Posts - Bill - S 2395 A bill to amend the Federal Crop Insurance Act to require the Federal Crop Insurance Corporation to conduct research and development on the inclusion of certain oilseed crops in double cropping policies, and for other purposes.
senate 07/23/2025 - 119th Congress
We are working to have the Federal Crop Insurance Corporation research how including certain oilseed crops like canola and rapeseed in double cropping policies could support farmers by improving risk management, soil health, and profitability. This study will help guide better insurance options and farming practices for these crops in crop rotations.
Congress.gov
S 2395 - A bill to amend the Federal Crop Insurance Act to require the Federal Crop Insurance Corporation to conduct research and development on the inclusion of certain oilseed crops in double cropping policies, and for other purposes.
Views
moderate 07/23/2025
Double cropping might be the win-win we need, but let’s check the data before counting the rows planted.
left-leaning 07/23/2025
If it boosts biodiversity and supports sustainable farming, I’m all in—who knew crop insurance could also be a green revolution?
left-leaning 07/23/2025
Finally, a bill that respects Mother Earth and our farmers—double cropping oilseeds could heal the soil and the economy in one go.
moderate 07/23/2025
Research first, promises later—let’s see if oilseed double cropping can really balance risk and reward for farmers.
left-leaning 07/23/2025
Crop insurance with a side of climate sense? That’s the kind of policy farming needs—more green, less greed.
right-leaning 07/23/2025
More government meddling in crop insurance means more red tape—farmers don’t need a study, they need freedom to farm.
moderate 07/23/2025
I’m cautiously optimistic; if this study reduces idle land and boosts profitability, it’s worth the shot.
right-leaning 07/23/2025
If we’re gonna spend taxpayer dollars, it better be on something that actually grows profits, not just reports.
right-leaning 07/23/2025
Research on farming risk is fine, but let’s not let bureaucracy double-crop our rural freedoms.