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Re: : Re: TN legislation

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Hi,

Bill has a good point here. Why not just write into law an exemption for

small dairies. Something such as:

Small producers shall be exempt from all dairy inspection laws including

processed products made from milk. Milk and milk products may be only sold

to direct end users either on farm, or delivered. A small producer shall be

defined as an entity selling less than 100,000 pounds of liquid milk

annually, including products made from that milk.

The 100,000 lb limit would be equivalent to about 15 to 18 cows, and would

be independent of animal type. I think rewriting your law as an exemption

rather than another regulated food is the way to go. Keeping it small would

let the customer decide if the quality is high enough and leave the state

out of the loop entirely. A small size would also ensure larger unsanitary

dairies wouldn't be able to dump their inferior and possibly dangerous

product on an unsuspecting populace. The way to limit size is by quantity of

milk sold or used in processing. I think a 15 cow limit is a reasonable

size.

s

www.micah68.org - how to please God

www.willowhills.org - natural foods & crafts

: Re: TN legislation

What makes selling raw milk illegal? Taking the viewpoint of the whole,

that law should be rescinded. This would simplify life rather than make it

more complex. Clear, truthful labeling is all that is needed for everyone

to get what they want. We are moving into a new age. People are becoming

more aware and responsible. There is disagreement about what is good. Laws

were appropriaate to express near universal agreement about rules for human

interaction within the context of independent individuals competing for

survival. We are shifting our context to interdependent coopeeration for

mutual benefit. It's time to start studying and advocating what laws we can

eliminate year by year.

Re: TN legislation

Well no raw milk law would make selling raw milk still illegal. At least

with a raw milk law you have a chance to try to be legal.

To learn more about Raw Dairy, visit our home pages at

http://www.midvalleyvu.com

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I could go for that if it were written to include goats and sheep somehow. Seems it would be easier to get thru as it wouldn't be such a threat to the "regular" milk producers.

Belinda

Hi,

Bill has a good point here. Why not just write into law an exemption for

small dairies. Something such as:

Small producers shall be exempt from all dairy inspection laws including

processed products made from milk. Milk and milk products may be only sold

to direct end users either on farm, or delivered. A small producer shall be

defined as an entity selling less than 100,000 pounds of liquid milk

annually, including products made from that milk.

The 100,000 lb limit would be equivalent to about 15 to 18 cows, and would

be independent of animal type. I think rewriting your law as an exemption

rather than another regulated food is the way to go. Keeping it small would

let the customer decide if the quality is high enough and leave the state

out of the loop entirely. A small size would also ensure larger unsanitary

dairies wouldn't be able to dump their inferior and possibly dangerous

product on an unsuspecting populace. The way to limit size is by quantity of

milk sold or used in processing. I think a 15 cow limit is a reasonable

size.

s

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Hey Bill, , and Belinda,

These are teeerrific suggestions. I have already included sheep and

goats in the legislation as well as all other graxing/browsing

ruminants. Some like Buffalo milk for yogurt, I think? I've also

modified it for not just milk, but all milk products the farmer might

make as well. I am working on it and will post it when it's finished.

Anyway, I like the wording of this and will try to include it.

from TN

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Beautiful ... but I don't think the National Dairy Council or any of the

political dairy-industry forces would let it slip by them unchallenged. To them,

any raw dairy is a threat to their institutions. A threat that I hope will

become reality. :)

Tom

s wrote:

> Hi,

>

> Bill has a good point here. Why not just write into law an exemption for

> small dairies. Something such as:

>

> Small producers shall be exempt from all dairy inspection laws including

> processed products made from milk. Milk and milk products may be only sold

> to direct end users either on farm, or delivered. A small producer shall be

> defined as an entity selling less than 100,000 pounds of liquid milk

> annually, including products made from that milk.

>

> The 100,000 lb limit would be equivalent to about 15 to 18 cows, and would

> be independent of animal type. I think rewriting your law as an exemption

> rather than another regulated food is the way to go. Keeping it small would

> let the customer decide if the quality is high enough and leave the state

> out of the loop entirely. A small size would also ensure larger unsanitary

> dairies wouldn't be able to dump their inferior and possibly dangerous

> product on an unsuspecting populace. The way to limit size is by quantity of

> milk sold or used in processing. I think a 15 cow limit is a reasonable

> size.

>

> s

> www.micah68.org - how to please God

> www.willowhills.org - natural foods & crafts

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Oh they'll protest for sure Tom. But according to my lawmaker, if each

ag. committee members gets 5 or 6 calls over the course of the year,

then by next year's session, the bill will be in good shape. The honey

bee lobby in our state got their RAW bill passed last year, so we can

too. Got to stay optimistic, right?

Tom Jeanne wrote:

> Beautiful ... but I don't think the National Dairy Council or any of

> the political dairy-industry forces would let it slip by them

> unchallenged. To them, any raw dairy is a threat to their

> institutions. A threat that I hope will become reality. :)

>

> Tom

>

> >

> > s

> > www.micah68.org - how to please God

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