Sustainable Food

PROTECT LOCAL FOOD PRODUCTION.

To: The President of the United States, Your U.S. Senators and Your U.S. House Representative, see more...

Started by: Ani L. Schwartz

PHOTO:
Mike Callicrate in his Colorado Springs natural meat market where he markets his own and other producers naturally raised, high quality meats, local produce and other healthy food products.


Yesterday I received word that someone had a problem signing this petition.
They signed it but it did not work, their name did not get posted as having signed it.

If you run into this problem, the best suggestion I have is to copy-paste it and send it on your own.

Some contact info for that purpose:  

VILSACK: AgSec@usda.gov  

OBAMA: http://www.whitehouse.gov/contact/
(5000 character limit, I believe your letter will fit but if it doesn't, send it in 2 parts)  

CONGRESS: http://action.nwlc.org/site/PageServer?pagename=Find_Your_Elected_Officials
These are my favorites, let me know if they don't work.
I have some other links buried in my files, tho I don't find them as easy to use and it would take me some time to find them because I DON'T use them.

You can also fax Secretary Vilsack at 202-720-2166

UPDATE, 6/12/09:
Here is a video of Mike Callicrate's testimony for those who prefer u tube over text. The 4 minute audio is different than the written comments.
This is the link: Callicrate testimony at Colorado NAIS listening session.
Or http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZrKihUyc__w


PETITION TEXT:

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

We the undersigned request that Secretary Vilsack pay careful attention to Mike Callicrate's letter below and act accordingly to protect local production of REAL food.

We the undersigned ask that our Congressmen and our President give Secretary Vilsack strong support to protect local farmers and ranchers who produce REAL food.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

An open letter to Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack:

Will we eat from our own backyards or beg food from big agribusiness?

By Mike Callicrate

 

Pulitzer Prize winning author Charles Simic once wrote, “Stupidity is the secret spice historians have difficulty identifying in this soup we keep slurping.”

As our precious few independent livestock producers and small processors continue their losing fight for survival, the USDA dreams up even more ways to make their lives more difficult. These are the people producing the safest, highest quality and most dependable food for our tables. As we sit here today at this listening session in Greeley, Colorado, considering the depressing possibility and cost of tracing back every healthy animal to its home of origin so Tyson, Cargill and JBS can export more, the farmer and rancher with the heaviest workload and the least income will pay - and down the road - consumers will also pay.

Today, USDA, in protecting the biggest and dirtiest meat plants, continues to block trace-back of pathogens to the source plant, a very easy and inexpensive measure that could improve food safety tomorrow - and you say instead you want to track healthy animals back to the farm! Where USDA’s farm-to-kill plant NAIS ends, contamination and food degradation begins. What do you call an agency that actively undermines a nation’s ability to feed itself? What term defines an agency that sells out its mission to serve and protect the people in favor of serving higher profits of multinational agribusiness corporations? Stupid would be a kind choice of words.

Thinking about NAIS and possible ways to improve food safety and disease traceability, we might reflect back to 2002 when we experienced one of the biggest meat recalls in our history. From here we can almost see the Greeley packing plant, from which the nearly 20 million pounds of E. coli tainted beef was shipped across the U.S. to unsuspecting eaters. Having experienced this and many other catastrophic failures in our nation’s food safety system, USDA actually continues to do even less to protect our food supply. USDA has done nothing to address the problems in the big packing plants where E. coli is systematically put into our meat daily while trusting these big profit-driven companies to self inspect under the HACCP hoax. You may ask why meat cooking companies like Advance Foods, a major supplier to the school lunch program, are doing so well and expanding their facilities? Might it be due to the growing supply of cheap E. coli tainted meat, marked “FOR COOKING ONLY”?

