Bovine bombardment is part of the most recent plan to thwart Texas legislators’ plan to implement a federally mandated animal identification system.
Protesters plan to tell state government officials, “Don’t Tag Texas,” March 2.
Farmers and ranchers will turnout in numbers at the state capitol that Friday, livestock in tow, to declare their discontent concerning the newly proposed National Animal Identification System (NAIS), as well as the Trans-Texas Corridor (TTC).
A media release from the Farm and Ranch Freedom Alliance, said the protest is motivated by individual freedoms, which they fear could get trampled along the way.
“Freedom-loving Texans planned this protest because of two issues that threaten their way of life: The National Animal Identification System and the Trans-Texas Corridor,” the release stated.
“The NAIS and the TTC are national issues with their hearts in Texas,” said Judith McGeary, founder to the Farm and Ranch Freedom Alliance. “We hope that the sight of a veritable Noah’s Ark marching up Congress Avenue will reconnect Texas lawmakers to the people whose lives they are affecting and bring the attention of the entire country to bear.”
NAIS legislation was spurred as a result of heightened threats of foreign animal disease outbreak in the U.S.
The United States Department of Agriculture’s Web site describes NAIS as, “a modern, streamlined-information system that helps producers and animal health officials respond quickly and effectively to animal disease events in the United States.”
The proposed system, at this point, is a voluntary State-Federal-Industry partnership. However, the Farm and Ranch Freedom Alliance states there are some concerns when it comes to a possible mandate.
“NAIS is a corporate-agriculture plan being pushed by the federal government,” the release reads. “The Texas Animal Health Commission currently has the authority to make it mandatory at any time.
“If it does, then anyone who owns even one livestock animal — even just a chicken or a horse — will have to register their premises with the government, individually identify each animal and report movements to a database.”
Jon Green, Parker County extension agent-agriculture, said at this point, NAIS legislation is still up in the air, and his sentiments are mixed when it comes to the proposed system.
“Right now, that whole program has been put on hold,” Green said. “We’re kind of in the wait-and-see mode. I think it could have a positive impact just due to the fact that it allows animals to be traced back, and it would help in the case of a disease outbreak.
“But, it does put a little more on the part of livestock producers when it comes to tagging their animals and making sure everything is done before the animal leaves the premises.”
According to Mike Sweatt, county executive director for the Farm Service Agency, approximately 200 to 300 area producers stand to be affected if the new legislation becomes mandatory.
CNHI News Service Originals
February 14, 2007
Protesters plan to take NAIS issue to Austin
- CNHI News Service Originals
-
-
Of weddings and bail money
Memorable mistakes happen at almost every wedding.
The ring bearer’s tux is too large, the maid of honor’s shoes are the wrong color, the videographer shows up drunk, the mother of the bride gets too close to the candles on the altar and singes her dress. -
The curse of Friday the 13th
Be extra careful tomorrow.
Don’t walk under any ladders, break any mirrors or cross the paths of black cats.
It’s Friday the 13th. - Congressman misplaces priorities
-
North Texas weathering financial downturn
Headlines tell of a faltering stock market, grim job prospects and an economy in free fall as the country welcomes a new administration.
However, Texas, and specifically Parker County, may be a good place to ride out the current financial storm. - It’s not just your usual Sunday buggy ride ... ‘You just passed gate three, looking for gate four!” yells the navigator as the vehicle careens action-movie style — two wheels on the ground, two in the air — around the tight curve. The navigator hangs on precariously, leaning to the high side to balance the rig.
- Voting never gets too old for this centenarian LAWRENCE, Mass. — Anna French has an airtight alibi for not voting when she turned 18._In 1919, women couldn't vote.
- Pay gap still separates men, women of equal education TAHLEQUAH, Okla. — The Clinton administration ushered in America’s first woman secretary of state, Madeleine Albright; the George W. Bush administration was witness to the first woman speaker of the House, Nancy Pelosi.
- Will Joe Tison run for state rep? Local scuttlebutt whirred last week after Texas Weekly, a political newsletter based in Austin, suggested four-term Weatherford Mayor Joe Tison is a likely future candidate for the District 61 House seat currently held by State Rep. Phil King (R-Weatherford).
-
Voters overwhelmingly approve groundwater district
Slightly over 78 percent of voters in Montague, Wise, Parker and Hood Counties supported the creation of the Upper Trinity Groundwater Conservation District, according to election results announced Tuesday.
- Survival of 10-year-old Alabama boy called miracle TONEY, Ala. — Jim Wiese doesn’t know why he was so compelled to go to find his son on a warm September day as the 10-year-old and a friend rode the family’s go-cart in a nearby pasture in Toney, Ala.
- More CNHI News Service Originals Headlines
-
Of weddings and bail money
Memorable mistakes happen at almost every wedding.





