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Environment

Old Big Brother Had a Farm

By Amanda Griscom Little, Grist.org. Posted March 25, 2006.


A USDA plan to attach microchips to every farm animal in America has some small-scale farmers worried.
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If only Orwell could get a load of this.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture is promoting a system that would have farm animal owners and livestock handlers attach microchips or other ID tags to their furry and feathered charges so they could be monitored throughout their lifetimes by a centralized computer network. The National Animal Identification System, as it's known, has been in development by the department since 2002, with help from an agribusiness industry group that represents bigwigs like Cargill and Monsanto.

Sounds like Animal Farm meets Big Brother. Yet, while some small-scale farmers are outspoken in their criticism of the scheme, many in the agriculture community say it's high time the U.S. more carefully tracked livestock. The question is how best to do it -- and the devil, as always, is in the details.

The vision, says Agriculture Secretary Mike Johanns, is to create a comprehensive high-tech tracking system that would eventually know the whereabouts of every cow, llama, hog, catfish, ostrich, and other farm critter in the nation so that animal-borne diseases such as avian flu, mad cow, and foot-and-mouth disease could be easily and systematically kept in check. If an animal were discovered to be a carrier of a disease, this system could supposedly track every location it had been in through the course of its life and the other animals it may have come in contact with; those exposed could then be killed before the disease spread out of control.

Some independent farmers are concerned that the costs of NAIS would be particularly burdensome for small-scale operators, who are already struggling to stay afloat. "It's horribly insidious," says Lynn Miller, editor of Small Farmer's Journal. "The USDA is poised to push us off our farms."

Dore Mobley, spokesperson for the USDA, counters that such claims are greatly exaggerated. "It's simply not true," she says, explaining that the department has no intention of putting any farmer, no matter how small, out of business. And though she acknowledges that farms of every size will have to share the costs of the program, she reasons that it is "an investment in the future of animal agriculture from which all will benefit."

Martha Noble of the Sustainable Agriculture Coalition, which advocates on behalf of midsize and small-scale farming, acknowledges that some form of tracking system may be necessary for public-health reasons. "We are not opposed to a tracking program, per se," she says. "We understand the need for effective monitoring of animals and disease, but there's a lot of disagreement about how is it going to be implemented, who is in control, and how is it going to be paid for."

Some small-scale farmers also suspect that the program was designed by big industry, for big industry -- and, indeed, there's no denying that industry had a heavy hand in it. According to Glenn Slack, president of the National Institute for Animal Agriculture, a trade group, "The program is largely based on a plan developed in 2002 through an industry-government collaborative effort facilitated by NIAA." NIAA represents, among others, the biggest meat producers in the U.S., including Cargill Meat Solutions and the National Pork Producers Council, and the makers of high-tech animal-ID equipment, such as Micro Beef Technologies and Digital Angel. The latter group, needless to say, could benefit directly from a nationwide animal-ID program.

Paul Shapiro of the Humane Society of the United States has taken no position on the program, but argues it could actually be better for the animals than current tagging methods: "If anything, microchips may be less invasive to animals than branding or ear-clipping, which has been going on for eons," he says. And according to Mobley, the ID program would enable officials to be more prudent in choosing which animals are killed in the event of a disease outbreak, rather than wiping out herds and flocks on a large scale, as has generally been the approach heretofore. (Granted, most of the animals are destined for the slaughterhouse anyway, but that's another story.)

I'm going to have to see your ID

The program -- which is thus far voluntary, but could eventually become mandatory -- is designed to unfold in three stages. First, farmers and producers would register the barns, factories, slaughterhouses, and even homes where their animals -- be they 10,000 cows, a dozen chickens, or a single potbellied pig -- reside and are processed.

Second, animals born or living on those premises would be assigned a 15-digit federal ID number and a tag -- in some cases, an implanted radio-frequency identification (RFID) device. But producers of certain species such as chickens and swine that are bought, moved, and slaughtered in big groups could be allowed to identify an entire lot with a single ID number -- a less time-intensive and expensive process. Critics argue that since factory farms are in the business of mass production of animals, this would present them with a cost advantage. Miller says this is a loophole that effectively "renders the whole program moot."


Digg!

Amanda Griscom Little writes the Muckraker column for Grist Magazine.

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devil
Posted by: rsaxto on Mar 25, 2006 3:55 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The devil is in the Bushie Animal Farm.

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» RE: devil Posted by: tresdelsol
This is the epitome of 1984
Posted by: anothername on Mar 25, 2006 5:46 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I've been following this topic on and off and find it amazing.

1) If you want animals not to be sick, don't feed cattle innards to other cattle! Don't give them steroids or routine antibiotics, either.

2) How obsessive-compulsive has the government become when even the animals have to be numbered, entered into databases, and controlled?

3) As the small-scale farmer notes, and as with the Real ID Act, these univesal tracking systems do nothing to make us safer - they are all about control of the populace.

4) I can just see someone tracing a chip placed in a cow when she was a heifer through her post-milk-production years destruction, the chip then being mixed in with slop fed to pigs, the pig's intestines ending up in sausage sold at some food stand, then the by-product being deposited into a river during a storm and the Combined Sewer Overflow failing to sanitize the waste first, a fish eating the chip, that fish being eaten by a shark, the shark ending up in shark-fin soup, and when the computer running all things decides that number is contagious, a worldwide hunt will find the deadly "cow" in the stomach of a 68-year-old ex librarian in Mongolia.

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» RE: This is the epitome of 1984 Posted by: sarahenany2
There's no Mad COW on Animal Farm
Posted by: addyroo on Mar 25, 2006 6:59 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Zanoni is quite right about buying local and worrying more about corporate farm animal conditions. What small farmer loses track of his livestock? He is with them every day. Let the feed lots and slaughterhouses worry about this. That is where disease and contamination starts.

