HR-1952-119
Referred to the Subcommittee on Conservation, Research, and Biotechnology.
Sponsored by Josh Riley (D-NY)
What it does
This bill would reauthorize National Institute of Food and Agriculture (NIFA) grants and fellowships for food and agriculture science education through fiscal year 2029. It would continue funding for three specific programs: the Higher Education Challenge Grants Program, the Agriculture in the Classroom Program, and the National Awards Program for Excellence in College and University Teaching in the Food and Agricultural Sciences.
Who benefits
College and university students pursuing food and agriculture degrees who receive scholarships or fellowships. Faculty and educators who receive grants or teaching awards. K-12 students and teachers who participate in Agriculture in the Classroom programs. Land-grant universities and agricultural colleges that administer grants. Rural communities that depend on a pipeline of trained agricultural professionals. The broader agricultural sector, which benefits from a trained workforce and ongoing research.
Who is hurt
Taxpayers who bear the cost of continued federal spending on these programs. Competing grant applicants in other scientific or educational fields who may face tighter discretionary funding competition. Organizations or institutions that might prefer these funds be redirected to other agricultural priorities, such as direct research or infrastructure. States that fund parallel agriculture education programs may face pressure to defer to federal programming.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that a stable pipeline of trained agricultural scientists and educators is essential to U.S. food security and global competitiveness, and that NIFA education programs have a documented track record of placing graduates in agricultural careers. They contend that reauthorization provides continuity for institutions that plan multi-year curricula and research programs around these grants, preventing disruptive funding gaps that would set back workforce development in a sector already facing an estimated shortage of tens of thousands of agricultural professionals annually.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that reauthorizing these programs without a rigorous review of their outcomes extends spending on initiatives whose effectiveness has not been independently verified against cost. They contend that agricultural education funding could be more efficiently delivered through state land-grant university systems or private sector partnerships, and that continued federal involvement in classroom curriculum — particularly through the Agriculture in the Classroom Program — raises questions about whether this is an appropriate federal role versus a state and local education responsibility under the Tenth Amendment.