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SD says NO to NAIS

Liberty Belle

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 10, 2005
Messages
1,818
Location
northwestern South Dakota
South Dakota didn't just say no, we said HELL NO to NAIS. The sign above the door in the meeting room said capacity 375 and there were a lot of folks standing in the back because they had no place to sit. I'm guessing the number of people attending off and on during the day was closer to 500 and 3 testified they wanted a mandatory ID.

Ranchers say no to mandatory animal ID
By Steve Miller, Journal staff | Friday, June 12, 2009

No. No. No.

That was the resounding message that area ranchers delivered to federal agriculture officials here to gather their opinions on a proposed mandatory National Animal Identification System.

More than 300 ranchers packed into a meeting room at the Rushmore Plaza Holiday Inn for a U.S. Department of Agriculture listening session on the proposed NAIS. The system would use a combination of identification devices and computerized records to track livestock in the event of a disease outbreak.

Of the approximately 60 people who spoke Thursday morning, only two voiced support for the proposed mandatory system of animal ID.

Skip Waters, a rancher from Moorcroft, Wyo., was typical of those adamantly opposed to what they see as a costly, burdensome, off-target and unnecessary system that would be forced on them.

"It's not just a bad idea," Waters said. "It's a horrible idea. It's ludicrous."

South Dakota Rep. Betty Olson, R-Bison, said the costs of ear tags, especially a radio frequency ID tag, plus those of maintaining computer records, would put many producers out of business.

Olson said South Dakota and other western states already have a good system for identifying individual cattle -- the hot-iron brand.

Justin Tupper, who manages St. Onge Livestock, said he worries that a national ID system would snarl the flow of cattle on sale days.

He said electronic wands that read radio frequency ear tags are unreliable about 20 percent of the time. The delays could jam up traffic in South Dakota sale barns, which process up to 3 million cattle each year.

Larry Nelson of Buffalo, president of the South Dakota Stockgrowers Association, said the proposed system's requirement to record all movement of cattle within 24 hours, including between ranches, would be impossible to meet in far-flung ranges in the West, where cattle often drift into neighbor's pastures and calves can die and not be found for weeks or months.

"Most of these people here cannot comply," Nelson said of the crowd of western ranchers. "It's going to make us lawbreakers."

The Stockgrowers Association and its national affiliate, R-CALF USA, oppose any sort of national ID system, even a voluntary one.

R-CALF CEO Bill Bullard of Billings, Mont., was among those who blasted USDA for allowing cattle imports from Canada, despite its outbreak of mad cow disease; from Mexico, despite its problems with tuberculosis and fever ticks; and from Argentina, despite its problems with foot and mouth disease.

Bullard said the U.S. cattle industry has been shrinking since 1996, losing 19,000 ranchers a year.

"Our markets are broken. Our industry is broken," Bullard said. "It's happened because USDA has turned its back on us livestock producers."

Bullard drew a standing ovation.

Two speakers supported the idea of mandatory animal ID.

Brad Greenway of Mitchell, a member of the South Dakota Pork Council, said establishing a mandatory animal ID system is critical to the viability of the pork industry.

"The real advantage is that it places a searchable data base in each state for all premises holding livestock," Greenway said. "In the event of an animal disease outbreak, it will allow animal health professionals to efficiently locate the premises that have been exposed. The efficiency of a mandatory system will allow an outbreak to be brought under control and eradicated more quickly."

Todd Mortenson of Hayes, president of the South Dakota Cattlemen's Association, said a voluntary ID system is preferable for the livestock herd as a whole. "However SDCA supports mandatory ID in breeding stock as a first step toward addressing animal disease control," Mortenson said.

Mortenson said consumers and trading partners are demanding increased traceability and accountability from livestock producers. "Today the U.S. is the only developed country in the world without a comprehensive animal ID and tracking system," Mortenson said.

One of the senior USDA people present at the listening session, Dr. David Morris of Fort Collins, Colo., acknowledged many of the objections raised Thursday, including the importance of preventing diseased animals from crossing the U.S. border.

"But that is a separate issue from being able to provide traceability for our own existing animal diseases as well as potential foreign animal disease introductions," Morris said.

Morris said the successes of many current disease surveillance programs, such as those for brucellosis, have led to a problem: fewer producers and fewer cattle participating in those programs.

R-CALF's Bullard admitted that USDA has a legitimate concern about the decline in disease program participation. He said if Vilsack would dump the NAIS, groups like his would work with the USDA to increase participation in those disease surveillance programs.

