S-4660-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry.
Sponsored by Adam Schiff (D-CA)
What it does
This bill would appropriate $5 billion to the U.S. Department of Agriculture for fiscal year 2027 to make direct payments to producers of specialty crops — a category that includes fruits, vegetables, tree nuts, dried fruits, horticulture, and nursery crops. Payments would be made through the existing Assistance for Specialty Crop Farmers program announced in February 2026, or any substantially similar successor program, and would follow the terms set out in a January 2025 federal notice on marketing assistance for specialty crops. The funds would remain available until fully spent.
Who benefits
Specialty crop farmers — including growers of fruits, vegetables, tree nuts, dried fruits, and nursery/horticulture products — who would receive direct financial payments. Agricultural workers employed on specialty crop farms who may benefit from more financially stable employers. Rural communities economically dependent on specialty crop production. Input suppliers (seed, fertilizer, equipment) serving specialty crop operations. Consumers who may benefit indirectly if the payments help stabilize domestic specialty crop supply chains and prices.
Who is hurt
Taxpayers who bear the cost of the $5 billion appropriation. Commodity crop farmers (corn, soybeans, wheat) who do not qualify for this program and may view it as inequitable treatment. Imported specialty crop producers and the countries that export competing products, who may face a less favorable competitive environment. Deficit hawks and fiscal watchdogs who argue the spending adds to the federal debt. USDA administrative staff who would bear implementation burdens.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that specialty crop producers — who grow the fruits, vegetables, and nuts that make up a significant portion of the American diet — have faced compounding economic pressures from trade disruptions, extreme weather events, and rising input costs, and that targeted relief is necessary to prevent farm failures and supply chain gaps. They contend that specialty crops are already underserved by traditional farm safety net programs like crop insurance and commodity price supports, making direct payments a necessary corrective. The bill's use of an existing program framework also reduces administrative overhead and speeds delivery of aid.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that a $5 billion direct payment program bypasses the normal congressional appropriations and farm bill process, setting a precedent for large ad hoc agricultural subsidies that lack rigorous means-testing or accountability mechanisms. They contend that the bill delegates broad discretion to the Secretary of Agriculture to administer payments through a program defined largely by agency notices rather than statutory criteria, raising concerns about whether payment terms are sufficiently defined by Congress — a question courts may scrutinize more closely after Loper Bright v. Raimondo (2024) eliminated deference to agency interpretations. Critics also argue the funds disproportionately benefit large commercial operations rather than small family farms.
Constitutional context
Congress has broad authority to appropriate funds for agricultural programs under the Commerce Clause (Art. I, §8, cl. 3) and the Spending Clause (Art. I, §8, cl. 1). The bill delegates payment administration to the Secretary of Agriculture under the Commodity Credit Corporation Charter Act, which courts will now review with independent judgment under Loper Bright v. Raimondo (2024); if the statutory authority is ambiguous, agencies can no longer rely on deference to fill gaps.
Checks and balances
The legislative branch appropriates and sets program parameters; the executive branch (USDA/Secretary of Agriculture) gains spending authority and administrative discretion; judicial review of agency implementation is now more searching under Loper Bright, and Congress retains oversight authority through the appropriations process.
Historical precedent
Congress has previously enacted targeted agricultural relief through ad hoc appropriations, including the Market Facilitation Program (2018–2019), which provided approximately $28 billion in direct payments to farmers affected by trade disputes — a structurally similar mechanism of USDA-administered direct payments funded outside the standard farm bill process.