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Conveyor Currents                               January 6, 2012
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Upcoming Dates
                  

2012

 

January 11-12, 2012   
Grain & Feed Industry Conference, Embassy Suites, San Luis Obispo, CA


January 17, 2012  
5th  Gordon Currie "Salty" Crab Feed/North Bay District Meeting at Mister McGoos in Petaluma

April 18-21, 2012  
CGFA Annual Convention ~ The Hyatt Regency, Monterey, CA

May 16-17, 2012,  California Animal Nutrition Conference ~ Radison Hotel & Conference Center, Fresno, CA

2013

January 16-17, 2013   Grain & Feed Industry Conference, Embassy Suites, Monterey, CA

April 24-27, 2013  CGFA Annual Convention ~ The Hyatt Regency, Huntington Beach, CA


2014

January 15-16, 2014   Grain & Feed Industry Conference, Embassy Suites, Monterey, CA

April 23-26, 2014  CGFA Annual Convention ~ The Sheraton Resort, Maui, HI


In This Issue
Legislature Comes Back to Work in Sacramento
Governor Releases Budget
What Confronts Congress in 2012?
NLRB Workplace Posting Requirement Postponed
5th Gordon Currie "Salty" Crab Feed - January 17th
Ethanol Industry Pushing on "Demand" Side of Spending
Ag Groups Tell CFTC Rulemakings are "Inflexible"
NLRB Moves to Finalize Union Election Rule
FDA Restricts Cephalosporin Use
Regulators Should Avoid "Knee Jerk" Reaction to MF Global
USDA Updates Data Set on Fertilizer Use
People & Potpourri
FDA Animal Feed Safety System (AFSS) Update
Legislature Comes Back to Work in Sacramento

 

Following the interim break, on January 3rd, the Legislature returned to the state Capitol to begin the second year of a two year session. This is likely to be a unique year due to implementation of several voter enacted initiatives and the fact it is an election year. Legislators will be running in districts that have been crafted by a "citizens commission" that have nested several sitting Legislators in the same district and made a few more "competitive" seats. Additionally, this will be the second year of a majority vote budget. Last year Republicans held some leverage due to the Governor's desire to place a tax plan in front of the voters which requires a 2/3 vote.  

 

With the Governor taking his plan to the voters through initiative, he does not need to Republicans for any major actions, including tax increases. Local Government funding and allocation of responsibilities will continue to be major issues with the demise of redevelopment and the prison realignment.   Infrastructure development and funding will take center stage this year with the release of the Bay Delta Conservation Plan, the continued controversy over high speed rail and discussion about CEQA reform for major transportation and construction projects.   Finally, many progressives in the Legislature are getting "restless" about regulatory reform, pension reform and cuts to social programs and they may start to create issues for Governor Brown's agenda.


 

Governor Releases Budget - CDFA Bears $12 Million in Cuts


The Governor released his 2012-2013 budget proposal, which was expected to be released on the 10th. Because the budget documents were mistakenly posted online today, the Governor moved forward with releasing his proposal officially. The total general fund spending is $92.6 billion dollars and is highly dependent on the passage of a $6.9 billion November initiative to increase taxes on sales and high earners. Because the initiative is voted on in November 2012, this budget relies on $4 billion in revenue from that measure, with the total amount available for future budgets. The budget also provides "trigger" cuts if the initiative fails which would go into effect mid-year.

 

The budget includes a permanent decrease to various CDFA programs of $12 million in 2012-13, as part of a two-year effort to achieve $31 million in ongoing General Fund savings.  This reduction impacts various programs relating to pest prevention, border control station, and food safety activities.

Specific budget actions include:

 

Increases in Fees

  • $1,150,000 - Replace Interior Exclusion Program and Plant Pest Diagnostics Laboratory General Fund with phytosanitary fee for certification to move nursery stock.
  • $1,028,000 - Replace Milk and Dairy Food Safety General Fund with an increase to the dairy industry's existing fee for service.

