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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE	
December 6, 2006

Contact: Karin Bergener at (330) 298-0065, or Judith McGeary at (512) 
243-9404 
Email: bergener@config.com or judith@farmandranchfreedom.org

National Animal Identification Marches On

Despite widespread reports that the U.S. Department of Agriculture has 
“abandoned” its plans to require individual identification and tracking 
of every livestock animal in the country, the National Animal 
Identification System (NAIS) marches on.  USDA’s Thanksgiving announcement that 
it would not adopt mandatory regulations at the federal level was a 
welcome development, but changes little of what is happening on the 
ground.

The same day that USDA released its new User Guide, it also announced 
the availability of over $14 million in funds for states and tribes to 
implement NAIS.  The Work Plan for applicants reiterates the USDA’s goal 
of “full participation by 2009” – in other words, the registration of 
every single person who owns even one head of livestock and the 
identification of hundreds of millions of animals.  In many cases, the USDA 
will withhold part of the funds until the state shows that it has reached 
specified results.  

Karin Bergener, an attorney in Freedom, Ohio, reports that the Liberty 
Ark Coalition receives many reports from farmers whose farms have been 
registered against their will.  “The states are claiming farmers are 
voluntarily registering, when the states are really taking data from 
other agricultural programs and dumping it into the NAIS databases, without 
permission from the farmers.”  USDA’s latest call for applications 
specifically states that it “WILL provide funding for” data mining of this 
kind.

States that have reached certain goals for premises registration may 
use some of the federal money to implement animal identification and 
tracking.  This has already been occurring in Michigan.  The Michigan 
Department of Agriculture (MDA) is requiring mandatory RFID tagging of 
cattle by March 1, 2007, and encouraging people to get started early.  The 
program is headed up by Kevin Kirk, an MDA staff person who also is 
Treasurer of the National Institute of Animal Agriculture, the trade 
organization that asked the USDA to implement NAIS.  In a presentation to 350 
farmers in North Branch, Michigan, Kirk admitted that this tagging, 
ostensibly for the state’s tuberculosis control program, is the beginning 
of NAIS in Michigan.

A representative for the Michigan NAIS program advised officials at a 
government-industry conference that they should follow Michigan's 
example in implementing mandatory identification, as the best way to reach 
the USDA's goal of 100% participation in NAIS by 2009.  Colonel Randy 
Givens, also with Liberty Ark, has published an article addressing the 
USDA’s actions, entitled “The USDA Shell Game on ‘Voluntary’ versus 
‘Mandatory’ Participation in NAIS,” available on the Liberty Ark website.

As dairy and beef farmers in Michigan will tell you, their state 
government has no intention of stopping.  At the North Branch meeting, one 
cattleman said, “If we don’t have those tags on our cattle next March, we 
won’t be able to take them off our farm – for sale or slaughter.  We’ll 
be out of business.”  Like it or not, Phase 2 of NAIS has come to the 
Midwest.  And with the USDA funding states across the country to 
implement NAIS, the entire program will continue to spread.
 
To learn more about NAIS, and what it means for farmers and consumers, 
visit www.libertyark.net.

 

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