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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: June 16, 2004
SCHUMER: MAJOR PROPOSAL UNVEILED TODAY COULD BRING NY DAIRY
FARMERS $93 MILLION
Schumer unveils new legislation that protects New York’s
dairy farmers from low prices; Reynolds and McHugh are sponsors
in the House
Schumer: New bipartisan proposal could send New York farmers $53
million more than they would receive under the MILC program and
save the federal government hundreds of millions annually
Cap Region farmers could get $5.4 million more than under the
MILC program; Central NY $6.7 million; Rochester/Finger Lakes $9.1
million; Hudson Valley $1.9 million; North Country $11.4 million;
Southern Tier $7.2 million; Western New York $11.8 million
US Senator Charles E. Schumer today unveiled a new proposal with
a bipartisan coalition in Congress including Reps. Tom Reynolds
and John McHugh that would send New York dairy farmers $53 million
more a year than the current MILC program. Schumer said today that
the new proposal would act like a regional dairy pact when milk
prices fall and would serve as an alternative to the current MILC
program that could boost the income of New York’s dairy farmers
by $93 million annually and save the federal government hundreds
of millions of dollars.
"The MILC program had good intentions and brought New York's
milk farmers millions of dollars, but it should have done more,"
Schumer said. "We need a new system that guarantees farmers
fair prices for their milk and that's just what this new program
would do.”
Since 2001, milk prices have fluctuated significantly on a monthly
basis, hitting a low of $12.96 per hundred weight of Class I Milk
in May 2003. The current price, $24.38 is up almost $6 from April
and analysis of prices since 2001 have varied on average $0.68 month
to month. For example, from December 2003 to January 2004, the price
dropped by $1.99 from $17.09 to $15.10, a drop of 12%. While prices
have been high of late, the milk market is extremely volatile and
large price swings that lead to dangerously low prices remain a
real threat to dairy farms across New York.
To protect New York's dairy farmers, Schumer will join Senator
Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania in introducing the National Dairy
Equity Act (NDEA) that will allow states to choose between continuing
to participate in the MILC program or joining regional marketing
areas that would ensure that farmers in the region received substantial
benefits to help them weather periods of low prices. The NDEA would
rely on price triggers; when the price of milk falls below the trigger
price, farmers would start to receive support in the form of payments
under the program.
Payments to dairy farmers in these areas would be funded through
assessments on processors that would then be redistributed through
a national central fund and supplemented with a very small percentage
of federal funds. Payments to producers would be equal to either
what the region paid into the central fund or 50% of the difference
between the trigger price and the price of class I milk in the region
- whichever is greater.
To illustrate the potential impact of the proposed program, Schumer
today released a new study
showing that New York’s dairy farmers from almost every county
in the state would receive on average $93 million annually or $53
million more than under the MILC program. Specifically, the study
found that:
• 755 dairy farmers in the Capital Region could receive $9.5
million annually – $5.4 million more than under the current
MILC program;
• 948 dairy farmers in Central New York could receive $11.7
million annually – $6.7 million more than under the current
MILC program;
• 861 dairy farmers in the Rochester/Finger Lakes area could
receive $15.8 million annually – $9.1 million more than under
the current MILC program;
• 267 dairy farmers in the Hudson Valley could receive $3.2
million annually – $1.9 million more than under the current
MILC program;
• 1,706 dairy farmers in the North Country could receive $20
million annually – $11.4 million more than under the current
MILC program;
• 1415 dairy farmers in the Southern Tier could receive $12.6
million annually – $7.2 million more than under the current
MILC program;
• 1144 dairy farmers in Western New York could receive $20.7
million annually – $11.8 million more than under the current
MILC program.
[For county-by-county breakdowns please see attached chart.]
"When it comes to the milk market, there are various conditions
we simply cannot control. We can, however, set up a program that
helps farmers weather the terrible financial risks caused by these
often stormy prices," Schumer said. "The regional dairy
pricing system that this new law would create will pay farmers a
fair price so they can make a living. It's something we can do and
it's something we should do. The key now will be getting support
for this program from the rest of the nation and we'll be fighting
to do just that."
In addition to improving the incomes of New York’s dairy
farmers, Schumer said that the NDEA would save the government hundreds
of millions of dollars per year – more than $30 million in
New York alone – if it is used instead of MILC because under
the NDEA milk processors pay the bulk of the fees paid to farmers
when prices are low, instead of the government footing the whole
cost.
Schumer, who has been dubbed “the Brooklyn Farmer,”
also co-sponsored a measure in May to protect local dairy farmers
from cheap foreign imports of MPC, a cheese substitute that cost
New York’s dairy farmers $96 million last year, by applying
a tariff of 71 to 98 cents per pound of MPC.
Please see attached study
for county-by-county impacts and more information.
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