Bullard also said he is more optimistic about the chance for stopping NAIS, now that Vilsack, the former governor of Iowa, is secretary of agriculture.

"This was a train that looked unstoppable until Secretary Vilsack announced that he was not going to proceed until he learned from cattle producers and livestock producers what their concerns are," Bullard said.

The USDA heard the full litany of concerns in Rapid City on Thursday.

USDA officials said the Rapid City listening session, the eighth in the series, had the largest turnout so far. Another five listening sessions are scheduled.

Contact Steve Miller at 394-8415 or [email protected]..

http://rapidcityjournal.com/articles/2009/06/12/news/top/doc4a31cba0ad516376638449.txt
 
Good for them. They voiced their opinion and have every right to do so. I applaud them.

But, sit back for a minute and think about it. I have tried to look at this from both sides.

Had they rather have a system of ID mandated from the "Top Down" as opposed to one from the "Bottom Up" ?

Since they think that branding is the way to go, and I do not disagree,
they'd better put in a system of branding each "Group" or "Individual" animal with a unique identifyer of some sort.

Bush put off ID'ing as long as he could, but he's no longer running the show.
 
Breaking News : News : Details

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

DeLauro zeroes out funding for animal NAIS ID



(6/11/2009)
Sally Schuff

New funding for the troubled National Animal Identification System (NAIS) was dropped today from the fiscal 2010 spending bill. Agricultural appropriations subcommittee chairwoman Rosa DeLauro (D., Conn), who has been a strong critic of how the U.S. Department of Agriculture has handled millions of dollars spent on the program, said "continued investments into the current NAIS are unwarranted" until USDA comes up with a better plan.

"After receiving $142 million in funding since fiscal year 2004, (USDA's Animal & Plant Health Inspection Service) has yet to put into operation an effective system that would provide needed animal health and livestock market benefits," she said.

DeLauro noted that USDA currently is conducting a series of NAIS listening sessions nationwide, and funding will be suspended until the conclusion of those sessions and until USDA "provides details as to how it will implement an effective ID system."
 
Mike said:
Good for them. They voiced their opinion and have every right to do so. I applaud them.

But, sit back for a minute and think about it. I have tried to look at this from both sides.

Had they rather have a system of ID mandated from the "Top Down" as opposed to one from the "Bottom Up" ?

Since they think that branding is the way to go, and I do not disagree,
they'd better put in a system of branding each "Group" or "Individual" animal with a unique identifyer of some sort.

Bush put off ID'ing as long as he could, but he's no longer running the show.
Mike, why should we accept a mandated animal ID from either direction? Those mandates are diametrically opposed to the freedoms we've guarded so carefully in this nation for the last three centuries.

In South Dakota we have a fool-proof, inexpensive, totally reliable ID system – the hot iron brand. A brand never falls off like ear tags do and stays with the critter until slaughter. My brand is registered in my name for a fee of $50 every five years. My brand and my 911 address (the ultimate "Premise ID") are printed in the brand book available to anyone who wants to locate me or identify my cow.

Can you explain to me what I'd have to gain my identifying each individual animal? I can prove where my livestock has been and who bought them after they leave my ranch and I fail to see the need for anything else.

There are so many privacy issues and property rights that would be violated by a mandatory national ID that my blood pressure goes up just thinking about them. I gotta tell you, I'm darn sick of big government sticking its nose in my business.

There are producers who do use electronic ear tags now because they feel that they can bring a better price for their beef that way. That's up to the individual rancher and not any business of mine or the federal government.

One thing we need to remember is that when the federal income tax was first introduced, it was touted as voluntary. What happened with that and are we ready to let the government do the same thing with animal ID?
 
Kudos to South Dakota :cboy: and all the others who have been telling USDA where they can stuff it! I attended and spoke at the kick off session in PA, and I love reading and hearing about what's being said in the other sessions.
My biggest concern however, is that USDA will find some other way to get what they want. :disagree: They've shown a complete disregard to American farmers and other livestock owners in favor of their international trade agreements. :mad:
 
Good for South Dakota, Many people do not understand the NAIS is for ALL 33 species of livestock. Its not just for cattle or hogs. It includes every one who owns a horse, a mule, 2 chickens, a goat, a sheep, a llama. You must register you private property for a premises id. If you plan on going off your property including to a vet you will be required to have the tags and or chips and report your movement. This is not going to be a free service.

