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Oklahoma
State Senate For Immediate Release: August 24, 2006 Rabon Pleased With Call for Livestock Assistance Payments Sen. Jeff Rabon on Thursday applauded Gov. Brad Henry’s call for President Bush to make available funding for federal livestock assistance programs to aid Oklahoma farmers and ranchers facing financial hardships as a result of drought conditions. In an August 2 letter to Oklahoma’s Congressional delegation and Governor Brad Henry, Rabon requested the program be funded in order to provide immediate aid to farmers and producers in all 77 counties. A disaster declaration authorized by USDA Secretary Mike Johanns has made available loans to Oklahoma farmers, but additional relief is necessary to assist farmers, who in many cases have lost entire crops and cannot meet the increased costs of feed and hay to compensate for parched grazing lands, Rabon said. “I’m pleased the Governor has joined the effort to make this program available to our farmers who cannot afford further delay,” said Rabon, D-Hugo. “We must do everything we can to inform leaders in Washington of the dire conditions faced by Oklahoma farmers and ranchers.” Rabon explained the Agricultural Assistance
Act of 2003 made livestock assistance payments available to
farmers in drought stricken areas. In 2005, Rabon noted, over
90 percent of farmers and ranchers in Wyoming had received
livestock assistance payments for grazing losses suffered
through droughts in 2003 and 2004. Heightening national awareness of the dire conditions facing the state, Rabon said, will help result in prompt action from Congress. “I encourage all Oklahomans, particularly
farmers and ranchers, to call upon our Congressmen and Senators
and urge them to take a leadership role on this issue,”
Rabon said. “We cannot allow Congress to ignore the
conditions we currently face, and we must continue to demand
that this program be adequately funded. Cattle production
in western Oklahoma represents one of the largest industries
in the entire region, and at the current rate, many operations
are being placed in jeopardy without sufficient assistance
from the federal government.” |