Posted on 03/08/2006 10:35:07 AM PST by pubwvj
What is NAIS? NAIS is the USDA's National Animal Identification System Draft Strategic Plan to let the government track the births, deaths, co-mingling and all movements of all livestock in the United States.
http://animalid.aphis.usda.gov/nais/about/pdf/NAIS_Draft_Strategic_Plan_42505.pdf
Which animals are covered? Currently horses, cattle, goats, poultry, sheep, swine, alpacas, llamas, bison, deer and elk. NAIS is not limited to these animals and may also be extended to include dogs, rabbits & other animals. See documents at: http://nonais.org/index.php/2006/02/18/
Who must participate? Anyone with one or more of the covered animals will be required to register their home or business for a 7-digit Premises Identification Number and pay an annual fee. If you have a single horse, goat, chicken, piglet or other species from the above list, then you must register your home for a Premise ID and tag each animal once NAIS becomes mandatory or you may face fines of up to $1,000 per day for noncompliance. USDA and states are applying NAIS right down to the backyard level - No exceptions.
How will the beasts be numbered? Each animal will be assigned a unique 15-digit Animal Identification Number. Different species will be tagged in different ways. For example: injected Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) micro-chips, RFID button tags, RFID SwifTacs tags and RFID ear tags at a cost of about $3 to $20 per animal. Large producers will be able to use one ID number for tens of thousands of animals and will not be required to tag each individual animal if they are treated as a group. Most small farmers, homesteaders & pet owners must tag each individual animal and report individual events.
What 'events' must we report? Change of ownership, even if animals remain at the same premise; co-mingling of animals owned by different entities; movement of animals off of a premise; movement of animals onto a premise are some of the events. This includes buying, selling, trips to the vet, 4-H meetings, trail rides, road trips, shows & crossing or walking on a public road.
How must we report? Events must be reported within 24 hours by telephone or by computer via the Internet. There is no mail or paper option.
Why are they doing this? NAIS began as way to open up foreign meat markets, like Japan, for the large beef exporters. Later the USDA changed the stated justification for NAIS to be one of preventing disease. BSE (Mad Cow Disease) is the primary excuse given by the USDA for NAIS. Other excuses are Avian Bird Flu (H5N1), Exotic New Castles Disease and Foot & Mouth Disease (FMD). Most recently they have been giving the justification that consumers want to know where their food is coming from to trace it back to the farm in case of potential liability issues for food born illness.
Will NAIS prevent disease? No. In fact the government states quite clearly in this document http://www.cfsan.fda.gov/~comm/bsefaq.html that NAIS is not necessary to prevent BSE. Bird flu is spread by wild birds and NAIS will have no effect - we're not going to track every single wild bird nor can the government realistically expect to kill them all. Vaccination and biodiversity are the solution. Exotic New Castles was caused by illegally imported illegal fighting cocks - NAIS will not stop it. Foot & Mouth is not an issue in this country, there is already a program to handle it and FMD is transmitted by dust in the air, so NAIS will not help. Virtually all food contamination happens after the farm, when the animals are killed at the processing plant or later. NAIS does nothing for that. The best protections would be for the USDA to do its job of properly inspecting processing plants rather than making up complex and costly new regulations that will be impossible to enforce. The USDA should enforce its ban on feeding cows to cows which is the cause of Mad Cow Disease and enforce a strict quarantine of imported animals - all under existing laws and regulations.
Can't I just hide my animals? Veterinarians, police, butchers, service providers (gas, electric, telephone, etc) and possibly your neighbors will be required by law to report unregistered animal sightings to the government. Failure to register your premise and animals or to report movements will result in non-compliance fines of up to $1,000 per incident per day. Under NAIS the government may enter your property without a warrant and confiscate, redistribute or kill your animals without any form of legal appeal by you.
