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animal id editorial

big girl

New member
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Mar 28, 2006
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Location
middle of nowhere
March 28, 2006



Dear Editor,



Members of the South Dakota Stockgrowers Association are ranchers who make a living raising cattle – true experts in cattle-raising. We are circulating a petition to determine how many people statewide and nationwide oppose a mandatory national animal id program, as our members do.



Brand inspection areas such as Western South Dakota are not only capable of tracking our cattle, we are doing it already. Every day. We record movement of cattle every time they change ownership or travel outside of Western South Dakota. In fact, when Canada discovered their very first case of BSE in May of 2003, the Montana Department of Livestock contacted our chief brand inspector about some bulls that had been sold from Canada into Montana, and subsequently into South Dakota. The bulls were half brothers to the infected cow. Within about three hours, our chief brand inspector called the Montana department back with full details about the movements of each bull, all the way to slaughter. And Judy Martz, then the Governor of Montana, commended him with a personal letter of thanks. Brand inspection works.



Tattoos are another nearly permanent and very low-cost method of identification. Several states still require brucellosis tags and tattoos on breeding stock, and while S.D. is not one of those states, a good share of S.D. producers bangs vaccinate, tag and tattoo their breeding herd - yet another tracking system already in existence.



Producers from Colorado, Florida, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota, Montana, Missouri, Nebraska, New York, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Oregon, Tennessee, Texas, Washington, and all over South Dakota are now circulating petitions. Obviously they too believe the proposed id program brings with it more costs than benefits. Ranchers aren't asking for more animal id.



Sticking a tag in an animal's ear does not provide any sort of assurance of quality or animal health. Industry integrity and profitability all the way from the producer to the retailer, is the only thing that can provide that assurance. Contrary to the boasts made by supporters of the NAIS, tags can be cut out, lost and tampered with. A brand is forever.



I've yet to hear Japan request that the U.S. implement mandatory animal ID. Obviously USDA has now tainted our credibility with Japan by allowing shipment of bone-in beef. This had absolutely nothing to do with the presence or absence of a tag, and everything to do with a lackadaisical agency who is a watchdog only when it's convenient and politically acceptable to the multinational food companies. Foreign countries aren't asking for animal id, they want honest communication and respect.



Our organization has yet to talk to a U.S. consumer who would feel safer buying beef from a steer that lived its life with a computer chip in its ear. The proposed national animal id program is not intended to provide one shred of information to consumers. No farm, state or country of origin labeling information. Nothing. Consumers would still be unable to identify whether the hamburger in their grocery cart bearing that same old USDA stamp is a product of Canada, Japan, Mexico, Ecuador or all of the above. Consumers aren't asking for animal id.



Consumers have, however, teamed up with grassroots producers to lobby diligently for mandatory country of origin labeling, yet have been out-dollared and out-maneuvered by the meat packing giants and their pocket politicians.



The only supporters of an unnecessary mandatory animal identification program are the companies who stand to sell billions of dollars worth of equipment, USDA who wants a feather in their cap by deceptively claiming that they are somehow "managing disease" and the large meatpacking and retailing companies who want ever more information about the location, age and number of livestock worldwide to give them more control over the market and to further integrate the cattle and beef industries.



The meat and grocery industries, while lobbying for free trade agreements with developing countries who grow food in unsafe and unsanitary conditions, favor a burdensome mandatory animal id program for U.S. producers, but do not acknowledge the need to differentiate or even track imported food or livestock. It's not only a backward approach; it gives consumers a false sense of security while masking the real potential for disease problems – foreign food and animals raised in substandard conditions.



Until about three years ago, our federal government's policy was to prevent the introduction of foreign animal diseases. A very good policy with a remarkable record of success. Now USDA has done a 180 and decided that borders can be eliminated, if we can just "track animals" and "manage disease." If the USDA would protect our borders from unsafe imports of beef and cattle, the threat of a disease outbreak would substantially decline and we could once again prevent disease instead of managing it.



Please contact the Stockgrowers at 605-342-0429 or me at 605-344-2516 if you'd like to help us gather signatures.



Kenny Fox

Chairman, SDSGA Animal ID Committee

PO Box 37

Belvidere, SD 57521

605-344-2516
 
While tagging our yearlings with the Canadian cow license plates, or so we call them, one heifer jumped the fence, ran off, stumbled through a texas gate and has hurt, possible broken her ankle/fetlock.

If we didn't have to do this tagging, this might never have happened. So this will force me to now tag them at the time we brand the calves, and this will subsequently result in the loss of some of these tags before shipping as yearlings. All the costs are born by the rancher; yet the tagging system is supposed to be for the good of the people and food safety.

Yah, right! The tagging system is for tracking the use of chemicals and drugs used in agriculture. At a "quality control" seminar, the vet so much as said so. Her remarks were, that "it was of no use to organic producers"

These chemicals and drugs include what you inject, pour-on, or drench into the animal, as well as the chemicals you use to fertilize your crops, spray for weeds, dessicate in the fall - and so on. By having all the animals tagged, when they pull one out of the line and have it tested for the long list of chemicals used in agriculture - they will be able to track it back through the producers who raised it. Your records can be examined for what amounts and types of chemicals/drugs you used and the "chemical - pharmaceutical" companies can then adjust there formulas, and extend with-drawal periods if need be.

Keep spouting that BSE is infectious and you will never be free from the manipulation and control, imposed by government. BSE is the bio-accumulation of contaminants. At least when we stopped feeding cows-cows, we stopped recycling the contaminates.