Thanks to USDA antitrust cops and inspectors sleeping on the job, Americans now eat meat from essentially four big meat packers, running faster chains with inexperienced workers suffering high injury rates, resulting in even more meat contamination. USDA has ignored the existing laws and rules designed to protect our markets and keep our food safe, in favor of rules and policies that make big packers and processors more money and more market advantage over smaller independent processors. Why does USDA want to track every healthy U.S. animal and ignore the current foreign animal disease threats? Why does USDA fail to properly implement our own county of origin labeling law while refusing to inspect or even care about the origin of imported cattle? Even with the specter of Mad Cow disease, USDA continues to block routine testing and allows processors to grind the brain and spinal tissue of domestic and imported animals into our sausage and ground beef patties. (AMR, or Advanced Meat Recovery, optimizes meat yield through a special process of pulverizing meat and bone scraps into a paste which is pelleted and added to many meat products.)

Why would USDA pursue this expensive and unnecessary ID system, under the pretense of improving food safety, when machine tenderizers and injectors (making tough meat from implanted and low quality cattle more tender) are punching pathogens that reside on the surface of primal cuts of meat (normally killed with minimal cooking) into the middle of our rare and medium rare steaks without so much as a “COOK TO WELL DONE” warning label?

Could USDA possibly have the dreaded and highly contagious disease known as covering-your-butt-with-heaps-of-paperwork? You want to spread this “I-covered-my-butt-so-it’s-not-my-fault” plague down the food chain from your comfortable perch in Washington D.C. to your inspectors, who shuffle paper all day, instead of inspecting cattle and meat, to those of us who are breaking our backs raising the livestock. We don’t have time for it. In many cases we are working two off-farm jobs while trying to keep our operations afloat. Non-factory, independent family farmers and ranchers produce safe and wholesome food. Why don’t you make sure it stays that way?

You say that NAIS will increase our ability to export. Why does our government continue its march of folly towards increased globalization, appeasing the WTO and their multinational corporations, while blocking U.S. farmers and ranchers fair access to better markets here at home? Past and present history, from Ireland to Canada, has recorded the dramatic social declines and economic failures of export oriented agriculture.

I suggest to you today that rather than facilitating the profit over people WTO mission of increasing the miles that food travels around the globe with NAIS, that we support a new policy that enables people everywhere, through local food production and processing infrastructures, to eat food from their own backyards, communities and regions. It is time to give up on the folly of corporate controlled, bigger-is-better factory agriculture. It is time to reverse the current pandemic of “free trade” that survives only due to government support and the anticompetitive, abusive rules and regulations like NAIS.

I suggest that people everywhere would not only be better off without NAIS, but also without the WTO and the global corporations it serves. I suggest that this administration honor its promise of CHANGE and begin by ordering USDA to support those who make and grow things here at home. We should support our main streets and rural communities where our nation’s wealth is created, instead of Wall Street where our nation’s wealth is stolen.  Instead of wasting precious resources and our time to identify and track every healthy animal in America, let’s protect against the real sources of disease and causes of economic and social decline.

Corporate power over policy and the so-called cheap factory foods are the real threat to our well-being, making people everywhere sicker, poorer and more dependent on low quality imported food? What do you call something that is so contrary to our self interest like NAIS?

 
Mike Callicrate is an independent cattle producer, business entrepreneur and political activist, particularly outspoken in addressing the rural and social impacts of current economic trends.

Mike Callicrate
Ranch Foods Direct
2901 N. El Paso
Colorado Springs, CO 80907
719-473-2306
www.ranchfoodsdirect.com
Nobull Blog
YouTube


UPDATE, 6/12/09:
Here is a video of Mike Callicrate's testimony for those who prefer u tube over text. The 4 minute audio is different than the written comments.
This is the link: Callicrate testimony at Colorado NAIS listening session.
Or http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZrKihUyc__w

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Sign the Letter

PROTECT LOCAL FOOD PRODUCTION.

Dear Representative,

We the undersigned request that Secretary Vilsack pay careful attention to Mike Callicrate's letter below and act accordingly to protect local production of REAL food.

We the undersigned ask that our Congressmen and our President give Secretary Vilsack strong support to protect local farmers and ranchers who produce REAL food.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

An open letter to Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack:

Will we eat from our own backyards or beg food from big agribusiness?

