• If you are having problems logging in please use the Contact Us in the lower right hand corner of the forum page for assistance.

USDA Rules to Require Proof of Pasture Time for Organic

PORKER

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 2, 2005
Messages
4,170
Location
Michigan-Florida
New USDA Rules to Require Proof of Pasture Time for Organic Livestock Production

NewswireToday - /newswire/ - Bradenton, FL, United States, 02/12/2010 - Family farmers across the United States, who produce organic milk, are celebrating the release of strict new USDA regulations that establish distinct benchmarks requiring the grazing and pasturing of dairy cows and other livestock.


Family farmers across the United States, who produce organic milk, are celebrating the release of strict new USDA regulations that establish distinct benchmarks requiring the grazing and pasturing of dairy cows and other livestock. "We are delighted by the new rules," said Mark Kastel, Senior Farm Policy Analyst at the Wisconsin-based Cornucopia Institute. "The organic community has been calling for strong regulations and its enforcement for much of the past decade. Cheap organic milk flowing from the illegitimate factory farms has created a surplus that is crushing ethical family farm producers."

The ScoringAg.com database has the records that prove pasture time for the USDA NOP rules .ScoringAg is used successfully by many different industries for complete recordkeeping, documentation and traceback. ScoringAg is the only complete whole-chain traceback system covering all agriculture commodities, ingredients and food products raw and processed, repacked or commingled. Certification and audits can be directly scanned into the database to prove a practice and verification can be entered with even pictures and video.

The record as documentation moves with the product in the webbased system no matter where it comes from or goes to. ScoringAg's Data Management System (DMS) enables access for multiple users anytime, anywhere.There is no need to reinvent the wheel new. Other traceability systems just don't have date and time stamped recordkeeping or documentation that is 21 CFR Part 11 of the US code. Now even a gallon of milk can be tracked to the pastures where the dairy cattle grazed.

"We are delighted by the new rules," said Mark Kastel, Senior Farm Policy Analyst at the Wisconsin-based Cornucopia Institute. "The organic community has been calling for strong regulations and its enforcement for much of the past decade. Cheap organic milk flowing from the illegitimate factory farms has created a surplus that is crushing ethical family farm producers."

The biggest scandal in the history of the organic industry centered around one such USDA investigation with the regulators finding "willful" violations of 14 organic regulations on factory farms operated by Aurora Dairy, a $100+ million company based in Colorado (Aurora produces private-label, store brand milk for Wal-Mart, Costco and other large grocery chains).

The USDA has announced that they will begin this month hosting a series of workshops around the country with the nation's 50+ organic certification agencies and other industry stakeholders. The sessions are intended to clearly define the meaning and intent of the new rule so that certifiers, who conduct annual farm inspections and review organic system management plans, will understand what the regulations require from farmers and only approve management practices that strictly conform to it.

Specifically, the new rules require that dairy cows and other ruminants be out on pasture for the entire growing season, but for not less than 120 days. It also requires that the animals receive at least 30% of their feed, or dry matter intake (DMI), from pasturing. In addition, organic livestock will be required to have access to the outdoors year-round with the exception of temporary confinement due to mitigating and documentable environmental or health considerations.

ScoringAg.com and its traceback and traceup system for agriculture products, featuring Site-Specific Recordkeeping™ and PIDC location code. Located in Bradenton, Florida USA , the company specializes in providing solutions with mobile data, via wireless PDAs, laptops, and Semacode-programmed Nokia, Siemens, and Sony Ericsson cell phones. Whether using RFID or barcodes for traceup and traceback of livestock, recordkeeping from birth through the packing plants and on to the consumer; or tracking transport containers or perishable meats and other food consumer goods, ScoringAg.com makes managing data easier -- and does it in an extremely cost effective manner from "Field-to-Fork."
 
USA - Prison for organic farmer 27 Mar 2010
A cooperative investigation between USDA and Texas authorities has resulted in the successful prosecution of a Texas man for misrepresenting non-organic products as organic.
Basilio Coronado, a partner in Sel-Cor Bean and Pea Inc., operating out of Brownfield, Texas, was convicted February 26, 2010 of fraudulently selling products as organic. The U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas, Lubbock Division, sentenced Coronado to 24 months in federal prison, three years of supervised release and to pay $523,692.08 in restitution. Coronado is barred from participating in any USDA or other agriculture programs for five years.

In August 2006, the Texas Department of Agriculture (TDA), which is an accredited certifying agent (ACA) under the NOP, forwarded its investigation report to USDA's Agricultural Marketing Service (AMS). The report documented that Coronado was selling non-organic pinto beans, garbanzo beans, milo and soybeans labeled as organic.

TDA also submitted copies of the report to the FBI and the Terry County District Attorney's Office in Brownfield, Texas. The FBI forwarded the information to USDA's Office of Inspector General (OIG), which then opened a criminal investigation. In April 2009, the OIG issued its final report and informed AMS that the U.S. Attorney's Office in Lubbock, Texas, had accepted the case for prosecution.

On Aug. 12, 2009, Coronado was indicted by a Federal Grand Jury on three counts of false statements and documents. The three counts concerned the 2004 and 2005 time frames when Coronado knowingly misrepresented and sold over 3.3 million pounds of conventional milo (grain sorghum), 396,120 pounds of conventional pinto beans, and 60,410 pounds of conventional garbanzo beans. Coronado pleaded guilty in Nov. 2009.
Source: usda.com
 

Latest posts

Back
Top