I own 4 horses and the cost would be around 4,000.00 to comply. I spend money to remove foreign objects in my horses, and will not inject a RFID ISO 11784/11785 chip that is reprogrammable, I will not register my private property to the federal government and I will not report my movement should I commingle with a neighbor for a trailride.

You really need to understand what the Trade agreements with foreign nations really mean. Understand what "equivalent" means.
All of our healthy herds will be at 'RISK" because of NAIS. Its a free pass to come across the borders....
 
Liberty Belle said:
Mike said:
Good for them. They voiced their opinion and have every right to do so. I applaud them.

But, sit back for a minute and think about it. I have tried to look at this from both sides.

Had they rather have a system of ID mandated from the "Top Down" as opposed to one from the "Bottom Up" ?

Since they think that branding is the way to go, and I do not disagree,
they'd better put in a system of branding each "Group" or "Individual" animal with a unique identifyer of some sort.

Bush put off ID'ing as long as he could, but he's no longer running the show.
Mike, why should we accept a mandated animal ID from either direction? Those mandates are diametrically opposed to the freedoms we've guarded so carefully in this nation for the last three centuries.

In South Dakota we have a fool-proof, inexpensive, totally reliable ID system – the hot iron brand. A brand never falls off like ear tags do and stays with the critter until slaughter. My brand is registered in my name for a fee of $50 every five years. My brand and my 911 address (the ultimate "Premise ID") are printed in the brand book available to anyone who wants to locate me or identify my cow.

Can you explain to me what I'd have to gain my identifying each individual animal? I can prove where my livestock has been and who bought them after they leave my ranch and I fail to see the need for anything else.

There are so many privacy issues and property rights that would be violated by a mandatory national ID that my blood pressure goes up just thinking about them. I gotta tell you, I'm darn sick of big government sticking its nose in my business.

There are producers who do use electronic ear tags now because they feel that they can bring a better price for their beef that way. That's up to the individual rancher and not any business of mine or the federal government.

One thing we need to remember is that when the federal income tax was first introduced, it was touted as voluntary. What happened with that and are we ready to let the government do the same thing with animal ID?

Liberty Belle, my point is that sooner or later, some type of "Individual" ID on cattle will be mandated from the top down. The masses who will mandate it have us outnumbered many times over.

A herd brand is a fine and wonderful thing, but there is no way a herd brand "ALONE" is sufficient to track an individual animal across all 50 states at present.

If cattlemen could come up with a way to do it before a burgeoning alternative is pushed upon us, we would be better off.
 
[/quote]Liberty Belle, my point is that sooner or later, some type of "Individual" ID on cattle will be mandated from the top down. The masses who will mandate it have us outnumbered many times over.

A herd brand is a fine and wonderful thing, but there is no way a herd brand "ALONE" is sufficient to track an individual animal across all 50 states at present.

If cattlemen could come up with a way to do it before a burgeoning alternative is pushed upon us, we would be better off.[/quote]

Mike,
The CAFOs don't have to track individual animals - why should you? I also question who the "masses" are. USDA says consumers and other countries are demanding this - but that isn't true. Only the WTO and the financial beneficiaries are demanding it. American beef is high quality. There will always be a market for it unless we allow it to be dried up through bad regulations and laws.
 
Here's another story about the Rapid City NAIS "listening" meeting. There were ranchers, state legislators, livestock market representatives, county commissioners, and livestock organizations from six states there to testify against mandatory NAIS.

At the beginning of the meeting the first guy to testify asked everyone in the room against mandatory NAIS to stand up and all but five people stood. Those five, two from the South Dakota Cattlemen and three from the Pork Producers, stood up in favor of mandatory NAIS.

South Dakota Cattlemen is affiliated with NCBA and they did testify that their position is different than NCBA, which only favors voluntary animal identification.

Producers rally against animal ID
By Jessica Kokesh, Journal staff | Friday, June 12, 2009


Livestock producers from as far away as Kansas filled the atrium at the Rushmore Plaza Holiday Inn hotel Thursday, showing poster illustrations of their cattle brands, examples of their existing animal identification system.

The group of 300 to 400 objected to the proposed electronic National Animal Identification System, which opponents said will be too expensive and not solve the problem of diseased animals coming from other countries.

The Agriculture Department is holding listening sessions across the country on the system, and South Dakota Stockgrowers Association president Larry Nelson said about 90 percent of those attending oppose NAIS.

