The National
Grain and Feed Association (NGFA) commends the WRRDA conference committee for
completing work on this crucial legislation. This nation's inland waterways
system is indispensable in providing U.S. agriculture with an efficient and
cost-effective means for transporting agricultural products to overseas
markets, and for importing fertilizer and other essential farm inputs essential
for U.S. agricultural production. "The waterways really are the
gateway to how our nation helps feed the world," said NGFA President Randy
Gordon. "And recent rail service disruptions have magnified and
reinforced the importance of the United States having an "all-of-the-above"
transportation infrastructure policy that focuses on all modes - truck, rail,
barge and vessel."
NGFA in
particular commended the leadership of Transportation and Infrastructure
Committee Chairman Bill Shuster, R-Pa., Committee Ranking Member Nick J.
Rahall, D-W.Va., Water Resources and Environment Subcommittee Chairman Bob
Gibbs, R-Ohio, and Subcommittee Ranking Member Tim Bishop, D-N.Y., and Senate
Envir
onment and Public Works Chairman Barbara Boxer, D-Calf. and Ranking Member
David Vitter, R-La., for their work to complete this conference report and move
this important legislation one step closer to completion.
The NGFA
said the bill contains several key provisions important to agriculture,
including one that changes the funding mix for completing the long-delayed and
over-budget Olmstead lock-and-dam project on the Ohio River. Under the
new bill, the federal government would assume 85 percent of the cost of
completing the project, with funds from the Inland Waterways Trust Fund
(comprised of barge diesel fuel user fees) used to finance the remaining 15
percent. This change in the former 50:50 cost-share formula will free up
approximately $56 million a year in industry-paid user fees to fund much-needed
restoration to dilapidated locks on the Upper Mississippi and Illinois River
System. NGFA also pointed to reforms to the Harbor Maintenance Trust Fund
that will make more money available for port-dredging activities, as well as
numerous key reforms to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers' operations designed
to streamline its project-delivery process and promote fiscal
responsibility. NGFA said these improvements will help maintain U.S.
agricultural competitiveness in world markets and ensure U.S. farmers receive
needed crop inputs to produce grains, oilseeds and other agricultural
commodities
The NGFA said
it looks forward to working with both Houses of Congress to secure final
passage and send the legislation to the President to be signed into law.
The Global Miller
This blog is maintained by The Global Miller staff and is supported by the magazine GFMT which is published by Perendale Publishers Limited.
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