US Farmers on the hook for millions after Trump freezes USDA funds - The White House had repeatedly said the funding freeze would not affect benefits that go directly to individuals.

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Farmers report missing millions of dollars of funding they were promised by the U.S. Department of Agriculture, despite promises from the Trump administration that a federal funding freeze would not apply to projects directly benefiting individuals.

On his first day in office, President Donald Trump ordered the USDA to freeze funds for several programs designated by President Joe Biden’s signature clean-energy and health-care law, the 2022 Inflation Reduction Act. The freeze paused some funding for the department’s Environmental Quality Incentives Program, which helps farmers address natural resource concerns, and the Rural Energy for America Program, which provides financial assistance for farmers to improve their infrastructure.

Farmers who signed contracts with the USDA under those programs paid up front to build fencing, plant new crops and install renewable energy systems with guarantees that the federal government would issue grants and loan guarantees to cover at least part of their costs. Now, with that money frozen, they’re on the hook.

Laura Beth Resnick, who runs a Maryland flower farm, said she signed a contract for the USDA to cover half of a $72,900 solar panel installation. In late January, she said, she was told her reimbursement payment was rejected because of Trump’s executive order.
“I really don’t know what we would do,” Resnick said. “It just feels like I can’t even really think about it.”

The USDA has also halted funding for other programs, including scientific research grants in agriculture and producing climate-smart crops, according to a letter sent to the agency Thursday from House Democrats on the Agriculture and Appropriations committees.
“Pulling the rug out from these recipients runs counter to the mission of the USDA and will quickly and significantly cripple economic development in rural America,” the letter says.

The White House repeatedly said the freeze of agriculture funding and other federal financial assistance would not affect benefits that go directly to individuals, such as farmers. The administration rescinded the pause after a federal judge temporarily halted its implementation.

But over the weekend, farmers reported that their funding remained frozen — another blow to farmers who are also facing threats of tariffs and freezes to foreign-aid spending that involved food purchased from American producers.

In a statement, a USDA spokesperson said the Trump administration “rightfully has asked for a comprehensive review of all contracts, work, and personnel across all federal agencies.”

“Anything that violates the President’s Executive Orders will be subject for review,” the statement said. “The Department of Agriculture will be happy to provide a response to interested parties once Brooke Rollins is confirmed [as secretary of agriculture] and has the opportunity to analyze these reviews.”

The White House did not respond to a request for comment.
The disruption to funds appropriated through the Inflation Reduction Act takes aim at one of Biden’s flagship legislative accomplishments. Most of that funding was doled out in the last month of his presidency, according to a Washington Post analysis. But grants worth $32 billion authorized under the act remain vulnerable to being frozen.

The USDA made $3.1 billion from the Inflation Reduction Act available in the 2024 fiscal year for climate-smart agriculture activities, according to the department, including grants and loans for initiatives such as the Environmental Quality Incentives Program and the Rural Energy for America Program.

On Wednesday, National Farmers Union President Rob Larew testified before the Senate Agriculture Committee that the Trump administration’s sweeping decisions on federal funding were creating concern for farmers across the country.
“No one knows what funding will be available or if key programs will have the staff needed to operate,” Larew said. “Freezing spending and making sweeping decisions without congressional oversight just adds more uncertainty to an already tough farm economy.”
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Skylar Holden, a cattle farmer in eastern Missouri, said he signed a $240,000 contract in December under the Environmental Quality Incentives Program to share costs on investments for his farm.

With the funding, Holden erected new fencing and installed a well. He had planned further improvements to his farm’s water system and spent $80,000 on materials and labor contracts that he expected would be partly paid back by the government.
This month, a USDA representative told him the funding was paused because of Trump’s executive order.

“I asked her, ‘Is there any word on when they’re going to be unfrozen?’” Holden said. “‘Is it going to be frozen indefinitely?’ She didn’t have any answers for me.”

The department suggested that Holden’s only recourse was to contact his congressional representatives, he said.
With the money promised in his contract on hold, Holden said he’s in a bind. Up-front payments for the construction and materials he arranged for are due soon, on top of his regular operating expenses. The terms of his contract also stipulate that he must pay back the money he has already received from the department, plus interest, if he does not complete all the development outlined in the contract within five years. If the freeze continues, he said, he will have to take out additional loans or sell his farm equipment and cattle.
“If I sell them out to make this payment, I’m hurting myself years down the line,” Holden said. “I’m robbing myself of the future.”

Resnick, the flower farmer in Maryland, received a grant from the Rural Energy for America Program last year, she said. The initiative provides loan financing and grant funding to agricultural producers and rural small businesses to make energy efficiency improvements.
The grant was slated for solar panel installation on Resnick’s farm — an improvement she said would save her farm $5,000 a year and be better for the environment. Now, with the contract seemingly suspended, Resnick doesn’t know what to do.
“We don’t have a whole lot of capital to hire a lawyer,” she said.

The funding freezes have also paused large projects across states. The Iowa Soybean Association said Thursday that USDA payments had been suspended for a five-year Midwest Climate Smart Commodity grant that the organization secured in 2022. The $95 million deal supports more than 1,000 farms in 12 Midwestern states and encourages conservation practices in producing corn, soybeans, wheat and sugar beets, the association said.

