Upper Peninsula Congressman Jack Bergman says that the House resolution 7790 designed to ease the baby formula shortage will do nothing to solve the problem.
The Watersmeet Republican says there is nothing in the resolution that specifies how the $28 million will be spent, and there is nothing in it to actually solve the problem. Bergman says it simply gives the FDA an extra $28 million, which he believes will actually go to FDA salaries and expense accounts.
Bergman noted that the FDA just got a $102 million budget increase two month ago, and he suggests the current shortage is due to the mismanagement and inaction of the Biden Administration.
The resolution passed, 231-192, without Bergman’s support. Bergman did vote for House Resolution 7791, which allows women to buy formula with their WIC benefits by waiving certain rules that had been in place. That passed, 414-9.
“Bureaucratic failures can only be solved by reform and oversight,” Bergman said, “not by giving bonus cash to the federal agency that helped cause the crisis in the first place. Congress can and must do better for American families.”
Congressman Bergman’s full statement:
“The formula shortage crisis is a direct result of mismanagement and inaction by the current Administration. Despite clear warning signs of upcoming infant formula shortages over the past several months, the Biden Administration was slow to respond, and the FDA failed to take significant action before it was already too late. That’s why I demanded answers from the FDA on what they’re doing to address the shortage earlier this month – asking the Administration exactly what actions they were taking to ensure the still-closed Abbott Nutrition factory would be able to quickly and safely return to production.
“Aimlessly throwing money at the problem – without putting guardrails in place so the money is actually used effectively – will do nothing to solve the shortage of infant formula. This is especially true given the fact the FDA already received a $102 million budget increase just two months ago.
“H.R. 7790 provides no specificity as to how the additional $28 million will be used to address the formula shortage and it takes no concrete steps to address the problem; this three-page bill simply put $28 million into the FDA’s salaries and expenses account. This money doesn’t redeploy excess stocks of formula at federal agencies; it doesn’t cut down regulatory barriers that hinder the production of formula; and it doesn’t temporarily lift tariffs for foreign-produced formula.
“Instead of pushing a feel-good, more-of-the-same, spending bill, Congress must focus on reforms that will actually address the crisis – both in the short and long term.
“Additionally, last night I voted in favor of the Access to Baby Formula Act of 2022, which provides flexibility so that low-income families, who account for about half of infant formula sales in the U.S, can continue purchasing safe infant formula during supply chain disruptions. Bureaucratic failures can only be solved by reform and oversight – not by giving bonus cash to the federal agency that helped cause the crisis in the first place. Congress can and must do better for American families.”
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