"This is the best example of government coming to us, saying 'We're here and we're here to help,' but not visiting with us ahead of time," Nelson said.

Judy McCullough with the Independent Cattlemen of Wyoming (ICOW) said the cattlemen of Wyoming have already said "no" to the plan and will not pay for "huge government."

"If the government is still for the people and by the people, they'll listen to this uprising," McCullough said. "NAIS ought to be struck dead, never to raise its ugly, evil head again."


Nelson said he hoped the USDA heeds that message and said producers will be watching.

"If they can't get the message from this, then it can't be gotten," he said.

http://rapidcityjournal.com/articles/2009/06/12/news/top/doc4a31cc060db36507714955.txt
 
Sounds like Missouri said NO to NAIS too.....

6/11/2009 7:47:00 AM


Jolley: Mr. Vilsack, Were You Listening?



It was billed as a multi-city listening tour, announced May 15 by USDA Ag Secretary Tom Vilsack. He must have been laboring under a delusion if he thought it would lead to a general consensus and an acceptance of NAIS.



It has lead to a general consensus, though. In a word or two NO NAIS! That was the label on several hundred people attending the listening session in Jefferson City, Missouri. It was the message pounded home again and again by every speaker except one. Defending NAIS was Dr. David Hobson of the USDA's vet services. He said hello and ducked.



His "hello" was a statement that "This session is to listen to you. We all play a role in food safety. To do that we need healthy animals. We need this program to identify diseased animals and eradicate disease."



The crowd wasn't buying it.



There were so many speakers that the USDA personnel on hand extended the morning session by an hour to accommodate them. That lone pro-NAIS speaker? A hog farmer, obviously intimidated by the mood of the room, spoke warily in a shaky voice and fled the premises for the safety of the parking lot amid catcalls from the floor before he was finished with his prepared statement.



Two highway patrol officers sat in the corner of the room as the session began, ready to quell any outbreaks but obviously outmanned and hoping for a peaceful day at the Truman Hotel and Conference Center. They were watching about 240 people sitting at tables and another 80 or so sitting at the back of the room in chairs brought in to handle the overflow. Another dozen were standing in the hall and three times that many were demonstrating outside, refusing to enter the building.



The room was filled with people who ran small farms and ranches; husbands, wives and children from Missouri, Kansas, Iowa, Illinois and Wisconsin.



Finding the meeting room was a labyrinthine affair, like the 15 year journey toward NAIS. It required going down a series of stairs and a few hallways narrow enough that they should have been marked with "one way" signs and maybe that was the message Vilsack was trying to deliver.



He didn't attend the session, of course. His appearance was taped, a wise decision considering the mood of the crowd. If all politics is organization, something the Obama administration proved beyond a doubt, Vilsack has been seriously out-organized by the likes of R-CALF, MissouriansagainstNAIS.com, and NAISstinks.com. They delivered and the pro-NAIS crowd was almost completely missing.


The speeches had common themes: We don't trust the feds – Food Safety? It's a processing issue, not an animal ag issue – the cost is to high for the information it delivers – it delivers an unfair advantage to the packer - No NAIS.



A standing ovation was provoked by a speaker who proclaimed at the top of his voice, "No NAIS, no way, no how, not now, not ever!"



Rhonda Perry of the Missouri Rural Crisis Center also brought the crowd to its feet when she declared NAIS to be "An unknown, unfair, ineffective, corporate-driven program."



Mr. Vilsack, if you were listening to this one, the score was about 60 to 1 against. No one seemed to want to find a mutually acceptable center point. Most were willing to openly defy any attempt to make it a requirement, voluntary was only marginally agreeable. Time to punt.
 
Austin TX
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LZtdk5fmqyQ

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s7V_pbGvm-M&feature=related
MO session
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uclq3YOhRbA&feature=related

State troopers to protect the USDA from ANGRY Farmers
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A3EzGIbtFT8&feature=related

And there is more on youtube on NAIS
 
It doesn't sound like Missouri livestock producers think much of big brother breathing down their necks either.....