Reductions and Shifts

  • $4,382,000 - Decrease General Fund for operations at Border Protection Stations. The General Fund reduction will result in reduced operations at several stations.       Budget offsets cut with a shift of $1,432,000 in reimbursement authority from CalRecycle to operate border stations to reduce fraud in the recycling program.

Program Efficiencies and Reductions in Program Scope

  • $953,000 - Limit activities within the Light Brown Apple Moth program to federally funded activities only, such as a sterile release program which may increase nursery and farmers exposure to quarantines.
  • $701,000 -Eliminate General Fund support for Biological Control activities.
  • $366,000 - Reduce Plant Pest Diagnostics and Seed Laboratories via program efficiencies.
  • $2,400,000 - Reduce Local Assistance to counties for Trapping and/or High Risk Pest Exclusion activities, including inspection of incoming shipments of plants, fruits, vegetables, and conveyances at destination points throughout the state.
  • $350,000 - Discontinue support for Agriculture Security and Emergency Response Program.
  • $245,000 - Reduce staffing levels through efficiencies for the Animal Health Branch and Animal Health Food Safety Data Management System.
  • $425,000 - Reduce frequency of meat and poultry inspections and locate efficiencies within the Meat and Poultry Inspection program.

Additional Major Proposals in the Governor's Budget Include the Following:

  • Reducing Greenhouse Gas Emissions: California has been an international leader in the effort to reduce air pollution and develop clean energy. The Budget reflects the first year of implementation of the AB 32 cap and trade program. Through a market approach, the program will create fiscal incentives for businesses to reduce their greenhouse gas emissions. The proceeds generated from Governor's Budget Summary - 2012-13 Introduction the program, potentially $1 billion in the first year, will be used to invest in clean energy, low-carbon transportation, natural resource protection, and sustainable infrastructure.
  • Building High-Speed Rail: High-speed rail will be an important asset of the state's infrastructure. It will meet Californians' future travel needs in an efficient manner and reduce greenhouse gas emissions. The Budget includes funding requests to continue the basic functions of the High-Speed Rail Authority. The Authority's funding plan is under review by the Department of Finance. After the review, the Administration will propose a plan for the initial train segment.
  • Meeting Water Needs: Balancing the state's water needs with environmental protection remains a long-term challenge. The Delta Habitat Conservation and Conveyance Program is currently developing a plan to promote the recovery of endangered, threatened, and sensitive fish and wildlife and their habitats in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta in a manner that will also ensure water supply reliability. When completed, the plan will provide the basis for issuing permits for the operation of state and federal water projects. The Budget proposes $25 million and 135 positions to complete preliminary engineering work. Future funding requests to address the state's water needs will be necessary.
  • Temporary Tax Increase: The Budget is based on the assumed passage of the Governor's Constitutional Amendment on the November 2012 ballot. The proposal temporarily increases tax rates on the highest income Californians, and temporarily increases the Sales and Use Tax rate by 0.5 percent. These two provisions result in a revenue increase of $6.9 billion.
    • The Budget assumes the passage of the Governor's proposed initiative at the November election. This measure temporarily increases the personal income tax on the state's wealthiest taxpayers and temporarily increases the sales tax by one-half percent. The measure guarantees these new revenues to schools and constitutionally protects the 2011 Realignment funds for local public safety. It will generate an estimated $6.9 billion through 2012-13. After accounting for the increased Proposition 98 minimum guarantee, it will provide $4.4 billion in net benefit to the General Fund budget. The measure will prevent deeper cuts to schools, protect local public safety funding, and assist in balancing the budget. The revenues will allow the state to invest in higher education and to pay off the $33 billion in outstanding budgetary borrowing and deferrals by 2015-16.  Where noted in the Governor's proposal, "trigger cuts" are the items cut if the ballot measure in November 2012 to temporarily raise taxes fails passage.

