Thursday, December 31, 2009

comments re consolidation in agriculture

Dept. of Justice is thinking about may be investigating the situation in the food industry to see if may be there are a few big players there who kinda dominate the field and write the rules for the themselves (no s**t) and asked the public for comments, so below is what I sent them. I'm not happy with it, I think I didn't explain it as clear as I should have but the deadline is today and I really don't have much time on it anyway, so here it is:


Dear Sir/Madam,

We're a small sheep farm in Dade City, Florida and we're limited to selling live animals only by combination of laws and lack of infrastructure for meat processing. If we could sell the meat directly it would be a healthy, natural, low-cost and humane alternative to industrially produced or imported meat but we can't. This is how it works (or, in this case, doesn't work):

Meat for re-sale must be processed by a USDA-inspected meat plant and there are only 15 in the entire state of Florida. Only 8 of them accept animals from the public. Only 5 of those work with sheep. Only one of these 5 is less than a 4-hour drive from us and this one only does slaughter, no cutting or packaging. So, there is no way for us (or any other sheep farm nearby) to sell meat and the big companies who do it here have no competition.

And it gets worse actually - let's say someone is willing to buy an animal but they can't or don't want to do their own butchering (and that probably describes 99% of the population). They can take the animal to a "custom butcher" who is not allowed to process meat for resale but can do it for the owner of the animal. There are more custom butchers than USDA inspected ones but still too few. The closest ones to us are about an hour away and their fee for slaughter and cutting a sheep comes to about $100. The average 100 lbs. animal itself only cost about $200, so 33% increase from a butcher's fee is definitely a big turn off for many people, especially low income people, who are already in big disadvantage when it come to access to healthy natural foods. On the top of that, custom butchers are often do a rather poor job that impacts quality of the meat. The reason they're able to get away with that is because there are so few of them and because they don't have competition from USDA-inspected butchers who are few and far away and mostly don't accept animals from the public.

I'm not suggesting that big food companies somehow created this environment (more likely it was a result of the unwise drive to cheap food at any cost we've experienced in the second half of the 20th century) but they're certainly benefiting from that, as they only have to compete with each other. Whatever the newspapers say about benefits of natural or local meat - an average person not happy enough to live near a farm and USDA-inspected plant, not having extra money and not willing to butcher animals himself has only one source of meat - a big box chain store. Not only it is dangerous (as evidenced by almost weekly recalls of contaminated foods, affecting hundreds of people) but it's in no way a competitive marketplace that was always the real reason behind American success and ingenuity.

Thank you for your attention to this matter,

5 comments:

Robert C. Guy said...

Your perspective and approach to these issues is refreshing. I just watched the movie Food Inc. last night and the letter you sent and have reproduced here further clarifies the injury done to society in the long run by the single track pursuit of lowering costs while maintaining some simulacrum of health. A co-worker of mine recently asked me if my fiancée and I (a relationship of three and a half years with plans soon to marry) were planning in the long run on buying land of our own to farm and I couldn't gather all of the many concepts together in my mind into a quick lunch break conversation length explanation of why I am waiting and watching the world intently before leaping into an investment of that kind and the only single point I could think to bring up was that it would be difficult to make enough money, from the land itself, to not necessitate a daily commute of unfortunate length back to the office, in order to avoid being removed from the land either by the bankers who actually own the land until I'd paid it off or even after that to keep the government from removing me or my family regardless of how many generations may have worked the land and contributed to the community. It turned out to be point enough for discussion as the rest of our meal time was spent up considering it but there are so many other intricate social incentives and feedback loops in 'modern' culture that I felt baffled by the desire to discuss it with someone who seems open to the ideas but has never been exposed to much of the information and the frustration of the scope of the issues at hand compared to the attention span and small opportunities of folks that come by to delve into it

Walter Jeffries said...

I hear you completely. We've been facing the same problems and came to the conclusion that we must have our own on-farm slaughter and butcher capacity with USDA/State inspection. It is the current "big project" on our farm. Soaks up all that free time and keeps us hillbillies out of trouble. Check out this post for some details about our adventure. It's a saga that will continue for some time - these things don't happen over night.

