(St. Paul, Minn) The American
Meat Institute (AMI) today told USDA's BSE
Roundtable that full trade in cattle and beef
with Canada is warranted by science and
essential to the survival of beef companies
nationwide.
According to AMI, both the
U.S. and Canada were proactive in striving to
prevent BSE and aggressive in responding to the
one case detected in the U.S. and the three
cases detected in Canada. Both nations also
have taken extensive steps to protect both
animal health and the public health, and those
measures have been successful.
According to AMI, the fact that over the
last 12 months, the 380,000 cattle most likely
to test positive for BSE all tested negative
sends a resounding message that U.S. policies
are working. And because Canada's BSE
prevention strategies and regulations are
virtually identical, AMI argued that Canada is
a near mirror image of the U.S. and that full
trade should be resumed.
“There are
those here today who will attempt to advance
many conspiracy theories…they’ll try to alarm
the public with publicity stunts and false
claims of imminent danger,” said AMI Foundation
President James H. Hodges. “But we cannot let
this animal disease become an emotional
disorder. We must allow science – not hysteria
-- to chart our course.”
Hodges said
that some American isolationists are distorting
science in an effort to maintain a closed
border and high cattle prices. But he noted
that the North American beef industry is an
integrated industry regulated by nearly
identical sets of rules and governed by the
same scientific principles. “We cannot
criticize Canada without criticizing
ourselves,” Hodges said.
Hodges said
that we are now importing record levels of
Canadian beef from cattle under 30 months of
age. “When our policies permit beef from
Canada, but not the animals from which the beef
is derived, our policy sends a message to the
world that Canada does a better job of
processing cattle than we would if we imported
the cattle here and processed them ourselves.
Is that the message we want to send? ”
AMI Senior Vice President of Public Affairs
Janet Riley unveiled new black wrist bands that
say OpenBeefBorders.com, the Institute’s new
web site that was developed to communicate the
urgency of restoring trade with
Canada.
“We chose black because we are
mourning our losses,” Riley said. We’ve lost
more than 6,100 workers due to layoffs and
closed plants. We’ve also lost slaughter
capacity. In 2005, we expect to slaughter four
million fewer cattle than we slaughtered in
2002. Just this week, another beef packing
plant closed in Gering, Nebraska and more than
200 people lost their jobs. The plant cited
the inability to source Canadian cattle as a
chief reason for the closure.
Riley
detailed the millions in aid the Canadian
government is providing to its own beef
industry in an effort to build new beef plants
and expand existing ones that can process
Canada’s glut of cattle. She said the plants
are state of the art and offer serious
competition to the members of the U.S. beef
industry.
“U.S. policies are stoking
Canada’s meat packing engine,” Riley said. “We
are killing our own U.S. plants. We are
committing economic suicide.” Riley also said
the damage is also hitting hard-working
Americans, who are paying record prices for
beef – the highest prices since 1979.
“Our industry is in crisis. This strain
will drive businesses to bankruptcy and drive
those who survive to consolidate into larger
companies,” Riley noted. “You can’t have it
both ways…you can’t fight against free trade
and fight against consolidation in the beef
industry. But that’s exactly what the
isolationists are trying to do.”
“It is
my hope that the 9th Circuit will recognize
that this is just a profit-making game for the
isolationists and that the court will reverse
the preliminary injunction,” Riley said. “It
is my hope that the court will see what my
industry sees: the isolationists’ efforts are
like a cancer on the U.S. beef industry. The
longer they go untreated, the greater the
damage they will do and more irreversible their
effects will become.”
For more
information, visit http://www.openbeefborders.com
AMI SAYS BEEF IS SAFE, FULL CATTLE AND BEEF TRADE WITH CANADA SHOULD BE RESTORED
Thursday, June 9, 2005
For more information
contact:
|
David Ray Vice President, Public Affairs 202-587-4243 dray@meatami.com |
Janet Riley Sr. Vice President, Public Affairs 202-587-4245 jriley@meatami.com |
