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N.D. (PNS) – While negotiations over the next farm bill in Congress may seem distant, North Dakota farmers hope the 2018 bill can make their work more sustainable.

The improving economy has helped the country dig out of the Great Recession, but it also means farmers are getting less for what they produce. 

Crop insurance is a way to help support farmers in situations like these, but Mark Watne, president of the North Dakota Farmers Union, says farmers can’t get full coverage for losses on things such as production costs. He compares it to only getting partial home insurance after a disaster.

Members of Congress already are holding listening sessions for next year’s bill. Watne says crop insurance is a very useful tool for farmers and that farmers do get help with premiums. However, he says the premium on the highest coverage you can get, which is 85 percent, is expensive and impractical for farmers. He hopes the next bill allows for full coverage for farmers.

Watne says as prices go down, so does coverage. If the expenses for production don’t come down as well, farmers are left in a hole. Farming also becomes harder to sustain. 

Watne says if the farm bill is considered solely based on budgetary concerns, a sustainable system might be hard to maintain, especially for family farmers.

Watne emphasizes that the agricultural programs in place are not expensive. They make up a little more than a quarter of one percent of the federal budget.