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Author Topic:   More Federal overreaching *cough*...I mean, "Change"
NosiS
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Posts: 145
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Registered: Apr 2009

posted March 22, 2009 11:11 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for NosiS     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
If I were a conspiracy theorist, I'd say this looks frighteningly ominous.


http://www.nytimes.com/2009/03/11/opinion/11hayes.html?_r=1&th&emc=th

Tag, We’re It
By SHANNON HAYES
Published: March 10, 2009

Warnerville, N.Y.

AT first glance, the plan by the federal Department of Agriculture to battle disease among farm animals is a technological marvel: we farmers tag every head of livestock in the country with ID chips and the department electronically tracks the animals’ whereabouts. If disease breaks out, the department can identify within 48 hours which animals are ill, where they are, and what other animals have been exposed.

At a time when diseases like mad cow and bird flu have made consumers worried about food safety, being able to quickly track down the cause of an outbreak seems like a good idea. Unfortunately, the plan, which is called the National Animal Identification System and is the subject of a House subcommittee hearing today, would end up rewarding the factory farms whose practices encourage disease while crippling small farms and the local food movement.

For factory farms, the costs of following the procedures for the system would be negligible. These operations already use computer technology, and under the system, swine and poultry that move through a production chain at the same time could be given a single number. On small, traditional farms like my family’s, each animal would require its own number. That means the cost of tracking 1,000 animals moving together through a factory system would be roughly equal to the expense that a small farmer would incur for tracking one animal.

These ID chips are estimated to cost $1.50 to $3 each, depending on the quantity purchased. A rudimentary machine to read the tags may be $100 to $200. It is expected that most reporting would have to be done online (requiring monthly Internet fees), then there would be the fee for the database subscription; together that would cost about $500 to $1,000 (conservatively) per year per premise. I estimate the combined cost for our farm at $10,000 annually — that’s 10 percent of our gross receipts.

Imagine the reporting nightmare we would face each May, when 100 ewes give birth to 200 lambs out on pasture, and then six weeks later, when those pastures are grazed off and the entire flock must be herded a mile up the road to a second farm that we rent.

Add to that the arrival every three weeks of 300 chicks, the three 500-pound sows that will each give birth to about 10 piglets out in the pastures twice per year (and that will attack anyone who comes near their babies more fiercely than a junkyard pit bull), then a batch of 100 baby turkeys, and the free-roaming laying hens. Additional tagging and record-keeping would be required for the geese and guinea fowl that nest somewhere behind the barn and in the hedgerows, occasionally visiting the neighbors’ farms, hatching broods of goslings and keets that run wild all summer long.

Each time one of those animals is sold or dies, or is trucked to a slaughterhouse, we would have to notify the Agriculture Department. And there would be penalties if we failed to account for a lamb quietly stolen by a coyote, and medical bills if we were injured when trying to come between a protective sow and her piglets so we could tag them.

For my family, the upshot would be more expenses and a lot more time swearing at the computer. The burden would be even worse for rural families that don’t farm full-time, but make ends meet by keeping a flock of chickens or a cow for milk. The cost of participating in the system would make backyard farming prohibitively expensive.

So who would gain if the identification system eventually becomes mandatory, as the Agriculture Department has hoped? It would help exporters by soothing the fears of foreign consumers who have shunned American beef. Other beneficiaries would include manufacturers of animal tracking systems that stand to garner hefty profits for tracking the hundreds of millions of this country’s farm animals. It would also give industrial agriculture a stamp of approval despite its use of antibiotics, confinement and unnatural feeding practices that increase the threat of disease.

At the same time, the system would hurt small pasture-based livestock farms like my family’s, even though our grazing practices and natural farming methods help thwart the spread of illnesses. And when small farms are full participants in a local food system, tracking a diseased animal doesn’t require an exorbitantly expensive national database.

Cheaper and more effective than an identification system would be a nationwide effort to train farmers and veterinarians about proper management, bio-security practices and disease recognition. But best of all would be prevention. To heighten our food security, we should limit industrial agriculture and stimulate the growth of small farms and backyard food production around the country.

The burden for a program that would safeguard agribusiness interests would be disproportionately shouldered by small farmers, rural families and consumers of locally produced food. Worse yet, that burden would force many rural Americans to lose our way of life.

Shannon Hayes, a farmer, is the author of “The Grassfed Gourmet Cookbook” and the forthcoming “Radical Homemakers.”

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26taurus
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posted March 22, 2009 11:23 AM           Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
*cues circus music*

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NosiS
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Posts: 145
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Registered: Apr 2009

posted March 22, 2009 11:55 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for NosiS     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Hey, T!

How are you doing?

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26taurus
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posted March 22, 2009 12:09 PM           Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Hi. I'm okay.

And how are you doing?

