Dear Friend,
We are again hearing that the U.S. House Agriculture Committee may soon be
releasing draft Farm Bill language. We need your help to contact committee members
with your voice!
We’ve seen a major decline in independent producers in the latest Agriculture Census,
and that is directly due to government policies that support massive, consolidated
operations and hamper small ones.
We can’t change all of that in this one Farm Bill, but with your help, we CAN make important strides towards changing the status quo. Over the next two weeks, we will send you multiple alerts, asking you to call your U.S. Representative on a slate of reforms.
Today we are focusing on two different reform to help small-scale farmers have more options for meat processing and sales, also serving consumers who wish to buy direct from their local farm. The first is the PRIME Act.
The PRIME Act
The PRIME Act allows farmers to use licensed custom slaughterhouses and then sell the meat within their own state, either direct to consumers or to local restaurants and retailers. Now, custom slaughter is available to owners or part owners of a live animal. This would provide transparent, accountable meat sources to supply our local communities.
The LOCAL Foods Act
The second is the Livestock Owned by Communities to Advance Local (LOCAL) Foods
Act. It has not been filed yet, but our allies are working with legislators to include it in
the draft.
The LOCAL Foods Act allows individuals to buy a share of live animals and then hire someone as their agent to do the processing on-farm. The bill also reins in USDA’s abuses of state meat inspection programs, stopping USDA from harassing the
states based on the agency’s informal policies or staff opinions.
Independent Farms and Ranches will Benefit
These bills help local farmers and consumers at different scales. The LOCAL Foods Act
helps the very smallest producers get their products to consumers who desire them,
and it helps those consumers who want to buy meat in fairly large quantities at a time
through animal shares, allowing them to do so without government oversight or
regulation.
The PRIME Act also helps small producers, including those who want to sell
meat by the individual cut to consumers at local farmers markets and other outlets; the
Act will enable them to use licensed slaughterhouses with more scale-appropriate
regulation. This sort of tiered approach is what we need to build a resilient and
diversified food system!
Can you help by calling your U.S. Representative today?