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Legislative/Regulatory Information
FEDERAL NEWS

September 2013

 

Federal Government Shutdown

 

On October 1, the federal government partially shut down following a lapse of appropriations from Congress. In order to fund the federal government, and because Congress has yet to pass a formally adopted budget in years, Congress has been passing short-term stopgap spending measures, known as continuing resolutions (CR). Congress failed to come to an agreement on September 30 and the most recent CR expired. Both chambers continue negotiations but continue to hold a series of back-and-forth votes which each respective Chamber rejects. The House has sent several CR’s to the Senate that contain funding solutions but also contain restrictions and defunding of the Affordable Care Act, which are non-starters with in the Senate and the White House. As of Wednesday, October 02, 2013, the House was considering a series of votes to partially fund the Veterans Administration, local funding for Washington, D.C. and also would open back up National Parks and Museums. We expect further resolution to be considered before week’s end.

 

As a result of the shutdown, many federal works have been furloughed but most of the federal agencies have seen little to no disruption in service to date. Although the USDA is furloughing a portion of their workforce, the Food Safety Inspection  Service and the Agricultural Marketing Service Programs are deemed as “essential” federal employees and will not be furloughed, thus continuing to offer those services to the industry.

 

 

Farm Bill Update

The House voted and passed the Nutrition Reform and Work Opportunity Act (H.R. 3102) by a slim vote of 217-210 on September. In what was a win for conservative Republicans, the measure cut’s the Supplemental Food Assistance Program (SNAP), commonly referred to as food stamps, by nearly $4 billion a year over the next 10 years. This equates to a 5 percent reduction to the nation’s main food assistance feeding program.

Also included into the bill is a 3 year authorization as opposed to the normal 5-year farm bill authorization and allows states to put broad new work requirements in place for many food stamp recipients and to test applicants for drugs. Lastly it would end government waivers that have allowed able-bodied adults without dependents to receive food stamps indefinitely.

The legislation is the latest effort by the House to finish work on a comprehensive farm bill before the September 30 deadline. A comprehensive farm bill, one which historically includes both farm programs and food stamps, was defeated on the House floor in June causing Republican leaders to split the farm bill in two and pass only a version that includes farm programs in July. H.R. 3102 only contains food stamp assistance and is the result of the leadership’s goal of deeper cuts.

While this latest vote is encouraging news, many deem these new food stamp cuts as a non-starter with the Senate. The House will need to hold one more procedural vote to allow both the farm and food stamp bills to go to a House-Senate conference together. As mentioned above, once bills get to conference, it remains a steep upheld battle to iron out the differences between the House and Senate versions as the Senate version cut about $4 billion over the same 10 year period and the Obama administration has already issued a veto threat against the House bill.

Healthcare

Employer Mandate Delayed

The Obama Administration announced on Tuesday, July 2 that implementation of the highly contentious "employer mandate" provisions of the Affordable Care Act will be delayed until 2015. As you may recall, the employer mandate calls for businesses with 50 or more full-time/full-time equivalent workers to provide affordable quality insurance to workers, or pay a $2,000 fine per employee.

 

This is temporary good news for frankly all employers who are scrambling to comply with healthcare reform's deadlines and staffing ratios. The Administration is still encouraging all employers to voluntarily begin implementing the employer mandate in 2014, however it will not be enforced with penalties until 2015. Please refer to the actual White House blog at www.whitehouse.gov/blog/2013/07/02/we-re-listening-businesses-about-health-care-law.

 

While this is a positive development, it is by no means the end of the Affordable Care Act, a.k.a. Obamacare, or its related provisions. Rather than a January 1, 2014 date for compliance, you now have until January 1, 2015. 

 

Bills Introduced to Change ACA’s Full-Time Definition

 

Similar legislation was introduced in both the US House of Representatives and the US Senate that would change the Affordable Care Act’s (ACA) full-time employee (FTE) definition from 30 hours/week to 40 hours/week. The House bill, H.R. 2575 has been introduced by Reps. Todd Young (R-IN), Mike Kelly (R-PA), Pete Olson (R-TX) and many others. The Senate bill, S.1188, similar but not a companion to the House legislation, was introduced a few weeks before and sponsored by Senators Susan Collins (R-ME) and Joe Donnelly (D-IN). Various industry groups have come out in the support of these bills and much optimism remains that we will see some movement on one or both of these pieces of legislation.

 

 

TRADE AND REGULATORY ISSUES

 

USDA Increases Fees for Voluntary Federal Dairy Grading

 

At the end of June, the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) released a final rule for a two-stage increase of the fees issued for voluntary federal dairy grading and inspections services. The first stage was a 10 percent increase that went into effect in August, and the second stage will see an additional 10 percent increase in February 2014. According to the USDA the fees are being raised to cover increasing costs associated with inspectors. See below for the changes in fees.

 

 

USDA Announces Sugar Tariff-Rate Quotas for Fiscal Year 2014

 

On September 13, the U.S. Department of Agriculture released the sugar-tariff-rate quotas (TRQ) for fiscal year 2014. The TRQ determines the amounts of raw, refined and specialty sugars that may be imported for domestic use, which also includes the manufacturing of sweetened dairy products like flavored milk and ice cream. For fiscal year 2014, the TRQ level for raw sugar remains at 1,231,497 short tons raw value (STRV), the minimum amount allowed under the World Trade Organization. Refined and specialty sugar TRQs are at 134,482 STRV, slightly higher than fiscal year 2013.

 

Removing Flavored Milk in Schools has Unintended Consequences

 

An impromptu study conducted in 51 elementary schools in California, Colorado and Illinois examined the impact of the school’s decision to eliminate or reduce access to flavored milk offered with school meals. The results showed that removing flavored milk for one to five days resulted in an average 37.4 percent decline in overall milk consumption. Additionally, the children purchased 26 percent less milk and threw away 11.4 percent more of the milk they actually purchased.

 

 

 (Federal issues are monitored in consultation with FMI, NGA, and IDFA)