| Editor's
NOTE
Alan's column will appear each Friday on The
New Farm® web site.
Alan Guebert is a professional freelance agricultural
journalist from Delavan, IL. He brings 22 years’
experience to his weekly investigations, reflections
and analysis of events that shape the ability of farmers
to farm profitably and independently. Click
here for more information on Alan.
We'd welcome any thoughts or comments you have about
Alan's column, or any questions you have for him. Click
here to send us a note. |
|
|
"If USDA seriously
believes the pork checkoff must be reinstated to save 91 jobs
at the National Pork Board, exactly what does USDA believe
should be done for the more than 200,000 pork producers who
lost their jobs since the pork checkoff was imposed in the
mid-1980s?" |
 |
|
 |
1.
Election fallout continues
In the first of many chain reactions caused by the Nov. 5 Republican
win, Capitol Hill leadership showed some new faces this week.
First, as expected, Democratic House Minority Leader Dick Gephardt
relinquished his post after eight years of fighting--and mostly
losing to--Newt Gingrich, Dick Armey and Tom DeLay. Gephardt was
quickly replaced by Californian Congresswoman Nancy Pelosi, a clear-eyed,
unapologetic liberal.
As presumed as Pelosi’s rise to Minority Leader was, she didn’t
claim the title unopposed. The day before the Thursday, Nov. 13
caucus election, Rep. Marcy Kaptur announced a challenge to shoo-in
Pelosi.
Kaptur, a 10-term representative from Toledo, Ohio and the longest-serving
Democratic women in Congress, is an outspoken proponent of family
farm agriculture who fiercely opposes the North American Free Trade
Agreement, Fast Track Trade Authority and permanent tax cuts contained
in the 10-year tax bill passed by Congress in 2001.
Alas, Pelosi won and the Democrats now confront a Republican juggernaut
for two years. That juggernaut will be piloted by Tom “The
Hammer” DeLay, a former bug exterminator from Houston. DeLay
moved up to Majority Leader, replacing Dick Armey who retired, second
in command to Speaker Denny Hastert.
As his nickname implies, DeLay is not known for his light touch.
He is a fierce partisan known mostly for hyperbole and hyperventilating.
Don’t be surprised if the Bush Administration uses him as
its exterminator on the Hill.
Truly surprising was Tuesday’s announcement by House Ag Committee
Larry Combest that he would resign from Congress in May. The news
stunned friends and colleagues just a week after re-election to
his 10th term with 91 percent of the vote.
Combest has held the Ag Committee gavel only four years, but the
short stay belies his record. With help of his Democratic counterpart,
Ranking Minority Member (and fellow Texan farmboy and neighbor)
Charles Stenholm, Combest rejiggered 1996’s dysfunctional
Freedom to Farm law into the 2002 Farm Bill.
Combest, who Texas pundit Molly Ivans might say “has hair
all Texans can be proud of,” made two large contributions
to the 2002 Bill: counter cyclical payments -- whose complex payment
schemes promise to confuse farmers for at least six years -- and
flat-out, Texas-mule stubbornness.
On the stubbornness front, Combest steadfastly held the line against
Senate proposals to add a competition title and a packer ban on
livestock ownership to the 2002 law. In final House-Senate negotiations,
Combest told Senators there would be no Farm Bill if they persisted
in either or both ideas. In the end, neither was adopted.
But Combest was not a wrecker. He made honest efforts to keep the
House Ag Committee a bipartisan oasis amid the hot, airless desert
of debate that is a hallmark of Congress today.
In announcing his departure, Combest said he’s retiring to
spend more time with wife Sharon “while we still have our
health.” It was an illusion to the passing of his 88-year-old
father earlier this year and the tragic death of the couple’s
daughter, Tonya, after emergency surgery in 1999.
His impending departure puts the Ag Committee Chair in play and
Republican hopefuls are sharpening their elbows for the coming fight.
John Boehner from Ohio currently serves as the Committee’s
vice chairman and is the heir apparent. Boehner, however, chairs
the House Education and Workforce Committee. Since House rules do
not permit members to hold more than one chairmanship, few suspect
Boehner will give up the Education Committee to lead Ag.
That means some junior Republicans have a shot if they can get the
ear and the nod of Speaker Hastert who will name Combest’s
successor. Virginian Robert Goodlatte, Californian Richard Pombo,
Terry Everett of Alabama and Nick Smith of Michigan all have expressed
interest in the job.
2. USDA
appeals pork checkoff loss
File this one under the heading “If you live long enough,
you’ll see everything.”
On Wednesday, Nov. 13, USDA filed an emergency motion in the Sixth
Circuit Court of Appeals to “stay” an Oct. 25 federal
court ruling that declared the nationwide mandatory pork checkoff
unconstitutional.
First Amendment notwithstanding, USDA wants the ruling overturned
and the pork checkoff kept in place.
Why?
Because, as USDA notes in the second paragraph of its 20-page filing,
killing the checkoff “will end a Congressionally enacted program
and result in the dissolution of the National Pork Board, causing
the immediate loss of at least 91 jobs, the breach of existing contracts,
and the loss of assets and employee expertise that cannot be replaced.”
Hmm, let’s see if we understand this logic.
