3.11.2010

The little guys win one! Animal ID chips axed by FDA



Heh...iffin' ya been readin' the Back Porch fer long ya know Aunty is uber wary of big gubmint in collusion wif' big bidness--like Monsanto. The agencies and the gubmint is a leetle too interested in controllin' what ya grow an' eat.


Fer years now they's threatened to put a RF chip in every animal in the country! Yep--the fig leaf they offer is to insure food safety. (they go clean up the slaughter houses). Idea is tha each animal--down to yore last free range chicken, must be tagges an' if the gubmint says so, yore animlas can be kileld--in other words, ya might have yore farm taken from ya. When the raisin' of food is controlled by a few major palyers, an family farms is killed off, what ya reckon food is gonna cost? If ya can git it--


anyhow, the organic an' small growers has been kickin' an screamin' over it--so now looky! We won one!!


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Former USDA Leader and AVMA CEO, Dr. Ron DeHaven Responds in Video to USDA Decision to Scrap Animal ID System

SCHAUMBURG, Ill., March 9 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- A recent decision by the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) to scrap a national animal identification system could seriously hinder U.S. veterinarians' ability to track diseased animals and prevent the spread of those diseases -- diseases that could spread to humans and cost U.S. farmers millions of dollars.

That's the message that Dr. Ron DeHaven, chief executive officer of the American Veterinary Medical Association (AVMA) and a former head of the USDA Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, delivers in a new video which can be viewed on www.avmatv.org, the AVMA Media Library (www.avma.org) and YouTube. "I have a number of concerns," Dr. DeHaven says in the video.

Last month, the USDA announced that it was going to scrap the eight years of work and $120 million it poured into creation of the National Animal Identification System (NAIS). Instead, the USDA announced it will restart the process and begin developing a new state-based animal identification system.

"By having an animal ID program in place, we can more quickly contain and eliminate disease. Doing so not only minimizes the economic impact, but by minimizing the number of animals affected, we reduce animal suffering," Dr. DeHaven says in the video. "In the case of zoonotic diseases -- diseases that can spread from animals to humans - we reduce the potential that the disease will spread to humans."

Dr. DeHaven says that one of the biggest problems with this announcement is that there will be no animal ID system during this new development period, which could take years. DeHaven is also critical of the USDA announcement that cattle branding -- an outdated form of theft deterrent -- will be an acceptable form of animal identification in the new system. "It's hard for me to imagine how this ancient technology will fit into a modern, interstate system to trace animals," DeHaven says in the video.

As opposed to NAIS, which is a national program, the new system will be administered by individual states and tribal nations. Each state and tribal nation will be allowed to use its own system of identification.

"Will these systems developed by individual states and tribal nations be compatible with each other?" Dr. DeHaven asks in the video. "Will we actually be able to trace animals as they move from state to state with different systems in each state or tribal nation?"

The full video can be viewed at the AVMA's video site, AVMA-TV, at www.avmatv.org, and a downloadable version of the video is available to journalists through the association's media library, www.avmamedia.org. As with all its Web videos, the AVMA encourages bloggers and journalists to freely post and quote from this video. AVMA-TV offers a full library of videos about veterinary medicine -- from veterinary careers to food safety and brushing your pet's teeth -- open for use by the public.

For any other information about veterinary medicine, please visit www.avma.org.

The AVMA, founded in 1863, is one of the oldest and largest veterinary medical organizations in the world. More than 80,000 member veterinarians are engaged in a wide variety of professional activities. AVMA members are dedicated to advancing the science and art of veterinary medicine including its relationship to public health and agriculture. Visit the AVMA Web site at www.avma.org to learn more about veterinary medicine and animal care and to access up-to-date information on the association's issues, policies and activities.

Source: American Veterinary Medical Association

5 comments:

moi said...

Good news! Thanks for alerting us to it.

SophieMae said...

OO-RAH for this battle! Hope things are mellowing for you a bit now. It's so true... it don't rain but it pours. Be blessed, Aint B!

Have a JESUS-filled day! ^i^

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Doom said...

This is very good news. Thanks for the update. These seemingly little niggling things chew up my sleep and cause ferocious dreams... The real doomsday clock just took a tick back.