Start doing your own research and quit leaving everything to the so-called experts. Alot of these experts know what is happening in the food industry (re: contamination by pollutants) and they will never allow that to be exposed because somebody, or some company, will then be liable for the damage caused.
 
I still dont understand how this tagging is going to make any real difference except for public relations and an added cost to producers.
 
I have to give an atta boy to Mr. Fox and the SDSGA-- Sometimes when I get reading all of Super Heros and MRJ's posts I forget about all the common sense South Dakotans there actually are :wink:

I hope all the Canadians (like Frenchie) that refused to believe me about the bull track down and kept questioning it read that part of the letter:

In fact, when Canada discovered their very first case of BSE in May of 2003, the Montana Department of Livestock contacted our chief brand inspector about some bulls that had been sold from Canada into Montana, and subsequently into South Dakota. The bulls were half brothers to the infected cow. Within about three hours, our chief brand inspector called the Montana department back with full details about the movements of each bull, all the way to slaughter. And Judy Martz, then the Governor of Montana, commended him with a personal letter of thanks. Brand inspection works.
 
kathy wrote;

=======================

Keep spouting that BSE is infectious and you will never be free from the manipulation and control, imposed by government. BSE is the bio-accumulation of contaminants. At least when we stopped feeding cows-cows, we stopped recycling the contaminates.

=======================


well, you got half of it right now anyway kathy :wink:


i.e. At least when we stopped feeding cows-cows, we stopped recycling the contaminates. ...

odd when you stop feeding these cattle TSE tainted ruminant protein, the drop in cases of BSE/TSE drops dramatically, where there is a proven active/passive bse/tse surveillance system with proper and most up to date BSE/TSE testing protocol, and where the ruminant to ruminant feed ban was well enforced, all of which North America does not have. even Dr. Paul Brown states this ;

These two cases (the latest was detected in an Alabama cow) present a
picture of the disease having been here for 10 years or so, since it is
thought that cows usually contract the disease from contaminated feed they
consume as calves. The concern is that humans can contract a fatal,
incurable, brain-wasting illness from consuming beef products contaminated
with the mad cow pathogen.

"The fact the Texas cow showed up fairly clearly implied the existence of
other undetected cases," Dr. Paul Brown, former medical director of the
National Institutes of Health's Laboratory for Central Nervous System
Studies and an expert on mad cow-like diseases, told United Press
International. "The question was, 'How many?' and we still can't answer
that."

Brown, who is preparing a scientific paper based on the latest two mad cow
cases to estimate the maximum number of infected cows that occurred in the
United States, said he has "absolutely no confidence in USDA tests before
one year ago" because of the agency's reluctance to retest the Texas cow
that initially tested positive.

USDA officials finally retested the cow and confirmed it was infected
seven months later, but only at the insistence of the agency's inspector
general.

"Everything they did on the Texas cow makes everything they did before
2005 suspect," Brown said.


snip...





http://www.upi.com/ConsumerHealthDaily/view.php?StoryID=20060315-055557-1284r





BUT fact is kathy, BSE/TSEs are infectious, kathy's metals and chemicals have proven not to be so to date, so we will keep on spouting that, and maybe kathy needs to do a little bit of her own research into infectious disease i.e. TSEs :lol: :lol: :lol: TSS
 
RoperAB said:
I still dont understand how this tagging is going to make any real difference except for public relations and an added cost to producers.

Roper, as Canadians we need to remember that 60% of our calves leave our border. We are a net exporting nation. Our trading partners were yelling that they wanted us to have an good traceback system in place, otherwise they would go elsewhere for their beef.

So sure, it was PR, but its totally necessary. We HAVE to be aware of our customers wants and desires, otherwise our markets will disappear. And like I was mentioning to other people who were against M-Age, we have to MARKET better than anyone else in the world. Its the only way we'll continue to have a livestock industry. Its not enough that we grow the best beef in the world, we also need to market it the best.

Hey OT, you managed to track down those 3 bulls. We traced down 400 and some animals in the same time frame. Whose system is better? :wink: Sorry couldn't resist. I got out of this thread in the ranch section, but now I feel totally safe being a pain in the bull session :lol:

Rod
 
Rod,has it right. We HAVE to be aware of our customers wants and desires, otherwise our markets will disappear. And like I was mentioning to other people who were against M-Age, we have to MARKET better than anyone else in the world.
 
Big girl, this letter has already been posted by Jinglebob. I responded to the many contradictions in this letter in that thread. Perhaps you should read them. I do not support "M"ID but I do understand the value of source verfication and consumers are willing to pay more for it.

Funny, I thought you "M" COOL proponents were saying that consumers had a right to know where their beef comes from? Isn't that a bit hypocritical?


~SH~
 
big girl,

Read my response in the "Animal ID isn't the answer" thread by Jinglebob lower on this page. Look at how many contradictions are in that article. I would love to hear your comments on my response. How can you make a case for brand inspection and be against "M"ID. Brand inspection is "M""ID for all practical purposes so why the fear of "M"ID?

Again, I am not in favor of a government run ID program. I am in favor of source verified branded beef programs. Let the free enterprise system determine the value of source verificaiton. If we have a health problem that can be traced, it will only add confidence in source verified beef. Commodity beef can wither on the vine and take those who refuse to track their beef with it. I don't feel the need to save anyone from themselves.


~SH~
 

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