Friday, June 26, 2009
(703) 243-6111 ext. 356
E-Mail: CGalen@nmpf.org
NMPF
Calls For Temporary Expansion Of Dairy Price Support Program To Help Farmers
Bolstering
USDA Safety Net Program Will Help Improve Farm Prices At Critical Time
ARLINGTON, VA – The
National Milk Producers Federation today asked the U.S. Department of
Agriculture to boost its purchase prices for cheese and milk powder in order to
bolster the current rock-bottom milk prices that are threatening the livelihoods
of thousands of dairy farmers.
In a letter sent Friday to
Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack, NMPF requested that the USDA raise the
purchase price for cheese blocks from $1.13/lb. to $1.19; raise the purchase
price for barrel cheese from $1.10 to $1.16/lb.; and raise the purchase price
for nonfat dry milk powder from $0.80/lb. to $0.84. These price levels are
identical to those suggested by NMPF to Congress as it wrote the farm bill in
2007 and 2008. Higher product prices will translate into higher farm-level
prices, according to NMPF.
Under the Dairy Product Price
Support Program, the USDA serves as a buyer of last resort to help clear
commodity dairy markets during periods of exceptionally low farm-level prices.
The current price levels were written into the 2008 Farm Bill, passed by
Congress a year ago, but the USDA has the authority to increase those prices,
according to NMPF. The letter to Vilsack asks the USDA to temporarily
boost those purchase prices for a three-month period of July through September.
“Secretary Vilsack is
sensitive to the fact that farmers are desperate for any type of price relief,
as they are caught in the crushing vise of low prices and high input costs,”
said Jerry Kozak, President and CEO of NMPF. “Raising the price support
levels by a few pennies a pound will be a simple and effective way to offer some
assistance to farmers facing a very difficult summer.” Kozak calculates
that raising the price support levels for cheese and nonfat dry milk will hike
farmer income by $235 million this year.
Kozak said that USDA has
already taken several important steps to help farmers in 2009, including
liquidating 200 million pounds of surplus milk powder, reauthorizing the Dairy
Export Incentive Program in May, and expediting the payments under the Milk
Income Loss Contract program.
The NMPF letter also asked
USDA to authorize DEIP bonuses for the new fiscal year that begins July 1st,
which, if fully implemented, could help clear another 1.7 billion pounds of milk
from the U.S. market. The letter also reiterated NMPF’s intention to
maximize the use of its Cooperatives Working Together self-help program, which
is currently concluding its largest-ever reduction in surplus milk volume.
“As much as we’d like
there to be some silver bullet that will restore dairy farm profitability, there
is no simple solution to a problem tied to the poor health of the global
economy. But strengthening the price support safety net represents a
needed and quick fix to keep many farmers afloat at a time when the tide of red
ink continues to rise,” Kozak said.
The National Milk Producers Federation, based in Arlington,
VA, develops and carries out policies that advance the well being of dairy
producers and the cooperatives they own. The members of NMPF’s 31
cooperatives produce the majority of the U.S. milk supply, making NMPF the voice
of more than 40,000 dairy producers on Capitol Hill and with government
agencies.