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House bill: Raises limit on Conservation Reserve Program from 24 million acres to 29 million acres. Kills the Conservation Stewardship Program and uses the savings to boost the Environmental Quality Incentives Program and fund other priorities inside and outside the conservation title. Removes livestock funding set-aside for EQIP. Increases EQIP funding from $1.75 billion in fiscal 2018 to $2 billion in FY19 and $3 billion by FY23. Cuts $800 million from the conservation title in order to fund other priorities. Senate bill: Increases CRP to 25 million acres. Cuts CSP enrollment cap from 10 million acres a year to 8.8 million annually. Reduces EQIP livestock set-aside from 60 percent to 50 percent. Funds EQIP at $1.47 billion in FY18 and $1.6 billion in FY23, House bill: Both bills make minor relatively minor changes. The House bill bars producers with revenue policies from also having ARC individual-level coverage. Eliminates funding for education, which is used in the Northeast. Senate bill: Authorizes incentives for adopting conservation practices, including cover crops. Makes hemp eligible for insurance. Provides new incentives to insurance agents to sell whole-farm policies. House bill: Eliminates the energy title, strips Rural Energy for America Program of mandatory funding. Senate bill: Retains energy title and mandates funding at existing levels by cutting subsidies for domestic cotton textile mills. House bill: Expands work requirements to adult SNAP recipients in their 50s and to parents of children above the age of 6. Eliminates broad-based categorical eligibility, essentially making people ineligible for SNAP if their income is 30 percent over the federal poverty rate, or $26,000 for a family of three. Some states make people ineligible up to twice the federal poverty level.
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