The Farm Bill is now operating on a one-year extension, having been included in the continuing resolution budget deal that President Joe Biden signed Nov. 17.  That’s according to the office of U.S. Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer (D–N.Y.), which also noted that Schumer secured the one-year extension of the Farm Bill in that legislation.  […]

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The Farm Bill is now operating on a one-year extension, having been included in the continuing resolution budget deal that President Joe Biden signed Nov. 17. 

That’s according to the office of U.S. Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer (D–N.Y.), which also noted that Schumer secured the one-year extension of the Farm Bill in that legislation. 

In that one-year extension, Schumer said he procured an extension of the dairy margin coverage (DMC) program that he says farmers rely on, per a Nov. 17 news release from his office. 

The program was set to expire this year, which could have left farmers facing what Schumer called a “dairy cliff,” cutting off payments to farmers and harming consumers by raising the price of milk. 

“Our dairy farmers are the beating heart of Upstate, and when they came to me worried that this year we could be going over the ‘dairy cliff,’ I immediately started ringing the cowbell and promised I would churn up support to ensure these payments wouldn’t lapse. I helped enact the Dairy Margin Coverage Program in the 2018 Farm Bill, and I am proud to have secured this vital year-long extension while we work to develop a bipartisan Farm Bill in the next year,” Schumer said in the release. “Today our dairy farmers can breathe a sigh of relief and raise a glass of Upstate NY-made milk and more thoroughly enjoy this Thanksgiving.”

The dairy industry is one of New York’s largest contributors to the agricultural economy. Citing data from the New York State Department of Agriculture and Markets dairy statistics, Schumer’s office said New York has about 3,200 dairy farms that produce over 15 billion pounds of milk annually, making New York the nation’s fifth largest dairy state.

DMC significance 

Schumer explained the “dairy cliff” refers to the expiration of the DMC program. 

It’s described as a risk-management tool that offers protection to dairy producers when the difference between the all-milk price and the average feed price (the margin) falls below a certain dollar amount selected by the producer. 

The dairy industry would be the first impacted, as dairy farmers would lose out on monthly payments through the DMC, whereas farmers participating in other support programs are paid just once per year around harvest time, Schumer’s office said. 

If we went “over the dairy cliff,” that would have meant an end to monthly price-support payments to dairy farmers who participate in the DMC program; supply-chain disruptions causing increased milk prices; and “potentially billions” in wasted government spending as the federal government would be forced to make milk purchases at a “highly inflated price,” the senator said.

Eric Reinhardt

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