IDAHO PRESS NOT INTERESTED

Idaho Loses its Brucellosis Free Status


By Bill Schneider, 1-08-06

With almost no press coverage, one of the greatest fears of the Idaho ranching industry came true on December 28 when the U.S. Department of Agriculture revoked the state’s brucellosis free status. Officially, USDA reduced Idaho to a Class A status, the same as Wyoming. It's the first time since 1991 Idaho has not been brucellosis free.

“It’s amazing that so much ink is split, or electrons used, claiming that Montana and Idaho might lose its brucellosis free status when justifying the confinement of bison to Yellowstone Park, but how little is said and how little is really changed regarding wildlife management when the ‘terrifying’ losS of status actually happens or is at hand,� notes Ralph Maughan, on his website, Ralph Maughan’s Wildlife Reports. “In fact, you have to seriously search to learn that Idaho just lost its brucellosis free status for the same reason Wyoming did two years ago—infected elk, not infected bison, and perpetuation of the disease in elk by feeding them at winter feedlots.�

Maughan points out that the “sloppy habit of feeding elk� has spilled over into Idaho from Wyoming and “the Wyoming way of doing things� has infected Idaho cattle herds. “Idaho’s cattle industry will now pay the price, and it’s amazing how silent the media are.� According to Maughan, the only known press coverage of the “terrifying event� was a short TV news story on KIFI Channel 8 covering the Idaho Falls/Pocatello region and a short article in the Sublette Examiner.

Interestingly, the source of the brucellosis infection in the Swan Valley is not close to Yellowstone Park, but very close to the Wyoming border.

Class A status means Idaho cattle have to take more blood tests before moving out of state, and all cattle over 18 months not going directly to slaughter must be tested, which obviously increases costs for cattle producers. The status reduction doesn't mean there's anything wrong with the meat or milk products, which are still safe to eat.

For more background on this situation, see The Elk Problem

Update: Since we posted this artcile, we’ve had a flurry of calls looking for more details and some questions on where we got the information (See Sarpy Sam's post in our unfiltered section). This is a big issue for Idaho cattle producers, but there has been no official notice. Here’s why.

According to Wayne Hoffman at the Idaho Department of Agriculture, the USDA has notified his department that Idaho will be reduced to a Class A status. “We fully expect this to happen because the USDA told us it would happen,� he said, “and we are preparing for it.�

Technically, Hoffman said, the new status doesn’t become completely official until the USDA publishes the notification in the Federal Register, which is imminent -- "sometime this month,� Hoffman assured.

The Class A Status means Idaho cattle producers must have increased testing before animals can be shipped out of state. This status lasts for one year, and is already in affect, going from December 2005 to December 2006, according to Wayne Hoffman. “There is a lag time before it goes into affect, “he said. “It will stay in affect until next December unless any new cases emerge, and the affected herd is already being depopulated.�

He also said his department is “exploring the appeals process� but that can’t happen until after the official notification comes out in the Federal Register.

Wayne Hoffman confirmed that the December brucellosis infection occurred on the Wyoming border and was caused by elk transmitting the disease to cattle.



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