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Hartselle Enquirer

Alabama Farmers take concerns to Capitol Hill

By Marlee Moore

For the Enquirer

Escalating conflict overseas, government overreach, ballooning inflation and ever-increasing input costs were top of mind when 80 Alabama farmers went to Washington March 1-4.

The Alabama Farmers Federation members began Capitol Hill visits the day after the city lifted COVID-19 mask mandates. High points included meetings with House and Senate agriculture committee staff – critically important as 2023 farm bill talks ramp up.

“We need to touch base with our congressmen and especially with the ag committees on issues that are important to us,” said Covington County farmer Ricky Wiggins. “We need to try to keep them on track with what our issues are. We need to find out where they are, and they need to know where we are.”

In a series of visits with congressmen, staffers and U.S. Department of Agriculture officials, farmers reiterated the importance of voluntary, incentive-based conservation programs – not government mandates.

Stakeholders hope those conversations will pay dividends as leaders such as U.S. Sen. John Boozman, R-Arkansas, draft legislation affecting rural America.

“My message to agriculture right now is you need to stand together,” said Boozman, who chairs the Senate Ag Committee. “I can’t tell you what the farm bill is going to look like, but I can tell you it’s going to be based on the input of folks like you.”

Boozman underscored the importance of rural broadband, maintaining and creating markets and supporting farms of all sizes.

“We’re committed to using common sense. We’re not for setting aside productive farmland,” Boozman said. “The last thing we need is to get dependent on foreign sources for our food supply.”

U.S. Sen. Tommy Tuberville, R-Alabama, welcomed farmer-constituents to the capital during the opening dinner, held the night of President Joe Biden’s first State of the Union address. During an interview with “Simply Southern TV” that evening, Tuberville thanked farmers for taking time to visit Washington.

“We’re going to do everything we possibly can to help our citizens through these tough times that we’re having now and those we’re going to have in the future,” said Tuberville, who serves on the Senate Ag Committee. “There are going to be some bumpy roads ahead because of the pandemic, inflation, high prices – everything that’s going on.”

Farmers also heard from five members of Alabama’s Congressional delegation during breakfast meetings: Reps. Jerry Carl, Barry Moore, Mike Rogers, Gary Palmer and Robert Aderholt. Staffers from their offices met in smaller groups with farmers to discuss pressing issues such as the farm bill, ag labor, cattle markets, disaster programs and more.

Farmers crisscrossed Capitol Hill and the surrounding area to meet with other ag associations to help align goals and communications for Southern agriculture. Meetings included those with the American Forest Foundation, National Corn Growers Association, National Cotton Council, National Cattlemen’s Beef Association and American Farm Bureau Federation. The group also heard from USDA officials.

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