Area Farm Leaders Discuss Farm Bill at ND Sugarbeet Farm Print
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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE                                             CONTACT:   Phillip Hayes

Wednesday, July 7, 2010                                                                  202-507-8303

Area Farm Leaders Discuss Farm Bill at ND Sugarbeet Farm

Sugar Farmer Tells Peterson, Pomeroy Sugar Policy is Working Well

AMENIA, ND—Farmers from across the region joined House Agriculture Committee Chairman Collin Peterson (D-MN) and Ways and Means Committee Member Earl Pomeroy (D-ND) on a sugarbeet farm in the Red River Valley today to tackle one question: “Is the safety net in the current Farm Bill working?”

Russ Mauch, a producer from Barney, ND and president of the American Sugarbeet Growers Association, answered the question with an emphatic “yes.”

“We would urge Congress to continue this successful [sugar] policy in the next Farm Bill.  As we say on the farm, ‘If it isn’t broke, don’t fix it,’” Mauch told Peterson and Pomeroy.

Mauch explained that current sugar policy has maintained a balanced market; has helped sustain fair prices; and has done it all without costing taxpayers a dime.

In addition, the sugar safety net underpins a local $3.1 billion sugar industry that supports 30,000 area jobs, he said.

Bill Hejl, the sugarbeet farmer who hosted the meeting, likewise believes the policy is working well but fears unneeded foreign sugar cascading onto the U.S. market could disrupt things in the future if that safety net is weakened.

Hejl, who recently served as president of the World Association of Beet and Cane Growers, points to potential sugar entering through Mexico and future trade deals as the biggest threats.

Peterson and Pomeroy have been longtime supporters of sugar policy and appear to share sugar producers’ belief that the existing policy is working well and should be left unharmed in order to ward off future threats.

At a recent Farm Bill hearing in California, Peterson said sugar policy is “working exactly as it is supposed to. I don’t foresee big changes in sugar.”

The American Sugar Alliance is the national coalition of growers, processors, and refiners of sugarbeets and sugarcane, accounting for 146,000 American jobs and $10 billion in economic activity in 18 states.

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For more information about U.S. sugar policy and to view Russ Mauch’s full statement , visit www.sugaralliance.org.

 

Symposium

Audio & Video

  • Sugarbeet Grower Alan Welp Tells the Tale of Two Intertwined Industries
    Western Sugar, a company now owned by farmers, closed its Goodland, Kansas sugarbeet factory in 1985. Sugar prices were low, the cost of doing business was climbing, and tough decisions were made that hurt workers and farmers. Today, thanks to no-cost sugar policy, things have turned around, and business is now booming for confectionery manufacturers.  Sugarbeet grower and Western Sugar Cooperative member Alan Welp discusses.