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By Wayne Allard on January 14, 2005
(Excerpt -- for complete article please
visit The
Washington Times)
Tuesday's announcement by the Canadian
government that a second case of Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy
(BSE or Mad Cow disease) in less than a month had been
detected in Canada should not affect the expanded beef
and cattle trade with Canada announced by the U.S. Department
of Agriculture Jan 4.
For the past two years, I have advocated
applying sound science to deciding whether to reopen
the border to Canadian cattle and beef imports. Sound
science is critical, because it separates fact from
myth and ignores "mad cow" hysterics. Televised
pictures of seizure-stricken cows draw viewers but do
not represent the truth behind the image.
The border closing has created a market
imbalance. For instance, a Canadian packer could buy
a cow for about $17 (U.S.) per hundred-weight (cwt)
and sell the processing-grade beef for about $123 (U.S.)
per cwt. He also could buy a fed steer or heifer at
about $67 U.S. per cwt and sell the beef for about $132
(U.S.) per cwt. In the United States, the cow would
cost a packer about $55 per cwt and the beef would sell
for about $125 per cwt; a fed steer or heifer would
cost about $85 per cwt and the beef would sell for about
$135 per cwt. This imbalance has led, in part, to the
layoff of thousands of people in the processing industry
across our nation.
On Jan. 4, the Agriculture Department
(USDA) published a final rule that leads toward resumed
trade with Canada. The rule allows for importing certain
animals when certified to hail from a so-called "minimal-risk
region." This is similar to how we eliminate brucellosis
in cattle on a state-by-state basis.
The current situation should not be used
as an excuse to stop trade resumption. The new rule
is grounded in solid, sound science, and will help end
a situation that has wreaked havoc on beef trade for
too long. It will protect the integrity of the human
food supply system and stabilize agriculture trade.
Beef trade with Canada should move forward
because measures by both the United States and Canada
are working as planned to ensure detection of BSE and
that the beef is safe and wholesome. Canada meets the
requirements for a minimal-risk region based upon a
number of its actions:
Prohibition of specified risk materials
in human food.
Import restrictions sufficient to minimize BSE
exposure.
Surveillance for BSE at levels meeting or exceeding
international guidelines.
Ruminant-to-ruminant feed ban in place and effectively
enforced.
Appropriate epidemiological investigations, risk
assessment and risk mitigation measures imposed.
The finding of a second case of BSE in
Canada proves the Canadian BSE surveillance system is
working. A second case was not entirely unexpected,
given that cattle predating the feed ban are still alive
in both countries. The extensive risk assessment conducted
as part of USDA's rulemaking process took into careful
consideration the possibility Canada could find additional
BSE cases.
The U.S. has taken strong steps to protect
the safety of the food supply system. Opening the border
to trade with Canada will normalize the relationship
with one of our strongest trade partners and bring science
into the trade discussion.
As a veterinarian, I know we have
the world's safest food supply. As a senator, I will
work with federal agencies to assure compliance. As
a parent, I will continue serving American beef at dinner.
Wayne Allard, Republican and veterinarian, is the
senior U.S. senator from Colorado.
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