LEGISLATIVE
ACTION CENTER
ANLA
Lighthouse Program
(get up to date information regarding
current legislation and contact information for your
government representative)
Legislative
News
Update
through June 22, 2007
(Information
is reprinted from the July/August 2007 issue of Nursery
Notes and is compiled from the ANLA Legislative Update
and other industry sources.)
IMMIGRANTION RETURNS TO SENATE FLOOR
Republicans and Democrats reached an agreement June 15 to
resume debate over the comprehensive immigration bill (S.
1348). The bill had been pulled from the Senate floor following
a failed procedural vote on June 7. As part of the agreement
to resume debate, both parties agreed to add $4.4 billion
in guaranteed funding to the legislation to strengthen border
security, expand detention facilities, and strengthen worksite
enforcement. The legislation was slated to be taken up again
on the Senate floor as early as June 21.
The Bush Administration has pushed hard to have the bill
brought back. Cabinet Secretaries Chertoff (Homeland Security)
and Gutierrez (Commerce) have been most active. ANLA was
among a handful of groups invited to the White House to hear
President Bush make the case for reform.
ANLA has pushed Senate leaders to resume debate over the
measure and hopes that the Senate will quickly pass the bill.
The legislation includes meaningful H-2A and H-2B reforms,
as well as tighter border security, employee verification
provisions and a legalization process for currently undocumented
workers. Please continue to contact your Senators and encourage
them to quickly pass the measure.
FARM BILL PROPOSALS ADVANCE
Several House agriculture subcommittees have passed various
titles of the 2007 Farm Bill. To date, subcommittees have
passed portions of the Farm Bill related to specialty crops,
nutrition, crop insurance, conservation, energy, horticulture
and organic agriculture, rural development, livestock, dairy,
and poultry. The full committee will begin to take up the
various components of the farm bill this week, with the goal
of bringing a final bill to the House floor prior to the
August recess.
On June 8, the Horticulture and Organic Agriculture Subcommittee
passed parts of the farm bill that are important to the nursery
and floriculture industry. While the bill
authorizes funding for some programs important to our industry,
funding will not actually be secured for most of these programs
unless Congress provides funding through the annual appropriations
process. ANLA will continue to advocate for actual funding
for priority programs. The legislation would do the following:
- Amend the Tree Assistance Program so that nursery and Christmas
trees are eligible for compensation of up to $150,000.
- Shift from the Department of Homeland Security to USDA
the border inspectors tasked with keeping out foreign pests
and diseases.
- Authorize funding for the Clean Plant Network, which
would clear foreign germplasm of “high risk, high value” plant
material and provide clean planting stock to the industry.
- Create the Threat Identification and Mitigation Program
that would task APHIS to identify and take action against
emerging pest risks.
- Authorize funding for a grant program to provide technical
assistance to specialty crop growers for the development
and implementation of “certification systems based
on auditbased approaches, such as best management practices
or nursery pest risk management systems, to address plant
pests.”
During
subcommittee action on the various farm bill titles, almost
all controversial amendments were held for full committee
consideration. ANLA is closely monitoring potential amendments
that could impact the nursery and floricultural industry.
One potential amendment of concern is a bill (H.R.2401) introduced
by Rep. Joe Baca (D-CA) that would greatly expand pesticide
record keeping requirements for all pesticide applications.
The various titles of the farm bill acted on
to date can be found on the House Agriculture Committee’s
website at: http://agriculture.house.gov/inside/2007FarmBill.html.
The Senate Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry Committee
has yet to introduce its version of the farm bill, but Chairman
Harkin (D-IA) said he will soon introduce a measure.
EXPANSION OF THE CLEAN WATER ACT PROPOSED
Legislation
(H.R.2421) introduced by house transportation and infrastructure
chainman
Jim Oberstar (D-MN) would greatly
expand the reach of the Clean Water Act. The bill, which
has 160 cosponsors, would delete the word “navigable” from
the definition of “waters of the U.S.,” expanding
the regulatory authority of EPA and the Army Corps of Engineers
to virtually all public and private water bodies. This proposal
would potentially regulate almost every wet area in the nation.
