AMI today published an issue
advertisement called "R-CALF-OPOLY" in Roll
Call, the newspaper of Capitol Hill, to expose
the games that are being played to prevent
restoration of full beef and cattle trade with
Canada.
“To a group called
R-CALF, trade is a game. To Americans, it’s
serious business,” the ad reads. The ad,
designed to look like a popular board game,
details tactics used by isolationistic cattle
producers who aim to keep Canadian cattle out
of the U.S, which helps maintain artificially
high cattle prices and record high beef prices
for consumers.
The ad may be
viewed on the homepage of OpenBeefBorders.com,
or by clicking here:
http://www.openbeefborders.com.
Prior to Canada’s first case of BSE
in May 2003, the U.S. imported, on average, a
million head of cattle from Canada that went
largely to plants built along the U.S.-Canadian
border – plants that have been unable for two
years to procure enough cattle to run at
capacity. Some plants have closed, while
others have reduced shifts and laid off
workers. Meanwhile, Canada was forced to
expand its beef packing complex in order to
process the surplus cattle that it previously
exported here. They have done so with millions
of dollars in aid from the Canadian government.
According to AMI President J. Patrick
Boyle, "If there were a food safety issue, the
negative economic impact might possibly be
justified. But Canadian and U.S. cattle and
beef are produced in virtually identical
fashion under virtually identical federal
rules. Both are equally healthy and safe.
There is simply no food safety argument that
can be made to justify that economic
devastation that is being inflicted upon the
U.S. beef industry. We are helping to create
our biggest competitor in Canada and that will
harm the U.S. beef industry
long-term."
The Roll Call ad, according
to Boyle, is an effort to shine light on the
games that are being played.
“We believe it is imperative that lawmakers
on Capitol Hill and others within the beltway
recognize the efforts that have kept the border
closed for what they are: isolationism
designed to benefit a limited number of cattle
producers,” Boyle said. “Just as these
producers enjoy their high profits, 7,800 jobs
have been lost in the U.S. meat industry.
Hardworking Americans are being forced to try
to make ends meet with jobs that have become
part-time through no one’s fault but
R-CALF.”
Boyle noted that a
July 3 Chicago Tribune article provided
valuable insight into the issue. The article,
by Tribune correspondent Andrew Martin,
detailed the economic prosperity that
isolationistic cattle producers are enjoying by
artificially shorting the U.S. cattle market
through efforts to keep the border closed to
Canadian cattle.
In the article, Iowa
State University Agriculture Professor Neil
Harl noted, "People down here are building
fences, fixing up ranches, buying new pickups."
Chuck Kiker, a rancher and regional director
of R-CALF, was quoted saying, "In the last
three years I've made more money on cattle than
in the previous seven. If that's short-sighted,
I'm sorry."
Boyle urged
industry members and others concerned about
trade isolationism to visit OpenBeefBorders.com
and to use AMI’s Grass Roots Center to write to
lawmakers about the need to support efforts to
restore beef and cattle trade with
Canada.
AMI Publishes Roll Call Ad to Highlight Need to Cease Game Playing on Cattle and Beef Trade
Monday, July 11, 2005
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