Hundreds of participating farmers are owed $11 million after investing in new farming practices and crops because of the program, the association said.
Resnick said she’s at a loss for what to do next with the government’s promised payment of around $36,000 on hold. She is already paying back a loan she took out to launch her farm. Taking out another one would be unimaginable.
“It scares me for the future of farming,” Resnick said. “Not just that funding won’t be available for new farmers that need it, but that farmers won’t trust the government going forward.”
 
If they're in the US, I'm assuming they're growing mostly corn? Unfortunate if they're growing grains or other produce but I wish nothing but suffering for people growing a crop which is literally indigestible for human bodies, propped up only on federal subsidies, and is half the reason Americans are so obese and retarded. Suffer.
 
If they're in the US, I'm assuming they're growing mostly corn? Unfortunate if they're growing grains or other produce but I wish nothing but suffering for people growing a crop which is literally indigestible for human bodies, propped up only on federal subsidies, and is half the reason Americans are so obese and retarded. Suffer.
It’s agriculture and cattle farming too, here’s a video from one of the farmers, Skylar Holden
 
How is it possible to be this retarded?
Squall's right, though. The sugar a la fructose in corn is in so much food in America, all that corn syrup really packs on the pounds and there was a study I could have sworn I read a while back how different it was from plain cane sugar which was substituted for corn syrup years ago, which coincided with the obesity spike in recent eras. Corn syrup is a cheap byproduct and have you tried eating corn? It's tasty, sure, but it goes right through your guts and studs your turds with indigestable kernals. Corn flakes are yummy though.
 
In order from most likely to least likely:
  1. This is actually the result of farmers employing illegals and they're getting what they deserve
  2. A bunch of fake farmers are lying to make orange man appear bad
  3. There was an accounting error that will be resolved within the week, but we have to immediately declare the sky to be falling so orange man appears bad
  4. Trump is dumb and accidentally applied these rules too broadly and will fix it eventually
  5. Lightning struck a pigeon in mid flight and its ashes landed on the EO in a way that just so happened to look like he wrote "fuck them farmers" at the end and nobody noticed
  6. Trump ACTUALLY HATES FARMERS AND WE'RE ALL GONNA DIE
 
People are finding out that subsidies are bad. Don't feel bad for people who grow a crop, soybeans our number one export and the one grown the most in all of the major "breadbasket" states, we, as a people, don't eat so the government can sell it to asia where it's an indigenous plant.

Let that sink in. We are growing a crop not native to our soil for countries where the plant is native. It's not just us either. The major soybean exporter to the world is fucking Brazil of all places.
Screenshot-2023-05-07-at-5.03.30-AM.png

I don't feel bad for the cattle farmer either because he took a fucking loan for a glorified EPA scheme fed through the USDA probably so he could sell it as "ethically raised" or some bullshit.
 
It's just staggering how stupid some of you fuckers are.
Lemme jizzoogle for a minute to bring up information people should already know.

Is corn hard to digest?

The human digestive tract cannot break down cellulose. Corn passes through your system undigested; as such, it can cause cramps, abdominal pain, and gas in the process.



There you are, you corn nigger.
 
The human digestive tract cannot break down cellulose. Corn passes through your system undigested; as such, it can cause cramps, abdominal pain, and gas in the process.
That's the outer shell of the corn. If you consider anything that contains cellulose to be "indigestible", all plant matter is "indigestible" and you're suggesting we shouldn't eat dietary fiber.

Jesus Christ, we literally learned this shit in elementary school.
 
It’s agriculture and cattle farming too, here’s a video from one of the farmers, Skylar Holden
View attachment 6968289
That's what you get for spending government money you haven't even recieved yet.
People should also have figured out that a collectivization of farm water to "protect the environment" isn't surviving a Republican admin
 
That's the outer shell of the corn. If you consider anything that contains cellulose to be "indigestible", all plant matter is "indigestible" and you're suggesting we shouldn't eat dietary fiber.

Jesus Christ, we literally learned this shit in elementary school.
No, because vegetables have varying levels of cellulose and some are a hell of a lot better for you than corn which is absolute trash that's high in both cellulose and fructose (hence the name high fructose corn syrup). When corn syrup is in just about fucking everything including your sodas because it's a cheaper sweetener than ye olde cane sugar, that's why so many Americans are such fat fucks these days. It's in your drinks, your cereals, your candy and chocolate, all as a cheap bulk filler and sweetener that's harder to burn through than cane sugar like what used to be in your cola. Yes, vegetables have cellulose (that's not what I'm arguing against) but most of them (cooked spinach, beets,, asparagus, chards, ect) are a hell of a lot more digestable and easier on the stomach than corn that pretty much comes out the same as it goes in. It's pretty much the junk food of vegetables and it's largely responsible for why the obesity epidemic exploded in recent decades, not fucking spinach.
 
How is it possible to be this retarded?
>corn syrup being in almost every sweetened product in the domestic market isn't a large contributor towards obesity
And I'm the retard? Average Ibanez player I suppose.
In an America without corn subsidies and regulations against using industrial-byproduct seed oils in food for human consumption, American obesity would plummet in a decade or less.
 
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