A
Anonymous
Guest
Wasn't this the ID system that USDA said we should model ours after :???:
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BEEF NEWS
Australia's phantom cattle number 11 million
by Pete Hisey on 6/8/2006 for Meatingplace.com
Mix-ups in Australia's national cattle identification data base have resulted in some 11 million "phantom" cattle, according to the Australian Beef Association.
The database has some 38 million registrations; Australia's cattle population is about 27 million. The difference is probably the result of cattle that already have been slaughtered; tag inventory on shelves; damaged tags and the like, but ABA has asked the government how it will know which are which.
ABA chairwoman Linda Hewitt pointed out that a traceability program that purports to trace back animals in under 48 hours is unlikely to return accurate results with 11 million extraneous tags. "How do staff at the database know which tags are actually in live cattle and which are still on shelves?" she asked.
Hewitt said that the basic system is flawed and that mistakes and malfunctions are not corrected in the database, meaning that the promise of traceability is deceptive.
A database spokesman indicated the system needed to be rebooted, but was unclear how that would correct the 11 million phantom cattle.
-----------------------------------------------------
BEEF NEWS
Australia's phantom cattle number 11 million
by Pete Hisey on 6/8/2006 for Meatingplace.com
Mix-ups in Australia's national cattle identification data base have resulted in some 11 million "phantom" cattle, according to the Australian Beef Association.
The database has some 38 million registrations; Australia's cattle population is about 27 million. The difference is probably the result of cattle that already have been slaughtered; tag inventory on shelves; damaged tags and the like, but ABA has asked the government how it will know which are which.
ABA chairwoman Linda Hewitt pointed out that a traceability program that purports to trace back animals in under 48 hours is unlikely to return accurate results with 11 million extraneous tags. "How do staff at the database know which tags are actually in live cattle and which are still on shelves?" she asked.
Hewitt said that the basic system is flawed and that mistakes and malfunctions are not corrected in the database, meaning that the promise of traceability is deceptive.
A database spokesman indicated the system needed to be rebooted, but was unclear how that would correct the 11 million phantom cattle.