Farm Bill Series, part one: American Farmers and Ranchers Need a New Farm Bill This Year

Show Date:

As lawmakers work to write the next farm bill, the American Farm Bureau Federation is sharing stories of its importance to agriculture. Chad Smith has more with an example from a Missouri farm.


Smith: As ongoing drought grips much of the west and Midwest, farmers and ranchers are utilizing farm bill programs to ensure they’re acting as stewards of the land. Megan Richner, a farmer in Missouri, which has been one of the driest spots in the country, says the farm bill’s conservation programs have positively impacted her operation and kept them in business.
Richner: Really those conservation programs in the farm bill saved our farm during this drought that we’re experiencing. If it wasn’t for those, we’d be in pretty bad shape on our farm. We have not had to sell any cows. We’ve had some land, we’ve had grass, and really our land and grass would be in much worse condition if we would not have started using these conservation programs back in 2014.
Smith: Richner says Congress can’t wait until next year to pass a farm bill.
Richner: Due to the uncertainty in agriculture, whether it’s an uncertainty in markets, whether it’s the uncertainty in weather across the United States. Certainly, for us, the Farm Bill has been a safety net. It allows farmers like us to weather the storm and help us continue to grow food for our communities, whether it’s crops or, in our case, producing beef, still able to do that because of the farm bill and the programs that it provides.
Smith: She encourages farmers and ranchers to reach out to their elected officials and share their agriculture story.
Richner: One of the best things a farmer and rancher can do to really get the farm bill across the finish line this year is just pick up the phone and have a conversation with your legislators or their staff. How’s the farm bill impacted your farm? They say a picture’s worth 1,000 words, show them those pictures. Tell them your story.
Capps: Whether it’s in Missouri, or right here in Tennessee, it’s clear that a new Farm Bill is essential for not just farmers, but all Americans. For Tennessee Home and Farm Radio – I’m Thomas Capps.