The 2007 U.S. Farm Bill proposals were released last Wednesday. In reading the comments regarding the Farm Bill the message I get is U.S. agriculture is clamouring to be protected. It seems to me that what they want to be protected from is change. While U.S. producers do not specifically say they want to be protected from change they use words like “competition” instead.
One of the methods producer groups are seeking to have implemented so they do not have to change is Mandatory Country of Origin Labeling (MCOOL). Hundreds of U.S. producer groups are lobbying government for MCOOL because they believe if they could successfully keep competing meat products segregated and out of the retail meat coolers and (in the case of Canadian live cattle) out of U.S. packing plants they feel they would not have to change. They would not have to react to “competition”. Apparently they feel competition only occurs outside their borders and are unconcerned that chicken would be exempt from what amounts to further regulation of the U.S. primary producer and primary agriculture.
I was not able to find any specific mention of MCOOL in the U.S. Farm Bill proposals although there were a host of petitions demanding MCOOL be implemented. Maybe someone with high speed internet could find a reference and post it here for us. Is the U.S. government downplaying MCOOL in spite of producer demands for implementation? Canadian producers would be wise to follow the fate of MCOOL in this farm bill as the consequences will ultimately determine if there is a North American market for beef or if the United States wishes to have Canada become a competitor instead of a partner.
One of the methods producer groups are seeking to have implemented so they do not have to change is Mandatory Country of Origin Labeling (MCOOL). Hundreds of U.S. producer groups are lobbying government for MCOOL because they believe if they could successfully keep competing meat products segregated and out of the retail meat coolers and (in the case of Canadian live cattle) out of U.S. packing plants they feel they would not have to change. They would not have to react to “competition”. Apparently they feel competition only occurs outside their borders and are unconcerned that chicken would be exempt from what amounts to further regulation of the U.S. primary producer and primary agriculture.
I was not able to find any specific mention of MCOOL in the U.S. Farm Bill proposals although there were a host of petitions demanding MCOOL be implemented. Maybe someone with high speed internet could find a reference and post it here for us. Is the U.S. government downplaying MCOOL in spite of producer demands for implementation? Canadian producers would be wise to follow the fate of MCOOL in this farm bill as the consequences will ultimately determine if there is a North American market for beef or if the United States wishes to have Canada become a competitor instead of a partner.
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