Senate Bill 510!

I read a 4 page article on this bill.

Its called "The Agriculture Food Modernization Act".

If congress passes this; It will become illegal to sell even garden vegetables out of your garden (unless amended).

THE SENATE IS SUPPOSED TO VOTE TODAY! (Tuesday).

I already sent my senator a warning about this. He's up for re-election in 2 years, & wants back in! But I found out big companies, & advocacy groups have given him money in favor of it. He's received contributions (BRIBES) of over $107,000 to pass this.

Its the lame duck session, & a lot of these politicians could care less since they wont be back next year!

Deere Scotty
 
my brother in law sent that to us , He said it was done behind closed doors.My wife was so p#### off. She said what about all farmers that is their livelyhood . Tea party keep going, this is the U.S.A. ! She said more but I would have to bleep it all. This summer she might be interested in joining me working in the garden, that would be great.
 
Large Ag companies have taken over the USDA and want to run whats left of the small operators out of business.Fewer companies control most of the food supply than oil.Monsanto is pushing hard for this bill.Far left mulitbillionarie George Soros has a large stake in Monsanto BTW.Call your Senators vote is around 9AM today.
 
The managers amendment to this bill is full of exclusions for any farm that sells less then $500,000 dollars per year for direct marketing to consumers as well as restaurants etc.

The following is copied from an email I received from PASA yesterday. There is way too much false information being circulated around out there. The big companies may not want the amendment, but our food sources are in need of improvement.

What's in the Manager's Amendment?
The Manager's Amendment incorporates a wide variety of changes to the bill that have been added since the measure was approved by the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee late last year. All of these changes have been approved by both the Democratic and nnalert sponsors of the bill. Among the changes are a number of very important items for farmers, including the Tester-Hagan amendment that would improve food safety outcomes by creating size-appropriate requirements and less costly compliance alternatives. The Manager's Amendment will:

(1) Clarify existing law which says that farmers who direct market more than 50% of their product to the consumer at the farm or at a retail location off the farm such as a farm stand or farmer's market need not register with FDA. This clarification is especially important for off-farm retail locations such as farmers markets.

(2) Provides a size appropriate and less costly alternative to Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Plans (HACCP) for farmers who:

Direct market more than 50% of their products directly to consumers, stores or restaurants, and
Have gross sales (direct and non-direct combined) of less than $500,000, and
Sell to consumers, stores, or restaurants that are in-state or within 400 miles.

Farmers who qualify must provide documentation that the farm is in compliance with state regulations. Documentation may include licenses, inspection reports, or other evidence that the farm is in compliance with State, local, county, or other applicable non-Federal food safety law. The farm must also prominently and conspicuously display the name and address of farm/facility on its label. For foods without a label then by poster, sign, or placard, at the point of purchase or, in the case of Internet sales, in an electronic notice, or in the case of sales to stores and restaurants, on the invoice.
If there are no state regulations or if the farmer prefers a different option, the farmer must provide FDA with documentation that potential hazards have been identified and that preventive controls have been implemented and are being monitored for effectiveness.

(3) Provides alternatives to the produce standards for farms that:

Direct market more than 50% of their products directly to consumers, stores or restaurants, and
Have gross sales (direct and non-direct combined) of less than $500,000, and
Sell to consumers, stores, or restaurants that are in-state or within 400 miles.

The farm must prominently and conspicuously display the name and address of farm/facility on its label. For foods without a label then by poster, sign, or placard, at the point of purchase or, in the case of Internet sales, in an electronic notice, or in the case of sales to stores and restaurants, on the invoice.

(4) An amendment sponsored by Senator Debbie Stabenow (D-MI) to provide for a USDA-delivered competitive grants program for food safety training for farmers, small processors and wholesalers. The training projects will prioritize small and mid-scale farms, beginning and socially disadvantaged farmers, and small food processors and wholesalers. The grant program will be administered by USDA's National Institute for Food and Agriculture.

(5) An amendment sponsored by Senator Michael Bennet (D-CO) to reduce unnecessary paperwork and excess regulation required under the preventative control plan and the produce standards sections of the bill. FDA is instructed to provide flexibility for small processors including on-farm processing, to minimize the burden of compliance with regulations, and to minimize the number of different standards that apply to separate foods. FDA will also be prohibited from requiring farms and other food facilities to hire consultants to write food safety plans. The Bennet amendment applies to all small farms and processors, not just those who direct market within 400 miles of their farms.