Missourians Against NAIS
Press Release
Contact: Paul Hamby 816-632-0602
Press Conference at 10:00 am at Truman Conference Center, Jefferson City, Missouri
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE


June 5, 2009 Jefferson City, Missouri

Farmers, Ranchers and Consumers will hold a protest of the NAIS - National Animal ID System - on Tuesday, June 9, 2009 from 8 am to 12 noon. The protest will run concurrently with the USDA NAIS listening session at Truman Hotel & Conference Center in Jefferson City, Missouri. More than a dozen organizations have signed on in support of the peaceful protest and will have members attending to speak out against NAIS. The USDA has been pushing for mandatory NAIS, originally calling for mandatory in January of 2008 and with enforcements in January of 2009, but has delayed implementation due to huge public outcry against the program. USDA is now asking for public input on how to overcome objections to the program. Bob Parker, a southern Missouri farmer, has toured the state speaking out against NAIS, "The USDA does not want to accept that the people are against this program. They are asking how to make it more palatable. Our message to USDA is to end NAIS now."

NAIS is a three-phase program designed by the USDA and the National Institute for Animal Agriculture to advance guidelines for international trade through an agency of the World Trade Organization called the OIE. NAIS will tag and track movements of 33 or more species of animals worldwide. Phase 1 requires livestock owners to obtain a GPS linked Premise ID number for their property. Phase 2 requires all animals be identified with an international ID device. Phase 3 requires electronic reporting of movements on or off a premises to effectuate 48 hour trace-back to the premises of origin of any and every animal. Each phase is predicated upon the preceding phase. There can be no NAIS animal ID without a NAIS premises ID.

Opposition to NAIS is strongest from independent cattlemen, small farmers and hobbyists.

Doreen Hannes, a researcher, author and public speaker, whose family has a small farm and raises much of their own food states, "The design of NAIS is effectively a license to farm. This program would cost us at least $4,000.00 the first year. There is no method for growers to recoup the cost of the program, and the implementation of NAIS will be the destruction of the family farm and rural America. The cost to freedom is simply immeasurable."

"The Missouri Libertarian Party has worked with farmers and ranchers in Missouri for years to prevent implementation of the burdensome regulations of the National Animal Identification System being forced on them by the USDA", said Glenn Nielsen, Missouri Libertarian Party Chair.

Paul Hamby, NW Missouri coordinator for Campaign for Liberty, states "NAIS will put an undue burden on non-electric Amish farmers, small hobby farmers, 4-H and FFA members while providing no benefit to them. NAIS will not make our food supply safer. I am against this international livestock ID program run by the same federal government who just bought General Motors."

The following organizations are sending members to Jefferson City to speak against NAIS on June 9:
R-CALF USA
Missouri Campaign for Liberty
Arkansas Animal Producers Association
International Dairy Goat Registry
Missouri Independent Consumers and Farmers Association
Illinois Independent Consumers and Farmers Association
Ozarks Property Rights Congress
Missouri First, Inc.
Liberty Restoration Project
Legislators Against Real ID
Missouri Libertarian Party
Missouri Constitution Party
Missouri Rural Crises Center
Citizens for Private Property
Douglas County Citizens for Liberty

For interviews or talk radio guests call,
Doreen Hannes 417-349-9625 or 417-962-0030
Bob Parker 417-257-8711
Ray Cunio 314-223-6925
Paul Hamby 816-632-0602

http://www.missouriansagainstnais.com/press.html

816-986-0600

[email protected]
 
By their absence it appears like MSGA has sold out to their brethren in the NCBA- which we already know sold out cattle producers on this issue to the Packer bunch and USDA for 30 pieces of silver...


MCA Attends NAIS Listening Session



Montana Cattlemen's Association (MCA) was represented by former MCA president Paul Ringling and Animal ID Committee Chairman Hugh Broadus at the NAIS listening session recently held in Rapid City, South Dakota. MCA was the only Montana organization present to speak in opposition to the proposed mandatory National Animal Identification System program.



There were over 350 ranchers in attendance from at least eight states. Only five speakers favored the mandatory system. Ringling reported, "In the standing-room-only meeting, the message to USDA by producers was crystal clear - 'We ain't gonna do it!' Producers feel this is an unnecessary program and the costs far outweigh any benefits."



Hugh Broadus commented, "Mandatory NAIS will be burdensome and costly to most cattle producers. NAIS does not solve the problem of diseases coming into the U.S. from other countries. There is not sufficient evidence to indicate that a mandatory national identification system would track livestock any more efficiently or quickly than those identification systems already in place, including the hot brand and metal brucellosis tag."



Montana Cattlemen's Association has submitted written comments to USDA opposing mandatory NAIS and asking that Federal funding to promote this program be halted.
 
A Kansas State University study pegged the cost at $16 a head for a herd of 100 cattle.



