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State Legislative update
Many pieces of legislation are moving! The Collaborative assisted with Local Food Purchase Assistance Lobby Day on March 5. LFPA food system nonprofit organizations held a briefing for legislators and staff on the impacts of the federal program, and the need for state funding to continue this important work after the federal administration cut the program in spring 2025 and Congress debates the Farm Bill.
The Collaborative also advocated for our priority bills at Agriculture Day on March 11. It was great to see many familiar faces in Boston on that day!
A refundable, up to $5,000 annual, tax credit for farm businesses who donate excess food to hunger relief nonprofits is moving forward! This policy has been introduced by Representative Hannah Kane and Senator Jo Comerford for several sessions, and was included in a Fiscal Year 2026 supplemental budget that was introduced by Governor Healey, passed the House in March, and is included in the Senate Ways and Means supplemental budget proposal that will be debated and passed on April 9. Remember, a conference committee will likely need to be formed to work out any differences between these budgets before they are sent back to the Governor for her signature, but the tax credit is moving forward! We will ask for our partners’ help in getting the word out about this credit when and if it becomes law.
On April 1, the Senate unanimously passed An Act Fostering Agricultural Resilience in Massachusetts! Many thanks to Senator Comerford for championing this bill for the past several sessions, you can listen to her speech on the floor here. Additional speeches in support were made by Senate Ways and Means Chair Rodrigues and Senate Committee on Agriculture and Fisheries Chair Fernandes (read his thoughts on the bill here!). The final amended bill includes a number of Collaborative priorities; codifying HIP and FSIG in law, vacant lots to farms bill, next generation farmer fund, agritourism definition, development of an agricultural land registry, calling for MEMA to include the food system in emergency planning, and more. Several amendments were adopted that added a ban on rollback taxes if PFAS is discovered on agricultural land, property tax relief for agricultural buildings, including DMF in MEMA’s food system planning efforts, creating a food tourism task force, and a study on agricultural schools. Note, the bill still needs to be passed by the House, and any changes between the House and Senate proposals will have to be resolved by a conference committee before the bill is sent to the Governor for her signature, so please follow the steps in the above call to action to support this bill! Read the Editorial Board of the Boston Globe in support of the bill here. |