SENATE BILL REPORT
SB 5686
BYSenators Barr, Hansen, Newhouse, Bailey, Anderson and Gaspard
Making major changes to agriculture statutes.
Senate Committee on Agriculture
Senate Hearing Date(s):February 14, 1989; February 16, 1989
Majority Report: That Substitute Senate Bill No. 5686 be substituted therefor, and the substitute bill do pass.
Signed by Senators Barr, Chairman; Anderson, Vice Chairman; Bailey, Gaspard, Hansen, Madsen, Newhouse.
Senate Staff:John Stuhlmiller (786-7446)
February 17, 1989
AS REPORTED BY COMMITTEE ON AGRICULTURE, FEBRUARY 16, 1989
BACKGROUND:
Food and Dairy Products: The dairies and dairy product and fluid milk statutes (RCW 15.32 and RCW 15.36) provide the authority for the Department of Agriculture to regulate the dairy industry in the state, and establish the standards for the sale of milk products. Current statute contains some obsolete language and references, as well as certain requirements which are no longer applicable or enforceable.
Fruit Commission: The Washington State Fruit Commission assesses growers of soft tree fruits (Bartlett pears and all varieties of cherries, apricots, prunes, plums and peaches) for purposes of marketing and promotion. While nectarines are also currently assessed, they are not specifically listed in the statutory definition of soft tree fruit. The annual assessment funding the commission is currently levied on all commercial soft tree fruit which is grown or packed in the state. The statutory authority specifically authorizes the assessment to be levied on fruit grown in the state.
Commodity Commissions: Commodity commissions are responsible for the promotion of various specific agricultural commodities. Good statistical information on what is produced by growers enhances the ability of the commodity commissions to assist in marketing the crops. Several varieties of the same crop are often grown, and specific knowledge of these crops would aid the efforts of the commodity commissions. Current law is not broad enough to allow the commissions to require the reporting of grower receipts based on crop variety.
Weights and Measures: The Weights and Measures division of the Department of Agriculture has a National Bureau of Standards lab in Olympia which calibrates commercial measuring devices.
Commission Merchants: Commission merchants and dealers must maintain the records of their purchases and sales of agricultural products for one year. Many complaints filed by producers are not made within this time period.
Grain Inspection: The warehousing and deposits statutes authorize the Department of Agriculture to regulate warehouses and grain dealers. In reviewing the statutes, the department has suggested that there are areas with potential risk of litigation because practices do not conform with the terms of RCW 22.09, and there is language in the act which is unclear and does not reflect either the practices or needs of the industry.
SUMMARY:
Food and Dairy Products: Technical changes are made to revise obsolete language, eliminate requirements that are no longer applicable or enforceable and to allow the application of modern practices. Standards for labeling, cleanliness, and inspection are amended to reference federal law, such as the Fair Packaging and Labeling Act, rather than standards set by state statute.
The specific heat and time requirements for pasteurization are expanded to include higher temperatures and shorter time limits. In the instance of milk products containing 10 percent or more sweetener, or for eggnog, specific temperature/time limits are included, and any pasteurization process recognized by the Federal Food and Drug Administration is approved for use.
Fruit Commission: The definition of soft tree fruit is modified to include nectarines, and assessment language is expanded to include fruit packed as Washington soft tree fruit.
Commodity Commissions: Commodity commissions or the Director of the Department of Agriculture are given authority to designate the type of information required to be reported by growers.
Weights and Measures: The director is authorized to establish fees for the calibration work done in the state's weights and measures laboratory. Monies collected shall be deposited into the agricultural local fund to be used by the Division of Weights and Measures to fund the laboratory and its services.
Commission Merchants: Any person handling livestock, hay, grain, or straw must be licensed as either a commission merchant or dealer and cannot be licensed as a cash buyer.
No person may operate a separate business under the cover of another person's license.
Commission merchants and dealers are required to retain records for three years.
The requirement that boom loaders be licensed is eliminated.
Grain Inspection: The department is authorized to adopt inspection standards and procedures for grains and commodities. The inspection and grading of a lot is expanded to include the determining of a sample's grade, condition or other qualitative measurement.
A person aggrieved by the grading of a commodity may request a reinspection or appeal inspection within three business days from the date of certificate. A reinspection is an official review of the results of an original inspection, and an appeal inspection is a review of an original inspection or a reinspection by an authorized United States Department of Agriculture inspector or a supervising inspector.
Agricultural commodities are grains for which inspection standards have been established under the United States Grain Standards Act, the Agricultural Marketing Act of 1946, or other products for which the department has established inspection rules.
EFFECT OF PROPOSED SUBSTITUTE:
Technical changes are made in the milk grading process to bring it into line with federal requirements. The director shall degrade or suspend the grade A permit whenever the standard is violated in three of the last five consecutive milk samples rather than one of the last four, as is current law. A grade A permit shall subsequently be reinstated in notice status when sample results are within the standard for which the suspension occurred.
Any commission merchant, dealer, cash buyer, or person acting as such without a license who, with the intent to defraud a consignor, fails to comply with the requirements of the commission merchants statutes, is guilty of a class C felony.
Technical changes are made which clarify that commissioners for the Washington State Apple Advertising Commission must grow apples or act as an apple dealer in the district they represent. Nominations for vacant commission positions shall be made at the Washington State Horticultural Association annual meeting or the annual meeting of any other producer organization which represents a majority of producers in the state. In order to have a vote in a district or subdivision, growers must operate a commercial producing apple orchard within the district or subdivision.
The department is authorized to expand the pesticide disposal program to include products held by pesticide dealers. Fees will be paid by dealers to fund the program.
Appropriation: none
Revenue: yes
Fiscal Note: available
Senate Committee - Testified: Karl Kottman, Washington Council of Farm Cooperatives (pro); Dan Coyne, Dairy Fed (pro); Mike Schwisow, Department of Agriculture