I was reading the MCPA newsletter tonight, and in between all the articles about the gloom and doom of the times, and before I ran out and found a rope and a tree, I noticed an interesting resolution to be voted on at the general annual meeting.
"Be it resolved that the MCPA lobby the government to allow slaughter facilities to test every animal slaughtered for BSE"
Randy is working on Alberta, so now we need Saskatchewan to pitch in.
When we think of the problems we have, I think testing could go a long way toward making a lot of them smaller.
If the cattle were tested, would SRM's be such a disposal issue? Tested negative, they would become usable again for something other than landfill.
Combined with the traceback we have, would overseas markets remain closed?
If the cattle were tested, would the U.S. protectionists lose a lot of their ammunition?
Compare the price of a test with the price we are paying now for not testing, and the test starts looking pretty cheap.
We are quickly becoming bogged down in a whole pile of regulations that are costing us any market advantage we stand to have. These regulations are very over reactive, and testing would simplify things so much.
I think it's time our government stopped giving in to the bullies south of the border, and their lackies in certain unnamed slaughter facilities in our country, and started thinking about doing something for their own citizens for a change.
If the big boys don't want to test, too bad, so sad. The smaller plants can do it, and probably become big plants as a result.
"Be it resolved that the MCPA lobby the government to allow slaughter facilities to test every animal slaughtered for BSE"
Randy is working on Alberta, so now we need Saskatchewan to pitch in.
When we think of the problems we have, I think testing could go a long way toward making a lot of them smaller.
If the cattle were tested, would SRM's be such a disposal issue? Tested negative, they would become usable again for something other than landfill.
Combined with the traceback we have, would overseas markets remain closed?
If the cattle were tested, would the U.S. protectionists lose a lot of their ammunition?
Compare the price of a test with the price we are paying now for not testing, and the test starts looking pretty cheap.
We are quickly becoming bogged down in a whole pile of regulations that are costing us any market advantage we stand to have. These regulations are very over reactive, and testing would simplify things so much.
I think it's time our government stopped giving in to the bullies south of the border, and their lackies in certain unnamed slaughter facilities in our country, and started thinking about doing something for their own citizens for a change.
If the big boys don't want to test, too bad, so sad. The smaller plants can do it, and probably become big plants as a result.
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