The National Animal Identification System:
A New Threat to Rural Freedom
Friday, March 10, 2006
By Mary Zanoni, Ph.D. (Cornell), J.D. (Yale),
Executive Director of Farm for Life™
Small farmers and homesteaders have
chosen their way of life because they love their freedom - the freedom
from urban noise and congestion, the independence from government and
corporate interference, the self-reliance of providing one's own
shelter, water, food. Now the USDA's NAIS - National Animal
Identification System - threatens the traditional freedoms of the rural
way of life.
The genesis of the NAIS
The NAIS is the brainchild of the National Institute for Animal
Agriculture (NIAA). Who is the NIAA? Primarily two groups;
- the
biggest corporate players in U.S. meat production (for example, the
National Pork Producers, Monsanto, Cargill Meat); and
- the makers
and marketers of high-tech animal ID equipment (for example, Digital
Angel, Inc., EZ-ID/AVID ID Systems, Micro Beef Technologies,
Ltd.).
Beginning in 2002, the NIAA used 9/11, and subsequently the BSE
scares to lobby the USDA for a nationwide, all-livestock registration
and tracking system. The result is the USDA's proposed NAIS, set forth
in a Draft Strategic Plan (Plan), and Draft Program Standards
(Standards), released on April 25, 2005. The Plan and Standards can be
downloaded from www.usda.gov/nais.
Main requirements of the NAIS
The NAIS would require two types of mandatory registration. First,
premises registration would require every person who owns even one
horse, cow, pig, chicken, sheep, pigeon, or virtually any livestock
animal, to register their home, including owner's name, address, and
telephone number, and keyed to Global Positioning System coordinates
(for satellite-assisted location of homes and farms), in a federal
database under a 7-digit "premises ID number." (Standards, pp. 3-4,
10-12; Plan, p. 5.)
Second, individual animal identification will require owners to
obtain a 15-digit ID number, also to be kept in the federal database,
for any animal that ever leaves the premises of its birth. Thus, even
if you are raising animals only for your own food, you will have to
obtain an individual ID to send animals to a slaughterhouse, to sell
or buy animals, to obtain stud service. (Large-scale producers will be
allowed to identify, e.g., large groups of pigs or broilers raised and
processed together by a single group ID number. However, owners
raising single animals or a small number, under most circumstances,
will have to identify each animal individually for purposes of
slaughter, sale, or breeding.) If you own a non-food animal such as a
horse, you would need individual ID if you ever left your property for
shows or trail rides. The form of ID will most likely be a tag or
microchip containing a Radio Frequency Identification Device, designed
to be read from a distance. (Plan, p. 10; Standards, pp. 6, 12, 20,
27-28.) In addition to this "electronic identification," the USDA will
allow "industry" to decide whether to require the use of "retinal
scan" and "DNA" identification for all animals. (Plan, p. 13.)
Within this system, for animals subject to individual animal
identification, the animal owner would be required to report: the
birthdate of an animal, the application of every animal's ID tag,
every time an animal leaves or enters the property, every time an
animal loses a tag, every time a tag is replaced, the slaughter or
death of an animal, or if any animal is missing. Such events must be
reported within 24 hours. (Standards, pp. 12-13, 17-21.) The USDA
plans "enforcement" to ensure compliance with the NAIS. (Standards,
p. 7; Plan, p. 17.) The USDA has not yet specified the nature of this
"enforcement," but presumably it would include fines and/or seizure of
animals.
A more recent development is a movement, spearheaded by the
National Cattlemen's Beef Association (NCBA), to "privatize" the database,
which will contain all the premises and animal identification
information, and tracking information. As reported in Lancaster
Farming, Aug. 6, 2005, p. E 22, the NCBA has lobbied the House
Agriculture Committee to urge the USDA to put the NAIS database
administration into the control of the NCBA itself. As explained
below, such "privatization" will only worsen the prospects for
invasion of privacy, and economic pressures on small farmers and
homesteaders.
Any "benefits" of the NAIS Are illusory
The NIAA and USDA claim two principal benefits of the NAIS: first,
enhancing export markets for U.S. livestock products; and second,
allowing traceback to farms of animals' origin when animal diseases
(such as BSE) are found. These "benefits" are of no use to most small
farmers and homesteaders. Small farmers and homesteaders sell to their
neighbors, or consume their animal products themselves - they don't
profit from "export markets." Small farmers and homesteaders raise
their animals in natural and healthy conditions - usually on pasture,
with minimal home-raised or organic grain, with plenty of space for
exercise and dispersal of waste - to assure that problems like BSE and
bacterial contamination won't occur in the home-raised animals
destined for their own tables.
Indeed, the NAIS "traceback" system would be much less effective
against BSE than a system of testing every slaughtered cow. Europe and
Japan perform testing of every cow. The USDA has refused such testing;
but surely the testing would be less expensive than a huge tracking
system covering every cow, horse, donkey, llama, alpaca, pig, sheep,
goat, pigeon, chicken, duck, farmed fish, etc., etc.
