8 CapitalPress.com Friday, June 25, 2021 Dairy Subscribe to our weekly dairy or livestock email newsletter at CapitalPress.com/newsletters Dairy research awarded $10 million U.S. dairy urges administration to address trade barriers By CAROL RYAN DUMAS Capital Press U.S. dairy groups wel- comed the announcement that the U.S. and the European Union agreed to a fi ve-year suspension of tariff s related to subsidies in the Boeing-Air- bus cases before the World Trade Organization but say more work needs to be done to prevent disruptions in U.S. dairy exports to the EU. “The U.S. needs a holistic approach to Europe’s contin- ued attempts to disrupt inter- national trade so that our exporters have a dependable and more reasonable playing fi eld on which to compete,” said Krysta Harden, president and CEO of the U.S. Dairy Export Council. The European Commis- sion published new certifi ca- tion requirements at the end of 2020 for a wide range of food products, adding con- fusing and vague require- ments that threaten to upend U.S. dairy exports to the EU, according to the export coun- cil and National Milk Produc- ers Federation. The mandates seek to force the U.S. to change its regula- tory system to match the EU’s standards, the groups said. Those changes are set to take eff ect on Aug. 21. “U.S. exporters continu- ally have to chase new man- dates by the European Union to retain our current access, even when there are no safety concerns with American dairy Capital Press The Foundation for Food and Agriculture Research has awarded a $10 million grant in support of U.S. dairy’s Net Zero Initiative as a means of advancing the industry’s 2050 Environ- mental Stewardship Goals. The funding will sup- port a 6-year project that will produce data to be shared by the dairy com- munity to provide measure- ment-based assessments of dairy’s greenhouse gas foot- print for feed production and set the stage for new market opportunities related to carbon, water quality and soil health. The grant will be matched by contributions from Net Zero Initiative partners such as Nestle, the dairy industry, Newtri- products,” said Jim Mulhern, National Milk’s president and CEO. “Too often dairy trade with the EU is a one-way street,” he said. The EU’s frequent approach is to mandate pre- scriptive procedures that cause U.S. dairy export- ers to make time-consuming changes just to retain access to that market, he said The EU’s eff orts to impose its own process-focused reg- ulations on trading part- ners run counter to its inter- national commitments and appear designed simply to layer added cost and compli- cations upon imported prod- ucts to discourage trade, the groups said. “To continue to move transatlantic trade relations forward, the EU’s underlying approach to agricultural trade must change,” they said. On Monday, Reps, Ron Kind, D-Wis.; Jackie Walor- ski, R-Ind.; Jim Costa, D-Ca- lif.; and John Katko, R-N.Y., wrote to EU Ambassador to the U.S. Stavros Lambrin- idis calling on the EU to delay implementation of the new certifi cation requirements until U.S. and EU negotiators can reach a mutually agreed- upon solution. The lawmakers said they are concerned with the infl ex- ibility the EU has maintained regarding the new require- ments for U.S. exports of food and agriculture products, including meat and dairy. ent and in-kind support for a total of $23.2 million. The funds will be managed by the Dairy Research Insti- tute, which is staff ed by Dairy Management Inc. to conduct research on behalf of the industry. DMI scientists will serve as the project leads to address research gaps in feed production and manure-based fertiliz- ers that, once fi lled, will enable new markets, incentives and investments Wisconsin bills target milk, meat, dairy labeling By SCOTT BAUER The Associated Press MADISON, Wis. (AP) — Vegetarian and vegan foods sold in Wiscon- sin could not be labeled as meat, milk or dairy if they don’t contain those prod- ucts, under bills up for votes June 22 in the state Assembly. The “truth in labeling” measures are supported by the state’s agriculture and dairy industries as a way to combat what they say are misleading products that are marketed as “Impossible burgers” and use other words SR 100 GII SERIES SPEEDRAKE 18’10” - 23’4” working widths Capital Press File New research will help scientists understand and im- prove dairy sustainability. • ® such as “cheese” and “milk” but don’t actually contain meat, milk or dairy. Bill sup- porters say they will help protect Wisconsin’s agricul- ture economy while putting pressure on the federal gov- ernment to take action. Opposition to the bills came from a variety of groups that promote plant- based food, such as soy and nuts, as an alternative to meat and dairy products. They argue that the bills are unnecessary, bad for Wis- consin businesses and con- sumers, and an unconstitu- tional infringement on free speech rights. A federal judge in 2019 blocked Arkansas from enforcing a ban on using such terms as “burger” or “sausage” to sell vegetarian and vegan products because it likely violated the First Amendment’s free speech rights. There are similar lawsuits against food label- ing laws in Missouri and Mississippi. One of the Wisconsin bills up for a vote would ban labeling a beverage as milk unless it comes from cows, goats and other hooved mammals. Another would prohibit selling a product as cream, yogurt or cheese U SIMPLICITY. VERSATILITY. QUALITY. California