By the way, which docket item is this that you're commenting on?

Happy New Years!

-Walter
Sugar Mountain Farm
in Vermont

Leon said...

Robert,

I'm glad that you're interested in where your food comes from and realize the dangers of the single pipeline food system. Personally, I don't believe in complicated conspiracies by the Big Ag - there is no need for conspiracies because most people have so little interest in their food it's very easy to give them a snowball, tell them it's an ice cream and they will be happy to eat it and pay for it.

As for making living from the farm along - you're right, it's extremely difficult. There is also a danger that if your livelihood depends on it, you'll be more inclined to do things the profitable way, not the right way. Even if you're very hardworking and talented person that's often not enough because food prices are so screwed up (my personal and probably not very scientific calculations show that a meat needs to be 10 - 20 times more expensive before big scale animal ag. can be truly sustainable and humane). You need to be located in a certain areas, and you need to be lucky and so on. To think about it, Walter Jeffries, who commented below you is the only person I know who makes a living by farming alone (BTW, if you haven't done it yet I highly recommend you check out his blog, which is very educational, thought provoking and entertaining. Yep, 3-in-1 deal :)

Recently I've been thinking a lot about Gene Logsdon's theory that the agriculture simply can't be profit-driven because than it's manufacturing and that's a whole different game. I think he's right. I believe a better way is to produce as much as you need yourself (and don't need the things you can't produce) so the only money you need are for gas, taxes and accidents medical insurance. I know some families with annual income of 10,000 who even manage to save a good chunk of it because they consume very little of store-bought stuff. This is also where we're trying to go - rather than working on making more profit from our farm, we're trying to make it more well rounded, so there's little we need to buy. DW and I both have part-time jobs and we'll try to keep them too, if for nothing else than just for the fact that putting all your eggs in one basket is not smart and the freedom to do things right by our animals these outside money give us. Also, I know so many burn out farmers - it's scary. And I believe the main reason is that they're trying to make a living by selling food in a society that's happy to eat toxic snowballs labeled "good ice cream" as long as they're cheap.

Sorry, getting off my soapbox now :)

BTW, it's probably a good time to buy a farm now - quite a few are in foreclosure and while it seems wrong to profit from someone's misfortune, if you buy it and make it a sustainable farm that's so much better than someone building a golf course there anyway.


Walter,

I know you do - I actually wanted to use you (well, the fact that you are practically forced to build your own meat packing plant) as an example of how bad the things are all over but the letter was getting too long and I was really out of time. BTW, I see all the updates to your blog through Google Reader so I've been following every step of your butcher shop story in real time:)

I don't think there is a docket number - they're still "exploring". It's this thing: http://www.justice.gov/atr/public/press_releases/2009/251937.htm I read somewhere else that anti-trust investigation may result from these workshops but can't find that site now.

Thanks for you wishes and good luck with finishing the butcher shop (and other projects) in 2010!

Acadia Shelties said...

Leon, this is a great letter. It sure makes me glad that I live in Pennsylvania. We are in MUCH better shape in this State. USDA actually goes to (small) butcher who ask to be inspected and so we (the sheep farmer) can sell meat to the public that has been processed by these small butchers. The butcher we work with is only 30 minutes away, he only butchers a handful of animals each week (Wednesdays are the days the USDA inspectors are there and they have to be there for the "killing" - not the cutting). The butcher charges quite a bit (almost $100/head)- but he has a large investment too and they are so good to the animals that I don't complain. I will count myself lucky- and hope that FL changes the laws so that you too can directly sell your meat.
Cadie
www.ewewin.wordpress.com

Leon said...

Cadie,

You guys are so lucky.

Traditionally most animals born here were (most still are) shipped to Ohio and all them corn places for finishing and then they come back deep-frozen already.

Oh, well ... hopefully we'll see some changes soon...

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