Livestock “The greatest homage we can pay to truth is to use it.” – JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL FEBRUARY 15, 2014 • www. aaalivestock . com
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Digest I Volume 56 • No. 2
Dying a Slow Death by Lee Pitts here are more than 22,000 federal lands ranchers who are currently paying the Bureau of Land Management and U.S. Forest Service $1.35 per animal unit month to run cattle on 250 million acres of federal land. Truth be told, that rankles eastern, and even some western, ranchers who view the federal lands ranchers, not as cowboy brethren, but as competition who are getting an unfair advantage. Get rid of them, they figure, and their piece of the beef pie would be bigger. This unholy alliance is joined by greenies and radical environmentalists who want the federal lands ranchers gone at any price. They believe the West should be reserved, not for people and cows, but for so called “wild” horses and wolves. You can say this for them, they aren’t all dumb, they know that if the federal lands ranchers didn’t have access to the federal grazing ground for part of the year, it’s highly unlikely many of them would be able to continue ranching on the 120 million deeded acres that they do own. Take away the BLM and Forest Service ground and there would be a domino effect, as ranchers and the rural communities they support, would disappear faster than the tofu turkey at a Sierra Club potluck.
NEWSPAPER PRIORITY HANDLING
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Riding Herd
The best way to appreciate how another person rides is to get on their horse. Dirty Word A year ago, when Wyoming Republican Senator John Barrasso was joined by eight other Republican Senators in sponsoring The Grazing Improvement Act the news was hailed by federal lands ranchers, and vilified by angry greenies. The Grazing Improvement Act would amend the Federal Land Policy and Management Act of 1976 to change the current terms of BLM and Forest Service grazing leases
from 10 to 20 years on federal lands in the 16 contiguous western states, where half of the ground is owned by the feds. Even better for the federal lands ranchers, the Act would also allow for certain grazing permits to be excluded from constant NEPA reviews. That’s a very big deal because if you want to send shivers down the spine of any businessman, just mention NEPA. It stands for National Environmental Policy
Act and anyone who has been run through the NEPA wringer will tell you it’s worse than a combined colonoscopy/root canal without anesthesia! It’s a long, arduous and costly process which “requires federal agencies to do extensive environmental analysis and consider alternatives for any “major federal action” that is expected to significantly affect the human environment.” After federal judges ruled in several cases that grazing renewals are “important actions” it meant that to renew your grazing permit you had to go through a NEPA review every ten years. In other words, it’s an environmental impact study for ranchers in which the feds throw the big bureaucratic book at you. Quite naturally, this makes independent ranchers a little nervous and queasy whenever they hear the dirty four letter word NEPA. This NEPA review process continued on page two
Using feed-grade antibiotics for livestock: Changes are coming SOUTH DAKOTA STATE UNIVERSITY EXTENSION PORKNETWORK.COM
ecently, livestock producers and veterinarians have been hearing about changes coming in the way antibiotics are used in food animals. In mid-December, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) published a final “guidance for industry” that starts the clock running on some of these changes. Initially, it’s the animal health companies that will be adjusting their practices —adjustments that will eventually make their way down to the people who prescribe and use the drugs: veterinarians and livestock producers. The role of livestock antibiotics in contributing to resistant bacterial infections in humans is complex and has been long-debated. Producer associations have seen the writing on the wall for a couple of years now that these changes were coming. But what do they actually mean for producers?
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What will change: The labeled uses of “medically important” antibiotics for growth promotion and improvements in feed efficiency will go away. The FDA is asking drug manufacturers to voluntarily take these uses off their products’ labels. Because
extra-label use of feed grade antibiotics is illegal, these uses will no longer be legal as well. The companies have until mid-March to tell the FDA what products they plan to do this with. After that, they have three years to make the label changes, so livestock producers currently using antibiotics for growth promotion will have time to adjust, depending on how quickly the companies switch over. The list of what FDA considers “medically important” antibiotics is pretty long. It contains older drugs like tetracyclines and penicillin along with classes of drugs that are more critical to human medicine, such as cephalosporins and fluoroquinolones. When it comes to growth-promoting antibiotics that fall into this category, it’s drugs like tetracyclines, tylosin, and neomycin that will be affected. These “medically important” products will shift from over-the-counter to “Veterinary Feed Directive” (VFD) classification – possibly with new label indications for treatment, control, or prevention. The VFD is not a new classification; it’s currently being used for newer feed-grade drugs like Pulmotil® in pigs and cattle and Nuflor® in pigs and fish.
by LEE PITTS
Titanic Two
t must have been very embarrassing for the 74 scientists, who meant to go to Antarctica to validate global warming theories, when the Russian ship they were on got stuck in ice ten feet thick far from where it should NOT have been if the polar cap was melting. Even more humiliating, ice breakers couldn’t get within ten miles of the frozen ship so the group had to be saved by helicopters and ships burning fossil fuels, you know, those terrible greenhouse gas emitting tools of the right-wing rich. Couple that event with last month’s polar vortex that sent thermometers plummeting to record lows and it hasn’t been a very good time to be a global warming fanatic, or “warmist” as they are now called. Despite the fact the earth has been in a cooling off stage the last 15 years, the “warmists” still cling to their trumped up theories like a Titanic passenger clinging to a life preserver. Much to the scientist’s dismay, this aborted scientific expedition will be remembered for suggesting that maybe we aren’t all gonna be cooked medium well; Hollywood isn’t going to drop off into the ocean (darn it); and the leader of this embarrassing fiasco is not going to get good seats, or be a speaker at the next United Nations confab on global warming. I was especially interested in this story because the leader of the scientific team was Chris Turney, a professor of climate change at the University of New South Wales in Australia, of which I am an alumnus. When I attended the Australian university I was immediately shocked at the differences between their educational system and ours. At college in the U.S. tests were based on one’s knowledge of facts; there were right and wrong answers. In Australia in the 1970s a test might consist of one question asking for a defense of your opinion. If you wanted a good grade, and who didn’t, you would mimic back the opinion of your professor. Perhaps this is continued on page fourteen
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