The U.S. Agriculture Department would furlough up to one-third of its
workers if automatic spending cuts take effect at the end of the month,
the agency warned, with effects ranging from a two-week shutdown of
meat plants to summertime closure of hundreds of national forest
campgrounds. Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack
described the impact of the cuts, amounting to $2 billion, in a letter
that warned "these furloughs and other actions would severely disrupt
our ability to provide a broad range of public services." USDA released a copy of the letter on Tuesday. Vilsack
reiterated the prospect of "a nationwide shutdown of meat and poultry
plants during a furlough of (meat) inspection personnel" for "as much
as 15 days of lost production, costing over $10 billion in production
losses." Meat packers and processors cannot sell
beef, pork, lamb and poultry meat without the USDA inspection seal.
Inspection of meat for export or import also would stop during a
furlough, said USDA. The industry has appealed to USDA to find ways to
avoid a disruptive shutdown. Vilsack did not say
how soon furloughs might occur. An aide said she had no additional
information. Vilsack assured USDA employees in early February they
would get at least 30 days' notice if they were being furloughed. "Should
sequestration occur, we would likely need to implement furloughs
impacting about a third of our workforce, as well as other actions,"
Vilsack wrote in the letter to Democratic Senator Barbara Mikulski of
Maryland, head of the Senate Appropriations Committee. USDA has roughly 100,000 employees, down by 4,000 in two years. Up
to 600,000 low-income women and infants could be cut from the
so-called WIC program that provides supplemental food and nutrition
education if the budget cuts last for the rest of this fiscal year,
according to the letter. Current enrollment is nearly 9 million
pregnant women, new mothers and their children...more
Why would Vilsack highlight meat inspection over the WIC program? Because he knows the meat and livestock industry will have more influence with Republicans than those receiving food and nutrition education.
Other cuts, Vilsack said, could include:
-Closure
of 670 of the Forest Service's 19,000 recreation sites, such as
campgrounds, picnic areas and trailheads, in the national forests and
shorter hours at visitor centers. "This would largely occur during the
peak use seasons in spring and summer," said USDA. The Forest Service
would reduce its law enforcement force by 35 workers to 707 officers.
We could do with a little less picknicking on federal land and the reduction in law enforcement is an absolutely positive event.
But, oh horrors, the worst is yet to come:
-A work pause on the Census of Agriculture. "Data will become
incomplete and will not be statistically sound for publication," said
USDA.
Guess you'll have to figure out something else to do with the time you would have spent filling out those lovely gov't forms.
And all this hand-wringing is over a 1.2 percent cut in the budget. As I've posted before:
...according to Congressional Budget Office figures, the cuts amount to
only 1.2 percent of 2013 spending, which is enough to keep the
government running for about 4.5 days. More pointedly, the CBO estimates
that with the sequester in place, federal spending will be $3.553
trillion in 2013. With the $44 billion in sequester cuts removed,
federal spending would rise to $3.597 trillion, which includes a little
over $1 trillion in borrowed money, i.e., debt
Will be interesting to see how the Obama administration will implement the sequester. Will they protect the health and safety of the public or will they selectively cut in areas aimed at bringing the Republicans to their knees?
Issues of concern to people who live in the west: property rights, water rights, endangered species, livestock grazing, energy production, wilderness and western agriculture. Plus a few items on western history, western literature and the sport of rodeo... Frank DuBois served as the NM Secretary of Agriculture from 1988 to 2003. DuBois is a former legislative assistant to a U.S. Senator, a Deputy Assistant Secretary of Interior, and is the founder of the DuBois Rodeo Scholarship.
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So, Frank what is the other 98.5 percent of our budget?
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