(6) An amendment sponsored by Senator Bernie Sanders (I-VT) for farms that engage in value-added processing or that co-mingle product from several farms gives the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) the authority to either exempt farms engaged in low or no risk processing or co-mingling activities from new regulatory requirements or to modify particular regulatory requirements for such farming operations.

(7) An amendment championed by Senator Barbara Boxer (D-CA) to strip the bill of wildlife-threatening enforcement against "animal encroachment" of farms is also in the manager's package. It will require FDA to apply sound science to any requirements that might impact wildlife and wildlife habitat on farms.

(8) An amendment proposed by Senator Sherrod Brown (D-OH) will not require small farmers to meet extensive traceability and recordkeeping if they sell food directly to consumers or to grocery stores and allows labeling that preserves the identity of the farm to satisfy traceability requirements. The amendment also prevents FDA from requiring any farm from needing to keep records beyond the first point of sale when the product leaves the farm, except in the case of farms that co-mingle product from multiple farms, in which case they must also keep records one step back as well as one step forward.
Brian Snyder

Executive Director
Pennsylvania Association for Sustainable Agriculture (PASA)
P.O. Box 419, Millheim, PA 16854
(814) 349-9856
 
Fight this hard guys. You will be worse off than we Canadians. We can't sell milk or cheese to anyone, or even use our own raw milk at our own table. We can't have more than 249 laying hens without a quota, and can't sell the eggs unless they are graded. We can't sell any cattle without an electronic eartag in it that costs us $3 each. Sheep must have a 40 cent metal tag now but $2 electronic tags are just around the corner. If you ship an animal the doesn't have a tag, the fine is $500. I can't imagine how this helps food saftey. The ear tags ain't connected to the steaks. If you let the big companies win out, you will end up more communist than we are. Some days I would move if I thought I could afford health insurance.
 
I read the proposed bill and could not find what all the hype was about. I have friends that listen to a bunch of way out there talk shows and I could not find in the bill the claims they make about how bad it will be. Basically sounds like alot of producers selling direct want to bash large scale agriculture and say how unsafe the commercial food distribution network is but are against establishing any safetly inspection credentials themselves. I direct market all of my products already and already meet the proposed bills requirements by following existing state and federal inspection and lableing laws.
 
Thin end of the wedge...
A show breeder of poultry said USDA had a meeting & wanted input on what a $5.00 electronic chip would do to the poultry industry. Yes that was per bird.

Everybody likes Gov. money but when did it come without strings, (followed closely by club enforcement).
 
I find it hard to believe that there would ever be a $5 chip. Electronic ID is mandatory in cattle in Michigan and the entire 2 piece electronic ear tag is only $2. Last proposal I saw for poultry was that an entire lot (don't know how many birds in a lot) would have one ID.
 
Those wack job talk show hosts DO get people wound up don't they? After 15 years of listening to them myself,I found that the subject that they were the LEAST informed about was anything agricultural.
 
Yes they do, I have a buddy that listens to that Info Wars on the internet and he all but thinks the world is coming to an end. You are right, it is amazing how mis-informed about all the facts they are.
 
It doesn"t really matter whats in the bill, all Americans that wish to remain free ought to be opposed to any and all Nanny state legislation, the Congress has no constitutional power over the citizens personal food preferences, or smoking cigarettes, drinking whiskey etc. Sometimes peoples bad habits kill them and sometimes people are too stupid or too lazy to properly wash and prepare their food, some of them get sick or die. None of that is a good enough reason to force everyone else in the country to adhear to regulations that of themselves won't accomplish anything. This type of meddling has been tried many times over the years, mostly on the state level to restrict interstate trade, the result was commodity prices skyrocketing, producers going broke and the end consumer getting screwed, in other words, the usual result of Government intervention in private trade.
 
I agree with LAA's statement that "It doesn"t really matter whats in the bill". Why do we Americans NEED this bill? I am sure that somebody will point to an incident that raised the alarm about the food supply. Problem is that Congress thinks it can FIX EVERYTHIG with a stroke of the pen (requiring more bureaucracy, meaning hire more paper pushers). If it ain't broke, don't fix it.

Plus, you can pass as many laws and write as many regulations as you want and as long as there are humans involved, someone will make a mistake or intentionally bypass them. So let's cut out all the abundant-thinking that government is here to solve all our problems.
 
You must listen to public radio to think government can't take away any exemption they grant.

These SOB's never pass any law that is good for the country.
 
