March 01, 2026

NASDA sets federal policy priorities

National Association of State Departments of Agriculture President and Maine Agriculture Commissioner Amanda Beal shares NASDA's 2026 policy priorities during the 2026 Winter Policy Conference.

WASHINGTON — The National Association of State Departments of Agriculture set its federal policy focus for 2026, prioritizing five main issues.

The organization will focus on agricultural labor reform, animal disease preparedness and traceability, the farm bill, pesticide regulations, and regional food procurement and distribution.

“These priorities are grounded in what works, what farmers need and what states know,” said NASDA President Amanda Beal. “We will work urgently to address the opportunities these policy priorities represent.”

The following are NASDA’s policy positions:

1. Agricultural labor reform — All segments of American agriculture are hindered by critical labor shortages, artificially high costs associated with the H-2A program and other regulatory barriers to a full and skilled agricultural workforce. NASDA is imploring Congress and federal agencies to establish an agricultural labor policy framework that provides a legal, reliable workforce and treats workers with respect.

2. Animal disease preparedness and traceability — State departments of agriculture, along with other federal and state partners, are responsible for tracking, responding and containing outbreaks of animal diseases in their states to protect the livestock industry and, more broadly, the U.S. food supply. NASDA’s policy positions advocate for establishing strong animal health programs that could save billions of dollars of losses in the future from economically devastating diseases.

3. Farm bill — The upcoming farm bill must be dedicated to supporting American agriculture and essential food and nutrition assistance programs. This bill shapes agricultural policy, supports farmers, ensures food security and promotes sustainable natural resource management.

4. Pesticide regulations — A predictable, enforceable, science- and risk-based pesticide regulatory framework is essential for maintaining agricultural productivity while minimizing adverse impacts on human health, the environment and endangered species. To this end, NASDA supports state primacy in the enforcement of pesticide activities under the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide and Rodenticide Act and calls on Congress for appropriate and sustained funding for state lead agencies as co-regulatory partners with the Environmental Protection Agency.

5. Regional food procurement and distribution — NASDA will advocate for policies that strengthen regional food systems through infrastructure investments, flexible state purchasing programs and expanded institutional procurement of local foods to support the viability of small- and medium-sized farms and nutritional outcomes.

Erica Quinlan

Erica Quinlan

Field Editor