Ag Department protecting big business from superior product
Friday, June 1st, 2007I can’t believe this. A Kansas beef producer, Creekstone Farms Premium Beef, announced its plans to test all of its cows for mad cow disease - which sounds great to me. (The company does some other pretty cool stuff - its processing plant was designed by Dr. Temple Grandin, a specialist in animal welfare, for example.) The USDA, however, knew that
…if Creekstone should test its meat and advertised it as safe, [larger meatpacking companies] might have to perform the expensive tests on their larger herds as well.
Since the USDA regulates the mad cow test, it prevented Creekstone from testing its cows, using the blindingly lame argument that
…widespread testing could lead to a false positive that would harm the meat industry.
Naturally, they don’t care that widespread testing could lead to people not dying - it’s the big meatpacking companies that they’re around to protect.
On March 29th, Judge James Robertson of the United States District Court for the District of Columbia ruled that it was illegal for the USDA to prevent Creekstone from testing its own goddamn cows - but allowed the USDA to appeal until June 1st. On May 30th, they did. Creekstone’s CEO James Buhlke said that
We still hope to convince USDA to work with Creekstone on a voluntary BSE testing program. However, Creekstone Farms will continue to pursue our right to test even in the wake of this latest action by the USDA.
I don’t see how anybody who’s not a complete shill for Creekstone’s competitors could disagree. Creekstone owns the cows, Creekstone’s customers want safe beef, but the USDA thinks it owns all the cows in the country.
