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Headlines
Featured news articles on the NAIS from across the country. These articles are posted on other websites, and we do not control how long they will be available.
- Minnesota cattlemen want NAIS scrapped, government intrusion ended
- AgWeek.com - June 29, 2009
Minnesota cattle producers are bristling at the idea of the U.S. Department or Agriculture imposing the National Animal Identification System on the livestock industry and of further government intrusion in their business.
- State cattle group opposes mandatory ID program
- TheIndependent.com - June 28, 2009
Dwindling support for a National Animal Identification System (NAIS) has one Nebraska livestock organization calling on state livestock producers to reject the idea of making the program mandatory.
- Rebellion on the Range Over a Cattle ID Plan
- New York Times - June 27, 2009
Wranglers at the Platt ranch were marking calves the old-fashioned way last week, roping them from horseback and burning a brand onto their haunches. What they were emphatically not doing, said Jay Platt, the third-generation proprietor of the ranch, was abiding by a federally recommended livestock identification plan, intended to speed the tracing of animal diseases, that has caused an uproar among ranchers.
- Tell 'em "no national animal ID"
- North Platte Bulletin - June 25, 2009
Sen. Johanns thought Nebraska had been snubbed when the National Animal Identification System (NAIS) listening sessions were scheduled and he requested one be placed in Nebraska.
- Were the USDA’s NAIS “listening” sessions a decoy?
- CanadaFreePress.com - June 24, 2009
Opposition to the National Animal Identification System (NAIS) at the USDA’s recent “listening sessions” around the U.S. revealed more than 95% of America’s livestock owners were against it.
- Were the USDA’s NAIS “listening” sessions a decoy?
- CanadaFreePress.com - June 24, 2009
Opposition to the National Animal Identification System (NAIS) at the USDA’s recent “listening sessions” around the U.S. revealed more than 95% of America’s livestock owners were against it.
- Listening session on Animal Identification System planned in Omaha
- The Grand Island Independent - June 23, 2009
As the Nebraska Department of Agriculture continues to trace the locations of cattle in the ongoing bovine tuberculosis case, U.S. Sen. Mike Johanns, R-Neb., is commending the U.S. Department of Agriculture for choosing Omaha for a National Animal Identification System listening session.
- USDA: Can You Hear Me Now?
- GOPUSA.com - June 22, 2009
For the last several weeks, the U.S. Department of Agriculture has been conducting "listening sessions" in a dozen cities across the country. The purpose of these sessions was to find ways to make the proposed National Animal Identification System acceptable to the people who own livestock.
- House committee approves ag budget
- AgWeek.com - June 22, 2009
The House Appropriations Committee on June 18 approved a fiscal year 2010 agriculture appropriations bill that includes no money for the national animal identification system and continues a ban on the importation of processed chicken meat from China.
- No, thanks, U.S. Department of Agriculture
- WilsonCountyNews.com - June 16, 2009
Rural America may not agree on much, but nobody seems to like the prospect of putting an identification tag on every farm animal.
- USDA gets an earfull about NAIS
- CanadaFreePress.com - June 15, 2009
Results from the USDA’s “Listening Sessions” are now clear: No NAIS, no way, no time! Here are two short summaries of what livestock owners had to say at the listening sessions in Missouri and in Texas.
- Congress Using Money as Leverage to Make NAIS Mandatory
- FarmFutures.com - June 15, 2009
It's been no secret that Rosa DeLauro, D-Conn., the chair of the House Appropriations Ag Subcommittee, wants a mandatory National Animal Identification System. Last week she emphasized that message telling USDA and the livestock industry to agree to a mandatory program or the program will be zeroed out in the 2010 fiscal year budget.
- Animal ID system: Big Brother or just good business?
- News-Leader.com - June 13, 2009
Livestock producers across southwest Missouri are conflicted on a National Animal Identification System , which at this point remains voluntary.
- Committee pulls funds for animal ID program
- Rapid City Journal - June 12, 2009
A spokesman for a major ranchers' group called the move a victory for livestock producers opposed to having a national animal ID system forced on them.
- DeLauro zeroes out funding for animal ID
- FeedStuffs.com - June 11, 2009
New funding for the troubled National Animal Identification System (NAIS) was dropped today from the fiscal 2010 spending bill. Agricultural appropriations subcommittee chairwoman Rosa DeLauro (D., Conn), who has been a strong critic of how the U.S. Department of Agriculture has handled millions of dollars spent on the program, said "continued investments into the current NAIS are unwarranted" until USDA comes up with a better plan.
