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Products would go to U.S. food banks or sent overseas as aid Dairy farmers have been disposing of milk; hog farms may cull
One gallon jugs of skim and one-percent milk sit on display at a supermarket in Princeton, Illinois, U.S., on Tuesday, June 4, 2013. The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations will release its monthly food price index on June 6. The index, a measure of the monthly change in international prices of a basket of food commodities, consists of the average of five commodity group price indices including meat, dairy, grains, oil and sugar. Photographer: Daniel Acker/Bloomberg via Getty Images

The Trump administration would like to make purchases of milk and meat products as part of a $15.5 billion initial aid package to farmers rattled by the coronavirus, said Agriculture Secretary Sonny Perdue.

“We want to purchase as much of this milk, or other protein products, hams and pork products, and move them into where they can be utilized in our food banks, or possibly even into international humanitarian aid,” Perdue said in a Fox Business interview Wednesday.

Perdue said he also wants to include direct financial assistance to farmers in the bailout, which may be announced as soon as this week.

The combination of direct payments to farmers and bulk government purchases of commodities parallels the approach the Trump administration followed in its $28 billion agriculture trade bailout over the past two years. That aid included $1.2 billion in bulk purchases in the first year including pork, beef, dairy and fruits and vegetables and an additional $1.4 billion for such purchases the second year.

Many farm groups say they will need even more assistance to make it through the coronavirus pandemic. Hog farmers have asked the U.S. Department of Agriculture to purchase $1 billion in pork products, compared with $559 million in the first round of trade aid and $208 million in the second year. The National Pork Producers Council, which is also seeking direct payments to farmers, anticipates a $5 billion blow from the virus if hog prices stay at current depressed levels for the remainder of the year.

In addition to milk purchases, dairy farmers have urged the Trump administration to impose a temporary supply management program in which farmers would be paid for reducing milk production. Perdue didn’t address that request in the interview.

Read More: Slaughterhouses That Supply America’s Meat Are Starting to Close

The closure of restaurants, school cafeterias and other commercial food service operations has upended the market for agricultural products, particularly dairy, meat and produce. Food service is a disproportionate buyer of cheese, butter, meat and fresh fruits and vegetables. Dairy farmers are dumping as much as 8% of their milk, according to the Dairy Farmers of America cooperative.

A shutdown of several slaughterhouses because of virus outbreaks for employees of the facilities has further disrupted hog and cattle farmers’ ability to sell their livestock.

“When you have a slowdown in processing, which we’re working on to sustain as much as possible, then you have a backup in that,” Perdue said.

The secretary said he didn’t expect the shutdowns to cause any shortages of meat products on grocery shelves.

The coronavirus relief bill Congress passed last month includes $23.5 billion in aid for farmers. Speaking at a news conference last week, Trump said his administration will develop a program with at least $16 billion initially for farmers, ranchers and producers.

Farmers and rural communities are a critical part of Trump’s political base as he seeks re-election this year.

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There is no evidence that the milk poses a danger or that a live virus is present, the regulator has said.

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