
I am honored to be here with you today and look forward to getting a farm bill across the finish line.
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I am honored to be here with you today and look forward to getting a farm bill across the finish line.

The future of rural America depends on whether the next generation decides to continue operating their family farms and ranches.

There is no one more committed to leaving this world cleaner, healthier, and safer than we found it.

I do think has enormous potential but has fallen short of that potential in the rollout.

Thank you. Thank you all for your excellent testimony. Appreciate your being here.

We can actually absolutely do a better job of incentivizing positive outcomes through the Conservation Reserve Program.

We need solutions that fuel long-term economic development and provide multiple benefits like Senator Bennet's Healthy Watersheds and Healthy Communities Act.

I have a few remarks I will deliver prior to closing, and I yield myself such time as I may consume. Mr. Speaker, with respect to the comments made by my colleague from Missouri, there is certainly no confusion on our side of the aisle, no…

I'm particularly glad to see H.R. 8219 from my friend Rep. Tokuda on today's agenda, as I am a proud original cosponsor of the bill.

This is a five-alarm fire, and Washington needs to treat it that way.

Instead of a dust bowl, today's farmers and ranchers are dealing with a 1,200-year drought.

Only Congress can designate new wilderness, and while many have supported these designations throughout the country over the years...

The future of rural America depends on whether the next generation decides to continue operating their family farms and ranches.

In my mind, this is a perfect example of what we are trying to get to in the conversations that we are having.

Pat O'Toole is not an animal killer or a planet killer.

could you talk a little bit about what the producers in the Valley are beginning to think about the use of groundwater conservation easements

Instead of a dust bowl, today's farmers and ranchers are dealing with a 1,200-year drought.