The drought is especially severe, and the images of withered crops are startling.
The New York Times noted that if more farmers in drought-stricken California are forced to let their land lie fallow due to a lack of water, it could have “potentially dire consequences for the nation’s food supply.”
It’s not just crops that are affected, either. The lack of rain has led to poor grazing conditions and reduced forage for cattle and other livestock.
“You can feel it deep inside of you because when you put your heart and soul into this work, and you go outside and it feels hopeless, I don’t really have the words to explain it further… It’s really sad,” Colorado produce farmer Mindy Perkovich told NPR.
America’s farmers and ranchers are resilient – but they’re not shatterproof. They need strong policies now, more than ever.
That means pushing back on bad bills that could place our farmers under even greater stress.
Here are a few of the latest anti-farmer measures being floated by critics in Congress:
- A new tax proposal would devastate America’s hardworking farm families by changing the way farms are taxed when they’re passed from one generation to another. The experts at Texas A&M’s Agricultural and Food Policy Center surveyed nearly 100 family farms and found that this new tax would impact 98% of the farms and leave families with an average tax bill of $726,000.
- Radical efforts to gut America’s successful no-cost sugar policy would drive American sugar farmers out of business and outsource American jobs to foreign countries that heavily subsidize their sugar industries. The so-called Fair Sugar Policy Act is far from fair and would threaten the domestic supply chain for this essential ingredient.
Any legislation that undermines the farm safety net and harms our farmers – at a time when we need them the most – is shortsighted at best and disastrous at worst.
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