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<title>Creekstone Farms Slaughtered by USDA-Jonathan Turley</title>
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	 <h1>Creekstone Farms   Slaughtered by USDA </h1>        
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		     <p>By Jonathan Turley <br />
		       First published by the <a href="http://www.latimes.com" target="_blank">Los
		       Angeles Times</a>, April 20, 2004
		     </p>
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            <p>Creekstone Farms is a little slaughterhouse in Kansas with an
              idea that would have had Adam Smith's mouth watering. Faced with
              consumers who remain skittish over mad cow disease - especially
              in Japan - Creekstone decided that all its
beef would be tested for mad cow, a radical departure from the random testing
done by other companies. It was a case study in free-market meatpacking entrepreneurship.
That is, until the Bush administration's Department of Agriculture blocked the
enterprise, apparently at the behest of Creekstone's competitors. <br />
<br />
According to the Washington Post, Creekstone invested $500,000 to build the first
mad cow testing lab in a U.S. slaughterhouse and hired chemists and biologists
to staff the operation. The only thing it needed was testing kits. That's where
the company ran into trouble. By law, the Department of Agriculture controls
the sale of the kits, and it refused to sell Creekstone enough to test all of
its cows. The USDA said that allowing even a small meatpacking company like Creekstone
to test every cow it slaughtered would undermine the agency's official position
that random testing was scientifically adequate to assure safety. <br />
<br />
What it didn't say was that the rest of the meatpacking industry was adamantly
opposed to such testing, which is expensive, and had no desire to compete with
Creekstone's fully certified beef. "If testing is allowed at Creekstone . ," the
president of the National Cattlemen's Beef Assn. told the Post, "we think it
would become the international standard and the domestic standard, too." <br />
<br />
The Agriculture Department's Creekstone decision reveals the best thinking of
Soviet central planning: The government shoots the innovator to preserve market
stability. Though President Bush invokes free-market principles when it comes
to industry downsizing, "outsourcing" jobs, media mergers and energy deregulation,
those principles apparently have their limits when a company seeks to become
an industry leader in consumer protection. <br />
<br />
Located in the small town of Arkansas City, Creekstone is a model operation in
an industry that often seems medieval. It traces the origins of its high-quality
Black Angus beef to reduce the use of animals that have been given antibiotics.
It pays high wages, employs humane slaughtering techniques (they make for better-tasting
beef) and maintains a slow enough production line to guarantee worker safety
and to ensure that animals are dead before they are butchered. Although the largest
U.S. meatpacking companies have fought regulations that would force such practices,
Creekstone - which has been in business since 1995 - has proved that some consumers
will pay more for such corporate policies and the premium product that results. <br />
<br />
The appearance of mad cow disease in the U.S. herd hit Creekstone's small operation
hard. Much of its market was in Japan, where all cows are tested for the disease
and where U.S. beef is banned because American meatpackers don't follow the same
policy. So Creekstone's chief operating officer, Bill Fielding, announced that
he would voluntarily test the 300,000 cows his company slaughters annually, to
satisfy customers willing to pay the cost. Absent the test, Fielding says Creekstone
may face bankruptcy and have to lay off its 790 workers. <br />
<br />
The Department of Agriculture seems to have only one purpose in preventing Creekstone
from testing - appeasing the big slaughterhouses. The USDA has a long history
of doing the bidding of the meatpacking industry at the expense of the public.
Indeed, in many academic studies, the department is presented as a textbook example
of the problem of "agency capture," wherein an agency becomes so identified with
the companies it regulates that it becomes an extension of those companies. <br />
<br />
The allegations of agency capture have been magnified in the Bush administration,
in which former industry executives hold key regulatory positions - Agriculture
Secretary Ann M. Veneman has a chief of staff who was the head lobbyist for the
National Cattlemen's Beef Assn. and a senior advisor who was the association's
associate director for food policy. <br />
<br />
When mad cow disease appeared in the United States, the department again took
the industry line and resisted calls for added testing. Only after worldwide
criticism did it reluctantly make such modest rule changes as requiring slaughterhouses
to discard "downed" animals - cows so sick that they had to be dragged into slaughterhouses
to be butchered. Most Americans were surprised to learn that the department had
ever allowed such animals into the food supply in the first place. <br />
<br />
The administration may be correct that testing every animal in the U.S. is unnecessary
and not cost-effective. But why not let Creekstone find out what the market will
bear? The position of the administration is an affront to anyone who believes
in the free market. It's as if the Department of Transportation refused to allow
Volvo to add air bags just to keep the pressure off other carmakers. <br />
<br />
Congress should step in and end the department's monopoly over testing kits.
It should also call for the removal of the officials involved in the decision. <br />
<br />
As for the self-described free-marketeers in the Bush administration, Creekstone
Farms may not offer them an appealing meal but at least it doesn't come with
a heaping side order of hypocrisy. </p>
            <p><em>Jonathan Turley is a law professor at George Washington Law School. </em></p>
            <h5>&copy; 2004 LA Times <br />
            </h5>
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