Douglas
Well-known member
Surprised no dicussin on this so far
According to this guy:
http://beefmagazine.com/cowcalfweekly/0 ... /#comments
Consider this scenario:
Every marketing arrangement would have to be disclosed and posted for everyone in the world to see. GIPSA then would become the judge to determine if the arrangement was fair. I am not making this up; just think about those implications.
The proposed rules would make it far easier for virtually any party to sue for grievances. Imagine if Joe sells his calves for $125 after concentrating for years on creating superior genetics in his herd, managing his cattle extremely well and collecting 10 years of historical data and information. His contract is posted and, after review, GIPSA determines that the weigh-up conditions were out of specs because they were shrunk 2.5% instead of 3% under the formula GIPSA created. GIPSA also informs the parties involved that gathering the calves and sorting them without access to water for two hours is inhumane and must be addressed next year.
Meanwhile, another producer sells similar weight calves on the same day, slightly different location, vastly different management and biological types, but is bid $110. He then sues the buyer for discrimination, citing GIPSA rules that indicate differentiation based on a contention that quality or quantity could be considered unfair preferential treatment.
According to this guy:
http://beefmagazine.com/cowcalfweekly/0 ... /#comments
Consider this scenario:
Every marketing arrangement would have to be disclosed and posted for everyone in the world to see. GIPSA then would become the judge to determine if the arrangement was fair. I am not making this up; just think about those implications.
The proposed rules would make it far easier for virtually any party to sue for grievances. Imagine if Joe sells his calves for $125 after concentrating for years on creating superior genetics in his herd, managing his cattle extremely well and collecting 10 years of historical data and information. His contract is posted and, after review, GIPSA determines that the weigh-up conditions were out of specs because they were shrunk 2.5% instead of 3% under the formula GIPSA created. GIPSA also informs the parties involved that gathering the calves and sorting them without access to water for two hours is inhumane and must be addressed next year.
Meanwhile, another producer sells similar weight calves on the same day, slightly different location, vastly different management and biological types, but is bid $110. He then sues the buyer for discrimination, citing GIPSA rules that indicate differentiation based on a contention that quality or quantity could be considered unfair preferential treatment.