Agricultural News
National Farmers Union Calls On President Obama to Act On GIPSA Rule
Wed, 22 Jun 2011 12:52:03 CDT
In a recent press conference, a national coalition of cattle and hog producers, poultry growers, and consumers came together to urge President Obama to complete the Grain Inspection, Packers and Stockyards Administration rule, also known as the GIPSA rule. Organizations that participated in the press conference were National Farmers Union, Western Organization of Resource Councils, Land Stewardship Project, Contract Poultry Association of the Virginias and Food and Water Watch.
National Farmers Union President Roger Johnson summarized the press conference and said the GIPSA rule is critically important to family farmers and ranchers. The current market for livestock is very concentrated and there is a need for the marketplace to become competitive again, Johnson said.
Johnson also said the GIPSA rule would return us to an essential competitive market that would provide more market access and more fair treatment within these markets.
Click on the LISTEN BAR below to hear the rest of Roger Johnson's comments on the importance of the GIPSA rule for the livestock market and industry.
National Farmers Union President Roger Johnson also issued the following statement in recognition of the one-year anniversary of the proposed GIPSA rule:
"The Obama Administration needs to act now to implement and enforce the GIPSA rule. Farmers and ranchers need a fair marketplace now more than ever. We have waited long enough.
"It has been one year since the GIPSA rule was proposed. Since then, more than 60,000 comments were submitted to the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) regarding the rule. It has been more than three years since the 2008 Farm Bill was passed with a mandate to put forward protections for farmers and ranchers. It is long past time to implement these reforms to protect family farmers and ranchers.
"The GIPSA rule will prevent packers from engaging in unfair and deceptive practices to harm livestock producers. Under the rule, farmers and ranchers would no longer have to prove that the abusive business practices employed by a processor against a farmer or rancher caused competitive injury to the entire livestock marketplace. The proposed rule would now require the producer simply to prove that the abuses damaged his or her operation. Doing so would return the industry to the position USDA has supported through both Republican and Democratic administrations and would simply reverse the 2006 judicial rulings against family farmers and ranchers.
"Opponents of the rule have demanded at every turn that USDA delay the rule as much as possible. To slow the process further, last week the U.S. House of Representatives, at the behest of packer-producer organizations, defunded the implementation of the rule. The rulemaking process should not take this long. The GIPSA rule should be finalized and enforced before next year's appropriations bill is signed into law.
"The economic impact on rural America stemming from the lack of competition in livestock markets and the resulting loss of farmers and ranchers is clear. Thirty years ago there were 1.3 million beef cattle operations. Today there are only 740,000. In 1980, there were 660,000 hog farms. Today there are only 67,000. Last year alone, 2,300 hog producers went out of business.
"It is time for USDA to act in implementing the GIPSA rule, to give America's family farmers and ranchers an opportunity to compete in an open and fair marketplace."
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