- Heineman Calling On Congress To Block EPA
- Modern Marvels TV showcases "Beans"
- Pathfinder Reservoir Getting A Face Lift This Year
- House Ag Discusses Benefits of Trade with Cuba
- Vilsack makes appointments to Beef Board
- DOJ & USDA hold workshop on competition in Iowa
- NCBA Commends Senators for beef trade resolution
- Gov. Heineman Calls on Congress to Stop EPA Regulation
- Senators Want Japanese Restriction on Beef Lifted
- NAWG President McReynolds Testifies on Cuba trade
- Current Cuban Embargo Works Against Growers
- Kansas Farm Bureau "Insight"
- Grassley Reacts to President’s Trade Movement
- NAFEC President Testifies
- Nebraska Grain Sorghum Board Meeting Scheduled
- USGC Announces International Conference
- President Forms Export Promotion Cabinet
- NBB Hails Senate Passage of Biodiesel Tax Incentive
- Visioning the future of soybeans
- Leopold Center celebrates neighbors
- U.S. Soybean Federation Endorses New Plan
- FFA Advisors of the Year honored by Farm Bureau
- Registration open for Corn Untilization Conference
- Competition and Regulatory Workshop Set
- USDA Office of Environmental Markets Moving Forward
- Cattlemen’s Beef Board Appointments Announced
- Pork Board Sets New Vision for Industry
- AVMA Questions Dropping Animal ID Program
- R-CALF: Another Canadian BSE Case
- Tainted HVP Forces More Recalls
- Bertrand feedlot ordered to pay fine for discharge
- NACD Testifies on Importance of Technology
- NFU Participates in Technology Hearing
- Subcommittee Reviews USDA’s IT Systems
- ASA Looks for Quick Final Agreement on bill
- Tax Extenders Bill Passes Senate
On July 3, 2008, a
USDA, in its Oct. 5, 2009, status submission to the court , reported that more than 4,800 pages of comments were received and that those comments are currently in “intra-departmental clearance,” and afterward will be submitted to the Office of Management and Budget (OMB). The agency estimates OMB will finish its review no later than Jan. 5, 2010, the date USDA’s next status report to the court is due.
On Nov. 17, 2009, R-CALF USA and 39 other groups sent a letter to Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack to express their serious concerns about the agency’s status submission.
One such concern is that USDA says it is preparing a docket to initiate rulemaking that would comprehensively amend the BSE regulations, and the criteria it will propose “would be closely aligned with those of the World Organization for Animal Health” (OIE). This new proposed rule is expected to be published in the Federal Register for comment late this year or early in 2010, according to USDA. The 40-member coalition states that such alignment with weaker OIE standards would not achieve the agency’s congressional mandate to protect against the introduction and spread of animal diseases, “particularly from such a pernicious animal disease as BSE that is invariably fatal and that also afflict humans.”
In its letter to Vilsack, the group points out that he has inherited the weakest, most ineffective and liberal BSE import policies when compared to every other major beef-consuming market in the world, and that as past Senators, President Obama and Vice President Biden – as parties to a Senate Resolution of Disapproval declaring that USDA’s OTM Rule shall have no force or effect – had objected to the very rules that exist now.
In fact, at the time when the Resolution of Disapproval passed, only four cases of BSE had been detected in Canadian-born cattle, and no post-feed ban BSE cases had been detected. Since then, 17 cases of BSE have been discovered in Canadian-born cattle. Eleven of these 17 BSE-infected cattle were born after Canada’s 1997 feed ban, and 10 of these 11 infected post-feed ban cattle were eligible, under USDA’s current rules, for export to the United States because they were born after March 1, 1999.
The letter states in part: “We respectfully request that you promulgate BSE rules that restore for
Additionally, the group points out that: “The proper policy is to bring
“Current trade policy is losing support, in large part, because food and product safety standards are negated by government efforts to facilitate cross-border trade at all costs, and this trade-trumping-safety policy problem includes, but also goes beyond, cattle and beef,” said
National organizations that signed on to the letter include: American Grassfed Association; Coalition for a Prosperous America; Consumer Federation of America; CJD (Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease) Foundation; Farm and Ranch Freedom Alliance; Food & Water Watch; Freedom21, Inc.; International Texas Longhorn Association; National Association of Farm Animal Welfare; National Farmers Union; Organic Consumers Association; Organization for Competitive Markets;
State, regional and county organizations that signed on to the letter include: Buckeye Quality Beef Association (Ohio); Cattle Producers of Washington; Citizens for Private Property Rights, Missouri; Colorado Independent CattleGrower's Association; Independent Cattlemen of Nebraska; Independent Beef Association of North Dakota; Independent Cattlemen of Wyoming; Kansas Cattlemen’s Association; Kansas Farmers Union; Mississippi Livestock Markets Association; Missouri Farmers Union; Nebraska Farmers Union; Nevada Live Stock Association; New England Farmers Union; Northeast Organic Farming Association/Massachusetts Chapter, Inc.; Ohio Farmers Union; Oregon Livestock Producers Association; Ozarks Property Rights Congress, Missouri; PCC Natural Markets (Puget Consumers Co-Op); SmallHolders of Massachusetts; South Dakota Farmers Union; South Dakota Stockgrowers Association; Spokane County Cattlemen, Washington; and, the Stevens County Cattlemen, Washington.
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