Growers Discuss Priorities for 2023 Farm Bill

Dan Beef, Cattle, Citrus, Corn, Cotton, Equine, Farm Bill, Field Crops, Fruits, Grapefruit, Hemp, Herbs, Legislative, Lemons, Livestock, Nursery Crops, Orange Juice, Pasture, Peanuts, Pecans, Pollinators, Pork, Poultry, Rabbits, Sheep-Goats, Soybeans, Specialty Crops, Sugar, Tree Nuts, Vegetables, Wheat

Farm Bill
Image by Piotr Zakrzewski from Pixabay

The 2018 Farm Bill is set to expire in 2023, so preparations are underway to craft the behemoth legislation into law sometime next year. However, it is common for negotiations to extend into the following year. Whether the new farm bill is passed in 2023 or 2024, there’s a lot of work ahead.

Farm Bill

The farm bill was the focus of a special listening session during the recent Southeast Regional Fruit and Vegetable Conference in Savannah, Georgia. Growers packed into the room where the listening session was hosted by the Georgia Fruit & Vegetable Growers Association (GFVGA). The association is the primary planner and host of the conference held each year in early January.

Advertisement

“It was truly a listening session,” noted Chris Butts, the new GFVGA executive vice president. “We wanted to hear from our members and other growers from the Southeast (about priorities for the upcoming farm bill). There were two main topics: on the supply side, the continued pressures we face from imports and also pressures from the rising costs of inputs; on the demand side, how can we as a region and industry pool our resources and collectively work together to drive and push demand for southeastern-grown fruits and vegetables? We have limited resources to do that with. It is really going to take a grassroots effort.”

High on the agenda among growers who spoke during the session was securing new protections against the imports flooding the United States during the southeastern produce-marketing window. Low labor wages and subsidization have given countries like Mexico an unfair competitive edge. Growers want to see the farm bill address these concerns, perhaps with revived country-of-origin labeling (COOL) that consumers could easily identify on packaging to help them buy American produce first.

The original COOL lost its teeth when …..

Learn more about why Growers Discuss Priorities for 2023 Farm Bill on the Citrus Industry website.