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Policy Updates and Issue News June 2026

Agriculture and Food

Senate farm bill draft unveiledĀ 

Senate Ag Committee Chairman John Boozman (R-AR) this week released the long-awaited farm bill 2.0 discussion draft for consideration by his fellow senators. The bill touts boosting support for a wide array of agriculture producers, enhancing transparency of fertilizer markets and foreign land ownership, modernizing USDA loan limits, strengthening healthcare access in rural areas, and expanding support for rural communities. What’s not included in the discussion draft are the most contentious issues that created divisions as the House crafted its farm bill 2.0 version. These include restoring sharp cuts to the SNAP feeding program, a pesticide exemption from state pesticide laws, year-round E15 ethanol approval, and a provision to nullify state animal welfare laws like California’s Prop 12. The House passed its version of farm bill 2.0 earlier this Spring. The Senate needs to pass its version of the farm bill 2.0 in order to complete the comprehensive farm bill process, which began with the One Big Beautiful Bill Act last year. The last comprehensive farm bill was enacted in 2018.

New World Screwworm is here now

For several months, we’ve followed the screwworm infestation migrate from Central America through Mexico and close in on the U.S.-Mexico border. We also knew it would happen sooner rather than later. The New World Screwworm (NWS) has now crossed the border into the United States, with several cases confirmed in Texas and New Mexico. Screwworm was previously eradicated from the U.S. in the 1960s. While NWS is a critical threat to the health of livestock, wildlife, and pets, it is important to clarify that screwworm is a parasite, not a disease, and it poses no food safety concerns for consumers. The risk lies in the screwworm larvae’s harmful impact on an animal’s welfare.

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Screwworm is a flyĀ 

The NWS fly is about the size of a house fly. It has orange eyes, a metallic blue-green body, and three dark stripes along its back. It can travel on humans, vehicles, pets, livestock, and wildlife. The larvae feed on the living tissue of warm-blooded animals, entering through open wounds and burrowing into the flesh, causing severe wounds and animal suffering if not detected and treated quickly. The Food and Drug Administration has granted an Emergency Use Authorization for over-the-counter drugs to treat infestations in livestock and pets.

Now what?

America previously eradicated screwworm by developing sterile screwworm flies. Screwworm flies mate only once, so if the flies are infertile, no eggs are hatched and no larvae emerge. Even though the USDA began ratcheting up sterile fly production over the past year in anticipation of such an outbreak, supplies of sterile flies are still limited. USDA is developing methods to maximize the production of sterile male flies and using modeling to deploy existing flies. Construction of expanded production facilities has been in the works for the past year, which should begin coming online within the next year.

A boost for small meat plantsĀ 

The USDA has allotted $60 million in actions to better support small and very small meat and poultry processing facilities. These funds will go toward helping small plants improve customer service and responsiveness, make requirements easier to navigate, and reduce unnecessary regulatory burdens while still maintaining food safety. Increased support for small meat plants is a continuing priority for the National Grange.

Medical schools to teach nutrition... finally

Medical school curricula have been notoriously lacking in nutrition education for decades. Agriculture, food, and nutrition groups (including the National Grange) have been on a decades-long crusade to add nutrition courses to medical school requirements. Now, an additional group of 19 medical schools has agreed to require at least 40 hours of nutrition education or an equivalent, joining 54 others that have already made such commitments. The Departments of Health and Human Services and Education teamed up under the ā€œMaking America Healthy Againā€ banner to encourage this important change.

Are you kidding me?

We’ve seen massive cuts to the federal Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), which provides food assistance to low-income families. USDA said these cuts were necessary to weed out waste, fraud, and abuse, and for budgetary reasons. To stretch the remaining SNAP dollars, USDA initiated a pilot program in five states that barred SNAP recipients from using their SNAP benefits to buy soda, candy, and other non-essential, non-nutritious food items. Now, a federal judge has vacated those purchasing restrictions, ruling that USDA exceeded its legal authority and bypassed required public notice procedures. In response, Secretary of Agriculture Brooke Rollins said, ā€œSNAP is for food—not sugar bombs fueling obesity, diabetes, and skyrocketing healthcare costs for low-income families.ā€

Ag Workforce

Agriculture labor bill introduced

U.S. House Agriculture Committee Chairman Glenn ā€œGTā€ Thompson has introduced the Securing Agriculture’s Workforce Act. The legislation is based on a suite of bipartisan recommendations developed by the Agriculture Labor Working Group, comprised of seven Republicans and seven Democrats, in the last Congress. The working group hosted numerous roundtables with ag employers to identify shortcomings in the H-2A program and to target potential solutions. Despite the H-2A’s tremendous cost and burdensome administration to the producer, guest worker numbers under H-2A have risen from 100,000 in 2013 to almost 400,000 in 2023. This is due to a lack of domestic workers willing to perform many of the necessary agricultural jobs. The original H-2A program was designed for large operations that need large numbers of workers. The National Grange is disappointed the legislation did not address ag worker reform to meet the needs of small and mid-size operations that need a small number of workers. Grange had asked the Working Group and the Chairman to consider adopting the former Bracero guest-worker program, which was so successful for American agriculture from 1942 until 1964.

