April 19, 2026
Grounded in Idaho Soil, Guarding Idaho Sovereignty
A farm girl’s case for supporting ag while pushing back on federal strings that threaten our water and our freedom.
By: Idaho Dist. 24 State Senator Glenneda Zuiderveld
“Have Federal Strings Quietly Changed Who Really Controls Idaho Agriculture?”

In counties like Twin Falls, Gooding, and Camas, agriculture isn’t just an industry—it’s the backbone of family life, main street businesses, and our entire local culture. A recent University of Idaho report estimates that agriculture now drives about $44.5 billion in annual sales and accounts for roughly 17.2% of Idaho’s total economic output. One in nine Idaho jobs is tied to this work. That is something to respect and protect, not attack.
At the same time, a growing share of what happens on Idaho farms and dairies is influenced by decisions made in Washington, D.C.—often through federal subsidies, crop insurance support, and conservation programs that many operations depend on to manage risk. Every one of those programs comes with paperwork, eligibility rules, and conservation or compliance requirements. That raises a fair question for anyone who cares about both agriculture and Idaho sovereignty:
Are we strengthening Idaho agriculture’s future, or slowly trading local control, for water, land use, and production decisions, for federal leverage that comes with the money?
This isn’t about shaming farmers. It’s about asking whether the way we structure federal programs today truly serves Idaho’s long‑term interests in water, land, and local decision‑making.
How Much Federal Money Are We Talking About?
Over the past few decades, federal farm programs have become a core part of the financial landscape in farm country, including right here in Idaho. Public data show billions flowing into commodity programs, crop insurance premium support, and conservation contracts across the state since the mid‑1990s. While precise totals vary by category and year, the basic picture is clear: federal dollars are a major player in Idaho agriculture’s balance sheet.
A few key realities:
- Idaho’s agricultural economy is large and growing, with recent analysis placing its economic contribution at approximately $44.5 billion and about 17.2% of the state’s total output as of 2024 data.
- Those dollars are supported in part by federal risk‑management programs—subsidized crop insurance, commodity price supports, and conservation incentives that help smooth out droughts, price swings, and disasters.
- Nationwide, a substantial share of subsidy dollars is concentrated in a relatively small slice of operations, and that general pattern appears here too: larger, more capital‑intensive operations tend to capture a bigger portion of federal support compared with smaller family farms.
In places like Twin Falls, Gooding, and Camas Counties, where dairies, cattle, and row crops dominate the federal presence is not theoretical. It shows up in insurance bills, in conservation contracts, and in the compliance visits and paperwork that come with them year after year.
That doesn’t make those programs “bad,” but it does mean they deserve scrutiny—especially when we talk about water, aquifers, and who is really making the rules for Idaho land and producers.
Why Farmers Use These Programs
To be clear: most Idaho producers who use federal programs are not “selling out.” They are trying to survive and compete in an unpredictable global market. Federal farm programs offer some real benefits:
- Risk protection – Subsidized crop insurance can be the difference between surviving a drought or a market collapse and going under. In a state where weather and water availability are never guaranteed, that risk‑sharing can keep families on the land.
- Income stability – Price‑based programs and disaster assistance help stabilize revenue when commodity prices fall or when disaster strikes, which can keep lenders, employees, and suppliers whole in tight years.
- Conservation funding – Voluntary conservation programs can help pay for soil health practices, water‑use efficiency, and other improvements that many Idaho producers care deeply about, especially in areas facing aquifer and groundwater concerns.
- Rural economic stability – Because agriculture drives such a large share of Idaho’s economic activity and jobs, stabilizing farm income can also stabilize rural main streets, equipment dealers, and local tax bases.
Many farmers describe this as a partnership: they follow federal rules, and in exchange they gain some level of predictable support in a very unpredictable business. From their perspective, that’s not a handout; it’s a risk‑management tool.
The Strings Attached: Where Federal Leverage Comes In
Where my concern comes in is not about the existence of these programs, but about the strings and how they can quietly shift decision‑making away from Idaho and toward federal agencies.
Here are a few examples of how that leverage can work in practice:
- Conservation compliance rules – To stay eligible for certain subsidies and crop insurance premium support, producers must meet federal conservation standards on highly erodible lands and wetlands, documented through federal forms and overseen by NRCS and USDA. Those requirements can apply to all of a producer’s land, not just the acres directly benefitting from a particular payment.
- Eligibility and reporting rules – Producers must meet federal definitions of being “actively engaged in farming,” respect federal income caps and payment limits, and submit detailed acreage and production reports. One paperwork mistake can trigger penalties or loss of benefits, even when the error is unintentional.
- Multi‑year program contracts – Programs that pay for conservation or land‑use changes often lock producers into multi‑year commitments. Exiting early can mean repaying funds plus penalties, which is a powerful incentive to stay in line with federal expectations even if local conditions change.
For a dairy near Hansen or a ranch outside Twin Falls, this can mean that a missed deadline, a disputed wetland boundary, or a changed plan on water use leads to losing premium support or other payments for the year. When margins are tight, that kind of leverage matters.
Again, this is not an accusation that producers are doing anything wrong. It is an acknowledgment that federal dollars, by design, come with federal control mechanisms attached.
What This Means for Idaho Sovereignty and Water
At the state level, we’ve been working hard to assert that Idaho has primary jurisdiction over water, natural resources, agriculture, and land use. Legislation like House Bill 650 has advanced the principle that jurisdiction over matters arising within Idaho should be presumed to reside with the state, unless the federal government can clearly show constitutional authority to do otherwise. H650 explicitly emphasizes state jurisdiction over water and natural resources, agriculture, and land use.

