Animal ID and School Lunches, Part I

There's not much more that truly ticks me off than ignorant bureaucratic requirements that impose burdens on the little guy yet do nothing to accomplish their stated goal.  And the prime example of that right now is a tiny little provision in the House Agriculture Appropriations bill that requires the USDA School Lunch Program to only buy meat that comes from livestock producers registered in USDA's animal ID program.

This, of course, requires a little explanation.  The idea behind USDA's National Animal Identification System is that we  need to have the ability to track every single animal raised for human consumption in the United States.  That, as you might imagine, is a gargantuan undertaking- one website I visited put the number of animals at 2 billion, conservatively.  The point here is to be able to identify and isolate animals that may have been exposed to diseases in the event of an outbreak.  The obvious example is mad cow disease, but potentially just as devastating would be something like hoof and mouth disease.  And to tell the truth, there is some merit to this idea.  A widespread disease outbreak could devastate livestock producers- many, many livestock producers in England were driven out of business, have not returned, and were never adequately compensated for their loss.

This big NAIS push started after the mad cow incidents a few years back.  Interestingly, Congress never actually passed a law to create NAIS- USDA simply went ahead and did it on their own.  And when you get down into the details, you can see USDA went about it in practically the worst way possible.

Last December, The Nation published an article describing the current state of NAIS:

NAIS, ostensibly intended to contain disease outbreaks among livestock, has sparked the most severe political backlash rural America has seen in decades. The controversy stems primarily from the backhanded way the government has imposed a deeply unpopular policy...
A handful of industry stakeholders have cast their shadow over nearly every component of NAIS--past, present and future. A consortium of industry leaders--Cargill Meat Solutions, Monsanto and Schering-Plough, among others--pushed for NAIS for more than a decade and finally won the USDA's approval shortly after George W. Bush took office in 2001.

If you have any interest in the topic at all, I highly recommend the full article here.

Not surprisingly, the NAIS fight has been fierce, uniting the left and right in opposing a flawed and invasive government mandate (it's not hard to find information on the web- you can start at nonais.org).  As a result of this opposition, USDA decided to make participation in NAIS voluntary, but then started encouraging states to make participation mandatory.  The repeated back door efforts they've undertaken to make the program mandatory by default are worthy of a separate blog post.

But most egregious is the way in which the current NAIS completely favors a vertically integrated, CAFO-based meat production system.  Right from the get-go, the system is rigged against the small producer.  Large CAFOs whose animals essentially stay in one place their whole lives can use "lot tagging"- taking a large group of animals, assigning them one animal ID number, and not having to track and/or tag each individual animal.  The small producer, on the other hand, has to buy tags, complete paperwork, etc. for every single animal- unless they decide to put their animals in a tight controlled facility where their is no chance they'll come into contact with animals outside of their "lot".  And we all know what that means- more mega-CAFOs and all of their negative effects.

Furthermore, in a typical Bush administration move, USDA has actually turned over the management of NAIS databases to private companies.  This is a truly horrifying prospect.  From a purely market point of view, can you imagine Cargill (which is running an animal ID database) knowing where every single animal in the United States is located and how old they are?  Cargill would have the ability to predict how many animals were going to be delivered to their plants on any given day- creating the potential for massive market manipulation (of course, Cargill and others deny they would ever use this information for that sort of thing).

Even worse, those pushing NAIS have much grander plans for this data.  From The Nation:

At a recent animal genetics conference in Switzerland, a team of geneticists described how NAIS-like animal identification systems had "huge potential for a genetic improvement programme where lack of individual identification is one of the main hurdles."

Agribusiness is in a global scramble to secure intellectual property rights over the next generation of biotechnology products. China, Brazil, India and many other countries have accelerated animal biotechnology research. In Canada, Aqua Bounty Farms has patented the first transgenic salmon, which grows to adult dimensions in half the time it takes conventional salmon. Regulators are considering whether to approve the salmon for sale.

The National Animal Genome Research Program, which pioneered the first disease-resistant transgenic cow in 2001, describes NAIS as "a key user" of its national network of genomics resources... 

the most maddening aspect of NAIS: it's so vague that it's hard to pin down exactly what it will do or how or even why. The USDA has left NAIS open-ended so stakeholders can maximize the program's potential value by using it as a platform to develop additional processes or systems. NAIS is a set of open-ended standards and protocols that can support a wide range of operations and processes--including genetic tracking--many of which have nothing to do with disease surveillance.

Great- NAIS might give agribusinesses the information they needs to take control of the genetics of all the livestock in the country.  This is the last step in the complete commodification of livestock production, a completely vertically-integrated factory farm model.  Every animal will be genetically identical, and god forbid a small indepedent producer somehow ends up with genes in their animal they didn't pay a "technology fee" on.  I'm sure many of you remember Percy Schmeiser's difficulties with Monsanto in Canada.

Which brings us all the way back around to the requirement in the House bill for USDA to buy meat from operations registered with this junk NAIS crap.  But I've ran on long enough for today- tomorrow I'll talk about the particular reasons this is such a bad idea (beyond the fact NAIS sucks).


