H.Amdt. 593
Amends the Food, Agriculture, Conservation and Trade Act of 1990 to add chronic wasting disease as an eligible activity for research and extension grants under the High-Priority Research and Development Initiative.
H.Amdt. 621
Amends the National Agricultural Research, Extension, and Teaching Policy Act to deem any "recently designated"1890 institutions as having been designated an "eligible institution" on or after September 1978. A "recently designated" 1890 institution is one designated as an 1890 institution after September 1999. An "eligible institution" is eligible to receive research and extension formula funding.
Title VIII, Forestry
H.Amdt. 594
Establishes that receipts from Stewardship Contracting projects shall be considered monies received from the NFS, making those receipts subject to revenue-sharing laws.
H.Amdt. 595
Replaces Section 8331 and expands the availability of Good Neighbor Agreements to include federally recognized Indian tribes and county governments.
H.Amdt. 596
Requires the Secretary of Agriculture or the Secretary of the Interior to complete the environmental assessment for a salvage operation or reforestation activity within 60 days after the conclusion of a catastrophic event with specified time frames for public scoping, comments, and objections. Prohibits federal courts from issuing restraining orders or injunctions for any salvage operation or reforestation activity in response to a large-scale catastrophic event.
H.Amdt. 597
Requires the Secretary of Agriculture or the Secretary of the Interior to consider only the proposed action and no-action alternative while preparing an environmental assessment pursuant to NEPA for a forest management activity within areas designated as insect and disease treatment areas under HFRA (16 U.S.C. 6591a).
H.Amdt. 598
Exempts all National Forest System land in Alaska from the Forest Service Roadless Area Conservation Rule as published in 66 Federal Register 9, January 12, 2001.
H.Amdt. 599
Authorizes the Secretary to convey 1,520 acres of NFS land to the village of Santa Clara, NM.
H.Amdt. 600
Directs the Secretary of Agriculture to promulgate regulations revising the process to issue special use authorizations for communications sites or rights-of-ways on NFS lands.
H.Amdt. 601
Directs the Secretary of Agriculture and Secretary of the Interior to submit annual reports to Congress on specified wildfire and forest management metrics.
H.Amdt. 602
Reauthorizes the Collaborative Forest Landscape Restoration Program (16 U.S.C. 7303) through FY2023 and authorizes the Secretary to extend projects beyond 10 years.
H.Amdt. 603
Authorizes the Secretary to convey 3.61 acres of NFS land to Dolores County, CO, for specified purposes, subject to a reversionary clause.
H.Amdt. 622
Adds invasive vegetation to the definition of a forest that is experiencing declining forest health for purposes of designating insect and disease treatment areas within the NFS under HFRA (16 U.S.C. 6591a).
H.Amdt. 623
Directs the Secretary to make vacant grazing allotments available to holders of existing grazing permits under certain conditions.
H.Amdt. 624
Creates a pilot research program on the Lincoln, Cibola, and Gila National Forests to study the effectiveness of silvicultural management technique to address natural resource concerns. Projects in the pilot program are subject to the refusal of the county government in which the project is located. Establishes an arbitration program as an alternative dispute resolution process for challenges to projects in the pilot program.
H.Amdt. 625
Creates a new competitive forestry research program.
Title XI, Horticulture
H.Amdt. 626
Amends the Plant Protection Act (7 U.S.C 770 et seq.) to apply import restrictions to prevent the arrival of forest pests. Directs the Forest Service and Animal Plant Health Inspection Service to cooperate in responding to forest plant pests. Instructs the Secretary to produce a report on "Interception of Forest Pests" to Congress by March 1, 2021. Directs the use of available funds for all activities necessary for pest eradication, including pest identification, development of pest-specific management plan, and implementation of that plan.
Title XI, Miscellaneous
H.Amdt. 604
Requires USDA to establish not more than three regional Cattle and Carcass Grading Correlation and Training Centers to provide education and training for cattle and carcass beef graders of the Agricultural Marketing Service, cattle producers, and other professionals involved in the reporting, delivery, and grading of feeder cattle, live cattle, and carcasses. The centers are to be located near cattle feeding or slaughtering areas and are to coordinate the existing resources of USDA, state agricultural extension and research centers, relevant contract markets, and producers. Funding for the centers may not be used for new construction or remodeling of facilities but may be used for rental space. The centers may accept in-kind donations to cover such spaces.
H.Amdt.629
Amends Section 309 of the Federal Crop Insurance Reform and Department of Agriculture Reorganization Act of 1994 (7 U.S.C. 6921) to require the Secretary of Agriculture to (1) establish an Office of Tribal Relations within the Office of Partnerships and Public Engagement to advise the Secretary on policies related to Indian tribes and (2) establish the "New Beginnings Initiative," under which the Secretary shall provide funds to a land-grant college or university in the amount equal to the amount such land-grant college or university expends for providing educational programs and services for, or tuition paid with respect to, Indians at a land-grant college or university.
