Home
Stop the USDAAbout Your Local Family DairiesLearn more about the Grass to Glass CampaignFAQ's - Send Us Your Questions/CommentsAbout the Goverenment and Corporate DairiesConsumers, Family Dairy Owned Farms... Everyone

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Dairy-Backed Sales Limits OK'd in House
Washington, D.C., March 29, 2006

Legislation Aims to End Exemption for Large Milk `Producer-Handler'
Washington, D.C., March 28, 2006

Producer-Handler Dairymen Featured on Fox News - The Fox Report
March 22, 2006

Got Competition?
Yuma, AZ, February 25, 2006

He Sells Milk for Half the Price You pay. The Feds Want to Stop Him. Why?
Yuma, AZ, February 19, 2006

System Controlled by Industry Giants
Chicago, IL, February 19, 2006

Dairyman Biding Time with USDA Decision
Yuma, AZ, February 11, 2006

Small Dairyman Shakes Up Milk Industry
Yuma, AZ, February 2, 2006

New Federal Rule to Hit Edaleen Dairy: Farm Too Large for Revised Exemption
Bellingham, WA, January, 14, 2006

Moo-To-You May Become Moot-To-You
Seattle, WA, January, 4, 2006

USDA Announces Final Decision to Amend pacific Nothwest and Arizona-Las Vegas Milk Orders
Washington D.C., December 9, 2005

Do-it-yourself dairies may lose exemption
Silverton,OR, August 13, 2005

Running family farm not about corporate profit: it's about pride
Silverton, OR, August 10, 2005

New rules may milk farm dry
Kent, WA, July 11, 2005

Local dairy on Federal Government hit list
Silverton, OR, July 10, 2005

U.S. sour on tactics of milk's top co-op
Washington D.C., June 20, 2005

Public rallies behind local dairyman
Yuma, AZ, June 19, 2005

Monday deadline looms for Smith Brothers
Kent, WA, June 12, 2005

See more Dairy News!

 

 

Depression-era rules put the squeeze on smaller companies

By Andrew Martin
Tribune national correspondent

February 19, 2006

Here's a hoop that Bob Wills, the owner of Cedar Grove Cheese in Wisconsin, says he has jumped through on occasion to comply with federal milk regulations.

His milk is trucked 180 miles to the Oberweis Dairy in North Aurora, Ill., and pumped into a holding tank. Then it is pumped into another truck and sent back to Wisconsin.

Such are the idiosyncrasies of the Depression-era federal milk market order designed originally to ensure a reliable supply of the American staple.

Now the system has been exploited by industry giants, and in many cases the only clear results are higher transportation costs for some farmers and processors and higher costs for consumers.

To prevent wild fluctuations in prices for dairy farmers, the federal milk order allows them to pool milk revenues and split the pot. So even though milk that is bottled commands a higher price, a farmer who ships his milk to a butter plant gets the same price as a farmer who ships to a bottling facility.

But to participate in the federal order, a dairy farmer or his buyer is required to ship a certain percentage of raw milk each month to a plant that bottles milk.

In essence, the system is set up so that bottled milk suppliers subsidize milk used for manufacturing in exchange for first dibs on the raw milk supply.

Because of intense consolidation in the dairy industry, there are fewer companies that own bottling plants, and they have tremendous leverage over dairy farmers and manufacturers.

Dean Foods, for instance, bottles an estimated 35 percent of the bottled milk in this country. Dairy Farmers of America, or DFA, controls about one-third of the nation's raw milk.

Much of DFA's powers come from being able to decide who gets to participate in the federal pool, meaning that independent dairy farmers and smaller cooperatives must join the DFA cooperative, find an alternative or get out of the dairy business.

Furthermore, a review of public documents and USDA hearing transcripts shows that DFA and Dean Foods have led an effort to force dairy farmers to ship more milk each month to bottling plants, lobbying for changes in most regions of the federal order system.

By making their competitors ship more milk to bottling plants, the biggest players in the dairy industry have made it even more difficult and less economical for their smaller competitors to participate in the federal milk pool unless they join forces with DFA, critics say.

Both Dean and DFA declined to comment for this article.

Dana Coale, the deputy administrator for USDA's dairy programs, defended the system, saying it still ensured a reliable milk supply in parts of the country that don't produce enough to meet consumer needs. She also argued that the federal milk order provides some price stability for dairy farmers.

She also disputed critics' claims that new pooling provisions were helping DFA and others tighten their grip on the marketplace.

Coale said the USDA doesn't approve changes unless they are supported by sound evidence.

Gregg Hardy, who runs the tiny Erie Cooperative Association in Michigan, said the 20 farmers who make up the cooperative sell their milk to a local dairy manufacturing plant. But because of recent changes to the federal milk order, his members now have to ship 10 percent more of their milk to a bottling plant, up to 40 percent in some months.

"It ends up limiting what we can do and can't do. It doesn't give us free movement of milk to a free competitive buyer," Hardy said. "This is just to play the game. They keep elevating the bar to keep us from playing the game."

Copyright (c) 2006, Chicago Tribune


 

Stop the USDA, Save Family Farms!

Ever wonder where your milk comes from?

 

 

Home | Stop USDA | About Us | Learn More | Questions | Our Opposition | Who Gets Hurt

Copyright © 2006 Grass to Glass Campaign
Design by D4WebDesign.com