What’s in the 2018 Farm Bill? The Good, The Bad and The Offal…

Every five years, the federal government reviews the food and farm landscape and renews the Farm Bill. Who the bill benefits – and how – is the subject of decades of debate. Farm Aid breaks it down with a Farm Bill 101, ways to take action, and key takeaways. Learn about the Farm Bill now

The final five-year farm bill, an $867 billion package titled the Agricultural Improvement Act of 2018, passed Congress in a bipartisan show of support and was signed into law by President Trump on December 20.

Our biggest takeaway is this: in a time of farm crisis, this farm bill will not right the ship.

There’s a whole lot of good, bad and ugly in the bill, but our biggest takeaway is this: in a time of farm crisis, this farm bill will not right the ship. The future of family farm agriculture requires a dramatic shift in policy towards fair pricing, supply management programs, cracking down on corporate goliaths and accelerated attention to the climate crisis. By those standards, this farm bill fails. That said, farmers and ranchers cannot wait another day for the programs that ended when the last farm bill expired on September 30. The time is now to get them back up and running!

This whirlwind timeline robbed advocates of time for analysis or action (surely by design), but here are some of the highlights in our priority areas (a huge shout out to our friends at the National Sustainable Agriculture Coalition and Rural Coalition for helping us sift through the language). Check out Farm Aid’s Take in our Understanding the Farm Bill Hub for more details on how we got here.

Jump to a section:

Farmer Livelihoods

Since 2013, America’s farmers and ranchers have weathered a 50% drop in net farm income. The 1-800-FARM-AID hotline has had its busiest year yet, with more farmers calling us stressed, desperate and with a shrinking number of viable options for keeping their farms running.

The 2018 Farm Bill could have risen to the occasion by restoring commonsense measures like supply management (which would curb the overproduction that is causing the dairy crisis) and recommit to fair pricing policies that cover farmers’ cost of production, instead of using taxpayer money to compensate for extreme, costly and avoidable market volatility that puts farmers at risk of going out of business. But this bill won’t do that. Despite a few bright spots, when it comes to the core challenges facing the farm economy, the 2018 Farm Bill fails spectacularly, and in some cases, actively takes steps backward by giving even more taxpayer money to the wealthiest farm operations.

The bright spots:

Luke-warm:

Unconscionable:

Local Food Systems & Healthy Food Access

Farm Aid celebrates the great power of food to connect people and grow strong communities, as well as the farmers and ranchers at the root of our food system. The 2008 Farm Bill ushered in a suite of programs that support the development of local and regional food systems, market diversification opportunities for farmers, healthy food access initiatives and other innovative programs that seize upon the great potential of food to bolster local economies, create jobs and deepen the connection between farmers and eaters.

Our hope for this Farm Bill was continued support for these programs and an expansion of access to healthy food for all Americans. By and large, this was a bright spot in the bill, which is no small feat given how hard our communities have had to fight to make the case that local food systems represent worthy investments in rural economies, public health, job creation and farmer livelihoods.

What we like:

Disappointing:

Soil, Water & Climate

For the better part of a century, farm bills have acknowledged the crucial role that government dollars can play in developing conservation programs that steward our natural resources. Funding for these programs has expanded over the last three decades, as more farmers seek to learn on-farm conservation skills, invest in the long-term health of our soil, water and climate, and build a more resilient agricultural system in the face of climate change.

Our hope was for a farm bill that empowers farmers and ranchers to steward our natural resources and effectively mitigate and adapt to climate change by investing in the long-term health of our soil, air and water and maintaining full funding for all conservation programs; expanding program access to serve farmers of all types; and removing loopholes in the EQIP program that subsidize factory farms. Unfortunately, while there are important measures in this farm bill, it falls far too short in advancing these goals.

The Good:

Mixed bag:

…the oh-so-ugly:

Equal Opportunity for All Farmers

For too long, the lion’s share of federal farm bill dollars has gone to a narrow segment of farmers and farm types. Farmers of color and female farmers have experienced discrimination when seeking access to credit, conservation and other farm programs. In far too many cases, this discrimination has led to farm families going out of business and losing their land.

Our hope was for a farm bill that would build upon past progress to ensure equal opportunity for farmers of all kinds and create a truly level playing field for anyone interested in becoming a farmer. There are some notable achievements in this bill.

What we like: