Green Mtn
location: Observing the Progressive madness with considerably less amusement.
listening to: Grandchildren, the best reason for saving the future.
registered: 2004.04.03
posts: 2617
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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
DATE: SEPTEMBER 12, 2006
FROM: VIRGINIA INDEPENDENT CONSUMERS AND FARMERS
ASSOCIATIONRE: PROPOSED LEGISLATION OFFERS BAIT AND SWITCH TO U.S.
FARMERS
CONTACT: RICHARD BEAN 434.263.8704
DEBORAH STOCKTON 434.295.7176Proposed legislation would offer a classic bait and switch to
U.S. farmers. A proposed bill would allow exempting animals
from a national licensing system who never leave a farm
premise but would allow full requirements at sale barns,
butcher shops or private neighbor-to-neighbor transactions.Obviously, that is not much of an exemption.The Virginia Independent Consumers and Farmers Association
says the bill, introduced by Senator Jim Talent and
Representative Jo Ann Emerson to ensure the National Animal
Identification System
(NAIS) is a voluntary program, lacks adequate safeguards.
VICFA President Richard Bean commented, "While we
appreciate that Senator Talent and
Representative Emerson introduced this bill, it leaves
uncertainties about the NAIS."VICFA says the Talent-Emerson bill would allow the USDA to
regulate meatpackers, processors, veterinary or other services
farmers must use so that farmers would be required to
participate in the identification program to have access to
these services. Anyone who did not volunteer could be forced
into "volunteering" or face ruin."If this bill were to become law, the USDA could effectively
exempt us and put us out of business at the same time," says
VICFA spokesman and farmer Joel Salatin.VICFA warns that the bill's failure to define "voluntary" could
be a disaster for family farms, small livestock operations and
sustainable agriculture.In September 2005, before the House Agriculture Committee,
Canadian and Australian officials testified that the best way to
start a mandatory national animal identification program is
with a "voluntary" program, then transition to mandatory.The USDA has already advised that small producers will not
have to participate as long as an animal never leaves the farm
and is consumed on the farm but virtually no farmers meet
this very narrow requirement, most regularly buy and sell
livestock. Even homesteaders who produce for themselves
often sell their surplus.In July of 2006 VICFA formed the National Independent
Consumers and Farmers Advocates Fund (NICFA Fund) to
oppose "any government funded or managed National
Identification System."VICFA says if a program is needed to open foreign markets as
the USDA claims, the marketplace will provide the system and
the government should not force family farms to pay for a
program mainly supported by industrial agricultural interests.VICFA member Deborah Stockton summed up NAIS as, "Just
another piece of USDA corporate welfare."Mary Zanoni, Ph.D., J.D., of Farm for Life in Canton, New York
says,"Section 2 of the proposed bill is extremely detrimental to the
opponents of NAIS, in two respects, first, Section 2 purports
to create a FOIA exemption for 'voluntary' NAIS information.
This would allow, for example, Vermont to continue with its
premises registration program that was suspended due to
FOIA concerns. It also implicitly gives the USDA the 'cover' of
FOIA protection to continue its current so-called 'voluntary'
program, which is highly coercive.Second, the very fact that this bill is couched as an
'amendment' to the Animal Health Protection Act [AHPA] is a
back-door and underhanded way to create arguable
congressional 'approval' for the
oppressive actions the USDA has already taken, under what
the USDA claimed to be the authority of the AHPA.As things presently stand, the AHPA gives the USDA no
authority to create NAIS.Congress should not create 'back-door' authority and
underhanded de facto authorization of the USDA's prior
offensive NAIS activities, by purporting to 'amend' the AHPA.""Let Congress address all NAIS issues openly and above
board, in the orderly process of the 2007 Farm Bill," said Dr.
Zanoni.http://groups.msn.com/AbleFarmandRanch/
nais.msnw?action=get_message&mview=0&ID_Message=542
7&LastModified=4675589631995282741
–--
“Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions.” Wm O. Douglas
“Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions.” Wm O. Douglas
G
Green Mtn
(view)
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
DATE: SEPTEMBER 12, 2006
FROM: VIRGINIA INDEPENDENT CONSUMERS AND FARMERS
ASSOCIATIONRE: PROPOSED LEGISLATION OFFERS BAIT AND SWITCH TO U.S.
FARMERS
CONTACT: RICHARD BEAN 434.263.8704
DEBORAH STOCKTON 434.295.7176Proposed legislation would offer a classic bait and switch to
U.S. farmers. A proposed bill would allow exempting animals
from a national licensing system who never leave a farm
premise but would allow full requirements at sale barns,
butcher shops or private neighbor-to-neighbor transactions.Obviously, that is not much of an exemption.The Virginia Independent Consumers and Farmers Association
says the bill, introduced by Senator Jim Talent and
Representative Jo Ann Emerson to ensure the National Animal
Identification System
(NAIS) is a voluntary program, lacks adequate safeguards.
VICFA President Richard Bean commented, "While we
appreciate that Senator Talent and
Representative Emerson introduced this bill, it leaves
uncertainties about the NAIS."VICFA says the Talent-Emerson bill would allow the USDA to
regulate meatpackers, processors, veterinary or other services
farmers must use so that farmers would be required to
participate in the identification program to have access to
these services. Anyone who did not volunteer could be forced
into "volunteering" or face ruin."If this bill were to become law, the USDA could effectively
exempt us and put us out of business at the same time," says
VICFA spokesman and farmer Joel Salatin.VICFA warns that the bill's failure to define "voluntary" could
be a disaster for family farms, small livestock operations and
sustainable agriculture.In September 2005, before the House Agriculture Committee,
Canadian and Australian officials testified that the best way to
start a mandatory national animal identification program is
with a "voluntary" program, then transition to mandatory.The USDA has already advised that small producers will not
have to participate as long as an animal never leaves the farm
and is consumed on the farm but virtually no farmers meet
this very narrow requirement, most regularly buy and sell
livestock. Even homesteaders who produce for themselves
often sell their surplus.In July of 2006 VICFA formed the National Independent
Consumers and Farmers Advocates Fund (NICFA Fund) to
oppose "any government funded or managed National
Identification System."VICFA says if a program is needed to open foreign markets as
the USDA claims, the marketplace will provide the system and
the government should not force family farms to pay for a
program mainly supported by industrial agricultural interests.VICFA member Deborah Stockton summed up NAIS as, "Just
another piece of USDA corporate welfare."Mary Zanoni, Ph.D., J.D., of Farm for Life in Canton, New York
says,"Section 2 of the proposed bill is extremely detrimental to the
opponents of NAIS, in two respects, first, Section 2 purports
to create a FOIA exemption for 'voluntary' NAIS information.
This would allow, for example, Vermont to continue with its
premises registration program that was suspended due to
FOIA concerns. It also implicitly gives the USDA the 'cover' of
FOIA protection to continue its current so-called 'voluntary'
program, which is highly coercive.Second, the very fact that this bill is couched as an
'amendment' to the Animal Health Protection Act [AHPA] is a
back-door and underhanded way to create arguable
congressional 'approval' for the
oppressive actions the USDA has already taken, under what
the USDA claimed to be the authority of the AHPA.As things presently stand, the AHPA gives the USDA no
authority to create NAIS.Congress should not create 'back-door' authority and
underhanded de facto authorization of the USDA's prior
offensive NAIS activities, by purporting to 'amend' the AHPA.""Let Congress address all NAIS issues openly and above
board, in the orderly process of the 2007 Farm Bill," said Dr.
Zanoni.http://groups.msn.com/AbleFarmandRanch/
nais.msnw?action=get_message&mview=0&ID_Message=542
7&LastModified=4675589631995282741
–--
“Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions.” Wm O. Douglas
“Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions.” Wm O. Douglas
