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WORD COUNT
664
JUNE 17, 2009
DAIRY
CRISIS DEMANDS FEDERAL ACTION NOW – by Paul Rozwadowski
What will
it take for President Barack Obama and our congressional representatives
to realize the catastrophe that is overtaking rural America as dairy
farmers face prices that are lower than what we received in the 1970s?
Every other week seems to bring news of another farm suicide, another
lifelong dairy farmer out of business, and despair from farm families
wondering how we’re going to feed our kids with no money left for food.
Yet our politicians and media seem utterly unaware of just how desperate
the situation is.
For 20
years, since President Ronald Reagan deregulated the price of milk,
dairy farmers have been on an emotional rollercoaster where the price is
determined by only a few corporate entities. Farmers are receiving $9-10
per hundredweight for their milk when it costs us $20-30 per
hundredweight to produce it. Conventional wisdom blames farmers for
overproducing and oversupply, but food processors are importing massive
amounts of inferior dairy substitutes, called milk protein concentrates,
that are flooding the market and replacing our quality American dairy
products. Consumers are not benefiting either from our misery. Milk and
cheese prices at the grocery stores have certainly not dropped by 50
percent.
Meanwhile,
Dean Foods, the largest fluid milk supplier in the country, doubled its
first quarter profits to $76 million. Kraft Foods also saw its profits
soar by an increased $60 million compared to last year. These are the
corporate entities, along with our corrupt dairy cooperatives such as
Dairy Farmers of America (DFA), responsible for milk prices crashing. In
December, thanks to the hard work of the National Family Farm Coalition,
DFA was fined $12 million for trading violations at the Chicago
Mercantile Exchange, which is where much of our milk price is
determined.
Farmers
are not asking for welfare payments or a taxpayer bailout. We simply
want to put an end to this corporate corruption. We need a new pricing
system that isn’t based on Wall Street shenanigans, but takes into
account farmers’ cost of production. If we had a fair pricing system,
there would be no need for taxpayers to spend billions in farm subsidies
that only help to unfairly pad the profits of the likes of Kraft and
Dean Foods. At a rally on May 30 in Manchester, Iowa, 160 folks turned
out to demand change with our dairy policies. We patiently sat in the
hot sun for two hours as speakers from New York, Pennsylvania,
Wisconsin, Minnesota and Iowa called for Congress and U.S. Department of
Agriculture to take emergency actions.
Farm Aid
is now circulating a petition asking that Secretary Tom Vilsack give
farmers an emergency floor price of $18. This would force the
corporations to pay us fairly. Consumers concerned about us maintaining
local milk supplies and fearing reliance on dairy imports should help us
flood Congress and Secretary Vilsack’s office with letters and faxes.
There is also a new bill introduced by Senators Bob Casey and Arlen
Specter, S. 889, the Federal Milk Marketing Improvement Act, that would
replace our broken dairy pricing system with one that bases milk prices
on a national cost of production. The Department of Justice needs to
complete its two-year investigation into Dairy Farmers of America and
its attempts to monopolize markets and squeeze out farmers. In many
areas of the country, a dairy farmer has no one else to market their
milk to except DFA since they have bought and merged with many other
dairy cooperatives.
Dairy
farmers are not only vital to making sure America has a safe and stable
food supply, we are an integral part of the local economy. Feed grain
suppliers, farm equipment sellers, veterinarians, local banks, all
depend on the business of dairy farmers. In Wisconsin, where I farm,
dairy employs 160,000 people and is a $20 billion industry. We have
fewer than 60,000 remaining dairy farmers in the United States. Many of
us are facing imminent bankruptcy if the system does not change. And
should we all become extinct, so will rural economies and communities
across the country.
--
Paul
Rozwadowski, a Wisconsin dairy farmer is chair of the National Family
Farm Coalitions Dairy Subcommittee.
www.nffc.org
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