Other changes in the Governor's budget include the following:

  • Reduce Number of Regional Water Boards: This proposal realigns the regional water board boundaries to create eight regional water boards, merging two of the smaller existing regional water boards (the Colorado River Basin Water Board) into neighboring regions with the boundaries continuing to follow watersheds.  The proposal brings more consistency in the size of the regions. It also reduces the number of members on the boards from nine to seven.
  • Unfair Labor Practice Case Backlog: An increase of $500,000 Labor and Workforce Development Fund and 3.8 positions to reduce a backlog of unfair labor practice cases. The Agricultural Labor Relations Board will implement permanent process changes and efficiencies that will enable unfair labor practice cases to be processed more quickly.
  • Consolidate Colorado River Board within the Natural Resources Agency: The Board is responsible for developing a plan to maintain an adequate water supply from the Colorado River.   The proposal eliminates the Board and transfers these responsibilities to the Natural Resources Agency. This proposal will ensure that all statewide water supply issues, such as water supply reliability, Delta sustainability, and Colorado River water issues are addressed in a comprehensive and coordinated manner.
  • Research Grants for Fumigant Alternatives: An increase of $713,000 Department of Pesticide Regulation Fund and 2.0 positions to provide funding for applied research grants for fumigant alternatives research projects. These grants will encourage and support development of alternative techniques, procedures, and processes for pest control, reducing the need for high-risk pesticides use and ensuring compliance with Federal Clean Air Act requirements for specialty crop pesticide use.
  • Employer Surcharge to Fund UI Interest Payments: An increase in revenue of $472.6 million, Employment Training Fund, as a result of implementing a surcharge on employers effective January 1, 2013. The surcharge revenue will fund future interest payments for funds borrowed from the federal government to pay California's unemployment insurance benefits and repay the funds borrowed from the Unemployment Compensation Disability Fund.
  • Ballot Trigger Reduction:  The Department's flood control programs would be reduced by 20 percent, or approximately $6.6 million, if the Governor's tax proposal is not approved in November. These programs include floodplain mapping and risk awareness.
  • Eliminate the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board and Transfer its Functions into the Department of Industrial Relations: The Board is responsible for the adoption, amendment, and repeal of the occupational safety and health standards and public safety standards enforced by the Department of Industrial Relations (DIR). This proposal eliminates the Board and transfers responsibility to the Division of Occupational Safety and Health within DIR.
  • Eliminate the Department of Boating and Waterways and Transfer the Functions into the Department of Parks and Recreation: The Department of Parks and Recreation currently partners with Boating and Waterways in facilities construction projects. Boating and Waterways funds operations at all of Parks' reservoirs. This proposal will transfer the functions of the Department of Boating and Waterways to a division of the Department of Parks and Recreation, similar to the Off-Highway Vehicle Recreation Division. Because the Department of Boating and Waterways is being transferred to the Department of Parks and Recreation, the California Boating and Waterways Commission will be eliminated. The Commission advises the Department of Boating and Waterways on matters within its jurisdiction and consents to all boating facilities loans and grants. The duties performed by the Commission will be absorbed by the Department of Parks and Recreation.

 

What Confronts Congress in 2012?

 

Having punted the payroll tax reduction battle - along with most federal spending, debt limit and tax reform issues - into 2012, Congress must now catch up with what it should have done in 2011, while trying to tackle a host of issues that must be handled before the November elections. Issues expected to consume Congress' time include the following:

 

Input Costs/Availability: Several overarching issues confronting agriculture are the cost and availability of everything from corn, soybeans and other crop ingredients to inputs, including fertilizer and feed ingredients. Much of the outcome will hinge on global factors, e.g, what will be the impact of prolonged South American drought on U.S. corn exports? What does Russian production look to be, particularly in the Black Sea region, and what will its import/export policies look like? What will China do in 2012? What's Europe's macroeconomic/currency future? Some of this will be addressed in the Farm Bill, some in energy policy development, some in tax and awaited Dodd-Frank/CFTC rulemakings.

