HR-8472-119
Referred to the House Committee on Agriculture.
Sponsored by Don Bacon (R-NE)
What it does
This bill would direct the USDA Secretary to launch a pilot program, within one year of enactment, that creates a faster qualification and approval process for two types of farm ownership loans: direct loans issued by USDA and guaranteed loans handled by Preferred Certified Lenders. The pilot would explore streamlining internal assessment steps without waiving any substantive loan requirements — only timing requirements could be modified. The program would expire on September 30, 2031, and the Secretary would be required to submit annual reports to Congress on the program's results.
Who benefits
Farmers and ranchers applying for USDA farm ownership loans who would experience faster decisions. Beginning farmers and socially disadvantaged farmers who disproportionately rely on USDA direct loans because they lack access to conventional credit. Preferred Certified Lenders (typically agricultural banks and Farm Credit System institutions) that participate in the guaranteed loan program and would benefit from reduced administrative friction. Rural communities that depend on farm ownership turnover and new farm entry for local economic activity.
Who is hurt
Applicants who currently benefit from the existing deliberate review process — a faster process could mean less time to correct errors or provide additional documentation before a denial. Competing loan applicants who may face a more crowded pipeline if faster approvals increase application volume. USDA Farm Service Agency staff who may face increased workload pressure to meet expedited timelines. Taxpayers who bear the risk of any guaranteed loans that default, if streamlining reduces the thoroughness of creditworthiness review.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that USDA farm loan processing times are notoriously slow — sometimes stretching months past planting season deadlines — causing farmers to miss land purchase opportunities or face financial hardship while waiting. They contend that the pilot's strict rule of interpretation, which bars waiving any substantive requirement, ensures that credit quality is preserved while eliminating purely bureaucratic delays. The mandatory annual reporting requirement provides Congress with real data to evaluate whether the streamlined process maintains loan performance standards.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that USDA loan processing timelines exist for substantive reasons — thorough review of farm viability, environmental assessments, and borrower creditworthiness — and that pressure to expedite approvals may lead to corner-cutting in practice even if not in statute. They contend that the bill's language directing the Secretary to "consider streamlining" is vague enough to give USDA broad discretion over which assessments to abbreviate, potentially increasing default rates on taxpayer-backed loans. The 2031 sunset also means any negative consequences may not be fully visible before the program ends.