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Cattle Raisers address
conservation, wind power,
vet shortage, changes to beef checkoff
FORT
WORTH, Texas, October 18, 2006―Reaffirming
their mission as “stewards of land and livestock,” members
of Texas and Southwestern Cattle Raisers Association adopted
policy Oct. 13 calling for enhanced government support for
environmental conservation, an independent evaluation of
industrial wind farms and efforts to address the growing
shortage of large-animal veterinarians.
TSCRA members also voted to support recommendations to
strengthen the beef checkoff. The resolutions were approved
during the final business session of TSCRA’s fall meeting in
Amarillo, Texas, Oct. 11-13.
Considerable attention was given to USDA’s
Environmental Quality Incentives Program, which provides
technical and financial assistance for rangeland conservation.
TSCRA has played a significant role in helping to implement
EQIP at the state and national levels.
TSCRA urged Congress to maintain and enhance support
for the program. Specifically, TSCRA asked for a 60 percent
allocation of EQIP funds to livestock-related applications
(rangeland and confined animal feeding operations) and that
the program be made available to all sizes of operations.
A separate resolution called for changes in EQIP
program structure to allow payments for a “systems approach
to brush control.”
TSCRA pointed out that most species of brush in Texas
cannot be treated one time without reinfestation occurring,
often before an EQIP contract has expired. A systems approach
would allow cost-share payments for second and third
treatments using mechanical and chemical brush control and
prescribed burning.
“A well-planned system is much more effective than
any of the three methods used alone,” TSCRA emphasized.
Also on the agenda was discussion of wind power,
prompted by recent pronouncements by state officials that
Texas should become the leading wind power-producing state in
the country.
No state agency or other public entity has any
meaningful authority over the siting of specific industrial
wind power projects. Neither do they have the ability or
resources to evaluate the impact on the economy, taxes,
electrical rates, wildlife, environment or private land values
of adjacent property.
TSCRA decided to ask the governor or legislature to
establish an independent panel of experts to “evaluate the
cumulative effects of industrial wind projects.” TSCRA
recommended that the panel’s report be completed within six
months so that “its conclusions would inform preconstruction
planning.”
TSCRA also addressed the growing shortage of
veterinarians who treat large animals and resolved to support
“efforts to assure a sufficient supply of bovine
practitioners and the veterinary support systems necessary to
enable the industry to produce beef in a safe, efficient and
humane manner.”
To achieve this, TSCRA supports increased use of
veterinary assistants, technicians and licensed
paraprofessionals “working for and under the direction of
accredited licensed veterinarians.”
The Cattle Raisers also urged state legislatures and
public universities “to make a priority of addressing the
growing shortage of food animal veterinary practitioners,
especially in the more rural areas of the nation.”
Finally, TSCRA members voted to support enhancement of
the state/federal beef checkoff program by the following
means:
1) Increasing the per-head fee collected for the beef
checkoff.
2) Creating a periodic petition mechanism for cattle
producers to hold a referendum on continuing the checkoff.
3) Creating an enhanced identity for the Federation of
State Beef Councils and the overall checkoff effort.
4) Eliminating the charter date for established
national non-profit industry-governed organizations for
eligibility to contract with the Cattleman’s Beef Board for
checkoff programs.
Texas and Southwestern Cattle Raisers Association is a
129-year-old trade organization whose 14,100 members manage
approximately 4.9 million cattle on 66.6 million acres of
range and pasture land, primarily in Texas and Oklahoma.
TSCRA-27-2006 |