Video on the website with Feinstein promising if the Bill doesn't pass she'll tack it on to other Bills and it will come back again and again! They already passed 2 billion dollars!


Senator Feinstein Takes First Hand Look at Freeze Damage
KFSN By Jessica Peres

04/02/2007 - Senator Feinstein says the senate just passed a bill that would give $100 Million to farmworkers. But, because of it's ties to the Iraq war it likely won't be signed by the President, leaving farmworkers and packing houses without the financial relief they need.
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Senator Dianne Feinstein made the trip from Washington, D.C. to the South Valley to see first-hand the freeze damage to citrus crops.

A new assessment of the January freeze damage added $16M to the orange crop loss in Fresno County alone, bumping the total up to $128M. Overall damage to crops across California now totals more than $1.4B.

Senator Feinstein, (D), California, looked at damaged orange trees and she said seeing the damage in person really puts a face to the freeze disaster here in the Valley.

She spent most of the day here in Exeter, meeting with citrus farmers who've lost half of their crops, and touring the Lobue Citrus Packing Company. Feinstein said her visit was eye-opening. "What I learned is that you see the result of the frost. You know, back in Washington you're 3,000 miles away and you don't see it as it happens as well as you can see its happening here daily now."

Feinstein said she's proud that an agriculture disaster relief bill allowing for over $2B in crop loss compensation has passed in the senate.

Joel Nelson, Presiden, Citrus Mutual, says, "There's a shortfall there of about $800 million dollars...that's why your disaster bill is going to be so important to help out."

But the senator admitted that the bill is unlikely to be approved. The federal disaster funding is attached to a bill that also includes funding for the Iraq war and sets a deadline for bringing troops home.

Senator Feinstein says, "This one, because of the Iraq language, may well be vetoed by the president; but it will come back again and again."

If the president vetoes the bill, the senator says she will try to tack on federal freeze relief to another bill. Either way, getting federal money here to the Valley will take time.

Citrus farmer Stan Cosart lost half of his crop. He said he's not depending on aid from the federal government and is trying to get by on his own. Cosart said it was good for Senator Feinstein to see what citrus farmers here in the Valley are going through. He says, "The U.S. is so diversified its hard for them to grasp what's happening in a specific area."

After touring the packing houses and damaged orange groves, Senator Feinstein had a personal luncheon with several local ag leaders to hear their freeze damage stories first-hand.
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