Posted on 03/15/2006 10:11:51 PM PST by ex-Texan
BURLEY -- The enormity of tagging and electronically tracking every animal in the United States hit home to livestock owner and 4-H Club leader Maria Brown recently when her Cassia County extension office informed her that 4-H steers in the county would be required to have radio frequency identification/electronic identification (RFID/EID) tags this year.
Another surprise, she said, was when the extension office asked if she had registered her "premises" (farm,ranch,acreage) with the state.
Brown's experience is what farm animal and poultry owners across the nation can come to expect in the next few years as the U.S. Department of Agriculture's National Animal Identification System (NAIS) becomes a reality. Also known as the U.S. Animal Identification Plan (USAIP), the USDA is behind the "farm to fork" tracing system that allows governmental tracking of animals from birth to slaughter.
In light of concerns about tracking disease outbreaks, the USDA claims that new technology will be utilized to replace outdated tracing techniques, such as branding, tattooing, and ear tagging. Recent attempts at utilizing bar codes on cattle didn't fare well because the codes are often hard to read and the lifespan of bar codes are relatively short, reported the USDA in recent studies.
"I knew the program was out there," Brown said. "But I didn't really think about the impact it could have." Like Brown, many owners of small non-commercial farm acreage (i.e. hobby farms, mini-farms and recreational animal owners) remain curious as to what the program is and exactly who will fall under its scope.
NAIS is a combination brainchild of the USDA and the National Institute for Animal Agriculture whose corporate members include Cargill Meat Solutions, Monsanto Company, pharmaceutical giant Schering-Plough and the National Pork Producers Council. In 2002, the USDA, through the Animal Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) began drafting standards and a strategic plan to develop a "48-hour trace-back" system to stop any outbreaks of animal disease -- such as Creutzfeldt-Jakob's disease and bovine spongiform encephalopathy.
Idaho is one of many states to sign on and is fully engaged in the first goal of NAIS -- premises identification. With voluntary sign up sparse, the Idaho State Department of Agriculture brought alongside Global Animal Management (GAM), a data collection company. According to ISDA records, GAM has "successfully extracted data from Idaho's brand database," which resulted in 13,907 unique premises identification numbers."
A brand owner, Brown questions tactics of a "voluntary" program that has assigned more than 13,000 brand owners premises ID numbers.
However, the proposed plan will make premises and animal identification mandatory with enforcement in January, 2008. By January 2009, the NAIS strategic plan says the system will be "fully implemented with all components mandatory" including "enforcement for the reporting of animal movement."
As a 4-H leader and horse enthusiast, Brown says reporting animals going from one premises to another is a logistical nightmare. "Between March and August I would have over 1,100 incidences of animals coming and going (that) I would have to report on," she said.
But John Chatburn, ISDA animal industries deputy administrator, said ultimately that (that) may not be the case.
"The USDA has not put out the regulations yet, only the draft," he said. "There are a lot of things about this that are still up in the air."
That concerns legislative and computer systems analyst Vicky Davis of Idaho Falls.
"This is a snowballing Big Brother program," she said. "It will turn animal ownership into a privilege, not a right."
Davis said it could eventually lead to a plethora of mandatory health exams, vaccinations and how and where animals are kept.
"You have to look at it long-range to see how intrusive it is," she said.
Jason Ahola, University of Idaho beef extension specialist, said it is important to remember that the plan is only a proposal at this point.
"We don't have answers to some of the specifics," he said. "At this point there are a lot of unknowns about who will pay for the equipment and how all animal movement will be recorded."
Ahola said there is a lot of misinformation "out there."
However, Mary Zanoni, a Cornell University attorney, notded numerous specifics in her recent analysis of the NAIS proposed standards and strategic plan.