- NAIS: Detriment to Texas agriculture
- Bandera County Courier - June 11, 2009
Although USDA advertises that the program is voluntary at the federal level, they are encouraging states to make the program mandatory at the state level.
- Group Urges USDA to Accomplish Two Priority Goals
- OpEdNews.com - June 10, 2009
In a meeting held last week in the office of the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), R-CALF USA CEO Bill Bullard informed USDA officials that urgent action is needed to restore the viability of the U.S. cattle industry.
- NAIS should be fixed or forgotten
- The Daily Republic - June 10, 2009
Four days before the seventh and final “listening session” June 1 to gather producer comments on NAIS, the National Animal Identification System, U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack announced USDA would host six additional meetings for the public “to voice their concerns about the current NAIS system and offer potential solutions.”
- Missouri Crowd Opposed to Mandatory NAIS
- FarmFutures.com - June 10, 2009
More than 200 farmers and ranchers from seven states gathered in Jefferson City, Mo. Tuesday for a listening session on the National Animal Identification System hosted by USDA. The session was the first of an additional six sessions that were added to the original eight listening sessions that have been held over the past month.
- Animal ID critics to protest at ag dept. meeting
- bnd.com - June 9, 2009
The agriculture department is holding an all-day discussion today at a Jefferson City hotel to solicit opinions about the National Animal Identification System. Critics plan to protest outside the meeting.
- Federal livestock-ID proposal riles smaller producers, Colorado Congresswoman
- DenverPost.com - June 7, 2009
Small farms and consumer groups are outraged that they could be forced into a previously voluntary system that they argue is expensive and increases the power of corporate agriculture.
- Editorial: Back to drawing board for NAIS
- Wallowa County Chieftain - June 4, 2009
If ever there was a good idea gone bad, it is the National Animal Identification System.
In fact, if you were to write a text book on how to turn people against something, it would be titled "NAIS: Fear and Loathing in the Countryside."
- More Animal ID Listening Sessions Planned
- WisconsinAgConnection.com - June 3, 2009
USDA's Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service will hold additional listening sessions on the National Animal Identification System. The meetings will take place this month in, California, Florida, Missouri, New Mexico, North Carolina and South Dakota.
- Nebraska Farm Bureau says "Keep animal ID voluntary"
- NorthPlatteBulletin.com - June 2, 2009
The Nebraska Farm Bureau supports a voluntary national animal ID system, Sherry Vinton told a panel of officials June 1 at USDA's National Animal Identification System listening session in Loveland, CO.
- Legal Defense Fund Asks USDA to Re-Focus Listening Tour
- BusinessWire.com - June 2, 2009
Acting Fund President Pete Kennedy, noting the overwhelming opposition voiced by consumers and farmers in the seven hearings to date, urged Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack to truly listen to the voices already raised.
- NAIS: Farmers and Ranchers Under Attack
- nolanchart.com - June 1, 2009
The National Animal Identification System (NAIS) is unfair and by all accounts, would be ineffective. It is yet another way to squeeze out small family farmers and further monopolize America's food production.
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USDA NAIS Listening Tour Information
Read the latest alerts from the Liberty Ark Coalition on the NAIS Listening Sessions being conducted across the country by clicking here.
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NAIS 101
Industrial agriculture and technology companies are urging the government to adopt a program that will drive many small farms out of business, burden horse owners, invade our privacy, increase the cost of meat, and expand the government bureaucracy.
If the National Animal Identification System (NAIS) is made mandatory, anyone who owns even one horse, chicken, cow, pig, sheep, goat, or any other livestock or exotic, will have to:
- Register their property with the state and federal government;
- Identify each animal, in most cases with electronic identification;
- Report events to a government-accessible database within 24 hours, including every dead or missing animal, private sales, and regional shows.
NAIS will:
- violate individuals' Constitutional rights, including freedom of religion and right to privacy;
- reduce the availability of local, organic, and grass-fed foods;
- raise the cost of food, because tagging and tracking costs will be passed on to consumers;
- create a massive government bureaucracy.
NAIS will not:
- make food safer since most food-borne illnesses, such as e coli and salmonella, are due to food processing and handling practices - not live animals;
- protect us against bioterrorism - the proposed microchips and radio tags are easily reprogramed and large databases are easy targets for terrorists or other criminals.
NAIS is both a federal and a state issue:
- The USDA says that the NAIS is voluntary at the federal level. But, USDA is funding the States to implement NAIS at the state level, and that funding creates incentives for States to use mandatory, misleading, or coercive methods in order to increase participation. And, Congress is considering putting NAIS in bills to fund and implement NAIS.
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