A U.S. rancher group, which
opposes the resumption of live cattle imports from Canada, on
Thursday again called on the Bush administration to maintain
the trade barrier to protect the American herd from mad cow
disease.
The Bush administration is in the final stages of reviewing
a proposal that would allow imports of Canadian cattle under 30
months old, as well as most types of beef from Canada.
Import barriers were imposed by the U.S. Department of
Agriculture in May, 2003, after Canada found its first domestic
case of mad cow disease. Since then, Canada has instituted a
series of measures it says helps guard against the spread of
the fatal animal disease.
But R-CALF USA, representing some U.S. ranchers, filed
additional papers with USDA on Thursday calling on the Bush
administration to abandon its plan to reopen the border to
Canadian live cattle.
"USDA must change its policy because there are gaping holes
in its efforts to prematurely reintroduce Canadian beef and
cattle imports into the United States," said R-CALF USA CEO
Bill Bullard.
The rancher group also threatened legal action "as a last
resort" if Canadian cattle imports resume. Early this year,
R-CALF won a court order halting some beef trade from Canada.
In papers filed with USDA, R-CALF argued that reopening the
border ignores science-based international standards for
guarding against the spread of bovine spongiform
encephalopathy.
R-CALF filed the comments with USDA even though a public
comment period expired several months ago.
USDA officials were not immediately available for comment
on whether it would consider the new R-CALF comments.
opposes the resumption of live cattle imports from Canada, on
Thursday again called on the Bush administration to maintain
the trade barrier to protect the American herd from mad cow
disease.
The Bush administration is in the final stages of reviewing
a proposal that would allow imports of Canadian cattle under 30
months old, as well as most types of beef from Canada.
Import barriers were imposed by the U.S. Department of
Agriculture in May, 2003, after Canada found its first domestic
case of mad cow disease. Since then, Canada has instituted a
series of measures it says helps guard against the spread of
the fatal animal disease.
But R-CALF USA, representing some U.S. ranchers, filed
additional papers with USDA on Thursday calling on the Bush
administration to abandon its plan to reopen the border to
Canadian live cattle.
"USDA must change its policy because there are gaping holes
in its efforts to prematurely reintroduce Canadian beef and
cattle imports into the United States," said R-CALF USA CEO
Bill Bullard.
The rancher group also threatened legal action "as a last
resort" if Canadian cattle imports resume. Early this year,
R-CALF won a court order halting some beef trade from Canada.
In papers filed with USDA, R-CALF argued that reopening the
border ignores science-based international standards for
guarding against the spread of bovine spongiform
encephalopathy.
R-CALF filed the comments with USDA even though a public
comment period expired several months ago.
USDA officials were not immediately available for comment
on whether it would consider the new R-CALF comments.
Comment