Like most other agriculture interest groups, the Missouri Cattlemen's Association supports a voluntary system .



"If it goes mandatory and everybody has to do it, then there are no premiums to be had," Windett said.
--------------------------------

Tuesday's meeting was one of 13 meetings the USDA is holding across the country in May and June to gather input from farmers about NAIS.



So far, small producers appear overwhelmingly against it, while larger corporate farms and agriculture organizations are lining up on the USDA's side, said U.S. Sen. Claire McCaskill, D-Missouri.



"It really works to the advantage of the big guys, and the big guys have a lot of influence on this issue," said McCaskill, who has been one of the most out spoken critics of NAIS since being elected to the Senate in 2006.



USDA added Tuesday's meeting after McCaskill complained in a May 20 letter to Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack that the country's second-largest beef producer -- the Show-Me state -- had been snubbed from the nationwide schedule of listening sessions.



McCaskill said many of Missouri's small producers could be forced out of the marketplace if NAIS is mandated.



"I would like us to continue to have more than a handful of companies that can control the world's food supply," McCaskill said in an interview.



Missouri's junior senator is not sold on USDA's argument that an animal ID system is needed to trace infectious diseases and open up foreign trade markets.



Brazil, for example, is the world's largest exporter of beef, but the South American country doesn't have a tracking system, McCaskill noted.



"It is ironic to me that the federal government cannot figure out who is coming into America, but it's perfectly OK to tag every bunny, chicken and calf in America,"
McCaskill said.



news-leader.com
 
Democrats are following some of Obama's suggestions — and are adding a few cuts of their own on top. Last week the House Appropriations Committee approved a $22.9 billion measure for the Department of Agriculture that denied the agency $15 million for its much-criticized animal identification program.

The panel also endorsed Obama's plan to eliminate an $18 million grant program to help people in Alaska, Hawaii and a few isolated areas in the continental U.S. get reasonably priced electricity.

http://canadafreepress.com/index.php/article/12254
 
Minnesota cattlemen want NAIS scrapped, government intrusion ended
Matt Bewley,Agweek
06/29/2009


FERGUS FALLS, Minn. — Minnesota cattle producers are bristling at the idea of the U.S. Department or Agriculture imposing the National Animal Identification System on the livestock industry and of further government intrusion in their business.

"The biggest solution in agriculture is to get the government out of it," says cattle producer Jerry Enderline of Fergus Falls, Minn. "Out of the grain business, out of the livestock business — completely out."


Enderline is a strong supporter of free trade and says he hasn't been able to make a profit feeding cattle for 10 months. He says he resents government intrusion into his industry and the fact that he does not have the final word on some issues regarding is own operations.

Privacy issues


Should it be instituted, NAIS would require every cattle producer to pay a registration fee and affix a 15-digit identifier on every animal, revealing the location of the farming or ranching operation that raises them and sells them to feedlots. The information is termed "premises registration" by USDA, which says the primary purpose is to implement an animal tracking system in the event of an outbreak of disease.

But industry sources claim the records now maintained by the various types of livestock operations have proven sufficient in providing a history of the animal's owners and herd mates. Further, some say the NAIS premises registration is not only an invasion of privacy but will provide an unfair advantage to meat packers over cattle producers.

R-CALF USA Region V director Stayton Weldon says premises registration would grant the four largest meatpackers in the U.S. access to proprietary information on the thousands of U.S. cattle feeders and auction yards. That information, held by one segment of a competitive industry can be used, in a worst-case scenario, to "eliminate competitors," he says.

"Nowhere in the U.S. economy is proprietary information more important to ensuring competitiveness than in the multi-segmented live cattle industry and beef industry," he says in a press release recently published on the R-CALF USA Web site.

He says the 15-digit identifier would reduce, if not eliminate, competition in the U.S. cattle and beef industries.

Deaf ear?


USDA has been sponsoring listening sessions on the subject of NAIS to gain input from the public. But R-CALF USA CEO Bill Bullard says these sessions are designed to hear suggestions for improving the identification system, rather than outright objections to implementation of the system.

"If USDA is allowed to frame the debate to that of focusing only on how to fix NAIS, then our ability to stop NAIS in its tracks is weakened," he says.
Bullard goes on to say that once NAIS is "scrapped completely," then U.S. livestock producers will be prepared to work with USDA to develop an overall strategy for prevention, control and eradication of livestock disease and to develop separate strategies to improve the safety of meat.

