Alberta Beef Producers and Chuck MacLean hosted a town hall type meeting in Brooks last week which was pretty well attended. It included a frank discussion of the proposal for livestock movement tracking by RFID tag scanning. It seems to be mostly OK with the feedlot (FL) types and mostly poison to the cow-calf (CC) operators. When one analyses the two viewpoints the likely reasons for this become clearer. 1. Feedlots are already reading ID tags during routine processing. They are also computerized to the level that e-mailing a "move in" report can be automatic. Thus there is very little hardship to them from ID tag tracking. 2. The FL sector likely views the prospect of aquiring highly documented feeder cattle positively as long as the price doesn't change. That might not be realistic. 3. If the present proposal goes forward and the auction markets are compelled to read tags in and out it will be a death sentence to the AMs. The savings in cattle handling for direct sales vs. the auction markets will be overwhelming. The FLs and the CCs might view their passing differently. Even though a lot of calves and yearlings are traded by video and computer the AM has been and still is an important price discoverer. It is also the quickest way to turn cattle into cash. This is probably valued higher by the CC sector than the FL. 4. I have no real evidence that LIS brand inspection is resented by the FL sector but I am sure that it is not as valued by them as it is by the CCs. In light of the fact that we are probably choosing between brand inspection and ID tag tracking in this debate the FLs and CCs are likely on opposite sides. The reason for that is the management basics of our operations. The FL guy might have 20,000 HD on a quarter section of land. The CC guy might have 1000 HD on 100 quarter sections. The FL is stocked 2000 times denser than the ranch. Obviously our cattle are not secured as well as the FL and hence our greater dependence on hide branding and brand inspection.
To my fellow cow-calf and yearling guys and girls, don't expect your customers, the feeders, to share your concerns about ID tag tracking. It is no skin off their hide. In fact, they might see it as increasing the supply of direct traded, limited bid cattle in the shorter term and they could be right. We have to do our own thinking and protect our own interests in these matters. Stay informed and make your concerns known. They have already softened up the rules a lot (apparently you can transport cattle from M Hat to High Prairie without scanning if you operate both fields) and if they drop scanning at auction markets I'd say we have mostly held our ground. HT
To my fellow cow-calf and yearling guys and girls, don't expect your customers, the feeders, to share your concerns about ID tag tracking. It is no skin off their hide. In fact, they might see it as increasing the supply of direct traded, limited bid cattle in the shorter term and they could be right. We have to do our own thinking and protect our own interests in these matters. Stay informed and make your concerns known. They have already softened up the rules a lot (apparently you can transport cattle from M Hat to High Prairie without scanning if you operate both fields) and if they drop scanning at auction markets I'd say we have mostly held our ground. HT
Comment