What is the cost of NAIS? The federal government is already spending $50 million per year on NAIS, prior to implementation. States and animal owners are expected to foot the bill for the vast majority of the cost. These costs will be passed on to consumers. Studies show the real cost at over $15 billion per year - a new tax on food. http://nonais.org/index.php/2006/02/19/
Is NAIS legal? It should not be. NAIS is clearly unconstitutional by violating Amendments 1, 4, 5 and 14 of the United States Constitution. In 2001, after 9/11, Congress gave the government enormous new powers in the form of the Patriot Act which is up for renewal in 2006. Supporters of NAIS used this to draft a plan for invasive micro-management of all animals in the United States. The Patriot Act, PAWS, REAL ID and NAIS strip Americans of fundamental rights to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. It gives the government the power to invade our homes and take our property without warrants or any legal appeal.
How will NAIS affect small farmers? Annual Premise ID registration fees, livestock registration fees and tag costs, tag applicator and other equipment costs, potential enormous fines for incorrect report in, failure to track, increased liability, potential loss of all livestock due to faulty trace backs, loss of biodiversity as heritage breeds become extinct. Small farmers, homesteaders and hobbyists are the keepers of heritage breeds and the genetic diversity that makes domestic livestock strong. In other countries that have implemented systems like NAIS most small farmers were forced out of business.
Horse owners? Must report all movement of horses including trail rides, shows, equiestrian events, riding on public roads and every entry and exit from a property, within 24 hours. Reports include the 15 digit animal ID of each horse plus the 7 digit premise ID of each property crossed on the ride.
Homesteaders? The same as small farmers but unable to pass the costs on to customers effectively taxing us on the food we raise for ourselves at a cost of about $500/year per family. You are no longer free - You are a serf of the state.
4-H, FFA & pet owners? Parents of children in 4-H, FFA and owners of pet livestock will be treated as farmers, required to register their home for a Premise ID with the associated annual fees, tag costs, filing fees, tracking of all animal events and fines. Failure by a child to comply will result in fines.
Consumers? Consumers will see a loss of choice, smaller selection and higher prices as farmers pass on the costs of NAIS and many farms go out of business. They already operate on thin margins and can not handle the added costs. This will concentrate control of our food supply into the hands of fewer and fewer larger corporations who'll raise prices as they gain monopoly power.
Vegetarians & Gardeners? Virtually all of the animal manures used to grow quality vegetables, especially organic ones, come from small farms. Suiteable manure is already in short supply. You do not want to grow organic or healthy vegetables in the contaminated septic output from factory farms with their antibiotic, chemical wormers and arsenic laced feeds. As small farms are lost, the price of manure will increase raising vegetable prices for everyone.
Big Agri-businesses? The big meat producers are the big winners. They expect a surge in profits from meat exports to foreign markets. Maybe they'll get it. Maybe not. Recently Japan reopened their market to American beef, after two years of banning it, only to quickly reclose it after spinal tissue was discovered in meat due to faulty processing at a slaughter house in the USA. This is not an issue with farms, it is a processor error and NAIS will not help with that at all.
Terrorists? Terrorists will be delighted to have larger targets. They want a high body count for their efforts. Hitting a small farm is not impressive and does not affect very many people. A factory farm with 100,000 animals is a hot target!
What is the solution? NAIS should be strictly voluntary. Big meat exporters can participate and they should pay the costs. The rest of us should not be burdened with a system designed to provide profits to a tiny minority of corporations. The best way for consumers to know where their food comes from is to buy it locally, from small farmers, keeping money in their local economy and supporting area farms. See: http://www.slowfood.com/ and http://localharvest.org and http://SugarMtnFarm.com/blog/ NAIS is an extraordinarily complex solution to a very simple problem.
What can I do to help? Write your state and federal legislators about NAIS. Write letters your local newspapers, talk to your friends and neighbors.
http://nonais.org/index.php/what-can-i-do-to-help/
Download this page and hand it out, leave it on bulletin boards, at feed stores, general stores, etc. Help spread the word about the dangers of NAIS. http://NoNAIS.org/handout
We the people of the United States of America need to renew our vows with the Constitution to protect Americans from bad laws and regulations that would strip us of our rights and freedoms. We must require that our politicians respect the Constitution and all amendments when formulating laws so as not to steal away our natural, God given, rights.