H.Amdt. 630
Amends Section 26 of the Animal Welfare Act (7 U.S.C. 2156) to extend to the territories the existing prohibition on animal fighting to which the 50 states are currently subject. Makes it unlawful to sell, buy, or transport in interstate or foreign commerce any knife or sharp object to be used on the leg of a bird as a weapon in animal fighting.
H.Amdt. 632
Allows the Secretary of the Interior, in conjunction with the director of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, to authorize the issuance of depredation permits to livestock farmers for black vultures, otherwise prohibited by federal law, to prevent black vultures from taking livestock during the calving season. Allows permits to be issued only in states or regions where producers are affected by black vultures. Requires producers to report takings to the proper enforcement agencies.
Source: Congress.gov.
Notes: The amendments to H.R. 2 in this table do not have assigned section numbers within the bill. As such, the listing of these amendments by title is an effort to categorize them based on CRS's understanding of their substantive content. It is not meant to indicate to which title they may ultimately be assigned.
Author Contact Information
1. |
This section was written by [author name scrubbed], Specialist in Agricultural Policy. |
2. |
CRS In Focus IF10783, Farm Bill Primer: Budget Issues. |
3. |
CRS Report 98-560, Baselines and Scorekeeping in the Federal Budget Process. |
4. |
|
5. |
|
6. |
The scoring of H.R. 2 assumes that changes in the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2018 (P.L. 115-141), particularly for the cotton and dairy programs, are already incorporated into the April 2018 CBO baseline projection. See CRS In Focus IF10829, Agriculture Funding in the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2018 |
7. |
CRS In Focus IF10780, Farm Bill Primer: Programs Without Baseline Beyond FY2018. |
8. |
This section was written by [author name scrubbed] (farm commodity support) and Mark McMinimy (sugar), Specialists in Agricultural Policy; Joel Greene (dairy) and [author name scrubbed] (farm commodity support), Analysts in Agricultural Policy; and [author name scrubbed] (disaster assistance), Specialist in Agricultural Conservation and Natural Resources Policy. |
9. |
The Olympic average excludes the high- and low-price years from calculation of the average. |
10. |
S corporations meet the requirements of |
11. |
This section was written by [author name scrubbed], Specialist in Agricultural Conservation and Natural Resources Policy. |
12. |
EQIP and CSP combined received approximately $2.6 billion in FY2017. Total mandatory spending in FY2017 was approximately $5.3 billion. |
13. |
This section was written by [author name scrubbed], Analyst in Agricultural Policy. |
14. |
A fifth existing export promotion program, the Quality Samples Program, is not included in the bill. |
15. |
This section was written by Randy A. Aussenberg, Specialist in Nutrition Assistance Policy. |
16. |
This section was written by [author name scrubbed], Specialist in Agricultural Policy. |
17. |
This section was written by [author name scrubbed], Analyst in Natural Resources and Rural Development. |
18. |
This section was written by [author name scrubbed], Analyst in Natural Resources and Rural Development. |
19. |
This section was written by [author name scrubbed], Specialist in Natural Resource Policy. |
20. |
The Agriculture Committees have jurisdiction over any national forest not reserved from the public domain. The House Committee on Natural Resources and the Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources have jurisdiction over public lands generally, including national forests reserved from the public domain. |
21. |
P.L. 95-313, 16 U.S.C. §§2101-2114. |
22. |
P.L. 108-148, 16 U.S.C. §§6501-6591c. For more information on these programs, see CRS Report R45219, Forest Service Assistance Programs. |
23. |
P.L. 106-393, 16 U.S.C. §§7101-7153. |
24. |
For more information |
25. |
P.L. 91-109, 42 U.S.C. §§4321-4347. For more information on NEPA, see CRS Report RL33152, The National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA): Background and Implementation. |
26. |
P.L. 93-205, 16 U.S.C. §1531 et seq. For more information |
27. |
This section was written by [author name scrubbed], Specialist in Agricultural Policy. |
28. |
H.R. 2 takes a similar approach in Title VI with funding for the Value-Added Producer Grant (VAPG) program, which broadly benefits specialty crop and local food producers. The 2014 farm bill provided $63 million in mandatory funding for VAPG to remain available until expended. H.R. 2 amends authorizations for discretionary appropriation, providing $50 million in annual appropriations (FY2019-FY2023) with no additional mandatory funding. |
29. |
This section was written by [author name scrubbed], Analyst in Agricultural Policy. |
30. |
This section was written by Joel Greene, Analyst in Agricultural Policy. |