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USDA Trying to Put Loophole in Organic Dairy Rules Out to
Pasture 11-4-08
Since you are what you eat, the U.S. Department of Agriculture is proposing
stricter grazing standards for cows certified to produce organic dairy products,
closing loopholes that allowed some operators to cut corners.
Regulators found that some producers, though certified organic, were cutting
corners on the standards because the current rule doesn't define what "access to
pasture" means. Some dairies didn't give grazing time to cows that had just
given birth or wouldn't let cows out to pasture in the rain.
The Oct. 24 proposal specifies that organic livestock, those raised free of
hormones, antibiotics or pesticide-treated grain, must be allowed to graze in a
pasture at least 120 days a year. Thirty percent of the cows' feed must be from
such grazing, rather than being fed organically produced food in a feedlot or an
indoor facility.
The change, eight years in the making, is significant because consumers pay up
to twice as much for organic milk, whose sales are growing but are only about 6
percent of the $17 billion spent annually on milk.
"It's a big win for organic integrity," said Samuel Fromartz, author of Organic
Inc., a book that examines the organic food industry. "A lot of smaller farmers
thought the pasture definition was a big loophole that you could walk 5,000
Holsteins through."
There are about 1,800 dairies with some 87,000 organic dairy cows in the United
States, more than 93 percent of them small operations in the Northeast or
Midwest, according to the 26-page proposal. Though only 7 percent of the farms
are in the West, they account for a third of the production.
"Some producers, with the approval of their certifying agents have used other
provisions within the regulations to avoid or minimize the role of pasture," the
Agriculture Marketing Service said.
Some organic supporters, led by the Cornucopia Institute, an organic advocacy
organization, said that industrial-size dairies that supply some of the
country's largest retailers with private-label brand organic milk were skirting
the standards. That let the companies lower production costs and gain an unfair
advantage over smaller producers.
"It's inexcusable they are not enforcing this program, which has hurt the
ethical players in this business," said Mark Kastel, senior farm policy analyst
at Cornucopia, referring to agriculture officials.
Since 2005, the agency overseeing the organic program has received 11 complaints
requesting enforcement actions against big producers. The dairies have been
accused of over-milking their cows, restocking herds with cows that aren't
certified organic and skimping on fresh pasture.
Cornucopia, a Wisconsin-based institute, filed a complaint in 2005 against
Aurora Organic Dairy of Boulder, Colo., which has five farms in Colorado and
Texas where 16,000 cows produce organic milk for private-label supermarket and
retail brands. With sales of about $100 million annually, Aurora said it
accounts for up to 10 percent of the U.S. organic milk market.
The department found 14 willful violations by Aurora and proposed revoking its
organic certification. The company agreed instead last year to make changes to
its operations under a consent agreement.
"These were allegations, not violations of organic standards," said Sonja
Tuitele, spokeswoman for Aurora. "The activists are opposed to scale and the
campaign they have waged is not necessarily based on fact."
The dairy also is fighting a class-action lawsuit filed last fall. The complaint
alleges that consumers were defrauded, even though the milk carried an organic
seal of approval issued by USDA.
Aurora said it now publishes data on how many acres of pasture it owns and how
long cows graze on that pasture. It also has added organic pasture to its farms,
Tuitele said.
The agency is taking comments on the proposal until Dec. 23. A preliminary
proposal on stricter grazing requirements in 2006 attracted about 250 comments
from consumers, trade groups, retailers and producers.
Though the proposal addresses the "access-to-pasture" problem, some organic
farmers say they worry that new issues may slow progress on the rule. For the
first time, the agency says it is considering adding bees and aquatic species as
organic "livestock." And it includes provisions about beef cattle and whether
non-organic heifers can continue to be used as replacements in a herd.
"There is some fear that big industry packed the rule to slow it down," said
Ronnie Cummins, director of the Organic Consumers Association in Finland, Minn.
"It was not done correctly. It makes you really suspicious since it has taken
them years and years to close these loopholes."
Barbara Robinson, who oversees the National Organic Program at USDA, said the
proposal is expansive because the agency wanted to lay out as many options as
possible for the organic industry.
"We have no hidden agenda," she said, adding that she hopes a final rule will be
published in the spring. "It's their rule, their industry and their marketing
claim."
Comments:
I recently bought some Horizon Organic Whole Milk in a pinch and none of us
could stand it, it tasted and smelled so horrible. However it is not bad, it's
just very low quality compared to raw, organic grass-fed milk. It is just a sad
comment on the state of organic food in this country.
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