For additional info visit: http://NoNAIS.org or send a large self-addressed stamped (1.11¢) envelope to:
NoNAIS @ Sugar Mtn Farm
252 Riddle Pond Road
West Topsham, Vermont 05086
I don't think anyone here is...the angst and objections arise from people being all too aware of the power of information technology. As I've stated elsewhere, I generally see technology largely as amoral; it can be used for good or bad. Americans who value their freedom need to remain aware of and vigilant toward the fact that the more powerful it becomes, and the more rapidly it becomes more powerful, the point will arrive where it need only be abused or misused once to spawn irreversible conditions.
It's not unlike why we should have nukes but allowing Iran to have them is probably not a good idea.
You are simply amazing. Are you so fearful of life that you would have us all under the thumb of some govt bureaucrat 24/7? Your type is always willing to give away everyone elses rights under the guise of security. Put on your straight jacket and report to your rubber room immediately before you get hurt.
And before someone jumps in saying that we are evil people to let our cats roam free, let me put it this way.... What if someone's dog gets loose and runs around the neighborhood. Is that person expected to know each and every property their dog has come into contact with? Puhleeze. This whole thing is frightening and an abuse of power.
Next thing you know the nanny state will require you to give notice when you leave your house. Please report at all times when you cross a property line...
I don't understand that either Hair. One of my horses does have an e-ID tag but that was done before I bought him. It is through a private company.
Looks like the only thing that will stop this is a general uprising of horse owners like you and me letting our Senators and Representatives know just how upset we are.
I'd like to know how I became a "farmer" and acquired a "farm". All I have is an acre and a half with 2 pleasure horses on it who will never be "processed" anywhere.
We already have to comply with EIA laws, and that is one too many for me.
What is the BCHA position on NAIS? As an avid trail rider, I was intending to join BCH, I emphatically support your efforts on behalf of trail riders on public lands, but I am alarmed to see that Alan Hill is among the Equine Species Working Group members who are recommending horses be included in this program.
My fears are:
First: Upon the discovery of a communicable disease in an area, the animals nearby could be taken, rounded up and killed, perhaps without cause, process, or compensation.
Second: And this one affects our freedom in the outdoors... since a premise has to be registered with an ID number before animals can be taken there, they could refuse the public access to state parks, state and national forest, and other public lands for recreation, hunting, trail riding and hiking, all in the name of "prevention of disease".
Sounds paranoid, but how ELSE could databases of premises and movement of horses be used to prevent disease?
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One of those issues that doesn't impact me much, yet, but I'd be inclined to go with my neighbors who own an occasional donkey (why aren't they on the list?), duck, chicken or goat, and are opposed. However
Which animals are covered?: may also be extended to include dogsWhich animals are covered?: may also be extended to include dogsWhy are they doing this?: NAIS began as way to open up foreign meat markets
Why are they doing this?: NAIS began as way to open up foreign meat markets
If the government would say that, this would die in a heartbeat.
Thanks for posting this. Is this going on in all the states or just some?
It's federal.
Sorry, My brain's been fried today. This will seriously throw a wrench into my getting a horse! :(
No need for that. Get a horse... This is just a pain in the ass thing we have to fight against.
Maybe the Knoelks are right!
She ~was~ a cocker mixed with something else... not sure what.
She was a great dog, and I miss her.
Thanks, I love dogs. She looked like an American Water Spanial, but was the wrong color.
I'm not buying this for a minute.
I ignored it as paranoia for a long time, but I read the draft at the USDA site. It's linked at the top of the article.
OK... but it just doesn't make any sense. Nobody drinks from a firehose, not even government bureaucrat control freaks. The quantities of data in any such proposal are of epic proportions and questionable usefulness.
I agree.
The data quantity would be astronomical, even at a local level. I outlined my fears about it above, but from a functional standpoint, I don't see how they could ever digest all the data if they got even fractional compliance.
Cattle that live one or two places and are butchered young are easy to track this way. Horses that sometimes travel weekly and live 20-30 years are another story.
I have no doubt that the UN and the USDA may want this to happen, but they don't get to make laws.
Can you, or anyone else, show me where this is a law that was passed??
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