Texas 2013 83rd Regular

Texas House Bill HR710 Introduced / Bill

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                    83R8128 BPG-D
 By: Rodriguez of Travis H.R. No. 710


 R E S O L U T I O N
 WHEREAS, Texans increasingly seek out locally sourced food
 products, but the availability of local meat and poultry is limited
 because small farms and ranches often lack access to small and
 midsize production facilities; and
 WHEREAS, Over the past two decades, the meat processing
 industry in the United States has undergone massive consolidation,
 with just four corporations slaughtering about 80 percent of the
 cattle; facilities that process meat on this enormous scale are not
 geared to accommodate local producers due to mismatches in size,
 services, and business models; and
 WHEREAS, Farmers and ranchers wishing to market meat and
 poultry locally need small-scale, state-inspected slaughter
 facilities, but this type of processing capacity is limited;
 federal regulations create a barrier to the operation of such
 facilities by requiring state inspection programs to enforce
 regulations "at least equal" to those imposed at the national
 level; current federal law regarding animal slaughter and meat
 processing, however, is chiefly designed to ensure the safety of
 corporate agribusiness, and regulations do not recognize the
 differing practices applicable to small producers; forcing smaller
 operations to use the same equipment as producers operating on a
 vast scale creates an onerous and inappropriate financial burden;
 and
 WHEREAS, At present, despite consumer demand, the percentage
 of direct sales of meat products is significantly lower than the
 percentage of such sales of other agricultural products; the
 one-size-fits-all approach of current federal law is hampering the
 ability of small farmers and ranchers to sell directly to customers
 and retailers, but by revising regulations to better reflect the
 sharply different needs of corporate agriculture and small-scale
 farming and ranching, the federal government can facilitate growth
 in a sector of the agricultural economy that is primed for
 expansion; now, therefore, be it
 RESOLVED, That the House of Representatives of the 83rd Texas
 Legislature hereby respectfully urge the United States Congress to
 amend existing laws and regulations governing animal slaughter and
 meat processing to remove procedural requirements that are unsuited
 to small and midsize slaughterhouse facilities, including basing
 scientific substantiation and microbial testing on individual
 product lines; to develop scale-appropriate approaches to the
 regulation of small and midsize slaughterhouses that take into
 consideration both the total volume and diversity of operations; to
 provide for appropriate regulation of mobile slaughter and
 processing units, including flexibility of the slaughter location
 and scale-appropriate provisions for the disposal of offal and
 wastewater; to allow feral hogs to be donated for food when
 field-killed and custom-processed; and to expand the current
 exemption for on-farm processing of poultry to allow for on-farm
 processing of other animals at a similar scale; and, be it further
 RESOLVED, That the chief clerk forward official copies of
 this resolution to the president of the United States, to the
 president of the Senate and the speaker of the House of
 Representatives of the United States Congress, to the secretary of
 the United States Department of Agriculture, and to all the members
 of the Texas delegation to Congress with the request that this
 resolution be officially entered in the Congressional Record as a
 memorial to the Congress of the United States of America.