By Mike Callicrate

 

Pulitzer Prize winning author Charles Simic once wrote, “Stupidity is the secret spice historians have difficulty identifying in this soup we keep slurping.”

As our precious few independent livestock producers and small processors continue their losing fight for survival, the USDA dreams up even more ways to make their lives more difficult. These are the people producing the safest, highest quality and most dependable food for our tables. As we sit here today at this listening session in Greeley, Colorado, considering the depressing possibility and cost of tracing back every healthy animal to its home of origin so Tyson, Cargill and JBS can export more, the farmer and rancher with the heaviest workload and the least income will pay - and down the road - consumers will also pay.

Today, USDA, in protecting the biggest and dirtiest meat plants, continues to block trace-back of pathogens to the source plant, a very easy and inexpensive measure that could improve food safety tomorrow - and you say instead you want to track healthy animals back to the farm! Where USDA’s farm-to-kill plant NAIS ends, contamination and food degradation begins. What do you call an agency that actively undermines a nation’s ability to feed itself? What term defines an agency that sells out its mission to serve and protect the people in favor of serving higher profits of multinational agribusiness corporations? Stupid would be a kind choice of words.

Thinking about NAIS and possible ways to improve food safety and disease traceability, we might reflect back to 2002 when we experienced one of the biggest meat recalls in our history. From here we can almost see the Greeley packing plant, from which the nearly 20 million pounds of E. coli tainted beef was shipped across the U.S. to unsuspecting eaters. Having experienced this and many other catastrophic failures in our nation’s food safety system, USDA actually continues to do even less to protect our food supply. USDA has done nothing to address the problems in the big packing plants where E. coli is systematically put into our meat daily while trusting these big profit-driven companies to self inspect under the HACCP hoax. You may ask why meat cooking companies like Advance Foods, a major supplier to the school lunch program, are doing so well and expanding their facilities? Might it be due to the growing supply of cheap E. coli tainted meat, marked “FOR COOKING ONLY”?

Thanks to USDA antitrust cops and inspectors sleeping on the job, Americans now eat meat from essentially four big meat packers, running faster chains with inexperienced workers suffering high injury rates, resulting in even more meat contamination. USDA has ignored the existing laws and rules designed to protect our markets and keep our food safe, in favor of rules and policies that make big packers and processors more money and more market advantage over smaller independent processors. Why does USDA want to track every healthy U.S. animal and ignore the current foreign animal disease threats? Why does USDA fail to properly implement our own county of origin labeling law while refusing to inspect or even care about the origin of imported cattle? Even with the specter of Mad Cow disease, USDA continues to block routine testing and allows processors to grind the brain and spinal tissue of domestic and imported animals into our sausage and ground beef patties. (AMR, or Advanced Meat Recovery, optimizes meat yield through a special process of pulverizing meat and bone scraps into a paste which is pelleted and added to many meat products.)

Why would USDA pursue this expensive and unnecessary ID system, under the pretense of improving food safety, when machine tenderizers and injectors (making tough meat from implanted and low quality cattle more tender) are punching pathogens that reside on the surface of primal cuts of meat (normally killed with minimal cooking) into the middle of our rare and medium rare steaks without so much as a “COOK TO WELL DONE” warning label?

Could USDA possibly have the dreaded and highly contagious disease known as covering-your-butt-with-heaps-of-paperwork? You want to spread this “I-covered-my-butt-so-it’s-not-my-fault” plague down the food chain from your comfortable perch in Washington D.C. to your inspectors, who shuffle paper all day, instead of inspecting cattle and meat, to those of us who are breaking our backs raising the livestock. We don’t have time for it. In many cases we are working two off-farm jobs while trying to keep our operations afloat. Non-factory, independent family farmers and ranchers produce safe and wholesome food. Why don’t you make sure it stays that way?

You say that NAIS will increase our ability to export. Why does our government continue its march of folly towards increased globalization, appeasing the WTO and their multinational corporations, while blocking U.S. farmers and ranchers fair access to better markets here at home? Past and present history, from Ireland to Canada, has recorded the dramatic social declines and economic failures of export oriented agriculture.

