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White House, Democrats Reach Deal to Fund Farm Payments

By Phil Brasher
 
Democrats reached a deal with the White House and congressional Republicans to allow replenishment of the Agriculture Department’s Commodity Credit Corp. account in exchange for prohibiting CCC payments to oil companies and extending some pandemic-related nutrition assistance.
 
A stopgap funding bill that Democrats had released on Monday to keep the government funded until Dec. 11 omitted a provision the Trump administration sought to refill the CCC account. The CCC is a revolving, $30 billion fund that USDA uses to disburse farm program payments and provide marketing loans to farmers as well as provide special assistance programs.
 
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, under pressure from some members of her own caucus on the CCC issue, said in a statement the agreement would “add nearly $8 billion in desperately needed nutrition assistance for hungry schoolchildren and families. We also increase accountability in the Commodity Credit Corp., preventing funds for farmers from being misused for a Big Oil bailout.”
 
The new version of the bill subsequently passed the House Tuesday night, 359-57.
 
The prohibition on payments to refiners was a response to reports that the White House was planning to use the CCC to make payments to companies that had been denied waivers from the Renewable Fuel Standard. Agriculture Secretary Sonny Perdue said on Monday that USDA didn’t have the legal authority to make such payments.
 
“Democrats have heard our call, and the calls from farm country, to not ignore rural America when funding the government,” said Senate Agriculture Committee Chairman Pat Roberts, R-Kan “This bipartisan deal is a step in the right direction to allow agriculture producers across America to continue feeding the country and the world, especially at a time when markets are unpredictable and prices are low.”
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Evolution of Beef Cattle Farming

Video: Evolution of Beef Cattle Farming

The Clear Conversations podcast took to the road for a special episode recorded in Nashville during CattleCon, bringing listeners straight into the heart of the cattle industry. Host Tracy Sellers welcomed rancher Steve Wooten of Beatty Canyon Ranch in Colorado for a wide-ranging discussion that blended family history and sustainability, particularly as it relates to the future of beef production.

Sustainability emerged as a central theme of the conversation, a word that Wooten acknowledges can mean very different things depending on who you ask. For him, sustainability starts with the soil. Healthy soil produces healthy grass, which supports efficient cattle capable of producing year after year with minimal external inputs. It’s an approach that equally considers vegetation, animal efficiency, and long-term profitability.

That philosophy aligned naturally with Wooten’s involvement in the U.S. Roundtable for Sustainable Beef, where he served as a representative for the Colorado Cattlemen’s Association. The roundtable brings together the entire beef supply chain—from producers to retailers—along with universities, NGOs, and allied industries. Its goal is not regulation, Wooten emphasized, but collaboration, shared learning, and continuous improvement.