Call Congress TODAY To Ensure that New Food Safety Regulations Do Not Punish Small Farmers or Home Gardners → Washingtons Blog
Call Congress TODAY To Ensure that New Food Safety Regulations Do Not Punish Small Farmers or Home Gardners - Washingtons Blog

Monday, November 29, 2010

Call Congress TODAY To Ensure that New Food Safety Regulations Do Not Punish Small Farmers or Home Gardners


The Senate will likely vote this week to limit debate on substitute amendments to the new food safety bill - S510.

While everyone is for food safety, it is important to remember that one size does not fit all.

Specifically, that most food safety problems are caused by the giant, industrial-size food producers, such as huge confined animal feeding operations and giant egg producers,

Any version of S510 which penalizes small farms and ranches with onerous regulations targeted to the food giants will stifle competition, and drive many small independent food producers out of business.

Democrats Jon Tester of Montana and Kay Hagan of North Carolina have proposed an amendment which would exempt from the new regulation small farmers and food facilities with less than $500,000 in annual sales that directly market to consumers in a 275-mile area.

Call your senator and support the Tester-Hagan amendment to S510.

Many websites have also warned that S510 could - intentionally or unintentionally - interfere with people's ability to grow food in their own gardens. While I have seen no evidence of that (admittedly, I haven't spent any time looking at the issue), people should also demand that the language of S510 be clarified to explicitly exempt home gardens.

Update: Less than 24 hours after I wrote this post, the Senate passed S510, with the Tester amendment included. Thanks to those who called.

1 comment:

  1. "While everyone is for food safety, [...]"

    I am not for food safety. It has always been a con of big business.

    The meat cartel many decades ago effectively shut down meat production in rural areas for those same rural areas.

    There are no USDA stamp facilities anywhere in all of Maine. That's obscene.

    For some reason, people are stupid enough to think making things more difficult for the entrepreneur is going to improve quality.

    Think again. This is the ongoing destruction of everyone's ability to make a living, which is being parceled-off to the highest bidder by legislative fiat at every level of government.

    These government swine are effectively selling monopolies.

    ReplyDelete

→ Thank you for contributing to the conversation by commenting. We try to read all of the comments (but don't always have the time).

→ If you write a long comment, please use paragraph breaks. Otherwise, no one will read it. Many people still won't read it, so shorter is usually better (but it's your choice).

→ The following types of comments will be deleted if we happen to see them:

-- Comments that criticize any class of people as a whole, especially when based on an attribute they don't have control over

-- Comments that explicitly call for violence

→ Because we do not read all of the comments, I am not responsible for any unlawful or distasteful comments.