More government intrusion. What could be wrong with that? Let's see, Government run auto plants. Gotta love that Chevy Volt. Government run health care. The more information that comes out about it, the worse it gets. Vastly increased government in our airports, Ain't traveling by air a whole lot more fun now? Now we get more governmnet control of our food supply. I sure food costs will go down, and requirments for farming and livestock ownership will just be smooooth sailing when they get all those new rules and requirments up and running.
Jack
 
I buy 6 loaves of bread and two dozen brown eggs
every 2 weeks from an Amish lady, and a case of
wild black raspberry jam every autumn.($4 a pint)
They are aware of the pending foolish law, but
doubt if it will affect them as they have no
roadside stand, and sell only to friends who go
direct to the house. But who knows..next the Gvmt
will create a new job...food police, to drive
counrty roads. 98% of all congressmen make the
others look bad !
 
Funny...Lyndon LaRouche was saying that very thing in 1980 when he was running against Jimmy Carter and Ronald Reagan, and everybody told us he was a lunatic.

But then, in 1992 Ross Perot told us that NAFTA would create "a large sucking sound" and our jobs would disappear...and the same folks told us that Perot was a lunatic.

I'm beginning to see a pattern...if you tell the truth, you must be some kind of lunatic, and are therefore unelectable. That's why we've gotten the people in office that we've had over the past 30+ years.
 
Is this the same thing you're talking about?

http://www.snopes.com/politics/business/organic.asp

Paul
 

Remember the Jim Hensen "Dinosaur" episodes and the Government called "WE SAY SO"...........

Watch out for "WE SAY SO"...!!!!


Ron..
 
Yea those are the same Whack Jobs that said in
07 Real Estate and the Stock Market was a bubble and on track to crash.Boy ain't we lucky how wrong they were then?(LOL) Bet you laughed at them then too.
 
It passed but exempted small operations and the House Bill is totally different so it most likely will die.Hopefully after getting rid of many of the nut jobs in the US House the next Congress will be more sensible.
 
Yea most of the 'experts' were calling Peter Schiff an Idiot in 07 for saying the Stock Market would go under 7000 and Gold would go over $1200 we ALL know who was right that time.
 
Are you new here?! I was making stronger warnings of things to come while those crackpots were still applauding Bush and trying to blow sunshine up your skirt about how great things were going to be. And no,I'm not some left wing wack job either. I just know when I'm being fed a line by a bunch of abundant radio actors pretending to be conservatives on their three hour a day radio soap operas. How many times do they have to tell you themselves,before you take a look at who's saying it? Let me quote them,"watch what they do,not what they say".
If I told you I knew somebody who had been married 5 times,did drugs til they went deaf and was an official spokesman for a left wing extremist vegetarian animal rights group who has as it's goal to end animal agriculture,would you think I was talking about a CONSERVATIVE?
Good,because I'm not,I'm talking about abundant Limbaugh!
 
Since we're talking about government intrusion, my wood sculpting artist neighbor is having a hard time making ends meet because of the economy. He saw how much my and my neighbors grandkids liked playing with his scrap pieces of wood so he had the bright idea of making some wooden toys to sell. After checking around he found out since the Chinese paint scare on their toys it now costs $30,000 or so to have every piece tested, painted or not. So much for trying to start a small business.
 
Last week the Senate voted to stop debate on it. All nnalert and 14 nnalert, including both of my Indiana senators, Bayh (D) and Lugar (R). Bayh isn't running for reelction and Lugar is up for reelction to his 7th six-year term in 2012. As a staunch conservative, I wrote Lugar that night and asked him to resign, or at least not seek reelection because if he does in 2012, he won't run unopposed as always before.

Passing in the House is not going to be a problem. Its a done deal. You will not even be gardening by the time this thing gets done, nor will you be giving anyone apples off of your trees. And Lugar, whom stood next to a combine in a farm field during a commercial when he ran for reelction in 2006 backs this thing.

Don't get me going.

Mark
 
Fellow I bought lumber from years ago made a toy train out of pine.Sold it to a doctor who put it in his office waiting room for kids to play with.Kid got a splinter in his finger that got infected.Doc treated it no charge.Mother sued Doctor.Maker took the train back and refunded money.State agency jumped on the maker, wanted test the trains finish, maker said I used corn oil.They backed off.I have gotten 2 scratches on my hand side by side, one got infected the other was fine.Owner of a country store was told he had to stop using his wood cutting board by the state.Switch to plastic they said,Came back later telling him to go back to wood.I used to make wood cutting boards for sale, finished them with corn oil.Wouldnt do that now.Built some nice rocking horses for my grand children.Very nice looking, they are still used as ornaments long after the kids out grew them.People that have seen them wanted one but I cant risk selling one.
 

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