Recapping the Farm Bill Successes… and the Work Still Ahead
JAVMA News has posted a pretty comprehensive overview of the gains made through the recently passed Farm Bill. Take a look at the article for a run-down of the food safety issues addressed in the bill, including funding authorization for the Food Animal Residue Avoidance Databank (FARAD).
The The article features an interview with Dr. Alistair Webb, a FARAD administrator at the University of Florida. In the interview, Dr. Webb reminds us all that the program has yet to have the authorized monies budgeted for the program and that, right now, “The present is very bleak."
Remember, even though FARAD has been authorized for funding, it has yet to actually receive the money it needs to operate. We’ll continue to update you on our battle to get full funding for this program crucial to keeping our meat, eggs and dairy products safe to eat. But your support, by way of a phone call or letter to your congressional representatives, would help. Let them know that you’re still concerned that FARAD won’t be funded and that your health and that of your family will be put in jeopardy.
From the article:
Highlights from the farm bill include authorization for a $2.5 million annual appropriation for the Food Animal Residue Avoidance Databank from 2008 through 2012. FARAD is a chronically underfunded resource used by veterinarians, livestock producers, and state and federal regulatory and extension specialists to ensure that drug, environmental, and pesticide contaminants do not end up in meat, milk, and eggs.
The database is administered through the Agriculture Department's Cooperative State Research, Education, and Extension Service and operates out of North Carolina State University, the University of Florida-Gainesville, and the University of California-Davis.
FARAD has been operating since September 2007 on emergency funds set to expire within the year. What's more, there's no guarantee the money in the farm bill will be appropriated. The AVMA-GRD staff is working with the House and Senate appropriations committees to secure the appropriation. But even if they're successful, the money won't arrive until 2010, which, according to Dr. Alistair Webb, a FARAD administrator at UF-Gainesville, is too late.
"We're eking this out, but come sometime in the new year, we're going to run out of money before any appropriation based on the farm bill in next year's budget. In other words, there is no funding for FARAD in the 2009 budget," Dr. Webb said, adding that layoffs of specially trained staff are all but certain. This compromises institutional ability, which later takes time to rebuild.
"We're happy for the future, but the present is very bleak," Dr. Webb said.
Congress 