I suggest to you today that rather than facilitating the profit over people WTO mission of increasing the miles that food travels around the globe with NAIS, that we support a new policy that enables people everywhere, through local food production and processing infrastructures, to eat food from their own backyards, communities and regions. It is time to give up on the folly of corporate controlled, bigger-is-better factory agriculture. It is time to reverse the current pandemic of “free trade” that survives only due to government support and the anticompetitive, abusive rules and regulations like NAIS.

I suggest that people everywhere would not only be better off without NAIS, but also without the WTO and the global corporations it serves. I suggest that this administration honor its promise of CHANGE and begin by ordering USDA to support those who make and grow things here at home. We should support our main streets and rural communities where our nation’s wealth is created, instead of Wall Street where our nation’s wealth is stolen.  Instead of wasting precious resources and our time to identify and track every healthy animal in America, let’s protect against the real sources of disease and causes of economic and social decline.

Corporate power over policy and the so-called cheap factory foods are the real threat to our well-being, making people everywhere sicker, poorer and more dependent on low quality imported food? What do you call something that is so contrary to our self interest like NAIS?

 
Mike Callicrate is an independent cattle producer, business entrepreneur and political activist, particularly outspoken in addressing the rural and social impacts of current economic trends.

Mike Callicrate
Ranch Foods Direct
2901 N. El Paso
Colorado Springs, CO 80907
719-473-2306
www.ranchfoodsdirect.com
Nobull Blog
YouTube


UPDATE, 6/12/09:
Here is a video of Mike Callicrate's testimony for those who prefer u tube over text. The 4 minute audio is different than the written comments.
This is the link: Callicrate testimony at Colorado NAIS listening session.
Or http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZrKihUyc__w

[Your name here]

 



390 Signatures Thus Far!

  • Jason J Green Jason J Green   Spotsylvania, VA
    Sent letter to Eric Cantor , Barack Obama , Jim Webb , Robert Wittman , Mark Warner and Tom Vilsack (Secretary of Agriculture )
    about 19 hours ago
  • Joan E Loza Mobry Joan E Loza Mobry   Madison, WI
    Sent letter to Barack Obama , Russ Feingold , Herb Kohl , Tammy Baldwin and Tom Vilsack (Secretary of Agriculture )
    Oct 28
  • Elisabeth Kelly Elisabeth Kelly   Washington, DC
    Sent letter to Tom Vilsack (Secretary of Agriculture )
    Oct 24
  • Florence Gray Florence Gray   Highlands, NJ
    Sent letter to Tom Vilsack (Secretary of Agriculture )
    Oct 24
  • Andrew Heugel Andrew Heugel   Brewster, NY
    Sent letter to Tom Vilsack (Secretary of Agriculture )
    Oct 24
  • Caitlin Schmedlin Caitlin Schmedlin   Monroe, CT
    Sent letter to Chris Dodd , Joe Lieberman , Barack Obama , Jim Himes and Tom Vilsack (Secretary of Agriculture )
    Oct 18
  • Sally Tinkham Sally Tinkham   Gilford, NH
    Sent letter to Carol Shea-Porter , Barack Obama , Judd Gregg , Jeanne Shaheen and Tom Vilsack (Secretary of Agriculture )
    Oct 14
  • kenneth knoppik kenneth knoppik   boca raton, FL
    Sent letter to Bob Wexler , Bill Nelson , Barack Obama and Tom Vilsack (Secretary of Agriculture )
    Oct 11
  • *AnimalSpirit ~ Diana* Martz   Indianapolis, IN
    Sent letter to Dan Burton , Barack Obama , Dick Lugar , Evan Bayh , Andre Carson and Tom Vilsack (Secretary of Agriculture )
    Oct 08
  • Christiane Henker Christiane Henker   Bad Laer, Germany
    Sent letter to Lisa Murkowski , Barack Obama , Mark Begich and Tom Vilsack (Secretary of Agriculture )
    Oct 07
Goal: 100,000
 
390
signatures so far!

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