(Ocotber 21, 1999)
Producers desperately needing $8.7 billion
in emergency aid have waited more than a week for the president's signature
on the aid legislation that his spokesmen have said the president will
sign -- although they will not say when. House Agriculture Committee
Chairman Larry Combest (R-TX) noted that producers could have been halfway
toward receiving promised aid by now. The president's 8-day delay now adds
to the 14 days that USDA is expected to take to get checks to producers
after the president's signature on the bill. Congress immediately
delivered the legislation to the White House on the evening of its final
passage, October 13.
"If the president had signed the bill soon after it came to him, farmers would be getting their checks next week," said Combest. "Indications all along from the U.S. Secretary of Agriculture, and from the president's spokesmen indicate he has made the decision to sign the farm relief bill, yet the president makes farmers wait. I think that producers and Congress have been more than patient."
USDA has indicated it needs two weeks
to process checks that will get $5.5 billion of the aid delivered quickly
through the customary transition payment formula, which is already calculated
for each farmer. Congress insisted on the transition payment method
of delivering a large portion of the aid, in order to prevent USDA from
repeating last year's 8-month delay of releasing
payments in June 1999 that were authorized by Congress in October 1998.