The comments made at the sale barn in Fergus Falls — unanimously against NAIS — seem to support a longstanding tradition of individualism within the cattle industry. Even cattle haulers — including driver Craig Elfering of Long Prairie, Minn. — are skeptical of outside influence.

Elfering sums up his feelings this way: "The government's just always looking for another way to make a buck."

http://www.agweek.com/articles/?id=4720&article_id=14487&property_id=41
 
Every cattle producer within driving distance of Omaha, Neb., in encouraged to attend the final NAIS listening session on June 30.

USDA is already unlawfully requiring NAIS eartags on Nebraska cattle and every rancher who has been forced to use the NAIS "840" prefix eartags against their will should be sure to attend the Omaha listening session to protest USDA's actions in the official NAIS listening session record.

Registration begins at 8:00 and the location of the 9:00 a.m. listening session is:
Embassy Suites Omaha – La Vista
1250 Westport Parkway
La Vista, NE 68128
 
LB: "In South Dakota we have a fool-proof, inexpensive, totally reliable ID system – the hot iron brand. A brand never falls off like ear tags do and stays with the critter until slaughter. My brand is registered in my name for a fee of $50 every five years. My brand and my 911 address (the ultimate "Premise ID") are printed in the brand book available to anyone who wants to locate me or identify my cow."

Liberty,

So what is the difference between a mandatory ID in the form of hot brands that follow the cattle to slaughter and the NAIS which, as I understand it, would allow hot brands as a form of ID?

What is it exactly that you are opposed to? The unknown consequences of a NAIS?? That is where my concerns lie even though I can see potential value in the ability to trace cattle during disease epidemics.

Am I assuming correctly that what you oppose is not so much the mandatory ID system itself but rather how that system might be abused? It appears contradicting to support brand inspection as a mandatory ID that crosses state lines to slaughter then oppose a national mandatory ID program.

For the record, I support SDCA's position. I support a voluntary ID system particularly from the standpoint of source and process verified branded beef programs to gain consumer confidence in the safety of those products and tracing cattle for disease purposes. What I don't support is goverment intrusion. At this point, my concern for government intrusion is greater than my understanding of the need to trace cattle for disease purposes. If we need to trace cattle to protect consumer confidence in the safety of our products, we can do that voluntarily through branded beef programs as opposed to a government mandate.

Here's hoping your grass is tall and your dams are full.


~SH~
 
Scott,

My biggest concern is having the federal government involved in ANYTHING, especially with the administration we have now. Having mandatory animal ID pushed down our throats by the feds is totally contrary to the US Constitution and violates states rights.

I have no problem with anyone who wants to voluntarily register their premises and participate in a federal program. That's up to the individual and is a personal choice. Hell will freeze over before I register my premises and I should also have the freedom to choose not to participate.

The brand inspection program is not a federal program and is run entirely by the individual states. If our state vet and Animal Industry Board decide that we need another system to track animal disease, let them set up a state-wide program and keep all the records in South Dakota. The information obtained from livestock producers should NEVER be shared with any out-of-state entity without a darn good reason.

For the record, I support SDCA's position. I support a voluntary ID system particularly from the standpoint of source and process verified branded beef programs to gain consumer confidence in the safety of those products and tracing cattle for disease purposes. What I don't support is goverment intrusion. At this point, my concern for government intrusion is greater than my understanding of the need to trace cattle for disease purposes. If we need to trace cattle to protect consumer confidence in the safety of our products, we can do that voluntarily through branded beef programs as opposed to a government mandate.
~SH~
:agree:

Our dams are full for the first time in 9 years!! Our grass is looking good, but we could use another rain. It's that time of year again - the prairie is getting a little crispy and we've had five fires in this area in the last two weeks. Got the fire fighting unit is ready to go and none of these guys do any welding without a sprayer along.

Liberty
 
I struggle with this. I can see the value in tracking a severe disease epidemic and consumers may demand a national ID from us at some point.

At the same time, like you, I have huge concerns with the current administration intruding into our lives.

I certainly see the value in corralling a BSE situation to maintain consumer confidence in beef but at what price in other areas?

Just when I thought feeder calf prices were going to strengthen for a few years, increased corn prices reduced feeder cattle values. This in turn was followed by a decrease in consumer demand for beef, due to the economy, which resulted in lower fat cattle markets. The cow/calf man just can't catch a break.


~SH~
 

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