NAIS

And major meatpacking companies who have turned market manipulation in a science - Smithfield, Tyson, Cargill, etc. - have always found ways to use government data against producers, whether legal or illegal.  Therefore, whether the packers will use NAIS data against farmers and ranchers is not at issue.  The only question that remains in this realm is when will they start bending the data for the purpose of distorting the marketplace for their own advantage?

Eye-opening

I had not heard of this issue until I read about it here. Thank you for bringing it to your readers' attention.

no nais for me

We are told that  NAIS is about tracking disease and keeping our food supply safe....sorry, that is not so. NAIS is a business plan, says so right on the cover,  made to  benefit corporate ag on the global market level... The part about tracking disease was added to make it more acceptable to the public.

 

Besides, NAIS tracking ends at time of slaughter.  Most food safety issues occur AFTER that, during processing. One of the big goals of NAIS is to shift liability to the farmers and off of the packers and retail chain. This is despite the fact that virtually all food contamination happens at the slaughterhouse and beyond. Ultimately the goal of the mega food corporations is consolidation and control by destroying the small farmers thus limiting consumer choice.

 

There are already disease tracking protocol in place, and they work just fine. 

 

Agri biz gets ONE lot number per groups of animals, any one of which could be sick and who would know... while the rest of us have to tag/track every animal individually and pay for it. 

 

If disease is suspected, depopulation of an entire 6 mile radius (140 square miles) is what is prescribed in the NAIS business plan.  Facts are most diseases can be cured, innoculated against or prevented.

 

If NAIS is about protecting the "national herd" (language straight out of fascist/communist ideologies) why then, when Creekstone Beef wanted to test every cow they process for BSE, the USDA says they could not!!!  They claimed it would cost too much money.   Creekstone had to take the USDA to court to sue for the right to test for BSE!

 

What about the foot and mouth outbreak in England?  The US has not had FM since 1929.  England does not allow for vaccination.  The FM  was traced back to the local lab where it had "escaped" from.  Out of the millions of  animals killed, only a small percentage tested really had the disease, which is not deadly, animals can survive it.  What about the dirty business of dealing with the piles of dead cows.  Surely more disease would come from that mess!

 

nais compared to....

What if I had a disease but I forced you to take/pay for the meds, then I go ttravel  the world, declaring I am disease free...makes no sense whatever and helps neither you nor me

but that is NAIS in the nuttiest nutshell ever...corporate ag wants to sell their meat products on the global market but puts all the rules/costs  of tagging/trackingon the private sector, like the pot belly pig in suburbia or backyard pony that will never be part of the food chain, but big ag tells Japan and other countries what a safe food supply we have. If a chicken sneezes in the countryside, an entire 6 mile radius of animals can be wiped out under NAIS rules.

good news about the fight against NAIS

USDA Sued To Stop NAIS

Legal Defense Fund Files Suit to Stop Animal ID Program
Suit Targets USDA and Michigan Department of Agriculture

 

Falls Church, Virginia, (July 14, 2008) — Attorneys for the Farm-to-Consumer Legal Defense Fund today filed suit in the U.S. District Court – District of Columbia to stop the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) and the Michigan Department of Agriculture (MDA) from implementing the National Animal Identification System (NAIS), a plan to electronically track every livestock animal in the country.

The MDA has implemented the first two stages of NAIS – property registration and animal identification – for all cattle and farmers across the state as part of a mandatory bovine tuberculosis disease control program required by a grant from the USDA.

The suit asks the court to issue an injunction to stop the implementation of NAIS at either the state or federal levels by any state or federal agency. If successful, the suit would halt the program nationwide.

 Concerned citizens can support the Fund by joining at farmtoconsumer.org or by contacting the Fund at 703-208-FARM. The Fund’s sister organization, the Farm-to-Consumer Foundation (farmtoconsumerfoundation.org), works to support farmers engaged in sustainable farm stewardship and promote consumer access to local, nutrient-dense food.

Editor’s Note: A copy of the suit filed against the USDA and MDA is available at farmtoconsumerfoundation.org

###

Contacts:

Taaron G. Meikle
President, Farm-to-Consumer Legal Defense Fund and Farm-to-Consumer Foundation
703-537-8372
tgmeikle@aol.com

Brian Cummings
Cummings & Company LLC
214-295-7463
brian@cummingspr.com

No more meat?

You know, to be honest, I seriously feel like if we all became <a href="http://www.goveg.com/">vegetarian</a>, the world would be a happier place. We BEG for world peace yet here we are slaughtering animals for our own consumption. I have been a vegan for the past six years and to be honest, I couldn't feel any younger. I'm always full of energy and I don't have to worry about getting stomach poisoning from a burger at Jack in the Box. Not to mention, I don't even spend that much on my <a href="http://www.assurant1.com/">health insurance</a>. If we didn't eat meat, none of this animal ID business would be an issue!

(Awaits the responses of angry meat-eaters).

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