当前位置: 当前位置:首页 > 焦点 > The Pork Industry Wants More Aid From Congress 正文

The Pork Industry Wants More Aid From Congress

2024-04-19 04:22:12 来源:魑魅罔两网 作者:娱乐 点击:486次

Pork industry experts say things could get a lot worse for American hog farmers without more immediate financial aid from the federal government.

Like many other sectors,巴西棋牌推流博主 pig farmers have been dealing with an unprecedented crisis due to the pandemic. Economists project that the US pork industry could face financial losses totaling around $5 billion or $37 per hog by the end of 2020.

The Pork Industry Wants More Aid From Congress

“This is by far the largest economic hit that I’ve ever seen this industry take… The average producer is going to be in dire straits,” Steve Meyer, an economist with Kerns and Associates, said Monday at a press briefing hosted by the National Pork Producers Council (NPPC).

The Pork Industry Wants More Aid From Congress

According to Meyer, there are roughly 1.1 million hogs that have not been sent to slaughter since June 1. That number is expected to grow to 2.5 million, he said, by the end of the year.

The Pork Industry Wants More Aid From Congress

Disruption to the meat industry’s supply chains began in April as a number of meatpacking plants across the country shut down due to COVID-19 outbreaks among workers. For some, it was close to a month before they resumed operations after President Donald Trump signed an executive order compelling the facilities to stay open as “critical infrastructure.” Closures for a number of weeks caused logjams of animals that forced many farmers to euthanize their livestock.

The reopened slaughterhouses have been operating at about 95 percent average capacity. This has exacerbated any previous backlogs and puts any hogs currently being raised for slaughter at risk of not being processed. Howard Roth, President of the NPPC and hog farmer in Wisconsin, said that the ongoing situation has caused tremendous financial and emotional stress for pig farmers.

“Without swift congressional action to address this dire situation, me and thousands of generational farm families could go out of business, forever changing the agricultural and economic landscape in our great country,” he said.

The NPPC said it specifically would like to see the Responding to Economic Losses and Investing in the Economic Future (RELIEF) for Producers Act passed, which it expressed initial support for earlier this month. The bill aims to compensate hog and poultry producers who are forced to euthanize or donate their animals that can’t be processed. Reimbursements under the act would be calculated for a 30-day period starting on the day of initial depopulation. However, farmers will only get paid for 85 percent of their losses based on the average national market value from March 1 to the time the bill is enacted. Each 30-day pay period after that, the value of their losses will be reduced by 10 percent.

Hog farmers have received at least $1.6 billion in direct payments through a federal aid program administered by the USDA called the Coronavirus Food Assistance Program. However, the NPPC says this is nowhere near enough to sustain the thousands of producers that have been affected by the pandemic.

Spokespeople for the NPPC did not identify a specific amount of financial aid they’d like allocated for pork farmers through the RELIEF act. Instead, they said they are hoping for “open ended support.”  The organization is working with a number of other agriculture groups to put pressure on the government. They added that nothing will fully fix this crisis, but they are hopeful that government help could save a number of producers from going out of business.

The organization’s staff said they hope Congress will fold the bill into its next COVID-19 relief package, and that it will be passed and sent to Trump to sign by early August. 

作者:探索
------分隔线----------------------------
头条新闻
图片新闻
新闻排行榜