 

Energy: Congress continues to wrestle with fashioning a comprehensive federal energy policy into which such things as alternative energy incentives, research into biofuels, etc., can be tucked. Expired tax incentives for biofuels - particularly biodiesel - and a federal Renewable Fuels Standard (RFS) under attack as market-distorting, will be tough hurdles to overcome, and ag groups will be pushing for a bill by Rep. Bob Goodlatte (R, VA) that would reduce the RFS mandate on corn-based ethanol should the stocks-to-use ratio fall below set limits.

 

Farm Bill: Production agriculture is focused on how to rewrite federal farm program income supports in a time of high on-farm income and restricted federal spending. However, given the difficulty in moving comprehensive and expensive farm legislation in an election year already has some national groups, including the National Cattlemen's Beef Assn. (NCBA), predicting the Farm Bill will not be completed until 2013, though drafts will circulate throughout 2012, and one or both committees may approve "final" versions. The chief priority for most farmers and ranchers is preserving federally subsidized crop insurance programs, with several grain/oilseed/cotton/rice/sugar/dairy groups having reinvented their federal payment programs as income insurance protection programs. The American Farm Bureau Federation (AFBF), which issued several "warnings" on various crop groups' new ideas, is meeting in Hawaii this week and will likely revisit all of its farm program recommendations, affirming or rewriting what most have called support for current programs albeit with smaller spending. A bill fashioned by Sen. Debbie Stabenow (D, MI), chair of the Senate Agriculture Committee, and Rep. Frank Lucas (R, OK), chair of the House ag panel, but never submitted to the deficit reduction super committee, may provide ideas for a new Farm Bill, but will not be the foundation for the comprehensive bill.

 

Trade: The World Trade Organization (WTO) formally nixed the U.S. country-of-origin labeling regulations, so 2012 will bring the Administration decision on whether to appeal that ruling or not. With Congress having finally ratified free trade agreements with Panama, Colombia and Korea, attention now turns to the Trans Pacific Partnership (TPP), with the immediate focus on bringing Japan, and perhaps Canada, into the negotiations, which increases the importance of these discussions for the U.S. livestock sector. Also on deck is congressional ratification of Permanent Normal Trade Relations (PNTR) for Russia now that this nation has been accepted into the WTO. This will be a heated debate based on Russian embargoes on poultry and other U.S. exports over the last couple of years.

 

Animal Rights: HSUS may continue to pursue federal legislation to make horse slaughter illegal in the U.S., as well as forcing all meat processors to kill all nonambulatory livestock - no matter the species or the reason - so that they do not enter the food supply. An assault on the use of primates in biomedical research is expected, as well as HSUS support of a proposed ban on antibiotic use on farms.   

 

Tax Reform: Over 1,000 federal tax credits for everything from small business research and development to child care to biodiesel were allowed to lapse at midnight on December 31, setting up another tug-of-war in getting some of them modified and all of them reauthorized. The Bush tax cuts will also expire absent congressional action, and both the Senate Finance Committee and the House Ways & Means Committee are expected to float a comprehensive tax reform package early this year that will seek to close some corporate loopholes and deductions as offsets to pay for other reform measures. Heavy debate will focus on reducing overall U.S. corporate tax rates, now the second highest in the world, as a means to entice companies to bring off-shore investment and savings back to the U.S.

 

 

NLRB Workplace Posting Requirement Postponed

 

The National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) issued an announcement on December 23, 2011 that it had postponed the implementation of its employee rights notice-posting rule until April 30, 2012, marking the second time the NLRB has postponed the deadline.

 

According to the NLRB announcement, the decision to postpone the effective date of its employee rights notice-posting rule came at the request of a federal court in Washington DC, hearing a legal challenge regarding the rule. The NLRB has ruled that it has determined that postponing the effective date of the rule would facilitate the resolution of the legal challenges that have been filed with respect to it. The NLRB believes that the workplace posting will serve to inform employees or their right to organize and bargain collectively with their employers. It will also serve to protect employees from certain types of employer and union misconduct and inform employees of their right to contact the NLRB, generally within six months of presumed unlawful activity, to inquire about possible violations without an employer or anyone else being informed of the inquiry.