The new definition would include farm and stock ponds and
an estimated 55 million acres of prior converted cropland.
The bill could affect production and management practices
near any of these new water bodies. Chairman Oberstar plans
to hold a hearing on the bill next month and mark it up in
committee in September. Senator Russ Feingold (D-WI) recently
introduced the same bill in the Senate with 17 cosponsors.
GREEN BUILDINGS’ BILL ADVANCE
The
Senate Environment and Public Works Committee recently
passed Green Buildings
Legislation. The “High performance
Green Building Act of 2007” (S.506) is intended to
improve the energy efficiency, indoor air quality and environmental
impact of federal buildings. The bill creates an Office of
High-Performance Green Buildings within the General Services
Administration. The Office would coordinate research and
development on ways for government buildings to become “green.” The
research shall include, among other things, studies on the
relationship between human health and indoor air quality,
lighting, maintenance, cleaning, and pest control activities.
Information will also be available to the public on the latest
developments in green building, including the technology,
studies, and best practices. The Act also provides $10 million
over five years for grants to states to help improve the
environmental and health impact of local schools on children.
In addition, the
House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform recently
passed legislation (H.R.2635) that would
require the federal government to freeze its carbon emissions
by 2010 and achieve zero emissions by 2050. The “Carbon-Neutral
Government Act of 2007” would also require all new
federal buildings and federal buildings undergoing major
renovations to be designed to reduce fossil fuel-generated
energy consumption (compared to a similar building built
in FY2003). New federal buildings would be required to achieve
Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) Silver
certification from the U.S. Green Buildings Council.
CONGRESSIONAL WATER CAUCUS FORMED
On
June 14, representatives Linder (R-GA), Costa (D-CA), Radanovich
(R-CA), Napolitano
(D-CA), and Stupak (D-MI) formed
the Congressional Water Caucus. The caucus is intended to “allow
Members of Congress committed to the goals of promoting dialogue
about our nation’s water issues to have a meaningful
educational venue and forum about how best to realize those
goals. The Congressional Water Caucus will aim to provide
timely scientific information and dialogue about water resources
and water use.” They also agreed to “The Twelve
Principles of Water Policy,” covering such issues as
water availability, drought planning, water efficiency and
technology, and federal, state, and local roles.
NEW REGULATIONS WEBSITE FOR AGRICULTURE
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has announced a
new website containing an easy look-up tool listing federal
environmental regulations that could potentially apply to
agriculture. The site can be found at epa.gov/agriculture/
llaw.html.
EPA AND THE ARMY CORPS ISSUE WETLANDS GUIDANCE
Responding to a recent supreme court decision limiting the
scope of the clean water act (CWA), EPA and the U.S. Army
Corps of engineers have proposed joint guidance for their
field offices clarifying when and where a person may need
to obtain a CWA Section 404 permit before conducting activities
in wetlands, tributaries, and other waters. Comments are
being sought and must be received on or
before December 5.
USDA
RESTRICTS CANADIAN NURSERY STOCK FOR ASH BORER
USDA-APHIS
published an interim rule on May 31 establishing regulations
to prohibit or restrict the importation of ash
nursery stock and other propagative plant material from Canada
to prevent the artificial spread of emerald ash borer (EAB).
APHIS is restricting or prohibiting EAB host material from
Canada, including nursery stock, plants, other propagative
plant material, ash logs, and wood with bark that cannot
be feasibly inspected, treated, or handled to prevent the
introduction of the pest
METHYL BROMIDE INVENTORY CONTIUES DOWNWARD TREND
The
methyl bromide inventory held by U.S. companies at the
end of 2006 continues
to shrink, according to EPA. The data
show a steady decline in the inventory since 2003, when the
Agency began collecting such information. A broad-spectrum
fumigant, methyl bromide is classified as an ozone-depleting
chemical and under an international treaty the United States
phased out new production and import of methyl bromide, except
for limited exemptions for users who have no technically
and economically feasible alternatives. The inventory held
by approximately 35 companies in the United States at the
end of 2006 shows a steady decline—approximately 16,422
metric tons in 2003, 12,994 metric tons in 2004, 9,974 metric
tons in 2005, and 7,671 metric tons in 2006.