I’m speaking at the Aspen Ideas Festival: Health. I’ll be interviewed by Helena Bottemiller Evich of FoodFix from 9:00 to 9:50 a.m.. Topic: “Making sense of nutrition science.”
President Biden signed H.R. 2617, the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2023.
I’m interested in what the $1.7 trillion , 1600-page bill does for food issues. It mentions the word “food” 786 times. It mentions “agriculture” 213 times. Fortunately, most of this is in Division A. Even so, one longs for summaries. For whatever they are worth, here are a few I’ve collected.
Let me see if I can make some sense of this.
USDA highlights
FDA
The bill does some other things worth mentioning. It includes: funds to:
It takes a lot of expertise to analyze all of this. Here are two reactions.
Heritage Action: This omnibus package represents the very worst of Washington: back-room deals, $1.85 trillion dollar spending bills full of pet projects and partisan priorities, and an Establishment more interested in their own power than the wellbeing of the American people. The GOP must stand united in their opposition to this bill.
The Center on Budget and Policy Priorities: The biggest disappointment of the year-end bill by far is the failure to expand the Child Tax Credit. The American Rescue Plan’s expanded credit and other relief measures drove the child poverty rate to a record low of 5.2 percent in 2021. But with the expansion’s expiration, that record progress in reducing child poverty in 2021 has sharply reversed.
There are lots of other criticisms of this bill floating around, mainly having to do with what the Biden Administration asked for but did not get, and concerns about inadequate funding of FDA for food safety.
On this last point, let me again say that the perennially underfunded FDA gets its appropriations from agriculture committees, even though it is an agency of the public health service. Agriculture subcommittees could not care less about FDA. FDA needs a mandated home in Congress and much better support than it now gets.
Happy new year.
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