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eeyore
09-10-2006, 12:21 PM
Transporting Hay to be Subject to New Regulations
By IPR
Aug 19, 2006, 09:18


WASHINGTON, D.C. -- Under the Public Health Security and Bioterrorism Preparedness and Response Act of 2002, regulations regarding the transporting of hay will go into effect in December.
The new rules are designed to protect against serious threats to the food supply. The regulations relate only to transported hay that is destined to be fed to livestock entering the nation’s food chain, such as beef and dairy cattle, sheep and goats.

All size farms are affected, but those who grow hay exclusively for use in their own livestock operation will see no change in the current procedures.

The regulations state that specific documentation must be kept by farmers if they sell, barter, give away or otherwise ship hay destined for use as livestock feed off the originating farm. If someone else does the hauling, then the responsibility for record keeping shifts to the transporter.

The Food and Drug Administration considers transporters to be anyone who has possession or control of an article of food for the sole purpose of transporting it by rail, road, water or air.

The transporter’s records must include both the source of the hay and the recipient, the origin and destination points, the date the shipment was received and the date it was released. A description of the freight and the number of packages must be noted.

The transporter also must keep track of the route the shipment followed, any transfer points during transport, and the name of each carrier involved in the shipping process.

The FDA requires that records concerning animal food be kept for one year. The documentation may be kept in either a paper or an electronic format. Currently, a standard bill of lading provides most of this information.

When the FDA suspects that foodstuffs have been tampered with and present a health threat to humans or animals in the food chain, any records must be easily accessible and made available for inspection or photocopying. Records must be produced within 24 hours from the time of notification.

Producers who grow hay for their own use and do not intend to provide it to other facilities will not, at this time, are not affected by the change in the FDA’s rules.



© Copyright 2002-2006 by Magic City Morning Star

hillbilly_mom
09-10-2006, 05:40 PM
What a bunch of poop. So if we go to BIL house to get one of his round bails of hay, which he never uses because he has no animals, we have to keep track of it? He has his hay mowed and made into bales for part of the hay. He gives that to us for our cows. Why in the world would they make us keep track of it, when it is just for our family cows?

I just went back and read the original post. I wonder if I could get around it because my cows will not go into the "nation's" food chain, but into our food chain. ;)

lost1
09-12-2006, 11:54 AM
:oDon't tell me your suprised, the gov. has a thumb in every pie, and the pie gets smaller and the thumb keeps getting bigger.
The gov. of, by and for the people? getting to be the other way around :-/

critterdoc
10-14-2006, 01:29 AM
When the people fear the government you have tyranny. When the government fears the people you have liberty.

Eagle
10-14-2006, 01:03 PM
Hi Deberosa,

Hats off to You for taking a stand!

There are many more of Us than there are of them...
they simply have brainwashed most that listen that it is otherwise. All We have to do is do what You are doing in clusters all over the country...and more and more are doing just that every day.
The momentum of the media hype and fear and the incessant rules and regulations that attempt to track and control everything an independent american does is being reversed.
Because We are reversing it, finally.
The more of Us that stop abiding by their nonsense and start re-awakening those in front of Us that We can break loose of their grasp simply by choice and action...the more that will choose and act.

Cassie
10-17-2006, 05:45 AM
Iniciative 933 Washington state..... I waded through most of it last night.... if it passes it will put the state government on notice... down to the villiage..... How apporopriate.... Cassie

CarolAnn
10-29-2006, 02:23 PM
I can forsee this law being misused by those in power who want a certain piece of land, or farm - just get some proof that they "illegally" transported or sold hay - and then take it.

The drug laws in California were (are?) used this way. There was a special several years ago that said the DEA guys were pin-pointing land they wanted, then planting evidence so they could take people's land.

How much easier it would be to use HAY to steal land from folks, rather than having to plant some pot on them.
>:(

crepemyrtle44
04-28-2008, 10:39 AM
Well I just copied and pasted the article to some agricultural groups I am on the list of. Guess I'll also send it to my state representative and maybe our senator, she is on the ag committee but she is really a party liner.