Texas 2011 - 82nd Regular

Texas House Bill HCR96 Latest Draft

Bill / Introduced Version

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                            82R10012 BPG-D
 By: Veasey H.C.R. No. 96


 CONCURRENT RESOLUTION
 WHEREAS, During the past few decades, obesity has increased
 dramatically in the United States, but the agricultural policies of
 the federal government continue to make calorie-dense,
 nutritionally deficient snack foods far less expensive than
 healthy, fresh produce; and
 WHEREAS, In the 1970s, the United States Department of
 Agriculture ended controls on corn, wheat, and soy production and
 replaced them with a policy that paid farmers to grow as much of
 these commodity crops as possible; corn subsidies made the
 synthetic sugar substitute high-fructose corn syrup cheap and
 abundant, and today, HFCS is virtually the only sweetener used in
 soft drinks and represents 40 percent of the non-calorie-free
 sweeteners added to foods in the United States; and
 WHEREAS, Because of subsidies, soft drinks containing HFCS
 are 24 percent cheaper today than in 1985; meanwhile, the price of
 fruits and vegetables has risen by nearly 40 percent; federal
 dietary guidelines recommend that fruits and vegetables represent
 one-third of dietary nutrients, but fruits and vegetables cost 100
 times more per calorie than HFCS, making it difficult for
 budget-conscious families to make nutritious choices; and
 WHEREAS, Consumption of HFCS has increased tenfold since
 1974; HFCS accounts for more than 80 percent of the 600 calories
 added to the diet of the average American in recent decades, and
 those additional calories, combined with sedentary lifestyles,
 have fueled an obesity epidemic that costs our nation an estimated
 $14 billion per year; since 1980, obesity rates in children have
 tripled, and an increasing number of children are afflicted with
 conditions previously associated with adulthood, such as Type II
 diabetes and high cholesterol; more than 70 percent of obese
 children will go on to become obese adults with increased risks of
 diabetes, heart disease, and certain cancers; and
 WHEREAS, Corn subsidies today total more than $8 billion a
 year, yet policies enacted through the 2008 Food, Conservation, and
 Energy Act, better known as the Farm Bill, discourage farmers from
 growing fruits and vegetables by excluding these crops from income
 support programs and penalizing farmers for harvesting fruits and
 vegetables on land receiving subsidies; subsidized commodity crops
 represent the majority of cropland harvested in the United States,
 and fruits, vegetables, and all other food crops together composed
 only six percent of all crop area harvested in 2009; and
 WHEREAS, It is incongruous and wasteful for health agencies
 to spend millions of dollars countering obesity while the USDA
 spends billions to subsidize production of a contributor to this
 epidemic; decreasing corn subsidies in order to support fruit and
 vegetable farmers would level the playing field and make healthy
 food more affordable while reducing the oversupply of high-fructose
 corn syrup; now, therefore, be it
 RESOLVED, That the 82nd Legislature of the State of Texas
 hereby urge the United States Congress to divert some of the
 subsidies currently used for corn production to the production of
 fruits and vegetables; and, be it further
 RESOLVED, That the Texas secretary of state forward official
 copies of this resolution to the president of the United States, to
 the president of the Senate and the speaker of the House of
 Representatives of the United States Congress, and to all the
 members of the Texas delegation to Congress with the request that
 this resolution be entered in the Congressional Record as a
 memorial to the Congress of the United States of America.