Press Release
March 25, 2009
Lucas to Vilsack: Rethink Plan Forcing All Farmers
to Release Tax Records
Lucas says plan ignores the intent of the law
WASHINGTON – Today, Ranking Member Frank Lucas along with eight of his Republican colleagues
on the Agriculture committee sent a critical letter to Secretary of Agriculture, Tom Vilsack, asking him to
rethink USDA’s recent announcement that the department will require all farmers to sign a form, which
grants the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) the authority to provide income information to USDA for
verification purposes. Failure to comply with this new requirement will make the producer ineligible for
program benefits.
According to a recent release from USDA, this new requirement is in response to a U.S. Government
Accountability Office (GAO) report that was released in October 2008. In that report, GAO found that
between 2003 and 2006, there were 2,702 recipients of USDA program payments who exceeded income
eligibility guidelines. Roughly two million individuals receive USDA program payments each year.
The complete letter to Secretary Vilsack is included below:
March 25, 2009
The Honorable Thomas J. Vilsack
Secretary
The United States Department of Agriculture
1400 Independence Avenue, SW
Washington, DC 20250
Dear Secretary Vilsack:
We are writing to express our concern over your recent announcement in the federal register forcing all farmers to
allow USDA access to their tax records before they are eligible for payments authorized by law. This invasion of
privacy is clearly against Congressional intent.
Exacerbating our frustration is the short period during which farmers can comment on this announcement. We will
be surprised if farmers even get the word that this new obligation is imposed on them before the comment period is
closed on April 6, 2009.
Mr. Secretary, those of us responsible for the 2008 farm bill, from which you say this authority flows, did not anticipate farmers signing away their right to keep their tax information confidential while we debated section 1604(d)(1). If we wanted the IRS to share farmer tax information we would have explicitly said so. We did not.
We did offer a choice to producers. Congress allowed for a verification of income statement, prepared by a certified
public accountant or another third party acceptable to you, to be submitted every three years that confirms the
producer’s adjusted gross income which makes he or she eligible to receive payment.
By forcing every producer to give USDA the power to verify with the IRS information submitted by the farmer or rancher takes away this choice, unnecessarily invades privacy and contravenes the intent of Congress. We, of course, do not want ineligible producers receiving payments, but Congress provided an explicit mechanism to address the problem without involving the IRS.
We strongly request you reexamine this decision. Congress never intended such a blatant violation of privacy.
Sincerely,
Rep. Frank D. Lucas, Ranking Member, (OK-3)
Rep. Bob Goodlatte (VA-6)
Rep. Timothy V. Johnson (IL-15)
Rep. Sam Graves (MO-6)
Rep. Steve King (IA-5)
Rep. Randy Neugebauer (TX-19)
Rep. Jean Schmidt (OH-2)
Rep. Adrian Smith (NE-3)
Rep. Bob Latta (OH-5)
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