"The 'premises' that the Department (USDA) plans to subject to global positioning system (GPS) surveillance and distance radio-frequency readings are the homes of these tens of millions of citizens," she said. "What the department is proposing is enormously intrusive surveillance against unsuspecting innocent citizens who have done nothing more that to own an animal which is a common form of personal property under our American system of law."
In light of what Zanoni says arre "numerous and insurmountable flaws" in the proposed plan, the USDA should "carefully consider alternative methods that would be much more successful in accomplishing its stated objectives."
Brown prefers a voluntary rather than a mandatory program.
"Let those who benefit from it be the ones to use it," she said.
Cathy Roemer lives in Jerome and can be reached by e-mail at cm@roemer.myrf.net.
NAIS will prohibit any person from:
* removing an identification device
* causing the removal of an identification device
* Applying a second identification device, altering an identification device to change its number
* Altering an identification device to make its number unreadable,
* Selling or providing an unauthorized identification device
* Creating a counterfeit identification device
NAIS proposed rules
Animal owners must report within 24 hours:
* any missing animal
* any missing tag
* sale of an animal
* death of an animal
* slaughter of an animal
* movement of an animal off the farm or homestead
* movement of an animal on the farm or homestead
Timeline for National Animal Identification System
April 2007 -- Alert livestock owners of the NAIS requirements
Fall of 2007 -- Final rules published governing home and animal surveillance
January 2008 -- Premises registration enforced
January 2008 -- Animal identification required and enforced
January 2009 -- Required reporting of all animal movements enforced
(source:www.animalid.aphis.usda.gov.)
Don't forget, all the animals not covered under NAIS, is picked up by PAWS.
A better idea would be to tag all government employees and politicians so we could track them...you know, see how much time they spend on the job, who they are meeting with, who they take bribes from. I think that would be very helpful to the voters in future elections.
Mad Cow---
How many beef animals are there in the USA?
There have been 3 THREE reported cases of Mad Cow, and one of those was a FALSE POSITIVE.
My horse, dog, cat, hamster, etc., are NOT food animals in the USA. Requiring everyone to comply with this is insanity.
Convicted sex offenders are not kept track of. They are far more dangerous than me riding my horse for a couple of hours off my property.
With this "regulation", I would have to take a PHOTO ID of the UPS driver and report within 24 hours that he/she had been on and off my property. How's that fit your life????
I've been pretty selective lately, recording just the first hour. Even Art, repeating with Strega Nona last Sunday.
But that's the nature of radio. Not everybody hears it the first 100 times.
I've been neglecting Limbaugh too, since he's on a stealth marketing kick with his podcasts as of late.
So I take it you absolutey 100% support the NAIS and see nothing wrong with it?
That it should be shoved down the throat of a Free People?
That it's not the People of the Country that own these farms and animals, that it's the Government?
This is one of the many fronts in CW2
This Bolshevik Law should be challenged in court and taken all the way to the supremes.
Failing that there needs to be a change of government.
Completely
I have been listening to Rusty Humphries lately in the evening....get him on XM....I really like him... John Gibson is good too on the Fox Talk.
So, this is part of a treaty?
BTTT
Imagine the impact this stupid requirement will have on the local county fair and 4-H exhibition!There could be nothing more discouraging and detrimental to future farmers than a monolithic animal control program that detracts from the time needed to successfully operate a farm.
Bureaucrats seem to think that farming is a 8-5 job.
Our government can't even control illegal immigration, so instead they choose to impose more regulation on it's citizens, their private property, and their livelihood.
I listened to the C2C program for as long as I could stay awake. Accepting this kind of regulation is sheer madness.
"January 2009 -- Required reporting of all animal movements enforced"
I think enough people are going to put up a fuss about this that it won't happen and it will be challenged at the SCOTUS level.
If not, December 31, 2008 becomes Butchering Day at my farm. Screw 'em. I'm not turning over my laying hens to the Government.
(This was one of the best articles I've read on this subject, BTW. Thanks for sharing.)
Thank you kindly, Diana.
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