END OF BSE LEGAL ADVENTURES IS FINALLY IN SIGHT. (copied from Agriweek 08/01/05 )
A senior court puts R-CALF and
judge Cebull in their places
The fanatic R-CALF (Ranchers Cattlemen Action Legal Fund) had its props
completely kicked out from under it last week by the 9th U.S. District Court
of Appeals in San Francisco. The court issued the detailed legal reasoning
for its July 14 decision striking down a temporary injunction obtained by
R-CALF blocking resumption of Canadian cattle exports and also preventing an
expanded range of Canadian beef products to be exported to the U.S.
The unanimous decision by a three-judge appeals court plainly leaves no
scope for any further legal action based on the reasons R-CALF offered in
its request for a permanent injunction. Click here
<http://www.agriweek.com/agrxa/eve733.pdf> for the entire 54-page court
document.
It thoroughly demolishes both the R-CALF arguments and Judge Richard F.
Cebull's legal reasoning in accepting them. It would be extremely rash of
the judge to proceed with the permanent injunction case. It almost looks
like Cebull was tipped off, because on July 20 he 'vacated' the July 27
hearing date for the permanent injunction without any request for such
action being made by either side.
The appeal court noted, in unusually strong language, that Cebull had
improperly discounted USDA's competence and expertise in developing
BSE-related regulations. The tone of this section implies that the appeal
court considers Cebull as either grossly incompetent or as not giving the
matter the thorough consideration it merits. Any hopes he may have had for
advancement in the court system are probably in tatters.
The detailed decision also sharply criticized R-CALF for bringing the action
at all, on grounds that it had no "likelihood of success on its merits."
Cebull had based the granting of the preliminary injunction on the R-CALF
contention that three different laws had been violated by USDA, including
the Administrative Procedure Act, which prohibits U.S. government agencies
from actions that are 'arbitrary, capricious [or] an abuse of discretion'.
The court also determined that R-CALF had not made a plausible case to
support its claim that allowing Canadian cattle imports would do
"irreparable harm" to the U.S. cattle industry.
The decision cited numerous precedents where other actions based on this
strategy failed. The appeal decision also held that Cebull, besides
substituting his view of BSE risks for USDA's and failing to respect the
agency's scientific expertise, also improperly sought to impose a zero-risk
policy on cattle imports, requiring the department to "disprove all
scientific uncertainty" associated with mad cow disease. Any "uncertainty
surrounding the current scientific understanding of BSE [is] insufficiently
significant to justify the continued exclusion of Canadian cattle."
The appeal judges further found that Canada has effective mad-cow control
measures and a low incidence of the disease, which is declining further.
Canada could actually have several more cases without changing its
low-incidence status for purposes of the USDA regulations. The decision
cited Canadian regulations for removal of risky central nervous system
tissue from carcasses and its feed regulations, which mirror USDA's.
Resuming Canadian cattle imports would not significantly increase the risk
of mad cow disease to the American animal or human populations.
The appeal judges denied applications for intervenor status in the R-CALF
permanent injunction case sought by the Canadian Cattlemens Assn., Alberta
Beef and the U.S. National Meat Assn., but apparently on grounds that the
action is unlikely to proceed. It may have been another none-too-subtle
signal to Cebull that it would be unwise to proceed with that action.
R-CALF's reaction (e-mail users Click here
<http://www.agriweek.com/agrxa/nhe555.htm> ) was uncharacteristically muted,
appearing to accept the verdict but continuing to insist that its position
is correct. Its website tried to distract attention by presenting a
one-sided summary of a preposterous month-old study by a University of
Florida economist contending that a resumption of Canadian cattle imports
will cause a net loss in U.S. economic output of $7.6 billion between 2005
and 2007. Put another way, the maximum number of Canadian cattle that could
possibly be exported during that period is 3 million head. According to this
so-called study, each of those animals, worth about $1,200, would cause a
loss of $2,533 in U.S. economic activity. For every five head imported,
which take about 35 minutes to process in a modern plant, there would be a
loss of one full-time American job, according to the 'study'.
