Lawmakers Reintroduce Bill to Reform Checkoff Programs

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Feedstuff reports:

 

Federal lawmakers reintroduced legislation Tuesday to bring what they view as “much-needed transparency and accountability to the federal government’s commodity checkoff programs.”

S. 740, the Voluntary Checkoff Act, was reintroduced by Sens. Mike Lee (R., Utah) and Cory Booker (D., N.J.) and it will also be introduced in the House. The bill prohibits mandatory or compulsory checkoff programs and requires producer participation in the programs to be voluntary at the point of sale. A checkoff is a program that promotes and provides research and information for a particular agricultural commodity without reference to specific producers or brands.

On Tuesday afternoon, Organization for Competitive Markets (OCM) founder Fred Stokes spoke at a congressional briefing on Capitol Hill hosted by OCM and the Heritage Foundation to discuss what they view as the “checkoff programs’ abuses.”

Stokes said, “The original intent of these checkoff programs was to help U.S. farmers and ranchers, but they have been hijacked by corporate interests and, oftentimes, foreign corporate interests. The half-billion dollars that these programs generate each year are being used to pick winners and losers in the market. They even engage in anti-market access campaigns within the same market sector or commodity. These funds have become the cash cow for organizations that work against fair competition for family farmers.”

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Source:  Feedstuff

 

 

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