 

The soon-to-be required posting can be found by  clicking here.

 

5th Gordon Currie "Salty" Crab Feed - January 17th

The 5th Gordon Currie "Salty" Crab Feed / North Bay District Meeting has been scheduled for Tuesday, January 17, 2012.  The event begins at 6:00 pm at Mister McGoos Restaurant located at 1375 Petaluma Boulevard North, Petaluma, CA.  The cost is $45.00 per person and reservations are due by January 9th in care of Darrel Freitas.  Click here for flyer   

 

 

Ethanol Industry Pushing on "Demand" Side of Spending

 

Since federal financial incentives for the ethanol industry have lapsed, including the blenders' tax credit and the import tariff, the broad ethanol industry is pushing hard to get an equivalent amount of support - about $6 billion in federal spending last year - shifted to spending on ethanol infrastructure, including loan guarantees for pipeline construction, flexfuel pump installations and federal mandates on construction of flexfuel cars and light trucks. Growth Energy, a major association of ethanol companies, says its focus is now on E15 (15% fuel blends), flexfuel pumps and flexfuel cars, all designed to increase demand for primarily corn-based ethanol.  

 

Further, Growth Energy and the Renewable Fuels Assn. (RFA) said it will continue to push EPA on the E15 petition - there are House and Senate bills designed to block any EPA action to increase the blend rate above the current 10% -- while also working to protect the Renewable Fuels Standard (RFS), the federal mandate on how much ethanol must be blended with gasoline on an annual basis. Livestock and poultry groups are calling for congressional hearings on the impact of the RFS on the economy and food production. The RFS is also a major rallying point for ethanol producers, given the new push against the RFS by animal production. "We expect the RFS to be a target as long as the RFS is in place," RFA said just before Christmas, but the group continues to try and reinvent parts of the RFS through administrative actions.  

 

The original federal law that created the RFS in 2007 specifically bans ethanol from benefitting from certain incentives for so-called "advanced biofuels," such as cellulosic ethanol and biodiesel whether from oilseeds or animal byproducts. The ethanol industry is pushing to have corn-based ethanol redefined as an "advanced biofuel" under the RFS, a move that would increase the RFS blend mandate to 21 billion gallons by 2022. However, EPA sees other biofuels - including biodiesel from soybeans and animal fats - as the fuels that will meet the 2022 blend mandate. Meanwhile, House bills authored by Rep. Bob Goodlatte (R, VA), former chair of the House Agriculture Committee, would eliminate the RFS completely, or more realistically, reset the RFS formula so that when the corn stocks-to-use ratio falls below a certain level, then the RFS is suspended in whole or in part.

 

Ag Groups Tell CFTC Rulemakings are "Inflexible"

 

Thirteen organizations representing the bulk of commodity market users - including the American Feed Industry Assn. (AFIA) and the National Grain & Feed Assn. (NGFA) - told the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) this week the commission's approach to regulation writing as part of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform & Consumer Protection Act is "inflexible, with rules written that are largely designed for systemically important institutions...whose hedging poses no risk to the markets or the economy."

 

The group asked that CFTC rules be clearer and more flexible and take into account legitimate hedging needs for end users of ag products. "Agriculture end users...should be positively encouraged to manage their risks and not (be) forced into a one-size-fits-all regulatory approach," the group said in a letter to CFTC Chair Gary Gensler.

 

The group asked that CFTC to revisit its swap dealer definition, a proposal written so broadly it threatens to ensnare cooperatives and local grain elevators that provide risk management tools as a service to their members and customers. The swap definition was supposed to catch commercial and institutional entities that pose a risk to the system, and the rule as written may force some co-ops and elevators to cease offering risk management services to escape the "swap dealer" definition and regulation.

 

Additionally, the rules being drafted by the CFTC as required under Dodd-Frank do not demonstrate an understanding of the interaction of the rulemakings, and in some cases, definitions and eligibilities under the rules are in conflict.


