HOUSE BILL REPORT
ESHB 1151
This analysis was prepared by non-partisan legislative staff for the use of legislative members in
their deliberations. This analysis is not a part of the legislation nor does it constitute a
statement of legislative intent.
As Passed House:
March 12, 2007
Title: An act relating to animal identification programs.
Brief Description: Creating a livestock identification advisory committee.
Sponsors: By House Committee on Agriculture & Natural Resources (originally sponsored by Representatives Pearson, Kretz, Dunshee, B. Sullivan, Kristiansen, Warnick and Haler).
Brief History:
Agriculture & Natural Resources: 2/21/07, 2/26/07 [DPS].
Floor Activity:
Passed House: 3/12/07, 98-0.
Brief Summary of Engrossed Substitute Bill |
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HOUSE COMMITTEE ON AGRICULTURE & NATURAL RESOURCES
Majority Report: The substitute bill be substituted therefor and the substitute bill do pass. Signed by 14 members: Representatives B. Sullivan, Chair; Blake, Vice Chair; Kretz, Ranking Minority Member; Warnick, Assistant Ranking Minority Member; Dickerson, Eickmeyer, Grant, Hailey, Kagi, Lantz, McCoy, Newhouse, Orcutt and VanDeWege.
Staff: Meg Van Schoorl (786-7105).
Background:
National Animal Identification System (NAIS)
In 2004, the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) initiated the NAIS as an
information system to support ongoing animal disease monitoring, surveillance, and
eradication programs. The system was planned to be used in all states to identify and track
animals as they came into contact and commingled with animals other than those in their
premises of origin. The system was intended to enable animal health officials to trace a sick
animal or group of animals back to the herd or premises that was the most likely source of
infection. A stated long-term NAIS goal was to be able to identify all premises and animals
that had direct contact with a foreign animal disease or domestic disease of concern within 48
hours of discovery. Species included in the NAIS are: bovine (cattle, bison), swine, sheep,
goats, equine (horses, mules, donkeys), poultry, camelids (llamas, alpacas) and ratites (emus,
ostriches).
The USDA published a draft Strategic Plan in April 2005 that called for mandatory premises
registration and animal identification for cattle by January 2008. In April 2006, the USDA
announced new timelines and benchmarks with a goal of achieving full producer
participation by 2009. The USDA has since announced that the NAIS will be a voluntary,
rather than a mandatory program.
The NAIS implementation was to involve both the federal and state Departments of
Agriculture in three phases: premise registration; animal identification; and animal
movement reporting.
The first phase, premise registration, would be a state and tribal responsibility. A premise is
a location where animals are housed, held, or commingled. The Washington State
Department of Agriculture (WSDA) began voluntary premise registrations in January 2005.
Twelve hundred and seventy-four Washington premises (about 6 percent of the total) have
registered to date.
The second phase of NAIS was to involve issuance of unique individual or group lot animal
identification numbers. Nationally, a number of industry/government species-specific
workgroups have formed to consider which types of identification will work best for their
particular animals. Methods under consideration include radio frequency identification tags,
retinal scans, DNA, and other options.
The third phase was to focus on collection of information on animal movement from one
premise to another.
Cattle Identification Advisory Committee
In 2006, the Legislature passed Substitute House Bill 3033, requiring the WSDA Director to
appoint an advisory committee composed of representatives from various segments of the
cattle industry to evaluate the NAIS requirements; research how other states are
implementing the requirements for cattle; evaluate demonstration projects conducted by the
WSDA; and recommend a plan for implementing the federal requirements in Washington for
the cattle industry, including funding amounts and sources, with a report to the Legislature by
December 2006. The Cattle Identification Advisory Committee was appointed, convened,
and has produced its progress report: "Implementation of the National Animal Identification
System in Washington: Activities and Recommendations of the Cattle Advisory
Committee."
Summary of Engrossed Substitute Bill:
The WSDA is directed to convene a Livestock Identification Advisory Committee
(Committee) by July 1, 2007.
The Director (Director) of the WSDA is required to consult with a broad range of
stakeholders who may be impacted by implementation of a mandatory or voluntary national
or state animal identification system, or components of these systems. The Director must
appoint one or more Committee members from:
The Director shall also invite one member from an Indian tribe to join the Committee. The
Committee will be chaired by the Director or the Director's designee, and be staffed by the
WSDA.
In conjunction with the WSDA, the Committee must:
The WSDA, in conjunction with the Committee, must submit a written report of its findings
and recommendations to appropriate committees of the Legislature by January 1, 2008.
This section expires June 30, 2008.
Appropriation: None.
Fiscal Note: Requested 3/13/07.
Effective Date: The bill takes effect 90 days after adjournment of session in which bill is passed.
Staff Summary of Public Testimony:
(In support) The prohibitions in this bill are needed. When the state entered into its
cooperative agreement with the USDA, we were bound into much more than the National
Animal Information System (NAIS). The NAIS is portrayed as a voluntary program, but
when as a livestock owner, I asked the Department to remove me from its record base, they
refused. The credibility of the USDA has been damaged by the change from a mandatory
system to a voluntary system - what will it be next week? The state has adequate animal
disease laws and emergency plans already on the books that do not invade people's privacy.
The goals of NAIS can be achieved through existing data bases. As an owner of one to two
horses, I am concerned that the NAIS will apply to me when I transport my horses from one
premise to another. There were no equine representatives on the Cattle Identification
Advisory Committee. The NAIS would violate property rights and religious freedoms,
eliminate the local food system, and could eliminate 4-H clubs and county fairs. The
problems of NAIS include paperwork, unconstitutional intrusions, and cost. Private industry
can set up a voluntary system and use it as a marketing tool if desired. Ear tags and radio
frequency identification tags are proving to be a tremendous problem.
(Opposed) The intent section finding that "existing means for identifying and tracking
animals has been sufficient" is contrary to all of my experience. With the mad cow incident
in our state, the WSDA worked for six or eight weeks straight and only located information
on half the cattle they were looking for. In England, having an identification system in place
made it possible to trace livestock during the foot and mouth disease outbreak and avert a
total disaster. Anyone who wants to participate on the Cattle Identification Advisory
Committee can, but it was primarily set up to address commercial livestock industry
concerns. While the USDA's waffling was admittedly very detrimental, there are better ways
than this bill to address those problems. The reasons for supporting an animal identification
system include food safety, consumer confidence, protection of livestock industry, and
competitiveness in international trade.
Persons Testifying: (In support) Representative Pearson, prime sponsor; Celeste Bishop,
NoNAIS; Darryl Wallace, Backcountry Horsemen of Washington; Fran Ogren; Tim Kunka
and Ted Wishon, Cattle Producers of Washington; and Rene C. Holaday.
(Opposed) Jay Gordon, Washington State Dairy Federation; Jim Jessernig, AB Foods; and
Patrick Connor, Washington Farm Bureau.