Moreover, the NAIS system would be of no use at all in dealing with
the most common types of meat contamination in the U.S., the
occurrence of pathogens such as listeria or E. coli in processed
meat. One example of such contamination can be found at www.fsis.usda.gov/Fsis_recalls,
2005 recalls nos. 033-2005 and 040-2005. Those incidents involved over
one million pounds (enough to serve at least four million people) of
ground beef contaminated with coliform bacteria, distributed
nationwide by a single processor. Such instances of contamination are
not discovered until the meat has been distributed into the supply
chain.
Assuming that a cow yields 500 pounds of ground meat, the one
million pounds in the foregoing recalls represent meat from over 2,000
cows. There is no way to identify individual cows from one million
pounds of hamburger; no way to tell if any contamination came from a
cow, multiple cows, or from the processing itself; and no benefit to
consumer safety in such a situation from the NAIS system. In sum, when
meat becomes contaminated at a large packing plant, millions of
consumers in all 50 states can be exposed to the dangerous product. In
contrast, an incident of impaired food at a small-scale farm or local
processor might affect only a few dozen consumers in a single
county. Thus, by encouraging increased consolidation of the meat
industry, the NAIS would actually make America's food supply more
unstable and less safe.
It is therefore clear that the benefits of the NAIS are
illusory. Unfortunately, the harms of the NAIS are very real, and fall
primarily upon the smallest farmers, homesteaders, and consumers.
The harms of the NAIS are very real
The NAIS will drive small producers out of the market, will prevent
people from raising animals for their own food, will invade Americans'
personal privacy, and will violate the religious freedom of Americans
whose beliefs make it impossible for them to comply.
The NAIS will create an unfair economic burden on small farmers and
homesteaders, because animal owners will bear the costs of property
and animal registration. As the USDA frankly admits,
"there will be costs to producers" (Plan, p. 11); "private funding
will be required... Producers will identify their animals and provide
necessary records to the databases... All groups will need to provide
labor." (Plan, p. 14.)
In sum, there is no realistic chance of government funding to cover
the costs of the program once it is established, and animal owners
will have to pay the tab for premises registration fees, individual
animal ID fees, reporting fees for events such as animals leaving a
given premises or being slaughtered, and for equipment such as RFID
tags, tag readers, or software needed to report to the database. The
proposed privatization of the NAIS would only worsen the economic
burden, since a private database holder would certainly want to make
some profit from the system.
The NAIS would also, in fact, lessen - rather than improve - the
security of America's animal foods. The NAIS is touted by the USDA and
agricorporations as a way to make our food supply "secure" against
diseases or terrorism. However, most people instinctively understand
that real food security comes from raising food yourself, or buying
from a local farmer you actually know. The USDA plan will only stifle
local sources of production through over-regulation and additional
costs. Ultimately, if the NAIS goes into effect, more consumers will
have to buy food produced by the large-scale industrial methods which
multiply the effects of any food safety and disease
problems. Moreover, the NAIS system will create opportunities for
havoc, such as the deliberate introduction of diseased animals into
premises containing large numbers of a given species.
Perhaps the most troubling aspect of the NAIS is its proponents'
lack of concern for individual privacy and religious freedom. Consider
that the NAIS plan is a compulsory registration with the government of
all people who want to raise their own animal foods. Concededly, the
Bill of Rights does not contain a Constitutional amendment
specifically to protect one's right to produce one's own food. But
that is only because the generation of the Founders could never have
imagined that American government could evolve into a system that
would compel citizens to, in effect, ask for government permission to
produce their own food.
Further, consider that livestock animals are legally a form of
personal property. It is unprecedented for the United States
government to conduct large-scale, computer-aided, surveillance of its
citizens simply because they own a common type of property. (The only
exceptions are registration of motor vehicles and guns, due to their
clear inherent dangers - but they are registered at the state level,
not by the federal government. Moreover, those registration systems
predate the widespread use of personal computers and the development
of the Internet, so even the car and gun registration systems were
never intended as the widespread threat to privacy and freedom that
they have become today.) Surveillance of small-scale livestock owners
is like the government subjecting people to surveillance for owning a
couch, a tv, a lawnmower, or any item of personal property.
Moreover, privatization of the NAIS will surely result in the same
gross abuses already evident in private databases of financial
information - the sale of citizens' most personal data, without their
knowledge, to the highest bidder; and the vulnerability of citizens'
information to hackers and thieves, because the President and Congress,
have utterly failed to subject the powerful private data industry to
long-needed protections for citizens' privacy.
The NAIS also violates America's tradition of respect for the
religious freedom of members of minority faith communities. Many
adherents of plain, (and other) faiths, raise their own food animals, and
use animals in farming and transportation, because their beliefs
require them to live this way. Such people obviously cannot comply
with the USDA's computerized, technology-dependent system; and many of
them also believe that scriptural teachings or other religious tenets
prohibit the marking of animals or homes with high-tech numbering
systems. The NAIS will force these people to violate their religious
beliefs, by compelling them to make an impossible choice between
abandoning the livestock ownership necessary to their religious way of
life, or accepting the government's imposition of practices abhorrent
to their faith.
