The farm bill expired at midnight on Monday, leaving farmers and ranchers across the country guessing at what federal farm policy will look like when they next put their crops in the ground.
Of course, they鈥檙e used to uncertainty, as this is the second straight year Congress has let the farm bill expire. Last year, farmers were set adrift for three months before of older policy in January.
Last time, the upcoming presidential election seemed largely to blame for the congressional inaction. This year, the farm bill was caught up in the partisan bickering surrounding a long line of important issues from immigration to health care. Farmers are among the many looking warily at Washington DC.
鈥淥nce again we do not have a farm bill in place,鈥� said Iowa farmer Jeff Longnecker. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 know what鈥檚 going on there. It鈥檚 like they鈥檙e both just trying to see how long they can stretch this out and not come up with an answer.鈥�
It may be a while yet. Because farm policies are generally governed by the crop year, not the calendar, the previous farm bill programs apply to most crops already in the ground. The 鈥渄airy cliff鈥� 鈥� caused by an 鈥� would be among the first concrete effects of the lack of a farm bill, but it won鈥檛 be an issue until Jan. 1.
Farm policy actually has little to do with the stalled farm bill. In fact, legislators are mostly arguing over the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), commonly known as food stamps, which makes up about 80 percent of the bill鈥檚 spending.
Steady farm policy is helpful, if not vital, for farmers. They want to understand what kind of safety net will be available to them when they decide how, where and what to plant. And those decisions make or break farmers every year.
Both the and have passed versions of farm bill legislation. Eventually, a conference committee will have to hash out the differences in the legislation and hammer out a compromise for each house to pass. But thanks to continuing partisan bickering and a legislative bottleneck, don鈥檛 expect a new farm bill any time soon.
Harvest Public Media鈥檚 Amy Mayer contributed to this report.