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Saturday, September 28, 2024

Legislation introduced against Biden's electronic ID ear tag mandate for livestock

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Senator Cynthia Lummis, U.S. Senator for Wyoming | Official U.S. Senate headshot

Senator Cynthia Lummis, U.S. Senator for Wyoming | Official U.S. Senate headshot

U.S. Senator Cynthia Lummis, Representative Harriet Hageman, and Senator John Barrasso (all R-WY) have introduced legislation to counter the Biden administration’s final rule mandating electronic identification ear tags for bison and cattle.

"Wyoming’s ranchers provide some of the highest quality meat in the world, yet this administration continues to find creative ways to make their jobs harder," said Lummis. "Forcing Wyoming’s ranchers to shell out their hard-earned money to trace and chip their livestock not only threatens to erode their privacy but puts unnecessary pressure on our supply chain. As a rancher myself, I understand the devastating impact this will have on our industry and will do everything in my power to block this administration’s chronic federal overreach."

"This rule is a solution in search of a problem that will advance a federal mandate which the American ranching community will have to pay for. America produces the highest quality meat in the world and there is nothing wrong with our traditional disease traceability system. This unfunded mandate raises serious privacy concerns for ranchers and their herds, with the potential to lock ranchers out of their traditional markets, thereby furthering vertical integration of the U.S. food supply chain. We need look no further than what happened in Ireland to recognize the threat of a USDA-driven EID mandate," Hageman said.

"In early 2022 Ireland adopted an EID mandate, and by August 2023, their government was reporting that they needed to slaughter as many as 41,000 head of livestock – not because of a disease outbreak, but because of so-called 'climate change.' A mandatory EID simply gives the federal government too much power."

"Mandating ear tags for all cattle and bison will financially crush independent Wyoming ranchers," said Barrasso. "Senator Lummis’ and Congresswoman Hageman’s legislation will stop this overreaching federal mandate in its tracks."

The Congressional Review Act resolution opposes the Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service’s final rule requiring ranchers to fit all livestock over 18 months old with electronic identification ear tags if shipped across state lines, exempting only animals going directly to slaughter. The mandate is set to take effect 180 days after its final publication on November 5th, giving Wyoming ranchers limited time to comply with new requirements estimated to impact roughly 11 million cattle nationwide.

Rep. Harriet Hageman has introduced companion legislation in the House.

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