Health Care

National Grange president featured in op edĀ 

National Grange President Christine Hamp authored an op-ed in Washington’s DC Journal about a promising new breakthrough tool for early cancer detection. The Multi-Cancer Early Detection screening test (MCED) diagnoses dozens of cancer types with a simple blood draw at a physician’s office, community health center, or mobile clinic before symptoms appear. This test is especially important for rural communities that experience higher cancer incidence, later diagnoses, and higher mortality rates than urban areas. This reality comes with a cost that goes far beyond the diagnosis itself. It means long travel to distant treatment centers, extended time away from work, and an extraordinary burden placed on families and caregivers.

Medicare is authorized to cover MCED

Congress approved, and the President signed into law, the Nancy Gardner Sewell Medicare Multi-Cancer Early Detection Screening Coverage Act, which authorizes Medicare to cover early detection screening tests. The Grange was recently thanked by GRAIL CEO Josh Ofman for its efforts in helping MCED become law, in a letter to Chris Hamp and Burton Eller. Grail also presented the Grange a framed and President-signed copy of the law, PL 119-75.

Strong support for genetically targeted technologies

The National Grange joined Healthy Women and 19 patient groups to urge Congress to invest in technologies that could advance women’s health. To realize the full potential of genetically targeted technologies (GTTs), Congress must fund basic science discovery research and clinical testing, and pass legislation to promote continued investment in groundbreaking treatments for cardiovascular health, rare diseases, neurological conditions, and pediatric diseases.

Health and Human ServicesĀ solicitsĀ Grange inputĀ 

In early June, Burton Eller, National Grange Government Affairs Director, was invited to testify before the Vaccines and Related Biological Products Advisory Committee of HHS. The committee is charged with making recommendations on the selection of the 2026-2027 COVID-19 vaccine formula. Eller critiqued the abysmal state of health care in rural America as background and spoke in support of continued broad access to the most effective COVID vaccines. He also urged the committee to recommend the updated version of the COVID vaccine be made available at the same time as this year’s flu vaccine so that rural residents can access both options with their trip to their provider or pharmacy.

Transportation

Surface transportation billĀ passesĀ 

The Build America 250 Act has cleared the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee on a huge bipartisan vote of 66-2. The bill authorizes $50 billion over five years for the country’s ailing bridges. This represents the largest single investment ever in bridge repair and replacement. The Act also allows fees to be imposed on electric and plug-in hybrids to support the highway Trust Fund. Several amendments to the bill were accepted to limit train speeds when carrying certain chemicals, to require railroads to maintain real-time hazmat information, and to give states the option to allow six-axle vehicles to haul up to 91,000 pounds on federal interstates. The National Grange and the Ag Transportation Coalition are asking the House leadership to bring this legislation to a floor vote soon.

Of Interest

The good, the bad, and the necessityĀ ofĀ data centersĀ 

Walk into almost any state capitol, county governance, or local zoning meeting these days, and you might see a data center project on the agenda. You’ll encounter a vocal set of concerns: Too much water. Too much power. Too few permanent jobs. Too little benefit for the local community. Big warehouse-type buildings are ruining the viewscape. From zoning battles in rural counties to rate design battles at state utility commissions, the future of AI is being shaped. But the urgent need for data centers is already here. It’s a necessity we’re already depending upon. The buildout of America’s AI infrastructure is not a matter of when but a matter of how. Grange members are encouraged to become involved in deciding how their communities best accommodate data centers. See the op ed by National Grange intern Savannah Mangold on page 8.

Perspectives on Community

ā€œAlone we can do so little; together we can do so much.ā€Ā -Ā Helen Keller

 

ā€œEach of us mustĀ rededicateĀ ourselvesĀ to serving the common good. We are a community.Ā Our individual fates are linked;Ā our futures intertwined; andĀ if we act in that knowledgeĀ and in that spiritĀ together,Ā as the BibleĀ says: ā€œWe can move mountains.ā€Ā -Ā Jimmy Carter

 

ā€œNever doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed,Ā it’sĀ the only thing that ever has.ā€Ā -Ā Margaret Mead

 

ā€œWhat should young people do with their livesĀ today? Many things, obviously.Ā But the most daring thingĀ is to create stable communities in which the terrible disease of lonelinessĀ can be cured.ā€Ā -Ā KurtĀ VonnegutĀ