A senior court puts R-CALF and
judge Cebull in their places
The fanatic R-CALF (Ranchers Cattlemen Action Legal Fund) had its props
completely kicked out from under it last week by the 9th U.S. District Court
of Appeals in San Francisco. The court issued the detailed legal reasoning
for its July 14 decision striking down a temporary injunction obtained by
R-CALF blocking resumption of Canadian cattle exports and also preventing an
expanded range of Canadian beef products to be exported to the U.S.
The unanimous decision by a three-judge appeals court plainly leaves no
scope for any further legal action based on the reasons R-CALF offered in
its request for a permanent injunction. Click here
<http://www.agriweek.com/agrxa/eve733.pdf> for the entire 54-page court
document.
It thoroughly demolishes both the R-CALF arguments and Judge Richard F.
Cebull's legal reasoning in accepting them. It would be extremely rash of
the judge to proceed with the permanent injunction case. It almost looks
like Cebull was tipped off, because on July 20 he 'vacated' the July 27
hearing date for the permanent injunction without any request for such
action being made by either side.
The appeal court noted, in unusually strong language, that Cebull had
improperly discounted USDA's competence and expertise in developing
BSE-related regulations. The tone of this section implies that the appeal
court considers Cebull as either grossly incompetent or as not giving the
matter the thorough consideration it merits. Any hopes he may have had for
advancement in the court system are probably in tatters.
The detailed decision also sharply criticized R-CALF for bringing the action
at all, on grounds that it had no "likelihood of success on its merits."
Cebull had based the granting of the preliminary injunction on the R-CALF
contention that three different laws had been violated by USDA, including
the Administrative Procedure Act, which prohibits U.S. government agencies
from actions that are 'arbitrary, capricious [or] an abuse of discretion'.
The court also determined that R-CALF had not made a plausible case to
support its claim that allowing Canadian cattle imports would do
"irreparable harm" to the U.S. cattle industry.
The decision cited numerous precedents where other actions based on this
strategy failed. The appeal decision also held that Cebull, besides
substituting his view of BSE risks for USDA's and failing to respect the
agency's scientific expertise, also improperly sought to impose a zero-risk
policy on cattle imports, requiring the department to "disprove all
scientific uncertainty" associated with mad cow disease. Any "uncertainty
surrounding the current scientific understanding of BSE [is] insufficiently
significant to justify the continued exclusion of Canadian cattle."
The appeal judges further found that Canada has effective mad-cow control
measures and a low incidence of the disease, which is declining further.
Canada could actually have several more cases without changing its
low-incidence status for purposes of the USDA regulations. The decision
cited Canadian regulations for removal of risky central nervous system
tissue from carcasses and its feed regulations, which mirror USDA's.
Resuming Canadian cattle imports would not significantly increase the risk
of mad cow disease to the American animal or human populations.
The appeal judges denied applications for intervenor status in the R-CALF
permanent injunction case sought by the Canadian Cattlemens Assn., Alberta
Beef and the U.S. National Meat Assn., but apparently on grounds that the
action is unlikely to proceed. It may have been another none-too-subtle
signal to Cebull that it would be unwise to proceed with that action.
R-CALF's reaction (e-mail users Click here
<http://www.agriweek.com/agrxa/nhe555.htm> ) was uncharacteristically muted,
appearing to accept the verdict but continuing to insist that its position
is correct. Its website tried to distract attention by presenting a
one-sided summary of a preposterous month-old study by a University of
Florida economist contending that a resumption of Canadian cattle imports
will cause a net loss in U.S. economic output of $7.6 billion between 2005
and 2007. Put another way, the maximum number of Canadian cattle that could
possibly be exported during that period is 3 million head. According to this
so-called study, each of those animals, worth about $1,200, would cause a
loss of $2,533 in U.S. economic activity. For every five head imported,
which take about 35 minutes to process in a modern plant, there would be a
loss of one full-time American job, according to the 'study'.
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