Oregon Idaho Marble Mountain Machinery Fort Jones Campbell Tractor & Implement Fruitland Glenns Ferry Homedale Nampa Wendell Papé Machinery Fall River Mills Fortuna INVEST IN QUALITY Rear wheels raise last for Superior terrain following cleaner windrow ends without need for hydraulic float ® Papé Machinery Aurora Central Point Cornelius Gresham Harrisburg Madras McMinnville Merrill Roseburg Salem Tangent Robbins Farm Equipment Baker City Burns La Grande Campbell Tractor & Implement Ontario Boyd’s Implement Tillamook unless it includes dairy. Those would only take eff ect if 10 states out of a group of 15 approve simi- lar bans by 2031. The move is designed to make sure the bills don’t violate the Constitution’s commerce clause, which gives Con- gress — not states — the right to regulate interstate commerce. Only two states in the group, Maryland and North Carolina, have passed milk labeling laws, but those laws haven’t taken eff ect because of similar provi- sions requiring other states to follow suit. Milk production continues to grow Wheel Rakes 8-,10- and 12-wheel models By LEE MIELKE For the Capital Press Independently adjust windrow widths to match pickup widths in dairy sustainability. “Addressing the U.S. dairy industry’s emissions is a critical solution to cli- mate change,” said Sally Rockey, FFAR executive director. “I know dairy farmers are working hard to decrease their environmental foot- print, and I’m thrilled to support their eff orts by advancing research needed to adopt climate-smart practices on dairy farms across the country,” she said. Through foundational science, on-farm pilots and development of new prod- uct markets, the Net Zero Initiative aims to knock down barriers and create incentives for farmers that will lead to economic via- bility and positive environ- mental impact. Fast, easy switching between transport and field positions Washington Papé Machinery cont. Farmer’s Equipment KuhnNorthAmerica.com Sumner Burlington Walla Walla Lynden Yakima Papé Machinery Watkins Tractor & Supply Chehalis Kelso Ellensburg Longview Okanogan Truck & Tractor Lynden Okanogan Mount Vernon Okanogan Central Machinery Sales Quincy Pasco Visit your local KUHN hay and forage dealer today! www.kuhn.com S228102-1 .S. milk output shot sharply higher in May, hitting a record 19.85 billion pounds, accord- ing to the USDA’s prelim- inary data. That’s up 4.6% from May 2020, and the big- gest month-to-month increase since March 2006, thanks to good weather, increased cow numbers, and increased milk per cow. It was the 12th month in a row to top year ago out- put and up a hefty 4.1% from May 2019. May output in the top 24 producing states hit 18.9 billion pounds, up 4.9%. Keep in mind a year ago the nation was coping with the COVID pandemic, which had caused dairy product prices to plunge due to shut- tered restaurants and a drop in foodservice demand, cre- ating havoc throughout the entire food chain. In addi- tion, many dairy farmers faced milk production restric- tions mandated by their cooperatives. Revisions added 45 mil- lion pounds to the April 50-state estimate, now put at 19.34 billion pounds, up DAIRY MARKETS Lee Mielke 3.5% from a year ago, instead of the originally reported 3.3%. May cow numbers were up for the 11th consecu- tive month, totaling 9.5 mil- lion head in the 50 states, up 145,000 from May 2020. May numbers were up 5,000 from the April count, which, with USDA revisions, was up an astounding 26,000 head from March. May output per cow aver- aged 2,088 pounds, up 61 pounds or 3% from 2020. California cows added 179 million pounds or 5.0% more milk in the tank than a year ago, thanks to a 105- pound gain per cow, but 1,000 fewer cows. Wiscon- sin output was up 144 mil- lion pounds or 5.6%, on an 85-pound gain per cow and 17,000 more cows. Idaho was up 2.7%, on 10,000 more cows and 25 pounds more per cow. Mich- igan was up 5.1%, on 17,000 more cows and a 25-pound gain per cow. $1M settlement reached in dairy worker overtime lawsuit The Associated Press S250206-1 YAKIMA, Wash. — Yakima County Superior Court has approved a $1 million settlement that pro- vides retroactive overtime pay for workers at a Lower Yakima Valley dairy. The settlement wraps up a class-action lawsuit fi led in 2016 by Jose Martinez-Cue- vas and Patricia Aguilar on behalf of nearly 300 workers of DeRuyter Brothers Dairy of Outlook, the Yakima Her- ald reported. Martinez-Cuevas and Aguilar alleged that they worked nine to 12 hours a day, six hours a week with- out rest breaks, meal pay or overtime pay. Most of the wage claims were resolved in a $600,000 settlement approved in 2017. That settlement left unre- solved a challenge to state law that exempted workers from overtime pay. The case went to the Wash- ington Supreme Court, which ruled last fall that the overtime exemption for the dairy work- ers was unconstitutional. How- ever, the question of whether the DeRuyter workers were entitled to retroactive over- time pay went back to Yakima County Superior Court. The case was set for a hearing, but a settlement was reached, said Andrea Schmitt, an attorney for Columbia Legal Services, which repre- sented the workers. Former owners Jacobus and Geneva DeRuyter have sold the dairy but will still ful- fi ll the settlement terms. The DeRuyters’ law- yer said the original com- plaint challenged state law on overtime, but didn’t claim DeRuyter violated the law as written at the time.