political food

Nov 09, 2008 08:58

I try to stay out of discussions about agricultural policy in this country, because I feel that I have a pretty limited understanding of things (being a lifelong urbanite), but also because it seems to me that this is one of our most corrupt policy areas, over-run by mega-corps. It seems like nothing productive ever really happens. However, I just came across this interesting post: Obama and the Food Supply and I have to say, it looks really good. Granted, it's a pre-election position paper, so it's supposed to look and sound good, it's the follow through part where things get messed up. Still, the positions taken seem easily addressed to me. No major debates, no long filibuster sessions, just tweaking existing regulations, maybe putting some money towards enforcement... Here are some of the highlights:

* Supports subsidies as a safety net, but calls for a $250,000 payment limitation and closing of loopholes, so that the program supports family farmers, not corporate agribusiness.
* Supports regulation of CAFOs (factory livestock operations).
* Wants to enforce anti-trust laws that so that smaller farmers can compete against large-scale meatpackers.
* Wants to cap the size of agricultural businesses that can receive government funds for environmental cleanup so that taxpayers don’t subsidize cleanup for large, polluting corporations.
* Supports Country of Origin Labeling (COOL) for meat, a critical issue as we learn how widespread melamine contamination of animal feed is in countries like China.
* Wants to increase support for organic agriculture and local food systems by helping farmers with organic certification/compliance costs.
* Wants to provide incentives to encourage and support new farmers, land conservation, renewable energy on the farm, and microenterprise for farmers and other rural Americans.
* Calls for greater food safety surveillance and communications.
* Plans to encourage local foods in schools.
* Supports providing farmers with incentives that will prevent agricultural runoff.
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