U.S. NEWS: "U.S. Weighs How to Track Diseases Livestock: Meatpackers Worry That New, Narrower Effort Won't Reassure Foreign Buyers; States Fear They'll Be Hit With the Tab," by Scott Kilman, Wall Street Journal, 22 February 2010.
The meat industry is upset that the USG is abandoning a planned $120m livestock tracking system "designed to limit the economic and human-health impact of animal-disease outbreaks."
The fear? The narrower replacement program "could exacerbate worries abroad about U.S. meat exports." State officials, as usual, spot an unfunded mandate from DC.
The feds argue back that the six-year-old voluntary program being replaced never attracted enough players to work.
The U.S. beef industry still hasn't recovered from the mad-cow outbreak in 2003. Big foreign markets were lost--like South Korea. Some for good.
The system launched (NAIS, or National Animal Identification System) after that scare was designed, like an Australian program, to track cattle their entire lives using electronic ear tags and tiny transponders and 15-digit serial numbers.
Canada, Japan and the EU have similar programs.
Problem? Many American ranchers spurned the program over "everything from privacy to religious issues, crippling the effort."
Sad to say, but sounds like the stubborn U.S. industry is getting what it deserves.
New fed plan, responding to that failure, is truly suboptimal for the age: state governments are to track cattle and only cattle that crosses state borders.
Oh, how very 19th century!
Fed officials can't even guess at the percentage of cattle/chickens/swine left outside that gem of a concept.
Meatpacking companies are freaking, knowing that our rule-set is lagging dramatically behind the rest of the advanced world. (aka, the Old Core). The great failure? Who wants 50 different outbreak rule-sets?
One state official says it'll be patchwork at best, taking the system BACK at least a decade in capability.
Nice.
The NAIS voluntary system only attracted about 500k farms and ranches, or about 36% of the total. Many farmers feared being held responsible financially for disease outbreaks. I have no idea why some sort of reasonable cap on individual liability couldn't have been created, with federal backing. Do we want to sell meat globally or not?
US beef exports fell 80% after the 2003 mad cow event. Fifty nations banned our beef.
And seven years later we've decided to go for an even looser, more patchwork monitoring system.
This, from the allegedly "socialist" Obama.
Sad state of affairs.