June 11, 2020

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State Archives hosts digital exhibit on farmworkers
 
An exhibit detailing the turbulent history of California’s farmworkers has gone digital. The California State Archives has posted “Farmworkers in the Land of Plenty” to a Google platform for arts so all can safely view the collection during the pandemic.
 
The photos date back to 1850 and depict a state growing to become the largest food-producing region in the country while often at odds over farmworker rights.
 
“Farmworkers are essential to the prosperity of California’s agriculture industry,” said Secretary of State Alex Padilla, in a statement on the exhibit. 


Farmers spraying crops, 1920. CDFA
 
AFBF seeks second round of CFAP
 
The American Farm Bureau Federation has given the Senate a 4 1/2-page list of priorities for the next coronavirus aid package, which the chamber is expected to consider in July.
 
The proposals include another round of direct payments to farmers to cover losses after April 15. The $16 billion in Coronavirus Food Assistance Program payments going out now are designed to offset losses from January to mid-April.
 
Business liability protection is also on the wish list.
 
Read more about the AFBF requests here.
 
Ag dealers may get dicamba relief
 
EPA has apparently agreed to allow ag retailers to distribute dicamba herbicides to growers who already paid for them, provided payment was made by June 3 and the product was in the hand of the dealer by that date.
 
Kevin Paap, president of the Minnesota Farm Bureau, said EPA Administrator Andrew Wheeler conveyed the news to more than 100 state and national Farm Bureau representatives on a call Wednesday.
 
Richard Gupton, senior vice president for public policy & counsel at the Agricultural Retailers Association, said that is also his understanding, but ARA is “waiting for EPA to officially post on their website.” The issue is important for dealers with prepaid product on hand.
 
Meanwhile: The plaintiffs in the case that resulted in the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals decision to vacate the registrations of the three herbicides — Xtendimax, FeXapan and Engenia — are expected to ask that court any time to prevent the use of existing stocks.


Sen. Braun
 
Ag climate bill likely to get hearing, action later
 
Sen. Mike Braun, the lead Republican sponsor of the landmark, bipartisan ag carbon bill introduced recently, confirms to Agri-Pulse that the legislation is likely to get a hearing before the Senate Agriculture Committee this year.
 
But the first-term Indiana senator acknowledged in an interview that it will take some time to get the bill enacted, probably as part of a larger bill, and that won’t come before the next Congress.
 
The Growing Climate Solutions Act is aimed at providing legitimacy and transparency to ag carbon trading by establishing a USDA-run system for certifying third-party verifiers and technical service providers. 
 
USDA’s role in the carbon markets is important because the Farm Service Agency can provide a familiar place for farmers to get reliable information. “For good stewards, which farmers are almost across the board, this will enable the technical hookup you need to get with markets that will reward you for” reducing greenhouse emissions, he said.
 
Take note: Braun believes there is growing interest from farmers in carbon markets. “They’re looking for ways to maybe do things differently,” he said.
 
Keep in mind: A recent Agri-Pulse poll found nearly one in every two American farmers would be interested in carbon markets, even though the climate issue is still a relatively low priority for them.
 
Fed: Holding interest rates low
 
Good news for the farm economy: The Federal Reserve is committed to keeping interest rates low until the U.S. economy recovers from the COVID-19 crisis.
 
The Fed is forecasting an economic recovery “beginning in the second half of this year and lasting over the next couple of years, supported by interest rates that remain at their current level near zero,” Chairman Jerome Powell said on Wednesday.
 
Keep in mind: The historically low interest rates are a key difference between the situation for farmers today versus the farm crisis of the 1980s.
 
Lighthizer to testify twice next week on trade policy
 
U.S. Trade Representative Bob Lighthizer will be testifying twice on Capitol Hill next Wednesday to answer questions by Senators and House members. First up will be the House Ways and Means Committee for morning hearing and then it will be the Senate Finance Committee in the afternoon.
 
Lighthizer is sure to want to talk about recent successes such as the free trade agreements he has negotiated (or renegotiated) with Japan, South Korea, Mexico and Canada, but just about anything related to U.S. trade policy will be up for discussion, one Hill aide said. That includes issues with the U.K., the European Union, Kenya and China.
 
Union to lawmakers: Compensate essential workers
 
Essential workers affected by the coronavirus, including those in meatpacking plants and throughout the food industry, should receive compensation for the risks they’re taking, says the head of the United Food and Commercial Workers International Union.
 
At a House hearing Wednesday, UFCW President Marc Perrone endorsed a bill introduced by Rep. Carolyn Maloney, D-N.Y., in the House and Illinois Democrat Tammy Duckworth in the Senate that would set up a compensation fund for essential workers who have become ill or died as a result of COVID-19.
 
Some 29,000 UFCW members have become ill and 225 have died, Perrone said. Seventy members at meatpacking plants have died from COVID-19 and another 20,000 have tested positive, Perrone said in his testimony.
 
Obtaining Personal Protective Equipment such as face masks is still an issue, Perrone said. He said one major company with 400,000 employees is thinking of eliminating its mask requirement.
 
She said it:
 
“Savings through the collective bargaining process are critical to maintaining the state’s fiscal health, in the event additional federal support does not materialize.” — State Senate Pro Tem Toni Atkins, in a statement explaining that the Legislature’s budget depends on negotiations with labor unions resulting in large spending cuts

 

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