Trump administration to unveil $15.5 billion first phase of coronavirus
farm aid: sources
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[April 14, 2020]
By P.J. Huffstutter
CHICAGO (Reuters) - The U.S. Department of
Agriculture will spend up to $15.5 billion in the initial phase of its
plan to bolster the nation's food supply chain against the impacts of
the coronavirus outbreak, according to three sources familiar with the
matter.
The plan, which could be announced this week, marks the Trump
administration's first big push to ensure the pandemic doesn't trigger
consumer food shortages as meat packers shutter, dairy producers dump
milk, and farmers struggle to find workers to harvest, plant and deliver
crops.
The initial plan will include direct payments to farmers and ranchers,
along with other support measures, using a portion of the $23.5 billion
approved by Congress to support agriculture in a coronavirus stimulus
bill last month, along with some existing USDA funds, according to the
sources.
The USDA will announce the initial plan as early as this week, and is
expected to detail later phases of the support program once more money
from the stimulus bill becomes available, potentially in July, they
said.
"It's not enough to cover all of agriculture, but we see it as a first
step," said Andrew Walmsley, director of Congressional relations for the
American Farm Bureau Federation, the nation's largest farmer trade
group.
"We expect there will be more aid going forward."
Walmsley expected farmers to start receiving checks within weeks. The
other two sources asked not to be named.
The USDA declined to comment on the initial phase.
The effort comes as supply chain disruptions caused by the spread of
coronavirus make it harder for farmers across the globe to deliver food
to consumers.
In the United States, several beef and pork packing plants have shut
down as workers fall ill or die from the virus. Smithfield Foods, for
example, the world's biggest pork processor, said on Sunday it will shut
a U.S. plant indefinitely due to a rash of coronavirus cases among
employees and warned the country was moving "perilously close to the
edge" in supplies for grocers.
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Farmer Lucas Richard of LFR Grain harvests a crop of soybeans at a
farm in Hickory, North Carolina, U.S. November 29, 2018.
REUTERS/Charles Mostoller
Some dairy farmers have also been dumping milk because of a loss of
their regular buyers, and laborers and truckers are in short supply,
according to Reuters reporting.
In the coronavirus stimulus bill, dubbed the CARES Act, lawmakers
set aside $9.5 billion for USDA to assist livestock producers, along
with fruit and vegetable growers and others who sell through farmers
markets.
That money is already available to USDA and is expected to be part
of the funds tapped in the program to be announced this week,
according to Walmsley and the other sources.
The rest is expected to come from some $6 billion currently in the
Agriculture Department's Commodity Credit Corp (CCC) funding
authority.
The CARES Act also added another $14 billion to the CCC, but those
funds won't be available until after June 30, a USDA spokesperson
said.
The CCC, set up during the Great Depression nearly a century ago,
has been repeatedly tapped by the Trump Administration for tens of
billions of dollars to compensate farmers and assist the sector due
to the U.S.-China trade wars.
(Reporting By P.J. Huffstutter; editing by Richard Pullin)
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