Site icon Dakota News Network

Farm Bill 2.0 Provides Additional Certainty to American Cattle Producers

web-photo-template-onecms-1000-x-563-px-1782986

WASHINGTON (February 19, 2026) – House Agriculture Committee Chairman G.T. Thompson released the text of Farm Bill 2.0 (the Farm, Food, and National Security Act of 2026). The National Cattlemen’s Beef Association (NCBA) welcomes the provisions that strengthen the agriculture measures included in the One, Big, Beautiful Bill (OBBB).

“We appreciate Chairman Thompson’s leadership and diligent work to provide legislative answers to the ongoing needs of cattle producers,” said NCBA President and Virginia cattle producer Gene Copenhaver. “Chairman Thompson’s bill includes important provisions to streamline voluntary conservation programs, protect grazing as a land management tool, address the critical shortage of rural veterinarians, and establish an important pilot program to safely explore better options for direct-to-consumer sales of locally raised beef. We thank Chairman Thompson and members of the House Agriculture Committee for their dedicated work during this Farm Bill cycle.”

Farm Bill 2.0 significantly builds on the accomplishments secured by the beef industry in the OBBB that included expanded access to drought relief, depredation reimbursement, funding to protect the U.S. cattle herd from foreign animal diseases, and an increased estate tax exemption. These new provisions included in Farm Bill 2.0 will help ensure the success of cattle producers by:

“This bill is the culmination of the years-long Farm Bill process that addresses the needs of cattle producers which weren’t included in the reconciliation bill last year,” said Ethan Lane, NCBA Senior Vice President of Government Affairs. “Cattlemen and women are already seeing the benefits of the historic achievements included in the reconciliation bill, and NCBA members look forward to building on that progress by passing Farm Bill 2.0. We strongly urge the House and Senate to swiftly pass this bill to fill the remaining legislative gaps facing animal agriculture.”