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What About Liability?
Posted by: birdman on Mar 25, 2006 7:16 AM   
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Aren't the big producers worried that such accurate tracking would increase their liability in the case of tainted food?

For instance, what about some salmon farmer whose tagged salmon escaped into the ocean and then proceeded to mate with, contaminate, whatever, the wild salmon, effectively destroying the remaining wild salmon gene pool worldwide (over time, of course)? If somehow that escaped salmon was ID'ed, it seems that salmon farmer could be in for a whole lot of trouble. Right? (Or would the salmon farmer get to use the Monsanto defense and now claim all "wild" salmon as his property?)

Usually big business looks for every scheme to evade responsibility. Why would they want to make it easy for investigators to trace problems back to them? I'm obviously missing something here.

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» RE: What About Liability? Posted by: TexasFarmer
Large Scale producers exempt
Posted by: AndyF on Mar 25, 2006 7:26 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The current proposal exempts large scale producers from tracking individual animals. They only need to identify locations where the animals are held, so there will not be any true traceability back to large scale facilities unless the processing facility puts a tracking system in place to identify the source for every animal it processes.

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we are next
Posted by: pacto on Mar 25, 2006 1:25 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I have been watching digital angel which are the ones developing the microchip for humans.At first they will use it for medical info,as thet are doing in Mexico now, and then the U S population so concerned with identity theft will be convinced it is for their own safety, to submit to this total control. So get ready to forfit you last bit of rights.

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666
Posted by: whitewolf on Mar 25, 2006 2:35 PM   
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Need I say more. This is part of the prophecies.. Monsanto and Cargill have to be the Anti-Christ...

In all seriousness, everything we say or do is recorded in some fashion now. This is getting spooky!

Kachina

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minor factual correction
Posted by: swami227 on Mar 25, 2006 9:50 PM   
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Sorry for being persnickity, but...
Early in her story, the author lists the National Pork Producers Council as one of the country's "biggest meat producers." In fact, the NPPC is a Washington, D.C.-based lobbyist group focused on global marketing of U.S. pork.

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Very disturbing
Posted by: DANIKA on Mar 26, 2006 12:10 AM   
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Not only is this totally unfair to small farmers but it's really disturbing to me on multiple other levels. The USDA says that these devices will make tracking food born illness easier... But by the time they even start tracking whatever it is, it has generally already spread throughout the food supply. I don't understand why the USDA doesn't require testing for the major food born illnesses in the animals before they are processed and distributed to the public for consumption. Or they could require a cleaner environment for the animals and the places they are processed. That would seem like the surest way to know exactly what illnesses were coming from where or prevent them all together. The USDA has failed to require testing for mad cow so far anyway. If no one's testing for it, the only way we will know it's there is when people start showing symptoms. By then it's too late. This is true for most food born illnesses. I feel as if the USDA has a conflict of interest between protecting the public and protecting it's own large corporate interests. I do not feel that these large corporations should be able to dictate requirements for all farmers in America, nor have such absolute control over our food supply. (If anyone is interested in signing a petition to have the USDA test for Mad Cow, visit www.thepetionsite.com/?ltl=114960337 and make your voice heard.)

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» RE: Very disturbing Posted by: Lincoln fan
Protect traditional rights to farm!
Posted by: Henwhisperer on Mar 26, 2006 5:02 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Who would want a system like this? NAIS will mean the death knell for small family farms, homesteaders, hobbyists, and the 4-H. It's none of Big Brother's business if I raise food for my own use. People are ditching their livestock now out of fear. NAIS will affect every single person in this country, even if you don't raise animals yourselves. All the food will come from Monstanto, Tyson, Cargill and the rest of their ilk. Thinking people! Get educated about NAIS. Nonais.org

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Come on!
Posted by: nickptar on Mar 26, 2006 9:09 PM   
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I can see the cost, effectiveness, etc. reasons not to do this, but bringing up Big Brother??!! Do livestock have a right to privacy now?

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A bit sensationalist
Posted by: Artaraxl on Mar 27, 2006 2:39 PM   
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The author's silly comment, "sounds like Animal Farm meets Big Brother" makes it sound like she's read neither Animal Farm nor 1984.

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Exectuive Director
Posted by: TexasFarmer on Mar 28, 2006 7:51 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Texas Organic Farmers and Gardeners Association is fighting this tooth and nail in Texas. To learn more about our efforts see our website at www.tofga.org

Steve Bridges
Executive Director
TOFGA

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TEXAS Fights NAIS
Posted by: TexasFarmer on Mar 28, 2006 7:52 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Texas Organic Farmers and Gardeners Association is fighting this tooth and nail in Texas. To learn more about our efforts see our website at www.tofga.org

Steve Bridges
Executive Director
TOFGA

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precursor/practice
Posted by: Elmowilcox on Mar 28, 2006 6:00 PM   
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Only thing that bothers me....seems like good practice for future human implementation. Track a bunch of animals for a while, then apply what they learn to accurately track us at some point in the future. You know, to control disease outbreaks such as flu, AIDS, dissendentasia, the protestor shakes, etc. Think it's far fetched?

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» RE: precursor/practice Posted by: nickptar
RE Old Big Brother Had a Farm
Posted by: blueyes on May 13, 2006 9:14 PM   
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As I watch thorough the window my beloved husband work in our garden, I wonder what will become of us. We only have 3 acres, but it means the world to him to be able to care for his animals (we have rabbits and geese). You see, my husband is disabled, and those animals are like his children. He actually loves them, imagine that, Cargill and Monsanto and USDA folks. I don't know how you people could go home and sleep at night. If you take this life away from him, there will nothing for him to live for anymore. We raise our animals, and mind our own business. And this is more than I can say for you...

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