Congress Seeks to Slash Food Aid for
Poor
Yahoo News/AP
By LIBBY QUAID, Associated Press Writer
October 5, 2005
WASHINGTON - Under orders to whittle agriculture spending by $3 billion,
Republicans in Congress propose to slash food programs for the poor by $574
million and subsidies and conservation programs by $1 billion each, The
Associated Press has learned.
The plan by Senate Agriculture Committee chairman Saxby Chambliss, R-Ga.,
would reduce farmers' payments by 2.5 percent across the board, slashing
spending by $1.145 billion over five years. That's half the 5 percent the Bush
administration sought earlier this year.
The $574 million cut in food stamps would come from restricting access to
this benefit for certain families that receive other government assistance. The
restriction would shut an estimated 300,000 people out of the program.
The conservation cuts would curb the number of acres that can be enrolled in
the biggest of the programs, the Conservation Reserve Program, and limit
spending on two others, the Conservation Security Program and Environmental
Quality Incentives Program.
Omitted from the budget-cutting plan is President Bush's idea of cutting
billions of dollars from payments to large farm operations by lowering the
maximum subsidies that could be collected each year.
The administration backed off of that plan in April amid fierce opposition
from farmers and Congress.
The AP obtained a summary of the plan, which is scheduled for a Thursday
morning vote in Chambliss' committee.
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