The USDA's planned NAIS timetable
The following is the USDA's timetable, as set forth in the Draft
Strategic Plan, and Draft Program Standards, on April 25, 2005, for
implementing the mandatory NAIS. Essentially, the USDA timetable would
make premises identification and individual animal identification
mandatory as of January 1, 2008. Please note that there can be no
assurance that the USDA will not advance (or delay) the previously
announced timetable. In addition, the USDA timetable may differ from
that of individual states, which have had the incentive of grant money
from the USDA to establish pilot projects of premises and animal
identification. (For example, Wisconsin is attempting to compel
premises and animal identification by late 2005, or during 2006.)
- April 2005 - the USDA issued its Draft Strategic Plan and Draft
Program Standards for public comment. The public comment period for
those documents ended in early July 2005.
- July 2006 - the Draft Strategic Plan (p. 10) gives July 2006 as
the target date for the USDA to issue a proposed rule setting forth
the requirements for NAIS premises registration, animal
identification, and animal tracking. This will be a crucial juncture
for action by those who will be harmed by the NAIS, because there will
be a limited public comment period after the publication of the rule,
and objections expressed in the public comments may persuade the USDA
to modify, or abandon some requirements of the rule.
- Fall 2007 - the USDA plans to publish a "final rule" to establish
the requirements of the mandatory NAIS. (Plan, p. 10.)
- January 2008 - this is the most crucial date in the USDA's
present timetable, the date when premises identification and animal
identification would become mandatory. (Plan, pp. 2, 10.)
- January 2009 - "animal tracking" would become mandatory,
including "enforcement" of the reporting of animal movements. (Plan,
p. 17.)
How to oppose the NAIS
There is still time to oppose mandatory premises and animal
identification. Small-scale keepers of livestock can take action to
create an effective movement in opposition to the USDA/agricorporate
plan. First, small-scale livestock owners should not participate in
any so-called "voluntary" state or federal program to register farms
or animals. The USDA is using farmers' supposed willingness to enter a
"voluntary" program as a justification for making the program
mandatory. (See Plan, "Executive Summary" and pp. 7-8.) If a state or
extension official urges registration of your premises or livestock,
question them about whether the registration is mandatory or voluntary,
and about any deadline for registration; and ask them for a copy of
the legislation or rule establishing any claimed authority to require
such registration.
Small farmers and livestock owners can also help inform and
organize others. The USDA presently does not plan to finalize its
rules to establish mandatory ID until the summer of 2006. (As stated
above, individual states, such as Wisconsin, may be planning earlier
implementation, but even in such states, widespread objection by
animal owners can still affect whether plans become permanent and
whether reasonable exceptions may be established.) Animal owners
should contact breed associations, organic and sustainable farming
organizations, or general farming interest groups and ask them to
oppose the NAIS. Also ask such organizations to start or support
campaigns of letter-writing to officials and of commenting on the USDA
rules scheduled to be issued in summer 2006 (and any similar state
rules).
NAIS opponents can also individually write their federal and state
legislators. You can find contact information for both federal and
state officials through www.vote-smart.org or through the
federal government's site, www.firstgov.gov. Remember, the
conventional wisdom is that individual letters sent by postal mail
carry more weight than e-mails, or signing on to form letters. But any
input is more useful than no input, so if you don't have time for an
individual letter, use e-mail, telephone, group petitions, or any
means you can. Also remember that both individual initiative and group
initiatives count, so even after you have sent a letter, continue, if
you can, to respond to calls for action asking you to send additional
messages to government officials.
In particular, the USDA's planned issuance of a NAIS rule for
public comment in July 2006, will be a crucial juncture. Be aware of
press coverage or action alerts at that time, and when you hear that
the public comment period on a NAIS rule is open, please take the time
to submit an individual comment.
Finally, if the time comes when the NAIS, or a state equivalent, is
about to go into effect as presently planned, and you feel your rights
are being violated, you can contact groups that may provide legal
representation without cost. Some sources of information to try are:
- Farmers' Legal Action Group,
www.flaginc.org, 651-223-5400;
- the American Civil Liberties Union,
www.aclu.org; for the ACLU in your
state, see the pull-down menu on the bottom of that page, under "your
local ACLU"; and
- the American Bar Association's guide to legal services,
www.abanet.org/legalservices/findlegalhelp/home.cfm.
Mary Zanoni, Ph.D. (Cornell), J.D. (Yale),
Executive Director of Farm for Life™
P.O. Box 501, Canton, New York 13617
Email: mlz@slic.com
Mary Zanoni practices law in St. Lawrence County, a leading
dairy-producing region of New York State. She serves as the Executive Director
of Farm for Life, a nonprofit group supporting small-scale and sustainable
farmers, and citizens who raise livestock and crops for their own food.
(We refer to this last category as "home farmers.")
NOTE: In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. section 107, any copyrighted material herein is distributed without profit or payment to those who have expressed prior interest in receiving this information for non-profit research and educational purposes only. For further information please refer to: http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml
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