Milk: Congress To Compromise on Prices
After close call, the agriculture committee reveals compromise so milk prices won't double in 2013, and we've included a list of current milk prices and specials at some Pikesville stores.
While Congress can't seem to agree on a compromise to avoid the "Fiscal Cliff," leadership of the agriculture committee announced a compromise on the farm bill Sunday.
The compromise will keep milk prices from skyrocketing to $6 or $8 a gallon.
In Pikesville, as of Monday, some of the prices range from $2.49 to $3.39 per gallon for most varieties:
| Trader Joe's |
Whole to skim (gallon) | $3.19 |
| Walgreen's | Assorted varieties (gallon) |
$2.49 |
| Giant | Stonyfield Farm, Lowfat 1 percent |
$3.39 |
| CVS stores | Garelick Farms Skim | $3.29 |
| Safeway | Lucerne Lactose Fat Free Milk | $2.99* |
*Sources: Clerk at Trader Joe's, 1809 Reisterstown Road, and Pikesville Patch Grocery Specials feature.
Senate Agriculture Committee Chairman Debbie Stabenow indicated that in addition to the one-year extension that has the backing of the committees, the House GOP is also considering two other extension bills — a one-month extension and an even smaller bill that would simply extend dairy policy that expires Jan. 1, reported the Associated Press on the NPR site.
Dairy subsidies under the 2008 farm bill expire on Monday and without a bill in place, prices paid by the government to farmers would revert back to higher 1949 levels, reported USA Today.
Wheat and other commodities could have be impacted later in 2013.
"It is not perfect—no compromise ever is—but it is my sincere hope that it will pass the House and Senate and be signed by the President by Jan. 1," Frank Lucas, R-Okla., chair of the House Agriculture Committee, said in a statement.
Pikesville Patch Editor Janet Metzner contributed to this report.
Steve
5:08 am on Wednesday, January 2, 2013
Why do humans's drink cows milk anyway? The stuff is full of nastiness...
Janet Metzner
10:08 am on Wednesday, January 2, 2013
Steve, I've been to a dairy in Texas, which opened my eyes to how milk's produced, at least at that business. However, I still drink it. Have always.
Steve
3:05 pm on Wednesday, January 2, 2013
I had to give up on it. I read an article on it one time and that was it for me. (same thing with Scrapple!).The Dairy producers have an interesting history. It's almost like a cabal in the way they can manipulate prices. One of my old roommates in college owns a dairy farm and he showed me how farm accounting works. Farmers always cry poor when in reality in some cases it can be much different. He gets payments of up to $40,000 from the government (Agrifare) to do nothing on only a portion of his property.