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U.S. ranchers' group seeks early judgment in devastating mad cow case

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    U.S. ranchers' group seeks early judgment in devastating mad cow case

    U.S. ranchers' group seeks early judgment in devastating mad cow case
    BETH GORHAM



    WASHINGTON (CP) - A U.S. ranchers' group blocking the border to Canadian cattle is asking for an early judgment in the mad cow case, even before a court hearing scheduled for July in Montana.

    R-CALF United Stockgrowers of America submitted the request this week to the U.S. District Court judge that sided with the group in March and slapped a temporary ban on the cattle trade just days before it was supposed to resume March 7.

    U.S. observers were unsure of the likelihood that Judge Richard Cebull would make a move to decide the long-term fate of the border before the full hearing scheduled for July 27 in Billings, Mont.

    "Very rarely does that happen," said a government spokesman who didn't want to be named.

    But some experts said there's a chance of an early ruling in the case, which has devastated the Canadian industry and U.S. meat packers who said they're losing an estimated $38 million US a week without enough cows to process.

    The U.S. Department of Agriculture has until June 8 to respond to the latest legal salvo from R-CALF, which also wants an end to trade in processed-beef products.

    "We'll lay out why the court should not move quickly," said U.S. Justice Department spokesman Charles Miller.

    "The court will wait for us to file our response."

    Dozens of U.S. cattle and farm groups representing the majority of ranchers are supporting Canada in the legal battle.

    But R-CALF has long argued Canadian beef and cattle pose safety risks because there have been three mad cow cases north of the border.

    It argues officials failed to properly assess the risk of Canadian imports to U.S. herds and humans and acted too quickly to reopen the border.

    The group also criticizes testing levels for mad cow, or bovine spongiform encephalopathy, on both sides of the border, saying they're too low.

    The Agribusiness Freedom Foundation released a rebuttal this week of R-CALF's claims Canada doesn't test enough cattle, saying tests each month of 2004 and 2005 have exceeded what the World Organization for Animal Health recommends for an entire year.

    Canada has about seven million cattle over the age of 30 months, thought to be at higher risk than younger cows for contracting BSE.

    It completed 23,550 tests in 2004 and have already tested 22,883 so far this year, the Canadian Food Inspection Agency said.

    "R-CALF has grossly misrepresented the situation to the public and in court," said Steve Dittmer, the U.S. foundation's executive vice-president.

    "How R-CALF reaches it conclusions and justifies its allegations somehow seems to have nothing to do with the real numbers."

    The U.S. beef ban began in May 2003 after Canada's first mad cow case, costing the industry some $7 billion Cdn.

    The Kansas Department of Agriculture estimates the U.S. beef industry, hit by its own mad cow case 18 months ago and struggling without Canadian imports, lost up to $4.7 billion US last year.

    U.S. officials launched an appeal of the March ruling in Montana granting a temporary extension of the cattle ban. But no date has yet been set in the U.S. Court of Appeals.



    © The Canadian Press, 2005

    #2
    When I first saw this article I wondered why R-CALF would be so gung ho to have an early ruling? Is it because they think they have it in the bag and will also get a ban on boxed beef?
    I saw a recent quote by Stan Eby that said if boxed beef was banned then the CCA would be pushing their "contingency plan"! He wasn't explaing just what that was, but one part of it was to ask the USA to allow Canada to ship cattle/beef to Mexico through the US! Yea right, like that is going to happen?
    If R-CALF wins this next go around how long will Canadian beef/cattle be locked out of the American market?
    Would anyone hazard a guess at the price of fats if R-CALF gets boxed beef banned? Personally if I owned a feedlot I'd be a wee bit worried!

    Comment


      #3
      I've been giving this one a bit of thought. This may not be as bad as it seems. I've been a little concerned lately about how long it's taking for the appeal on the temporary injunction to get going.

      Figured it would be just our luck that the appeal court would overturn it and then a couple of weeks later it would go to court in Montana again, and be made permanent, and then it would be months before that was appealed, and so on and so on. Meanwhile nothing gets done and we all suffer.

      Perhaps this way he can do what we all know he wants to do, and then the appeal court will be prepared for it, and can just jump in and overthrow it once and for all. This is just my thinking, and I'm not a lawyer, but to me it would make sense. (As if anything that's happened in the last two years ever made sense!)

      Either that, or R-Calf is getting jumpy, and figures that the longer they wait the higher the stack of oppostition to them will get.

      Kind of like a politician thinking of an election eh??? LOL

      Comment


        #4
        Nice call kato, no one really knowsor can guess our fates in the U.S justice system. I do beleive that R-Calf officials are very concerned over the growing resistance to their efforts. The ramifications of the loss of the boxed beef trade are very scary and they are well aware that it would really put us in a bad way. The onlt contingency plan that I have heard that makes any sense, is that the CBEF is pushing the Federal Ag Ministry to direct the CFIA to immediately develop a tseting for market acccess protocol with Japan and other Pacific Rim nations. But this is all speculative at the moment. Hope for the best

        Comment


          #5
          Not much of a contingency plan at this late stage is it? How long would it take to move the sloths at CFIA to approve such a procedure, then build testing facilities large enough to handle the workload, then of course there is Cargill and Tyson who have sworn they won't test - where else can we get them killed? Maybe in another two years they would be ready to go - if buyers actually materialise. Let's pray it doesn't come down to this desperate scenario.

          Comment

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