Center for Media Democracy & Organic
Consumers Association
Contact:
John Stauber & Diane Farsetta - Center for Media and Democracy -
608-279-4044 or 608-260-9713
Ronnie Cummins - Organic Consumers Association -
888-403-1007 or 218-349-3836
For Immediate Release
7 June 2005
Consumer and Watchdog Groups
join
Beef Producer to Challenge
USDA Secretary
Mike Johanns
on Mad Cow Disease
News Conference and Dump of Calf Feed Containing Cow
Blood and Slaughterhouse
Waste
Will Be Held Outside USDA Mad Cow Roundtable
at
University of Minnesota
St. Paul Campus, 8:30 am, Thursday, June 9 
Dressed in bio-hazard suits, organic consumer activists will mix commercial-grade
calf feed made from cow blood in front of this statue at the University of Minnesota.
St. Paul, MN - On Thursday, June 9 at 8:30 a.m. at the corner of Eckles
and Carter Avenues, on the St. Paul campus of the University of Minnesota,
the Center for Media and Democracy and the Organic Consumers Association
will hold a news conference to challenge U.S. policies that fail to safeguard
against the spread of mad cow disease. The conference precedes
U.S. Department of Agriculture Secretary Mike Johanns’ public roundtable
discussion with meat industry leaders on mad cow disease, which runs
from 9:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. at the nearby Classroom Office Building B-45,
1994 Buford Avenue.
The news conference will explain how current U.S. policies put livestock – and,
subsequently, humans – at risk for fatal, brain-wasting diseases. Speakers
will describe how and why the U.S. government has failed to ban feeding
slaughterhouse waste to cattle, failed to test millions of cattle entering
the human food supply, and refused to allow private producers to test
their own animals for mad cow disease.
Also at the news conference, the Organic Consumers Association will
dump commercially purchased calf feed containing cow blood and slaughterhouse
waste, to protest the U.S. government’s failure to adopt the stronger
safeguards implemented years ago by European and Asian countries.
News conference speakers will include:
- Jim Goodman, beef and dairy farmer from Wonewoc, Wisconsin;
- John Stauber, executive director of the Center for Media and Democracy
and co-author of the book Mad Cow U.S.A.;
- Dr. Diane Farsetta, senior researcher at the Center for Media and
Democracy
and molecular biologist; and
- Ronnie Cummins, author and national director of the Organic Consumers
Association.
“One focus of Secretary Johanns’ St. Paul roundtable is
the economic impact of mad cow disease,” said beef producer Jim
Goodman. “The best way to support U.S. meat and dairy producers
would be to adopt better safeguards. Instead, the USDA made it
illegal for producers to test their cattle for mad cow disease. U.S.
producers must be allowed to test their animals and to offer consumers
beef that tests free of mad cow disease.”
“You may not be a vegetarian, but the animals you eat should be,” author
John Stauber stated. “Animal-derived protein in cattle feed
is the number one way mad cow disease is transmitted. Yet blood
from cattle and pigs, slaughterhouse waste from pigs and poultry, and
poultry feces are still routinely fed to North American cattle. Also,
the USDA testing program should be expanded to screen millions of cattle
each year and should be made more transparent, with independent labs
able to verify test results.”
“Today’s USDA roundtable does not include any public health
or consumer representatives,” said researcher Dr. Diane Farsetta. “Unfortunately,
the agency appears to be continuing the U.S. government’s practice
to date of trying to assuage the concerns of U.S. consumers, economic
markets and foreign governments with public relations campaigns, instead
of making the necessary policy changes to ensure a safe food supply.”
Ronnie Cummins stated, “Consumers are turning in droves to organic,
grass-fed beef and organic dairy products, once they learn that the USDA
is still allowing the routine feeding of blood, manure, and slaughterhouse
waste to farm animals, and refusing to test all cattle at slaughter for
mad cow disease.”
In St. Paul, the Organic Consumers Association will also deliver to
Secretary Johanns a petition signed by more than 12,000 Americans, calling
for stronger mad cow disease safeguards, including a ban on all blood,
manure and slaughterhouse waste in animal feed, and allowing private
producers to independently test their own cattle for mad cow disease.
Sign the Mad Cow: Stop the Madness Petition here.
The Center for Media and Democracy was
founded in 1993 to investigate and report on deceptive public relations
and propaganda campaigns. The Center publishes the award-winning quarterly publication PR
Watch. Center staff have also authored five books, including
the 1997 book Mad Cow U.S.A. by John Stauber and Sheldon Rampton. Mad
Cow U.S.A. correctly predicted the emergence of mad cow disease
in North America and received favorable reviews from such technical publications
as the Journal of the American Medical Association, New
Scientist and Chemical & Engineering News.
The Organic Consumers Association was
founded in 1998. It is a nationwide network of 700,000 organic
consumers, carrying out public education around issues of food safety
and environmental sustainability, while promoting organic agriculture
and Fair Trade.
|