Our Klamath Basin
Water Crisis
Upholding rural Americans' rights to grow food,
own property, and caretake our wildlife and natural resources.
NOW
LET`S TRY THE BACK DOOR
by c.
Russell Wood
There for a
minute it looked like we could breath a little
easier. The United States Dept of Agriculture
issued yet another explanation of their National
Animal Identification System. This version
called A User Guide said "
It`s all voluntary, no mandatory ID at the
Federal level."
Well you
couldn`t beat that. That`s what we`ve been
working for. But the breathing easier didn`t
last long. There was yet another shoe to fall.
In this case a whole closet full.
Evidently the
current administration is realizing that the
common animal owners out here in the heart land
are not going to accept a mandatory national
animal ID system. Secretary of Agriculture
Johanns recently said a mandatory ID program
would result in "open revolt" among producers.
So they must try a different tact. Try a back
door approach.
` So the current
rhetoric has changed from voluntary as a
stepping stone to a mandatory program to one
they say will remain voluntary. They say this
paper replaces all previous plans.
BUT!!!
We`ve
discovered USDA issued another document the same
day their Guide was released. This one is
called Cooperative Agreements for
Implementation of the NAIS. It is directed
to the states and outlines the procedures to
bear down on the task of getting animal owners
to register their premises for the NAIS.
Fourteen million dollars is going to be
distributed among the states ( Missouri slated
to get $570,000.00) to be used to get premises
registrations.
So while in one
document they stress voluntary participation on
the federal level they are at the same time
saying to the states "sickem" and dangling money
out there for bait
Premises
registration has not been going as well as USDA
had planned but they helped that along
significantly by changing the standards. It
seems they discovered they were using the wrong
figures as to how many premises exist that need
to be registered. In Missouri they claimed there
are 104,000 places to get and they only had
about 10,000 in their web; about 10%. Now they
say there are some 78,000 total state wide.so
they have maybe 13%.
So for now the
big push from USDA is to get the states to
increase their efforts toward premise
registration.
Dr. Steve Goff
of the Mo. Dept of Agriculture told an Iowa
newspaper that Missouri " may have the most well
organized opposition group" hindering premise
registration. "They`re into rights and / or
violation of rights". He scoffs that ,"This
violates too many of their rights-private
property, constitutional" This is a state
employee ridiculing citizens for opposing
bureaucratic rulemaking. He also fails to
recognize that the opposition he faces is "the
people", not a well organized group.
All this makes
it more important now than ever for each state
to prohibit implementation of mandatory animal
ID in their state. Each state has to permit it
and USDA aims for them to let it happen. Here in
Mo. many legislators have already vowed they
will stop this at the gate. But Governor Blunt`s Dept.
of Agriculture will no doubt be out to get
this $570,000 regardless of the fact that it
all has to be spent to coerce people to join up
for NAIS. Some of it can be used for salaries
but most all has to go for advertising and what
ever else they can use to sell their program.
Without premise
registration, NAIS goes no where. Which is where
it`s gotten so far. So the approach has been
changed. Tell `em it`s voluntary at the federal
level so they will relax, then push the states
to get in there and get `em registered. Then the
ID part and the animal movement part and the
mandatory part will be added later.
Nothing has
changed except the door they will be trying to
come through. We need to help our legislators
close that back door approach on the Mo. Dept
of Agriculture and the USDA.
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Page Updated: Thursday May 07, 2009 09:14 AM Pacific
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