FARM BILL’S EXPIRATION DATE: The farm bill extension lawmakers passed last year expires today (on paper). But, as lawmakers and your favorite ag newsletter have repeatedly noted, a new extension or final bill won’t need to happen until the end of the calendar year, when key programs actually run out of funding. Top negotiators have long eyed the lame duck session as the make-or-break time to decide the path forward on a farm bill. Ag lawmakers met on Thursday last week to discuss the farm bill ahead of the October recess and their staffs held more discussions Friday. House Ag Chair G.T. Thompson (R-Pa.) told us last week that his discussions with Senate Ag Chair Debbie Stabenow (D-Mich.) have been focused mostly on how to get a new reauthorization done, not details of an emergency package that ag industry and rank-and-file members have been pushing for. “But I think she's probably hearing the same thing I am in terms of the need, with the crisis with market volatility and natural disasters,” Thompson said Wednesday. Stabenow has said it’s “just too early” to talk about an emergency package. “We’ve got to see if we can get a full five-year farm bill.” FIRST IN MA — BOAR’S HEAD BACKLASH: Dozens of lawmakers are criticizing Boar’s Head deli meat company and USDA’s food safety subagency for not taking adequate steps to prevent a listeria outbreak linked to 10 deaths. Rep. Rosa DeLauro (D-Conn.) headed two letters, first shared with Morning Ag, in response to the outbreak. The group of 23 House lawmakers and three senators asked USDA’s Food Safety and Inspection Service how the subagency failed to address “egregious sanitation problems” at a Boar’s Head facility and why inspectors observing “noncompliance” did not lead to any enforcement actions. “It is appalling that seemingly no enforcement actions have been taken against Boar’s Head despite the reported repeated records of major noncompliance,” the letter reads. A group of 20 House members and two senators also wrote to a Boar’s Head executive to request more details on what led up to the recall: “With the science we have available, there is no excuse for the tragic loss of life that has occurred as a result of this outbreak.” A Boar's Head company spokesperson declined to comment last week on legal issues associated with the recall. FIRST IN MA: Rep. Gabe Vasquez (D-N.M.) introduced a bill to create education programs for new farmers with mentorship and training opportunities, designed to address obstacles beginning farmers face in accessing information from federal agencies. “Our farming population is aging, and we are facing a significant shortage of skilled new farmers. This program ensures the quick and efficient exchange of local knowledge–providing beginning farmers with ways to overcome adoption barriers,” Vasquez said in a statement. Lotanna Obodozie, climate policy director of the National Young Farmers Coalition, pointed out in a statement that younger farmers are looking at more regenerative and climate-smart practices, but can be held back by economic uncertainty and lack of connections to other farmers. LAB-GROWN MEAT CONCERNS: Reps. Andrew Garbarino (R-N.Y.) and Dan Newhouse (R-Wash.) led a letter first obtained by MA to the director of national intelligence and USDA’s director of homeland security urging action to understand the agricultural implications of Chinese biotechnology innovation. The letter is a response to the director of national intelligence’s annual threat assessment, which the lawmakers wrote showed China as a competitor attempting to lead the “broader biotechnological landscape,” notably through research in lab-grown (or cultivated) meat products. “Should China secure a dominant position in the global innovative protein market, it could fundamentally alter food supply dynamics worldwide and give China control of key aspects of global food security dynamics. Put simply, we cannot allow China to control more of the world’s food supply than it already does,” the lawmakers, joined by nine other House Republicans, wrote. The letter calls for the federal offices to coordinate a “focused analysis” of China’s advancements and any strategic measures the U.S. should consider to respond.
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