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Azalaksh
Knowflake

Posts: 982
From: New Brighton, MN, USA
Registered: Apr 2009

posted March 22, 2009 12:56 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Azalaksh     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
And tied in with NAIS, we have the abominable H.R. 875:
http://www.linda-goodman.com/ubb/Forum3/HTML/002322.html

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NosiS
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Posts: 145
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posted March 22, 2009 02:16 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for NosiS     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Thanks for the link, Zala.

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NosiS
Moderator

Posts: 145
From:
Registered: Apr 2009

posted March 22, 2009 02:20 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for NosiS     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Me?
Oh, the usual...
keepin' busy with school and work.

Lots of voluntary reading, too.
I just started Goethe's Theory of Colours and I'm psyched about it.

I'm glad to hear your okay.

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26taurus
unregistered
posted March 22, 2009 03:25 PM           Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote

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juniperb
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Posts: 856
From: Blue Star Kachina
Registered: Apr 2009

posted March 22, 2009 04:58 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for juniperb     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Thanks for the heads up NosiS.

YES Zala, get your voice heard on HR 875.

Here`s a link to do a survey and the entire bill, it`s sponsers and co-sponsers.

One of MI`s rep.`s co-sponsered it Mark Schauer (D) MI ....


http://www.govit.com/vote/congress.aspx?bill=2009-hr-875

Now, go give your reps an earfull

juni

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Azalaksh
Knowflake

Posts: 982
From: New Brighton, MN, USA
Registered: Apr 2009

posted March 22, 2009 05:51 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Azalaksh     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
juni ~

I've already sent handwritten letters to ALL the people on the list SunChild provided:

ACTION TO TAKE --

The FSMA is an extremely dangerous bill. We recommend a multi-pronged attack, as the more salvos we throw at the FSMA the better chance we have of killing this abomination.

Contact House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, via phone: (202) 225-0100, or
email: http://speaker.house.gov/contact/.


Contact the House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, via phone:
202.225..3130, or email: www.majorityleader.gov/email_and_rss/email_the_leader/.


Contact the House Republican Leader John Boehner, via phone: (202)
225-4000, fax: (202) 225-5117, or email: http://republicanleader.house.gov/Contact/.


On March 11th Congress will hold its first hearing in many years on
the National Animal Identification System (NAIS), conducted by the
Livestock, Dairy and Poultry Subcommittee. It is vitally important you
contact all the committees below.

Contact the Livestock, Dairy and Poultry Subcommittee members listed
below. If one of the Subcommittee members is from your state, call
that member.


Mike Rogers (R-AL)
Phone: 202-225-3261
Fax: 202-226-8485

Dennis Cardoza (D-CA)
Phone: 202-225-6131
Fax: 202-225-0819

Jim Costa (D-CA)
Phone: 202-225-3341
Fax: 202-225-9308

Joe Baca (D-CA)
Phone: 202-225-6161
Fax: 202-225-8671

Betsy Markey (D-CO)
Phone: 202-225-4676
Fax: 202-225-5870

David Scott (Chair), (D-GA)
Phone: 202-225-2939
Fax: 202-225-4628

Leonard Boswell (D-IA)
Phone: 202-225-3806
Fax: 202-225-5608

Steve King (R-IA)
Phone: 202-225-4426
Fax: 202-225-3193

Walt Minnick (D-ID)
Phone: 202-225-6611
Fax: 202-225-3029

Frank Kratovil, Jr. (D-MD)
Phone: 202-225-5311
Fax: 202-225-0254

Adrian Smith (R-NE)
Phone: 202-225-6435
Fax: 202-225-0207

Tim Holden (D-PA)
Phone: 202-225-5546
Fax: 202-226-0996

David P. Roe (R-TN)
Phone: 202-225-6356
Fax: 202-225-5714

K. Michael Conaway (R-TX)
Phone: 202-225-3605 or 866-882-381
Fax: 202-225-1783

Randy Neugebauer, Ranking Minority Member (R-TX)
Phone: 202-225-4005 or 888-763-1611
Fax: 202-225-9615

Bob Goodlatte (R-VA)
Phone: 202-225-5431
Fax: 202-225-9681

Steve Kagen (D-WI)
Phone: 202-225-5665
Fax: 202-225-5729

Contact your own Representative and ask him or her to approach the
Subcommittee member to urge them to oppose NAIS.

If you're not sure who represents you, click here: www.congress.org/

I wish this type of well-intentioned (?) "excessive zeal" would apply to various badly-needed reforms in OTHER areas of the federal government

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juniperb
Moderator

Posts: 856
From: Blue Star Kachina
Registered: Apr 2009

posted March 22, 2009 06:57 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for juniperb     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote

------------------
~
What we do for ourselves dies with us. What we do for others and the world is immortal"~

- George Eliot

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