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USDA Announces Proposed Rule to Increase Fairness
in the Marketing of Livestock and Poultry
WASHINGTON, June 18, 2010—Agriculture Secretary Tom
Vilsack today announced that on June 22, 2010 USDA’s Grain Inspection,
Packers and Stockyards Administration (GIPSA) will publish a proposed
rule, as required by the 2008 farm bill and through existing authority
under the Packers and Stockyards Act, that would provide significant new
protections for producers against unfair, fraudulent or retaliatory
practices.
“Concerns about a lack of fairness and commonsense treatment for
livestock and poultry producers have gone unaddressed far too long,”
said Vilsack. “This proposed rule will help ensure a level playing field
for producers by providing additional protections against unfair
practices and addressing new market conditions not covered by existing
rules.”
The proposed rules address concerns that have been discussed for many
years and were developed at the direction of the 2008 farm bill, which
requires USDA to carry out specific rulemaking to improve fairness in
the marketing of livestock and poultry. During farm bill discussions in
2007, over 200 organizations across the country urged Congress to
include a livestock title to improve market fairness and competition for
producers. Additionally, USDA identified other areas where new
rulemaking is needed to ensure the marketplace is fair and competitive
for producers. Many of the concerns addressed in the rule were raised
during the dozens of Administration Rural Tour stops attended by
Secretary Vilsack last year, and the joint USDA-Department of Justice
Competition Workshops held this year. Additionally, GIPSA held three
public meetings in 2008 to gather comments, information, and
recommendations from interested parties.
Many of the concerns were related to increasing consolidation and
vertical integration in the livestock and poultry marketplace, and
shrinking farm numbers. For instance, there were over 666,000 hog farms
in 1980, but only roughly 71,000 today. In the cattle industry, there
were over 1.6 million farms in 1980, but only roughly 950,000 today. In
the hog industry, producers received 50% of the retail value of a hog in
1980, but only 24.5 percent in 2009. For cattle, producers received 62
percent of the retail value of a steer in 1980, but only 42.5 percent in
2009. In the poultry industry today, a grower makes 34 cents per bird,
while the processing company however on average makes $3.23 a bird.
The proposed rule announced today would provide the following
protections:
· Provide further definition to practices that are unfair, unjustly
discriminatory or deceptive, including outlining actions that are
retaliatory in nature, efforts that would limit a producer’s legal
rights, or representations that would be fraudulent or misleading.
Additionally, the proposed rule reiterates USDA’s position that a
producer need not overcome unnecessary obstacles and have to always
prove a harm to competition when they have suffered a violation under
the Act ;
· Define undue or unreasonable preferences or advantages;
· Establish new protections for producers required to provide expensive
capital upgrades to their growing facilities, including protections to
ensure producers have the opportunity to recoup 80 percent of the cost
of a required capital investment;
· Prohibit packers from purchasing, acquiring or receiving livestock
from other packers, and communicate prices to competitors;
· Enable a fair and equitable process for producers that choose to use
arbitration to remedy a dispute. Additionally, clear and conspicuous
print in the contract will be required to ensure producers are provided
the option to decline the use of arbitration to settle a dispute.
· Require that companies paying growers under a tournament system
provide the same base pay to growers that raise the same type and kind
of poultry, including ensuring that the growers pay cannot go below the
base pay amount;
· Provide poultry growers with a written notice of a company’s intent to
suspend the delivery of birds under a poultry growing arrangement at
least 90 days prior to the date it intends to suspend the delivery;
· Improve market transparency by making sample contracts (except for
trade secrets or other confidential information) be made available on
GIPSA’s website for producers;
· Outline protections so that producers can remedy a breach of contract;
· Improve competition in markets by limiting exclusive arrangements
between packers and dealers.


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