 

NLRB Moves to Finalize Union Election Rule; House May Act Again

 

A controversial National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) rulemaking designed to speed up union organizing elections and forestall employer litigation got the green light just before Christmas, and the House has said it will move legislation to stop the rulemaking. The NLRB voted 2-1 along party affiliation to move to final approval of the proposed rulemaking. Industry reacted as expected, condemning the NLRB move. The House passed one bill to forestall the NLRB, but Senate action is not expected; the House has vowed to continue its fight. The rulemaking, dubbed as the "ambush elections" rule, would require union elections to be held in less than 21 days on average, down from the current 38 days.  

 

Further, employers would be prohibited from filing a lawsuit to negate the election until after the vote has been held so they don't hold up the election process. NLRB Chair Mark Gaston Pearce said the final rule will be modified so it would only apply to union elections needlessly delayed by "frivolous litigation." The National Association of Manufacturers (NAM), sued the NLRB over the rulemaking stating, "This is a misguided rule. This is a prime example of how the current Board's aggressive agenda seeks to significantly change longstanding and agreed-upon labor policy. The NAM will seek to explore every possible action to put a stop to the ambush election rule and protect manufacturers from the NLRB's activist agenda."

 

FDA Restricts Cephalosporin Use

 

Within a week of FDA announcing it had withdrawn two long-standing and long-idle FDA notices of opportunity for hearing (NOOH) the agency announced it would restrict how and in what species cephalosporins can be used. The class of antibiotics that includes cephalosporins is used primarily in human medicine, but has some limited application in animal production, generally by veterinarians to prevent and treat disease across most species. There are no feed approvals for cephalosporin, nor can it be used in feed in any extra-label way by vets since extra-label use of drugs in feed is banned by federal law. FDA said its action was in line with its new emphasis on disease treatment and prevention, but the restriction, which will take effect April 5, will prohibit the use of the compound to prevent disease, while leaving treatment of disease a legal use.  

 

The American Veterinary Medical Assn. (AVMA) said the agency action was an improvement over previous actions, citing previous decisions by FDA as generally too broad, leading to unnecessarily banning medications for animals that pose no problem for humans. In a related development, Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack continues to try and clarify apparently conflicting statements on where USDA stands with regard to on farm antibiotic use. This week, AVMA formally asked for clarification after Vilsack said he'd like to see antibiotics used in the context of disease control and "response" during a press briefing on the completion of the Administration's Food Safety Working Group. He said USDA is working with veterinarians and universities to ensure the judicious use of antibiotics. The department, however, says Vilsack's comments should not be taken to mean support for a ban or lack of support for FDA's action, which is USDA's way of saying its position has not changed.

 

Regulators Should Avoid "Knee Jerk" Reaction to MF Global; Market Exodus Seen

 

American Farm Bureau Federation President Bob Stallman told the Agri-Pulse newsletter last week that "knee jerk" reactions to the MF Global bankruptcy will not solve the problems the collapse of the trading company has created. Stallman said the first step is to find out what laws were broken and by whom. At the same time, a Reuters News Service analysis of futures markets reported that as of December 21, commodity market participation had dropped by almost 9% as farmers, investors and other traders closed out positions following the MF Global bankruptcy, the eighth largest in U.S. history.  

 

Reuters reported that in the six weeks following the filing of the MF Global bankruptcy - MF Global described as the "most active broker in U.S. commodity markets - traditional hedgers closed out positions in corn, crude oil, gold and other markets, shrinking the number of open trades dramatically. Open interest at the end of November 29, fell below 10 million contracts for the first time since 2009 based on calculations on CFTC data from 19 different markets. Stallman called for full prosecution of lawbreakers, and if the company is found to have been under-regulated, then solutions to that regulatory gap must be found. "If the entire futures markets are going to operate for agriculture, we need to have confidence in the way they operate," Stallman said. "I don't want to start talking about knee-jerk reactions until we fully understand what happened with MF Global."

