Trustee Elections
These are the original issues in this subcategory
  • FEDERAL LANDS GRAZING
  • FEEDLOTS
  • MEAT PACKING
Winning Issue » MEAT PACKING


The purposes of the 1921 Packers and Stockyards Act is to ensure fair competition and fair trade practices, to safeguard farmers and ranchers, and to protect consumers and members of the livestock, meat, and poultry industries from unfair, deceptive, unjustly discriminatory and monopolistic practices. The Act was enacted in response to concerns that the largest meat processors of that era had engaged in anticompetitive practices that had a deleterious effect on producers and consumers. However, ranch advocates claim today’s market place is even more consolidated than it was in 1921. They say Rural America is drying up because it can’t get fair prices at the farm gate, and that Capitalism isn’t working in this particular instance because of industry concentration and consolidation. Consumers usually pay higher prices without industry competition and prices are often set without regard to what people can afford. They believe more sunlight and guardrails are needed to end the meat packer de facto monopoly, or our food security will be at risk.

Proposed Legislation: Reintroduction of S.2036 - Meat Packing Special Investigator Act (117th Congress 2021-2022)
Prospective Sponsor: Sen. Jon Tester (MT)



Options


  • I oppose reforming current meat packing industry policy, and wish to donate resources to the campaign committee of Leader Charles Schumer (NY).
  • I support creating the “Office of the Special Investigator for Competition Matters” within the Agriculture Department which will have a team of investigators, with subpoena power, to investigate and prosecute violations of the Packers and Stockyards Act of 1921 by:

    1.) Granting the office the authority to bring any civil or administrative action authorized by that act against a packer.

    2.) Setting regional mandatory minimum thresholds for negotiated purchases of fed cattle by large meatpackers.

    3.) Including a number of transparency measures, including the creation of a cattle contract library, requirements that packers report carcass weight more quickly and that they report the number of cattle scheduled for slaughter each day for the next 14 days.

    And wish to donate resources to the campaign committee of Sen. Jon Tester (MT) and/or to an advocate group currently working with this issue.


Winning Option
  • I support creating the “Office of the Special Investigator for Competition Matters” within the Agriculture Department which will have a team of investigators, with subpoena power, to investigate and prosecute violations of the Packers and Stockyards Act of 1921 by:

    1.) Granting the office the authority to bring any civil or administrative action authorized by that act against a packer.

    2.) Setting regional mandatory minimum thresholds for negotiated purchases of fed cattle by large meatpackers.

    3.) Including a number of transparency measures, including the creation of a cattle contract library, requirements that packers report carcass weight more quickly and that they report the number of cattle scheduled for slaughter each day for the next 14 days.

    And wish to donate resources to the campaign committee of Sen. Jon Tester (MT) and/or to an advocate group currently working with this issue.
There has been $0.00 pledged in support of this issue
Trustee Candidates

If elected as a trustee, the campaign committee of Sen. Jon Tester (MT) will be unconditionally awarded the funds pledged to this issue along with a letter requesting him to favorably consider either reintroducing S.2036 - Meat Packing Special Investigator Act (117th Congress 2021-2022), or a similar version thereof.

If elected as a trustee, National Cattlemen's Beef Association will be awarded the funds pledged to this issue along with a letter requesting these funds be used to advocate for increased competition in the meat packing industry and improving enforcement of the 1921 Packers and Stockyards Act.

About: Initiated in 1898, the National Cattlemen's Beef Association is the marketing organization and trade association for America's one million cattle farmers and ranchers. With offices in Denver and Washington, D.C., NCBA is a consumer-focused, producer-directed organization representing the largest segment of the nation's food and fiber industry. The NCBA is the national trade association representing U.S. cattle producers, with more than 25,000 individual members and several industry organization members. Together NCBA represents more than 175,000 cattle producers and feeders. NCBA works to advance the economic, political and social interests of the U.S. cattle business and to be an advocate for the cattle industry's policy positions and economic interests.
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Trustee Election - Opening Date
June 5, 2023
Trustee Election - Closing Date
June 12, 2023