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Reuters Agriculture website angers farmers, fails to sway Congress

Date: 20-Dec-01
Country: USA

However, the Web site run by the Environmental Working Group has failed
to sway lawmakers, who are in the midst of writing up new farm policy,
to allocate more money to protect the environment.

The pro-conservation group hopes the Web site, released to the public
last month, would impel lawmakers to replace the multibillion-$1996
"Freedom to Farm" law with legislation that provides more money to
conservation programs and scales back farm subsidies to big operators.

The information was obtained from the U.S. Agriculture Department under
the Freedom of Information Act. As of Tuesday, the Web site -
www.ewg.org - has recorded more than 10.1 million hits, most of them
from farmers.

"My thing is it's an invasion of privacy. I don't think they should be
publishing it," said William Olbrich, an Illinois farmer listed on the
website as receiving $160,000 in farm subsidies over the last five
years.

Many farmers complain that the website was created for political
purposes and was misleading, since it lumped together total subsidy
payments over five years. "They're trying to make us out as being these
huge corporations, which just isn't the case at all," said Dale Schuler,
Montana farmer and past president of the state's Grain Growing
Association. His cooperative, Schuler Bros. Partnership, pocketed
$816,101 in farm subsidies since 1996.

Susanne Fleek, Environmental Working Group's director of government
relations, said she understood the misgivings but added: "But we've
heard from a lot of farmers that think (the website) is great."

GAINING ATTENTION

Fleek said the group's website was receiving attention from some key
lawmakers including Senator Richard Lugar, ranking Republican on the
Senate Agriculture Committee, and Assistant Senate Minority Leader Don
Nickles. Both have been critical of the Senate farm bill.

"(The website has) not been on the frontburner for most lawmakers we
talked to," said Sam Willett, director of public policy for the National
Corn Growers Association. "But it is being discussed."

Despite the efforts by the Environmental Working Group, the current farm
proposals in the House of Representatives and Senate would boost
government subsidies by $5 billion a year.

"What EWG has done is put in black and white what people have suspected
all the time that the majority of money goes to a small percentage of
farmers," said a spokesman for Senate Agriculture Committee Chairman Tom
Harkin. But the website "hasn't changed the substance of the farm bill."

Fleek points out that there have been some small victories for
environmentalists in the current farm bill debate. Both the House and
Senate bills offer substantial increases in farm conservation programs.

The Land and Waters Stewardship program currently gets nearly $2 billion
a year. Under the House bill, spending would increase by 80 percent
while the Senate proposal would double conservation outlays.

Written every few years, farm bills bundle crop support, conservation,
antihunger, export promotion, agricultural research and rural
development programs.

Earlier this year, the House passed a $73.5 billion farm bill that would
run for an unprecedented 10 years. The Senate has still to pass its own
farm legislation.

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