LMD July 2011

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Livestock “The greatest homage we can pay to truth is to use it.” – JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL JULY 15, 2011 •

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Digest I Volume 53 • No. 7

Where is the Outrage? by Lee Pitts

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“Don’t interfere with something that ain't botherin' you much.” $80,057 worth of NCBA overhead expenses that were “improperly charged.” ■ The ongoing compliance review has found $305,365 in checkoff dollars that the NCBA misappropriated in just two years and the final tally isn’t in! ■ Ag Secretary Vilsack has reminded ranchers that policy organizations are not permitted by law to influence, determine outcomes, or vote on checkoff decisions. But the checkoff is a

government program and the USDA is seemingly turning their back to the hijacking of the beef checkoff by the NCBA. Now $45 million a year of your checkoff dollars are handed over to the NCBA by the Beef Board, money that is used indirectly to help finance its lobbying effort. Don’t believe it? Read on... ■ Chuck Kiker, a Beef Board member recently revealed that 70.9 percent of NCBA’s total overhead is paid for with check-

off dollars. According to Kiker, NCBA charged the checkoff a whopping $11.6 million just to administer the checkoff projects they were awarded. (Remember when we were sold on the checkoff it was promised that administration costs would be kept to less than five percent). “Remember,” says Kiker, “those implementation costs are over and above the direct costs of projects. Even more astonishing is the fact that this includes general administrative salaries. The CEO of NCBA is also considered the CEO of the Federation of State Beef Councils, so his general administrative time is paid 70.9 percent with beef checkoff dollars.” Yes, you read that right, over 70 percent of NCBA CEO Forest Roberts’ salary is paid for by checkoff dollars, and he works for a group that is actively lobbying Congress on a variety of subcontinued on page two

NOW THE REAL WORK BEGINS —

Reform of excessive litigation pay-outs by KAREN BUDD-FALEN

NEWSPAPER PRIORITY HANDLING

by LEE PITTS

An All New US

www. aaalivestock . com

ood prices in the cattle business can come at the worst times. Take now, for example. Ranchers are finally making a living wage and it’s about time! It happens so infrequently that many are embarrassed by it and don’t know how to act. So they are complacent at a time when there have never been more pressing issues regarding the future of the cattle business. Make-or-break issues like food safety, health of rural communities, monopolization and many others that will determine if your kids and grandkids will be able to make a living on the ranch. Cattlemen seem so apathetic, but if they don’t wake up soon these issues will be decided for them. When a person looks at the corruption on Capitol Hill and the beef checkoff these days one wonders . . . where is the outrage? Why aren’t ranchers up in arms over the following: ■ When the accounting firm began conducting their review of the beef checkoff for fiscal years 2008 through 2010 right off the bat they found $216,944 in faulty accounting. The NCBA repaid the Cattlemen’s Beef Board the money, apologized and that it was just an accounting error. But now the accountants have found an additional

Riding Herd

he American public has been asking for legislative reform of a system that pays taxpayer dollars to environmental “nonprofit” attorneys who charge $650 per hour to bring cases for statutory procedural violations, and we finally have it. On May 25, 2011, H.R. 1996, the Governmental Litigation Savings Act of 2011, was introduced to stop the deficit bleeding and level the playing field for all who seek to sue or need a permit from the federal government. But the simple introduction of this bill in the U.S. House of Representatives is not enough and we need your help. This bill has 18 sponsors, but needs many more and we need to get Congress to hold hearings to learn the true extent of the abuse. This is a call to action and a request for your help. The Governmental Litigation Savings Act of 2011 (“GLSA”) has five major sections. First, this Act eliminates the false distinction

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in net worth between a “for profit” organization and a “nonprofit public interest” organization. Currently, under the Equal Access to Justice Act (“EAJA”), a for profit entity or person with a net worth over $7,000,000 is ineligible to recover attorney fees for litigation against the federal government. However, an entity that has been determined to be “nonprofit” is not bound by this restriction. Thus, even though tax documents show a great many environmental and animal rights groups are worth far in excess of $7,000,000, these groups can “recover” attorney fees for suing the federal government. In other words, these “non-profit” groups get paid by the American taxpayers to sue the federal government which results in families losing their homes and businesses. Under the existing EAJA, groups like the Sierra Club, who reported its worth as $56,527,055 in 2007 can receive tax payer continued on page eight

t’s recorded in the history books that when Thomas Jefferson sent Lewis and Clark on their westward journey the cerebral President believed that the West was still inhabited by prehistoric animals. Unfortunately, some Congressmen still think that we in the former frontier are cavemen and still need their help to become civilized. My point is that our country is vastly different today than it was then. For example, anyone who has watched Congress on C SPAN knows that we shouldn’t be called the United States of America. A more fitting name would be The Rarely United States of America. Our national mascot is also wrong for the times we live in. Uncle Sam is sexist, racist with no tattoos or piercings being visually discernible. A more representative mascot would be Aunt Sam-antha who was previously a man, had a sexchange operation and is now a transvestite bi-sexual. Uncle Sam is also way too tall. The short people in this country take one look at him and immediately feel disadvantaged and victimized. We also need to name a Mother Of Our Country as we already have a father. Because we’re so celebrity obsessed likely candidates for the Mother of Our Country would be that gal Kate on television with eight kids, or the other one with 19. Or is it 25 by now? In the final analysis though the best representative as Mother of Our Country would be none other than the Octomom. Benjamin Franklin believed that our National Bird should be a chicken, not the eagle. While I don’t agree with Ben about the chicken, I’ve often wondered what it says about us as a nation to have our bird representative be a follically-challenged carnivore that eats roadkill. Our bird should stand for something more and I propose that it should be the Spotted Owl. Such a choice is more in continued on page ten

www.LeePittsbooks.com


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