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Organic Dairy Farmers' Rally - USDA Secretary Asked to Vigorously Enforce Organic Laws

By Lynn Buske  Posted by Will Fantle (about the submitter)       (Page 1 of 2 pages)   No comments
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Vilsack: Changes Being Made at National Organic Program

West Salem, WI: An estimated 150-200 organic dairy farmers, and their supporters, from Wisconsin, Minnesota and Iowa held a "demonstration" at the La Crosse County Fair on Thursday. Their goal was to convince Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack to take immediate and aggressive enforcement action against a handful of "factory farms" allegedly saturating the market with illegal organic milk.

Secretary Vilsack's comments indicate that the farmers may have been successful in their mission. "We are focusing on rules that will level the playing field so that small and medium size producers have a fair shot," said Vilsack, sparking applause from the crowd. "We are, as you are, asking questions about how producers can make so little and how others who are in the chain can make so much," added Vilsack.

One farmer shouted a question to the Agriculture Secretary, asking when the USDA will take action against organic lawbreakers. "I commit to you that we will enforce the rules," Vilsack responded.

Under the Bush administration the USDA was accused of "looking the other way" as large corporate agribusinesses invested in organics while allegedly violating federal standards. In the dairy sector there are now estimated to be 20 large industrial dairies, each milking 1500-7000 cows, producing as much as 40% of the nation's organic milk supply. A glut of factory farm milk has flooded the organic dairy sector squeezing the incomes of family farmers as dairy processors cut payments and demand production cutbacks.

Mark Kastel, rally organizer with The Cornucopia Institute, told Secretary Vilsack that, "We'd like you to re-open the Aurora investigation." Aurora, operator of five factory farms in Colorado and Texas and the organic milk store-brand supplier for Wal-Mart, Target, Safeway, Costco and other national chains, was found to have "willfully" violated numerous organic regulations by USDA investigators in 2007. The company received mild sanctions from USDA political appointees who rejected staff recommendations calling for revocation of Aurora's organic certification.

Cornucopia has questioned the legality of the USDA's agreement with Aurora allowing the nation's largest corporate organic dairy operator to remain in business. The Bush administration permitted Aurora to retain over 10,000 conventional cows illegally brought onto their operations.

Darlene Coehoorn, a dairy farmer from Oshkosh, WI, and president of the Midwest Organic Dairy Producers Alliance, noted that she milked her own cows before coming to the rally. "Keep the dream alive," she said between tears, asking for the ability to pass her farm down to the next generation. "Independent family farms are becoming an endangered species," Coehoorn added.

Wisconsin Organic Dairy Farmer Bruce Drinkman: "We had to cash in my wife's IRA to get money for seeds this year."

Bruce Drinkman, a fourth generation dairy farmer from Glenwood City, WI told how his wife had to cash in their IRA this past spring so they could continue operating their farm. "We deserve better," Drinkman said. "We have to stand together and we have to do it now," he implored the crowd.

In addition to USDA Secretary Vilsack, Wisconsin's Governor Jim Doyle visited the event at the fairgrounds in West Salem, and was well received, as did the state's Secretary of Agriculture and other local, state and federal officials.

"It used to be fun," said Jim Goodman, of Wonewoc, WI, a dairy farmer who has been certified organic for 10 years. "See our plight and listen to us," Goodman told Vilsack. "We aren't asking a lot make organic mean organic."

One of the strongest supporters of the development of organic food and agriculture has been the nation's 270 natural food cooperatives. Michelle Schry, the manager at People's Food Co-op in Lacrosse, WI came to the rally to show their solidarity with struggling family dairy farmers. "Whatever we can do to support you, we will do," Schry told the crowd. "We want that (organic) label to be protected as much as you do."

Pat Skogen said she was a school teacher before she decided to "go broke as a dairy farmer." She mentioned how crazy it was that farmers are being forced to apply for food stamps from the USDA to feed their families because their incomes have crashed. "We need help," added the Loganville, WI farmer, calling for a national farm policy that would recognize farmland as a national resource.

One representative of a dairy processor spoke at the rally. Steve Pechacek, of Organic Choice, said they used to have 19 buyers for their organic milk and dairy products produced by their farmer owners when they started operations four years ago. "Today we have two," Pechacek observed, referencing the corporate consolidation taking place. He noted the problems caused by factory farms abusing organic rules and called for enforcement. "We can't wait another four years, this has to work right now," he said.

With all the negative fallout for organic dairy farmers rally organizers reminded consumers that, according to Cornucopia Institute research and the scorecard that can be found on their website, 90% of all namebrand organic products are produced with high integrity by family farmers. "These factory farms are a bad aberration," according to Kastel. "We encourage organic consumers to do a little bit of homework and make sure the brands they buy are supporting the families that are working so hard to produce legitimate organic milk."

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I work for The Cornucopia Institute. We are a non-profit that works to protect sustainable/organic food and small-scale farming. We often write press releases surrounding what is happening in the industry and what our research discovers. You can (more...)
 
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