First, pork producers succeeded in their petition drive to force
USDA to hold a vote on the pork checkoff.
Next pork producers succeeded in winning the vote to end the checkoff.
Finally, pork producers succeeded in defending both victories in
federal court. (Remember, they didn’t go to court; they were
named as defendants by checkoff backers who brought the suit to
keep the checkoff.)
Now, after years of struggle and victory after victory, pork producers
are told by USDA that the checkoff really exists so 91 people--“with
expertise that cannot be replaced”--can keep their jobs?
And we thought lawyers lacked a sense a humor.
But USDA is not joking; it’s deadly serious.
So let’s be serious, too.
If USDA seriously believes the checkoff must be reinstated to save
91 jobs at the National Pork Board--most of which are held by former
National Pork Producer Council employees who simply moved to the
Board after the NPPC lost the 2000 checkoff vote--exactly what does
USDA believe should be done for the more than 200,000 pork producers
who lost their jobs since the pork checkoff was imposed in the mid-1980s?
And one more question while we’re at it: What has USDA’s
rigorous court defense of all checkoffs in the last three years
cost U.S. taxpayers? We know what’s its costs U.S. farmers--$1.3
billion per year.
3. GMO headlines,
headaches
and heartburn
GMOs again made headlines this week and again the headlines gave
American farmers headaches and heartburn.
On Nov. 13 and 14, USDA revealed that experimental bioengineered
corn twice had threatened to contaminate the U.S. food and export
markets in recent months with pharmaceutical varieties of corn unapproved
for human consumption.
In the first incident, about 500 bu. of soybeans containing trace
residual amounts of an unapproved GMO corn from a 2001 test plot
were present in soybeans grown and harvested in the same field in
2002. A truckload of beans from that field were later mixed with
500,000 bu. of soybeans at an Aurora, NE elevator.
USDA ordered all 500,000 bu. to be destroyed or used in non-food--such
as biodiesel--applications
According to USDA, ProdiGene, Inc., a biotech firm based in College
Station, TX, hired Stauffer Seed Co. to contract with farmers to
grow experimental varieties of pharmaceutical corn in 2001.
During the 2002 growing season, however, government inspectors monitoring
the soybean field where the one acre of GMO corn had been grown
in 2001 noticed volunteer corn in the beans. The inspectors ordered
the volunteer corn removed from the field before the 2002 harvest.
According to USDA, though, the farmer failed to remove the volunteer
GMO corn and harvested it with the beans. Later, the beans were
mixed with other beans at the Aurora elevator to contaminate about
$2.7 million worth 2002 crops.
On Nov. 14, USDA acknowledged that ProdiGene also had been ordered
to burn 155 acres of conventional, non-GMO corn in Iowa earlier
this fall after government inspectors suspected some of the firm’s
experimental pharmaceutical corn may have cross-pollinated nearby
conventional corn.
USDA said ProdiGene will pay for the costs of containing both non-approved
GMO varieties.
What USDA did not say--and what ProdiGene has yet to disclose--is
what types of “pharm” corn the company was testing to
cause USDA to impose such draconian measures. USDA records indicate
the ProdiGene received 85 test permits that allowed open-air trials
of GMO and pharmaceutical corn in at least 96 different locations.
GMO opponent GEFood Alert suspects the pharmacological corn may
have been one of four experimental varieties ProdiGene is attempting
to develop: corn that contains either an AIDS vaccine, the blood-clotting
agent Aprotinin, a digestive enzyme call Trypsin or an industrial
glue called Laccase.
Matt Rand, the Biotechnology Campaign Manager for the National Environmental
Trust, suggested the latest incidents only confirm that “it
is just a matter of time before one of these experimental crops
ends up on our dinner plates.”
GEFood Alert said it will petition USDA to halt all GMO pharmaceutical
testing. Also, The Center for Food Safety announced it will file
a Freedom of Information request with USDA to review all ProdiGene
GMO test requests.
An earlier FOI on ProdiGene tests by Friends of the Earth was denied
by USDA.
Despite the latest GMO headaches, some farm groups are using the
incidents to claim USDA oversight of GMO testing is working. Stephan
Censky, ceo of the American Soybean Assoc., noted USDA “did
take action” before the ProdiGene non-approved corn entered
the food chain.
But, he added, “pharmaceutical or industrial crops have to
(be grown) under very strict and very meticulous protocols.”
Food sellers, however, say more assurances are necessary. The Grocery
Manufacturers of America told the Des Moines Register Nov. 14 that
the “biotech industry should ‘give serious consideration’
to using plants other than food crops like corn to develop pharmaceutical
compounds.”
The American Corn Growers Assoc. agrees, saying the latest GMO scares
only reinforce its long-advocated “cautionary approach”
to GMO adoption and testing by American farmers.
“The last thing American farmers need is to have a lack of
food processor confidence or erosion of consumer faith over the
safety of corn, the nation’s largest crop,” offers ACGA’s
Dan McGuire.

THE FINAL WORD
ARCHIVES
© 2002 ag comm
The Final Word comes to you each Friday by special arrangement.
Alan Guebert's regular column, the Farm and Food File, is published
weekly in more than 70 newspapers around the US and Canada. Contact
him at AGuebert@worldnet.att.net.
|