2016

AGA NEWS & PRESS

  • New Rocky Mountain Humane Processing Listening Sessions Scheduled

    One of the biggest challenges facing small livestock producers is the lack of slaughter and processing facilities. Many producers who would otherwise market their meat products directly to consumers or work with retailers on a wholesale basis find it difficult to locate facilities that will allow them to enter different supply chains, and are at the mercy of distributors and middlemen who make a profit at the expense of the producers.

    American Grassfed Association, with help from USDA, Rocky Mountain Farmers Union, Niche Meat Processor Assistance Network, Ranch Foods Direct, Western Daughters, and Natural Grocers, is conducting a feasibility study regarding the potential for a humane slaughter plant to be located near Pueblo, Colorado. They are seeking input from small and midsize producers in the Rocky Mountain region who would be interested in using such a facility.

    AGA will be conducting a series of free listening sessions throughout the region and invites all interested producers to attend to learn more about the project and to share their ideas and concerns. Each session will run approximately an hour and a half and light refreshments will be provided. Speakers will include Mike Callicrate of Ranch Foods Direct and Marilyn Noble, American Grassfed Association.

    The next sessions are listed below. Please register in advance to reserve your spot. If you have any questions, or if you can’t attend but would like more information, please email Marilyn.

    You may also offer your comments and feedback by filling out a survey here. https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/M6GM7QS

    Monte Vista
    April 5, 2016, 8:30 am
    Monte Vista Coop
    1901 E. Highway 160
    http://conta.cc/21vPcXj

    Fort Morgan
    May 3, 10:00 am
    Morgan County Rural Electric Association
    20169 US Hwy. 34
    http://conta.cc/1VaI7eN

     La Junta
    May 6, 10am
    Otero Junior College
    1802 Colorado Avenue
    http://conta.cc/1PGjgZz

  • AGA takes the lead on new industry-wide grassfed dairy standard

    (DENVER) American Grassfed Association recently hosted a stakeholder meeting regarding the development of standards for marketing grassfed dairy products. Present at the Denver meeting were representatives from AGA’s standards and certification committee, CROPP/Organic Valley, and organic certifiers who have established one-hundred-percent grassfed claims, as well as other leading grassfed dairy producers and manufacturers, a major retailer of grassfed products, and veterinarians with specialties in dairy science. The day-long meeting was facilitated by Mark Lipson from the Center for Agroecology and Sustainable Food Systems at the University of California Santa Cruz.

    Rapid growth of the grassfed dairy segment and the consequent proliferation of grass- and pasture-based claims pose a challenge for producers, retailers, and consumers in the dairy industry. AGA convened the meeting to discuss mutual concerns about practices, standards, protection of legitimate claims, and avoidance of consumer confusion about grass-based products.

    The goals of the meeting were threefold:

    • To determine potential for agreement on standards for grassfed dairy products;
    • To assess options for protecting the integrity of grass-based dairy product identities; and
    • To seek agreement on objectives for establishing a unified standard and market integrity.

    Discussions centered on topics including animal health and nutrition, transparency of practices and claims, holistic land and soil management, support and validation for producers, and building on the Certified Organic standard while providing a bridge with non-organic grassfed claims.

    The group performed a detailed comparison of existing and developing standards, including AGA’s draft grassfed dairy standard, one-hundred-percent grassfed organic programs from Pennsylvania Certified Organic and New York-Northeast Organic Farming Association, and   the CROPP/Organic Valley Grassmilk program. In addition, attendees addressed issues of industry consensus and government-based options, along with the pros and cons of different strategies.

    “We feel this meeting was an important first step to develop a clear and definable industry standard that will encourage producers to develop grassfed dairy programs and also to provide assurance to consumers when they see the term “grassfed” on a carton of milk or other dairy products,” said Don Davis, chair of AGA’s standards and certification committee. “We’re looking forward to working with our colleagues as we move forward.”

    Two working groups have formed, one of which will draft a merged standards document for further discussion. The other group will seek to clarify options for market integrity. Any other parties interested in the process should contact AGA for details at  dairy@americangrassfed.org or 877-774-7277. The group will reconvene soon to continue the discussion and develop next steps.

     

  • Processing Plant Feasibility Study Underway in Colorado

    One of the biggest challenges facing small livestock producers is the lack of adequate slaughter and processing facilities. Many producers who would otherwise market their meat products directly to consumers or work with retailers on a wholesale basis find it difficult to locate facilities that will allow them to enter different supply chains, and are at the mercy of distributors and middlemen who make a profit at the expense of the producers.

    American Grassfed Association, with help from USDA Rural Development, Rocky Mountain Farmers Union, Niche Meat Processor Assistance Network, Ranch Foods Direct, and Natural Grocers, is conducting a feasibility study regarding the potential for a humane slaughter plant to be located near Pueblo, Colorado. They are seeking input from small and midsize producers in the Rocky Mountain region, including Wyoming, Western Kansas and Nebraska, Northern New Mexico, and West Texas, who would be interested in using such a facility.

    AGA will be conducting a series of free listening sessions throughout the region and invites all interested producers to attend to learn more about the project and to share their ideas and concerns. Each session will run approximately an hour and a half and light refreshments will be provided.

