An extended deadline for passing a congressional farm bill could be a possibility, according to the ranking member of the U.S. Senate Agriculture Committee.
Currently, lawmakers in Washington have a little more than two months to pass the 2023 farm bill.
The farm bill, a package of legislation passed roughly every five years, governs a list of agricultural and food programs in the country, including food assistance like SNAP.
Lawmakers failed to pass the bill by their end-of-September deadline and now face a much stricter end-of-year deadline.
But Arkansas Sen. John Boozman said Friday he would like to consider a one-year extension on passing the bill. He said an extension doesn’t mean it would take the entire year for the measure to pass.
“We want to get the farm bill done as soon as possible, hopefully before the end of the year. That doesn't preclude us from getting it done,” Boozman said. “But it gives us that time. And it gives the farmers the certainty that they will have a farm bill in place.”
Boozman joined Missouri U.S. Sen. Eric Schmitt on Friday for a roundtable discussion with a delegation of Missouri farmers in Columbia about the farm bill.
The Republican senators heard feedback from different representatives of the farming industry, including Garrett Hawkins, president of the Missouri Farm Bureau.
“It's not just getting a farm bill, but it's actually getting a forward-looking bill that works for farm and ranch families first and foremost,” Hawkins said.
Meeting the end-of-year deadline is currently a daunting task. The U.S. House is without a speaker and cannot conduct any business.
Additionally, lawmakers will again work through funding the federal government and preventing a shutdown. Right now, the stopgap bill passed in September only funds the government through Nov. 17.
As to how they would pass the extension, Boozman proposes adding it to the bill responsible for funding the federal government to avoid a government shutdown.
Regarding another potential shutdown, Schmitt said the Senate hasn’t been proactive enough with appropriations bills.
Source: kbia.org
Categories: Missouri, Government & Policy