Pork Producers Aren’t Giving Up on a Prop 12 Fix

NPPC President Duane Stateler says it’s just as critical – if not more – that the House Agriculture Committee keeps its promise to take action on a solution to the many problems triggered by California Proposition 12.

Duane Stateler
NPPC urges members of Congress to advance the provisions included in the reconciliation package that will ensure pork producers can continue to provide a safe, reliable and affordable supply of products from farms to so many people.
(Mikayla Dolch)

Pork producers are grateful that many industry priorities were included in the recently released reconciliation package from the House Agriculture Committee, but they aren’t giving up on securing a fix to Proposition 12.

“America’s pork producers recognize and greatly appreciate the tireless efforts by congressional champions of farming and agriculture, especially Agriculture Committee Chairman G.T. Thompson, in securing as many pork industry priorities as possible in the House’s proposed reconciliation package,” says National Pork Producers Council (NPPC) president Duane Stateler, a pork producer from McComb, Ohio.

But Stateler says it’s just as critical – if not more – that the committee keeps its promise to take action on a solution to the many problems triggered by California Proposition 12.

“We expect that members of both parties will continue to find the path to deliver the certainty and stability farmers need,” Stateler says. “Whether in the Farm Bill, or in other legislative provisions, we stand ready and willing to help the Congress deliver this needed, bipartisan solution.”

NPPC urges members of Congress to advance the provisions included in the reconciliation package that will ensure pork producers can continue to provide a safe, reliable and affordable supply of products from farms to so many people.

Those provisions include:

  • Preservation of necessary resources to protect the nation’s food supply through foreign animal disease (FAD) prevention, including:
    >National Animal Vaccine and Veterinary Countermeasures Bank
    >National Animal Health Laboratory Network

    >National Animal Disease Preparedness and Response Program
    >National Veterinary Stockpile

  • Increase in market access programs for U.S. pork.
    >The Market Access Program (MAP) and Foreign Market Development Program (FMD) build export markets for U.S. agricultural products through generic marketing and promotion and the reduction of foreign import constraints. For every $1 spent on MAP and FMD programs, U.S. agriculture saw $24.50 in export gains and contributed to the creation of 225,800 full-and part-time jobs across the U.S. economy.
  • Resources for the feral swine eradication to protect the health of U.S. swine herds.
    >Established in the 2018 Farm Bill, the hugely successful Feral Swine Eradication and Control Pilot Program helps address the threat feral swine pose to agriculture, ecosystems, and human and animal health, especially through FADs like African swine fever.

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