|

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! |
|
Weed out Mallorie's? Out of the question
By John Doran
Appeal Tribune
June 8, 2005
If it ain't broke, don't fix it. The U.S. Department
of Agriculture has proposed new rules that could put the squeeze on a
few Northwest dairies, including our own Mallorie's Dairy in Silverton.

Mallorie's is one of nine family owned producer-handlers in the Northwest; three,
including Mallorie's, are targeted by the proposed regulatory change.

Producer-handlers are milk retailers who perform every step of the milk production
process themselves, from milking the cows to putting milk in the stores.

Producer-handlers are currently exempt from USDA pricing and pooling arrangements
that apply to most milk farmers in the industry. While producer-handlers are
a dying breed, Mallorie's is the largest in the state.

So what's the USDA attempting? They want to keep Mallorie's and dairies like
it from selling its milk for less.

Three big players in the milk industry have persuaded the USDA to consider the
change. The choices are: Small producer-handler players can reduce business or
close up shop entirely; pay $1 million per year into a national milk marketing
pool; or sell into a cooperative like all other small-market milk dealers who
perform just a few - but not all - of the tasks to produce milk.

Or, they can raise the prices of their milk.

This proposed USDA change threatens to run Mallorie's out of business. It challenges
them to slice business by more than 1/3, or to pay more per year than they're
generating in revenue.

It's simply unfair.

"Unfair" is the term the milk giants are using to describe the milk market with
producer-handlers operating under the radar. They say direct farm-to-market operations
should be regulated so that the milk market can be equalized.

Let's break down some numbers.

Large milk cooperatives in the Northwest control approximately 96 percent of
the milk market while the family owned producer-handlers maintain a share of
4 percent.

Nationally, Dean Foods, the largest dairy products company in the nation and
a supporter of the rule change, reported $2.2 billion in net sales in the first
quarter of 2005, up $4 million from first quarter in 2004. Dean Foods is on the
New York Stock Exchange and employs 29,000 people in 120 plants in four countries.
We're talking "big boys" here.

Locally, there's little old Mallorie's. The $1 million it might have to pay into
a national marketing pool is more than it pulls in each year. The family-owned
dairy, which Bob Mallorie opened in 1954 and whose family still manages it, employs
86 people in one plant in one state of one country.

So what's the big deal, USDA? Why force do-it-yourselfers to sell milk through
the government-regulated system? Why succumb to the prodding of large corporations
under the premise of helping some small family farms only to destroy others?

Let's get this straight: Crush small-market, family business; smother hard work,
intuitiveness, and a business model that has withstood the test of time; rob
consumers of the chance to buy a product grown and made locally; cave in to the
pressures of multi-billion dollar corporations at the expense of free enterprise
and capitalism.

Hmmm . how American.If it ain't broke, don't fix it. The U.S. Department of Agriculture
has proposed new rules that could put the squeeze on a few Northwest dairies,
including our own Mallorie's Dairy in Silverton.

Mallorie's is one of nine family owned producer-handlers in the Northwest; three,
including Mallorie's, are targeted by the proposed regulatory change.

Producer-handlers are milk retailers who perform every step of the milk production
process themselves, from milking the cows to putting milk in the stores.

Producer-handlers are currently exempt from USDA pricing and pooling arrangements
that apply to most milk farmers in the industry. While producer-handlers are
a dying breed, Mallorie's is the largest in the state.

So what's the USDA attempting? They want to keep Mallorie's and dairies like
it from selling its milk for less.

Three big players in the milk industry have persuaded the USDA to consider the
change. The choices are: Small producer-handler players can reduce business or
close up shop entirely; pay $1 million per year into a national milk marketing
pool; or sell into a cooperative like all other small-market milk dealers who
perform just a few - but not all - of the tasks to produce milk.

Or, they can raise the prices of their milk.

This proposed USDA change threatens to run Mallorie's out of business. It challenges
them to slice business by more than 1/3, or to pay more per year than they're
generating in revenue.

It's simply unfair.

"Unfair" is the term the milk giants are using to describe the milk market with
producer-handlers operating under the radar. They say direct farm-to-market operations
should be regulated so that the milk market can be equalized.

Let's break down some numbers.

Large milk cooperatives in the Northwest control approximately 96 percent of
the milk market while the family owned producer-handlers maintain a share of
4 percent.

Nationally, Dean Foods, the largest dairy products company in the nation and
a supporter of the rule change, reported $2.2 billion in net sales in the first
quarter of 2005, up $4 million from first quarter in 2004. Dean Foods is on the
New York Stock Exchange and employs 29,000 people in 120 plants in four countries.
We're talking "big boys" here.

Locally, there's little old Mallorie's. The $1 million it might have to pay into
a national marketing pool is more than it pulls in each year. The family-owned
dairy, which Bob Mallorie opened in 1954 and whose family still manages it, employs
86 people in one plant in one state of one country.

So what's the big deal, USDA? Why force do-it-yourselfers to sell milk through
the government-regulated system? Why succumb to the prodding of large corporations
under the premise of helping some small family farms only to destroy others?

Let's get this straight: Crush small-market, family business; smother hard work,
intuitiveness, and a business model that has withstood the test of time; rob
consumers of the chance to buy a product grown and made locally; cave in to the
pressures of multi-billion dollar corporations at the expense of free enterprise
and capitalism.

Hmmm . how American.
|


|