Sustainable Agriculture Coalition
Speaks Out Against Decision
Washington, DC, January 12, 2016 – Today in the Federal Register, the U.S. Department of
Agriculture’s Agricultural Marketing Service (AMS) rescinds the labeling
standard for grass fed meat that was developed over the course of four years
and finalized, with the support of national farm and consumer organizations
including NSAC, in 2006.
“Meat labeling just became even more
confusing for farmers and consumers,” said Ferd Hoefner, Policy Director for
the National Sustainable Agriculture Coalition. “USDA is revoking a label
standard that had widespread farm and consumer support. Actions such as this
take us into a Wild West situation, where anything goes and both farmers and
consumers lose.”
In the Federal Register notice, AMS
states that having a strong, clear, consumer-friendly labeling standard “does not facilitate the marketing of agricultural
products in a manner that is useful to stakeholders or consumers” because a different USDA agency, the Food Safety
Inspection Service (FSIS), must approve meat labels and “there is no guarantee that an USDA-verified
production/marketing claim will be approved by FSIS.”
“The rationale that a strong USDA
label standard for grass fed beef is not useful because it might not be
recognized by a partner agency is outrageous,” said Hoefner. “It is both sad
and true that these two USDA agencies often do not coordinate, and worse yet
that in some cases FSIS has looked the other way, allowing particularly
unscrupulous meat companies to abuse the USDA standard,” Hoefner said. “But the
common sense solution is not to revoke the standard, but instead to tackle
siloing and lack of interagency communication head-on.”
The Federal Register notice gives
producers using the grass fed label 30 days to either convert the newly revoked
USDA grass fed label claim into their own private grass-fed standard, or to
develop a new grass fed standard of their own.
“Rather than bringing consistency and
common sense to our food marketing system, USDA seems to be throwing in the
towel,” said Hoefner. “This is terrible public policy that will create a
multitude of non-uniform labels, which will open the door to more confusion and
subterfuge in the marketplace. It is an affront to consumers, who have the
right to know how their food is raised, and to the farmers whose innovation and
hard work created the trusted grass fed label standard. NSAC and our member
organizations believe this reversal is a detriment to a fair and transparent
food system and we urge the USDA to come up with an alternative solution
quickly.”
The grass fed label claim standard
now being revoked was originally published in the Federal Register on May 12,
2006, the result of several years of meetings between farmers and farm and
consumer organizations sponsored by AMS and facilitated by NSAC, as well as by
a formal public notice and comment process. The standard stated among other
things that grass, forbs, and forage needed to be 99 percent or more of the
energy source for the lifetime of a ruminant species after weaning in order to
qualify as grass fed. Prior to the setting of that standard, grain fed animals
were often sold as grass fed, with USDA’s approval.
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