|
Dairy industry gave
to key lawmakers who opposed 'downer' ban
December 29, 2003
CNN/Associated Press
Sunny Dene Ranch in Mabton, Washington, has been quarantined
because a cow from the farm has been infected with mad
cow disease.
WASHINGTON (AP) -- The dairy industry contributed to
most members of a key House committee who voted nearly
in lockstep against banning the sale of meat from ill
or disabled animals, like the one that tested positive
last week for mad cow disease.
Political action committees representing dairy farmers
gave money to 33 of the 51 members of the House Agriculture
Committee, an Associated Press review of campaign reports
shows.
Of the 33, 28 voted against the ban on marketing "downed"
animals, four voted for it and one didn't vote, when
it was defeated 202-199 in July. The Senate approved
the ban on a voice vote in November, but it was left
out of the final compromise passed by the House this
month and awaiting action in the Senate.
Most "downers" are old dairy cows whose meat
can bring farmers a little extra revenue. The Agriculture
Department estimates that 130,000 are brought to slaughterhouses
every year, and that those showing signs of mad cow
disease are tested.
To prevent disease, the government prohibits processing
the brain and spinal cord of such animals -- the pathways
for mad cow disease -- into meat.
Congressional supporters of the ban have warned that
downed animals are more likely to have mad cow disease,
a brain-wasting illness. In addition, animal rights
advocates oppose the sale of downed animals because
they say so many are injured or ill that they must be
dragged by chains or forklifts to the slaughterhouse.
So far this year, the Dairy Farmers of America PAC
has made contributions to 27 Agriculture Committee members,
and another, National Milk Producers Federation PAC
contributed to 17. Some members received money from
both groups as well as from smaller dairy PACs.
Neither of the large dairy PACs returned phone messages
seeking comment.
The committee's chairman and its ranking Democrat,
who led the debate in the House against the downed-animal
ban, received the most contributions.
Chairman Bob Goodlatte, R-Virginia, received $9,500
in dairy PAC donations, and Rep. Charlie Stenholm, D-Texas,
got $8,500.
During floor debate in July, Stenholm lectured New
York Democrat Gary Ackerman, author of the proposed
ban in the House, that he did "not understand the
cattle business," and argued that most downed animals
are merely lame.
Ackerman said Friday that Agriculture Committee members
thought they were protecting the cattle industry but
wound up hurting it.
"The amount of money farmers would have lost euthanizing
these poor, wretched animals, they lost the other day
in five minutes," he said, referring to overseas
bans of U.S. beef.
Goodlatte said his opposition to the bill had nothing
to do with the dairy industry's position.
Rather, he said, he was worried that the ban would
prevent the discovery of an animal with mad cow disease,
known formally as bovine spongiform encephalopathy.
"The only place it's discovered is when the animal
is delivered by the farmer to a slaughter facility and
presents indications that it might have some kind of
an illness," Goodlatte said. "That is exactly
what happened in this case."
Gene Baur (formerly Bauston) , president of the New York-based animal
rights group Farm Sanctuary, argued that the time to
test the animals is not at the slaughterhouse -- where
they can enter the food supply before the tests come
back -- but at the farm. Ackerman's bill called for
such animals to be treated by a veterinarian at the
farm or be euthanized.
"It's clear that the dairy industry has very much
influenced the action of key members of Congress,"
Bauston said. "In light of this recent discovery,
we hope that members of Congress will serve the public
interest instead of the shortsighted interests of agribusiness."
Fast food chains such as Wendy's, Burger King and McDonald's
don't accept meat from downed animals, and the Agriculture
Department prohibits it in the federal school lunch
program.
Mad cow disease is caused by a misshapen protein that
creates tiny holes in the brain, making it look like
a sponge. People can get a related illness, variant
Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, if they eat meat containing
such tissue of an infected cow. In Britain, 143 people
died after an outbreak of mad cow disease in the 1980s
and 1990s.
|