ABOUT THE AUTHORS

Ken Cook

Ken Cook is president of Environmental Working Group, a public interest research and advocacy organization known for its Farm Subsidy Database. The author of dozens of articles, opinion pieces and reports on agricultural, public health and environmental topics, "[Cook's] fingerprints can be found on nearly two decades of U.S. farm law" (Omaha World Herald). Read more about Ken.

Craig Cox

Craig Cox is EWG Midwest Vice President. He Mulches from EWG's office in Ames, IA. Prior to EWG, Craig served as Executive Director of the Soil and Water Conservation Society and was Acting USDA Deputy Under-Secretary for Natural Resources and Environment, and Special Assistant to the Chief of USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service.

Michelle Perez

Michelle Perez is EWG's Senior Agriculture Analyst. She has a BA in Biology from Occidental, a Masters from the University of Maryland (UMD) and is finishing up a PhD in agricultural-environmental policy at UMD.

Don Carr

Don Carr is EWG's Press Secretary for agriculture and public lands issues. Prior to EWG, Don worked as a Communications Director for the DNC in his home state of South Dakota and on former Senate Leader Tom Daschle's 2004 reelection campaign.

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Are A Travesty »

Lochhead on Direct Payment Farm Subsidies

The SF Chronicle has stayed right on top of the farm bill soap opera all year long with hard hitting coverage on both the news and editorial sides. Here's the latest from Carolyn Lochhead ("New farm bill retains big crop subsidies").

Prominent Los Altos developer John Vidovich and various family members in the Sandridge Partnership of Sunnyvale were the nation's biggest recipients of automatic government payments to farmers last year, receiving more than $1 million, according to a new analysis of federal data by Environmental Working Group.

. . .The payments are heavily weighted to the biggest producers, with the top 10 percent getting two-thirds of the subsidies.

Ken Cook, president of Environmental Working Group, which opposes the subsidies, drew a contrast between the $1,064,134 payment to Sandridge Partners and the $600 economic stimulus payments now going out to taxpayers.

"Congress is about to be grotesquely generous to big, subsidized farms that are now enjoying unprecedented prosperity," Cook. said. The list of recipients for payments last year "makes clear the disturbing degree to which congressional leaders are catering to the powerful farm subsidy lobby at the expense of ordinary American taxpayers."

The payments will continue to go out automatically under a new $300 billion farm bill Congress has in the works, despite an 80 percent rise in grain prices over the past three years.

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