 

USDA Updates Data Set on Fertilizer Use, Price

 

USDA this week reported the Economic Research Service (ERS) has updated its data set on "data on fertilizer consumption in the U.S. by plant nutrient and major selected product, as well as consumption of mixed fertilizers, secondary nutrients and micronutrients." Data on the share of crop area receiving fertilizer and fertilizer use by receiving acre, by nutrient, etc., are also included on a state basis for corn, cotton, soybeans and wheat, along with information on fertilizer farm prices and indices on wholesale fertilizer prices.  

 

The complete report can be found at  www.ers.usda.gov/data/fertilizeruse/. 

 

People & Potpourri

Don Cameron - 2012 Western High Cotton Winner
 

Don Cameron's three decades of farming on the West Side of California's San Joaquin Valley can be defined by the numbers 3 and 26.   READ FULL ARTICLE 


California Governor, Edmund G. Brown, recently announced the appointment of Gordon Burns, 51, of Davis, to the position of undersecretary at the California Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). Burns has been an attorney for the Resources Law Group since 2010. He was deputy solicitor general at the US Office of the Solicitor General from 2006 to 2010 and deputy attorney general at the California Department of Justice from 1996 to 2006. From 1994 to 1996, Burns was an attorney at Downey, Brand, Seymour and Rohwer. While at the Resource Law Group, Mr. Burns was credited with developing and implementing strategies and projects focusing on renewable energy, climate change and land use and transportation planning. In his previous role as deputy attorney general in the Public Rights Division, he represented clients on a wide variety of natural resources matters, including water supplies, planning and regulatory takings. He filed an innovative lawsuit to restore sixty miles of the Lower Owens River and represented the California Attorney General in a key Supreme Court case on supplying water for future urban growth. 
  

 

FDA Animal Feed Safety System (AFSS) Update #8

(Editor's note: The AFSS Team has previously informed stakeholders of its progress by issuing "Project Plan Updates." However, the Team will now be using this AFSS Update rather than the Project Plan Update, because the new format reflects the changes in the initiative resulting from passage of the Food Safety Modernization Act. That Act provides FDA and CVM with new tools, which will result in new approaches to ensure the safety of animal foods. The Act and changes it brings are explained below.)

 

Food Safety Modernization Act (FSMA) - Implication for Feed Safety Enforcement

FSMA, which became law in January 2011, is designed to give FDA more authority to protect the safety of food for humans and animals. It gives FDA new authorities for addressing issues concerning the safety of food for animals and is altering some of the work of the AFSS Team.

Generally speaking, FSMA has four main themes: prevention; inspection, compliance, and response; import safety; and enhanced partnerships.

 

The prevention rules applying to animal food facilities will likely be similar to Good Manufacturing Practices regulation currently in place for human food and for some aspects of the CGMPs for medicated feed. They are expected to apply to personnel, plant and grounds, sanitary operations, sanitary facilities and controls, equipment and utensils, process and controls, and warehousing and distribution.

 

In addition, FDA is considering regulations that include preventive controls for animal food facilities. Those preventive controls would include:

  • Having written food safety plans
  • Conducting hazard analyses
  • Implementing controls to address hazards
  • Monitoring the controls to make sure they are effective, taking corrective action when a problem is discovered
  • Verifying that the corrective action was effective
  • Having a recall plan in place
  • Having a supplier approval and verification program

FSMA gives FDA new authority to require a mandatory recall if a firm with an unsafe food product fails to act quickly to voluntarily recall the product. It also gives FDA a more flexible standard for administratively detaining products that are potentially in violation of food safety requirements. And under FSMA, FDA will continue working with industry and other experts to develop programs for rapidly tracing domestic and imported food.

 

FSMA also extends to animal food ingredient imports. It gives FDA unprecedented authority to make sure that imported products meet U.S. standards. Under FSMA, importers are responsible for making sure that their foreign suppliers have adequate preventive controls in place to ensure the safety of their products.

 

NOTE:  Learn More About The Food Safety Modernization Act (FSMA) at the Grain & Feed Industry Conference next week in San Luis Obispo.   Details Click Here 

 

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