    The sessions are listed below. Please register in advance to reserve your spot. If you have any questions, or if you can’t attend but would like more information, please email us. You may also offer your comments and feedback by filling out a survey here. https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/M6GM7QS

    Montrose

    January 22, 2016, 10am
    Montrose County Fairgrounds Friendship Hall
    1001 N. 2nd Street
    http://conta.cc/1WnMUIX

     

    La Junta
    February 4, 2016, 10am
    Otero Junior College
    1802 Colorado Avenue
    http://conta.cc/1nf8JPc

     

    Alamosa
    February 5, 2016, 9:30am
    Hospice del Valle
    514 Main Street (please enter through the back door off the parking lot)
    http://conta.cc/1Rwnj0Z

     

    Fort Morgan
    Morgan County Rural Electric Association
    20169 US Hwy. 34
    http://conta.cc/1V2jcYo

  • The Facts About The USDA’s AMS Grassfed Marketing Claim Recission

    (DENVER) On January 12, USDA’s Agricultural Marketing Service rescinded the standards for the grassfed marketing claim. These were the minimal standards behind the grassfed label found on meat sold wholesale or retail. The reasons for the rescission are somewhat unclear, but according to AMS representatives, they have reinterpreted their authority and decided that developing and maintaining marketing standards does not fit within their agency.

    Some Background

    After a lengthy public process that lasted several years, AMS introduced the grassfed standard in 2006. USDA’s Food Safety and Inspection Service, the regulatory arm that approves meat labels, was charged with enforcing the standard for those who chose to use it. But because FSIS required no audit or other verification other than a producer-signed affidavit, the term was sometimes misused and was often confusing, both for producers and consumers. The growth of grassfed demand in the marketplace only fueled the misperceptions.

    Going forward, FSIS will continue to approve the grassfed label claim, but producers will each define their own standards. FSIS is only considering the feeding protocol in their label approvals — other issues such as confinement; use of antibiotics and hormones; and the source of the animals, meat, and dairy products will be left up to the producer.

    So what does this mean?

    For Producers

    • For American Grassfed Association Approved Producers, there will be no change. AGA’s standards are more comprehensive and stringent than the AMS standard, and FSIS will continue to accept those standards for the grassfed claim. AGA certified producers may continue using the AGA logo on their meat labels.
    • Non-AGA certified producers using the AMS grassfed standards as the basis for their label claim must update their paperwork with FSIS, but will not have to reapply for label approval. They will have to assert that the standards they use are their own.
    • Producers who have never used the grassfed claim may seek grassfed label approval from FSIS as long as they provide “documentation about what grassfed means to them,” according to Tammie Ballard of FSIS.
    • Producers who feed grain can make a grassfed claim if they spell out the percentage of grass on the label: 90 percent grassfed, 75 percent grassfed, 10 percent grassfed, and so on. Ballard says this has always been true, and approval is on a case-by-case basis. How this is enforced is unclear, however.
    • The Small and Very Small program will continue, and AMS will be in touch with those producers to discuss any changes.

    The unfortunate thing for producers who have worked hard to build quality grassfed programs is that, with no common standards in place, they will be competing in the marketplace with the industrial meatpackers who can co-opt the grassfed label.

    For Consumers

    Once again, consumers lose out on transparency and an understanding of what they’re buying. Grassfed has always been a source of some confusion, but now, with no common standards underpinning it, consumers will find it increasingly difficult to trust the grassfed label. Like other mostly meaningless label terms like natural, cage-free, and free-range, grassfed will become just another feel-good marketing ploy used by the major meatpackers to dupe consumers into buying mass-produced, grain-fed, feedlot meat.

    For those who want to buy real grassfed with a label they can trust:
    • Buy from a farmer you know, and ask plenty of questions. Do you supplement with grain or grain by-products such as brewers and distillers grain or by-products from ethanol production? Where do you get your animals? Do you use antibiotics or hormones? Do you feed your animals in confinement?
    • If you don’t have the luxury of knowing your producer personally, then look for the American Grassfed Approved logo. It’s the first and only standard developed by producers, range scientists, veterinarians, animal nutritionists, and other experts that guarantees the meat comes from animals fed a 100-percent forage diet, never confined to a feedlot, never fed antibiotics or hormones, and born and raised on American family farms. No other certification offers those assurances, and no other grassfed program uses true third-party audits to ensure compliance.
    • Avoid buying inexpensive grocery store grassfed. Chances are good that it’s imported– although now that Congress has eliminated County of Origin Labeling, there’s no way to be certain—and the animals were probably confined and supplemented with some form of grain.
    • Avoid buying meat with a grassfed percentage on the label. It’s either grassfed or it’s not. Studies have shown that even a small amount of grain in the animal’s diet affects the nutritional profile of the meat.

    American Grassfed Association is the industry pioneer and leader, being the first organization to institute standards that most closely match what consumers want when they buy grassfed. The organization is led by American family farmers who have been in the business for decades, and who understand the unique challenges of producing products from healthy animals that are good for people, good for the planet, and good for rural communities.

    If you have questions, please don’t hesitate to contact AGA at aga@americangrassfed.org

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