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Thursday, July 17, 2008

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Wildlife concerns plant Ag plan in court

Cattle graze next to a forest in Bakersfield

The Agriculture Department wants to open up conservation land for grazing and hay production, a move environmental groups say could harm wildlife. Renita Jablonski reports.

Cattle graze next to a forest in Bakersfield, Calif. (David McNew/Getty Images)

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TEXT OF STORY

Scott Jagow: The high cost of feeding cattle is becoming a pretty steep burden for meat producers. That's why the Ag Department wants to allow grazing and hay production on farmland set aside for conservation.

Of course, environmental groups are saying hold on a second. A federal judge in Seattle will hear arguments about that today.

Renita Jablonski has more.


Renita Jablonski: The government pays farmers not to farm certain chunks of land. It's called the Conservation Reserve Program. The CRP helps protect wildlife like sage grouse.

The National Wildlife Federation says grouse could be hurt by an emergency program to allow grazing and hay production on CRP land. The Federation's Duane Hovorka says that's why his group sued the USDA.

Duane Hovorka: They need to do an environmental impact statement so they understand what the impacts of that decision are on 24 million acres of land across the country.

Danielle Quist at the American Farm Bureau Federation says cattle farmers will be the real victims if the injunction against the feed plan continues.

Danielle Quist: Commodity prices for feed are at an all-time high, hay is scarce and people need a little bit of assistance.

Under the USDA plan, ranchers would keep collecting subsidies in addition to any payoff from producing hay or allowing grazing.

I'm Renita Jablonski for Marketplace.

Comments

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  • By Jaye Payne

    From cincinnati, OH, 07/23/2008

    I feel the CRP program should remain in effect with no haying or grazing allowed. If the USDA wants to alleviate the burden of providing feed for cattle, they should seek funding from goverment to discount the cost of purchasing feed from alternate sources.That way they could win on both fronts;providing vanishing wildlife cover and a food supply, while also helping beef and dairy producers with subsidation on feed purchases of grain or pellets.

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