That’s the direction many Idahoans want to go.
But federal farm and conservation programs operate on a different track. They don’t have to “take over” a state on paper; they simply attach conditions to money, and over time, producers, understandably, shape their choices to keep that money flowing. Congress and federal agencies set the rules in massive Farm Bills and regulatory handbooks, and states are often left reacting.
So here is the tension I’m raising:
- On one hand, Idaho is trying to assert and defend our sovereignty over water, land, and agriculture through state policy.
- On the other hand, the federal government continues to shape on‑the‑ground agricultural decisions through conditions attached to subsidies, insurance subsidies, and conservation programs.
We can say that participation is “voluntary,” and technically that’s true. But when entire business models and local economies are structured around these programs, the choice to opt out becomes less real and more theoretical.
As we debate new water projects, conservation initiatives, and federal grants, we need to ask: Do these dollars help us protect Idaho’s water and future, or do they hand more leverage to agencies in D.C. over how we use our land and water here at home?
This Is Not Anti‑Agriculture. It’s Pro‑Idaho.
Because I’ve raised these concerns, some have claimed I’m “anti‑agriculture” or somehow against farmers and dairymen. I reject that!

My concern is precisely because agriculture is so important to Idaho’s economy and communities.
Here’s where I stand:
- I support Idaho agriculture as a critical pillar of our economy and identity.
- I want Idaho producers, not federal agencies, to have the strongest voice over Idaho land and water.
- I worry that certain federal arrangements, especially those tied to water and long‑term land use, may undermine that over time.
- I will hesitate to approve new federal dollars, especially for projects that don’t clearly and measurably improve water security or respect local control.
Those are not anti‑farmer positions. They are pro‑Idaho positions, focused on long‑term sovereignty and resource stewardship.
An Open Question to Farmers and Dairymen
I don’t claim to have all the answers, and I know many producers see these programs very differently. That’s why I want to turn this back to you, especially if you work the ground, run a dairy, or ranch in counties like Twin Falls, Gooding, Camas, and beyond:
- Do you feel federal programs give you more stability than they cost you in flexibility and freedom?
- When it comes to water projects and conservation rules tied to federal dollars, do you feel Idaho producers and local boards are truly in the driver’s seat, or do you feel boxed in by federal terms?
- If Idaho pushed for reforms that reduced dependency on federal programs but increased local control over water and land, would you see that as a threat or an opportunity?
I’m asking these questions not to criticize agriculture, but to better understand how we protect both our producers and our state’s sovereignty in the long run.
Where Do We Go From Here?
Federal farm programs are not going away tomorrow. They’re deeply embedded in our markets, our lending systems, and our local economies. But as Idaho debates water projects, federal grants, and new state‑federal “partnerships,” we get to decide what kind of future we want.
We could choose to:
- Push for federal reforms that simplify programs, reduce leverage over local water and land decisions, and treat states like real partners, not subordinates.
- Strengthen Idaho laws that assert primary state jurisdiction over water, agriculture, and land use, and ensure our agencies don’t sign away that authority in pursuit of short‑term funding.
- Expand market‑based, locally driven approaches that help producers innovate, conserve water, and stay competitive without as many federal strings attached.
I’m willing to keep asking hard questions in the Legislature, even when it’s politically uncomfortable. But I don’t want to have this conversation about agriculture, I want to have it with you.
So here’s my question for you, as a reader and as an Idahoan:
Would you rather see Idaho agriculture move toward more independence, even if that means fewer federal dollars, or maintain the current system for the sake of short‑term stability?
I invite you to share your experiences and views in the comments or by reaching out directly. Your perspective matters, and it should shape how Idaho approaches both water policy and federal involvement in the years ahead.
Links to help you do your own research.
EWG Farm Subsidy Database (Primary Source for Payment Data)
• Twin Falls County Total Subsidies (1995–2024): $245+ million
• Gooding County Total Subsidies (1995–2024): $120+ million
• Camas County Total Subsidies (1995–2024): $29+ million
• Statewide Idaho Total Subsidies by County (1995–2024)
• Idaho Commodity Programs Overview (1995–2024)
• Idaho Conservation Programs Overview
Why I’m Asking for Your Trust
I’m running for another term in District 24 because this is home, and Idaho agriculture is my roots, not a talking point. My family has worked the ground, cared for cows, and lived the ups and downs of this industry for decades, and that experience is exactly why I will always question the motives of government when it puts strings on our land, our water, and our way of life.
I have never been interested in what is easy; I have always been driven by justice and by doing what is right, even when it means standing alone. I will keep fighting for Idahoans who have been here for generations and for those who just came because of the beauty, opportunity, and liberty we still enjoy. My goal is not to tell you I have integrity and principles, it is to show you, consistently, that I live by them.
You will not see me slander others to win your vote. If I earn your support, I want it to be because you trust that I will not compromise my principles, no matter the pressures from special interests in Boise or here locally. I will continue to expose corruption, insist on transparency, and uphold my oath to both the Idaho and U.S. Constitutions.
There’s a line in Braveheart that captures how I view public service: there is a difference between believing people exist to give you a position, and believing your position exists to give people freedom. I am asking for your vote so I can keep using this office to protect your freedom and I intend to go back and fight like it.

Let’s keep moving forward together, vote May 19th. I’d be honored to serve.
























