HR-8533-119
Referred to the House Committee on Agriculture.
Sponsored by Gabe Vasquez (D-NM)
What it does
This bill would expand USDA's authority to support farmer-to-farmer networks — groups of farmers who share information, mentorship, and technical assistance with each other. USDA would enter into cooperative agreements with eligible entities (nonprofits, tribal organizations, local governments, universities, states, and farmer networks themselves) to build these networks, connect farmers with mentors, and fund events and innovative activities. Funding would come from existing Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) conservation operations appropriations, and USDA would be required to prioritize historically underserved farmers, ranchers, and forest owners, as well as those in high-poverty areas.
Who benefits
Farmers, ranchers, and forest owners who are historically underserved or in high-poverty areas would receive prioritized access to peer learning and technical assistance. Beginning and small-scale farmers who lack access to traditional extension services would benefit from mentorship and network connections. Nonprofit organizations, tribal entities, universities, and local governments would gain access to USDA cooperative agreement funding. Farmers using non-conventional or alternative farming models and practices would receive more tailored technical support. Rural communities broadly may benefit from improved farm productivity and viability.
Who is hurt
Entities that currently receive NRCS conservation operations funding could face indirect competition for those dollars, since this program draws from existing appropriations rather than new funding. Farmers who do not qualify for prioritized status may receive less attention or resources relative to underserved groups. Traditional agricultural extension services and land-grant university programs could face reduced relevance or indirect funding competition if cooperative agreements shift resources toward farmer-led networks.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that peer-to-peer learning is one of the most effective and cost-efficient ways to transfer practical farming knowledge, particularly for farmers who distrust or lack access to government extension services. They contend that historically underserved farmers — including socially disadvantaged and beginning farmers — face documented gaps in technical assistance access, and that farmer-led networks have demonstrated success in improving adoption of conservation practices at lower cost than traditional top-down programs. Directing existing NRCS resources toward this model, they argue, improves the return on already-appropriated conservation dollars.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that redirecting existing NRCS conservation operations funding — without new appropriations — risks underfunding core conservation programs that already serve a broad base of farmers. They contend that prioritizing specific demographic and geographic categories may create an uneven distribution of federal resources, potentially disadvantaging farmers in non-high-poverty areas who also lack adequate technical support. Critics may also argue that the bill's broad delegation to USDA to define eligible entities, set reporting requirements, and determine prioritization criteria raises questions about accountability and whether program outcomes can be effectively measured.