R 330 |
2017 -- S 0919 SUBSTITUTE A Enacted 06/21/2017 |
S E N A T E R E S O L U T I O N |
RESPECTFULLY REQUESTING THAT THE RI CONGRESSIONAL DELEGATION WORK TO REVISE THE FOOD SAFETY MODERNIZATION ACT AND TO DELAY ITS IMPLEMENTATION |
Introduced By: Senators Sosnowski, Coyne, Calkin, Kettle, and Miller |
Date Introduced: May 30, 2017 |
WHEREAS, The Food Safety Modernization Act was signed into law in 2011 by |
President Obama, with the goal to ensure the U.S. food supply is safe by shifting the focus from |
responding to contamination to preventing it; and |
WHEREAS, The American public deserves access to the safest food in the world, and an |
important way to meet that goal is through policy that prevents food contamination; and |
WHEREAS, Although the Food and Drug Administration has been charged with |
implementing the Food Safety Modernization Act, the FDA lacks experience with the |
complexities of overseeing our nation’s agricultural lands which experience would allow it to |
effectively regulate food production; and |
WHEREAS, the United States Department of Agriculture was founded by President |
Abraham Lincoln in 1862, when half of the Nation’s population lived and worked on farms, the |
USDA’s role has evolved with the economy; and |
WHEREAS, the USDA works towards our shared goals of rural prosperity, preservation |
of forests and working lands, sustainable agricultural production, job opportunities and safe, |
nutritious food for every American; and |
WHEREAS, the USDA provides leadership on food, agriculture, natural resources, rural |
development, nutrition, and related issues based on sound public policy, the best available |
science, and efficient management; and |
WHEREAS, the USDA has a multi-year strategic plan consisting of five strategic goals |
which contain 16 objectives including increasing agricultural opportunities by ensuring a robust |
safety net, creating new markets, and supporting a competitive agricultural system, and |
WHEREAS, Regulating the way foods are grown in order to prevent food contamination |
should therefore be overseen by the United States Department of Agriculture; and |
WHEREAS, Rhode Island agriculture is an important and growing sector of the state’s |
economy with over 1,200 farms employing more than 2,500 workers, covering over 69,000 acres; |
and |
WHEREAS, A strong local food system creates growth in many related businesses from |
food processors, to storage facilities and transportation networks, to restaurants and tourism; and |
WHEREAS, Rhode Island’s farms are predominantly small-scale family run businesses |
that have made the state a national leader in the quantity of fresh fruits and vegetables sold |
directly from the farm to consumers; and |
WHEREAS, According to the United States Department of Agriculture, there are 2,055 |
people who operate farms in Rhode Island; 773 of them are women and for 619 of them, farming |
is their primary source of income, and only 86 farmers in the state of Rhode Island receive 100% |
of their income from farming, and |
WHEREAS, Farms vary in size in the state with 433 farms that are 9 acres or less in area |
and only four farms in Rhode Island that are over 1,000 acres, and the average Rhode Island farm |
has 56 acres; and |
WHEREAS, Rhode Island has the highest farmland prices in the nation, while the |
average income for a Rhode Island farm is $47,990 per year, and the US Department of |
Agriculture classifies any farm with gross sales of less than $250,000 as a small farm; and |
WHEREAS, The largest age groups for Rhode Island farmers are 45-49 years old and |
people who are 70 years or older while the average age for a Rhode Island farmer is 57 years old; |
and |
WHEREAS, When the Food Safety Modernization Act is fully implemented, farms will |
be responsible for adhering to the Act. At that point, the U.S. Farm Bureau claims it will be |
uneconomical for small farmers to continue to operate; and |
WHEREAS, The Tester-Hagan Amendment to the Food Safety Modernization Act would |
exempt farms with gross food sales of less than $25,000 annually, and would exempt farms with |
gross food sales of between $25,000 and $500,000 from much of the Act if their sales are to |
qualified retailers and sales are not more than 275 miles from the farm; and |
WHEREAS, the Food and Drug Administration has proposed rules that will allow that |
agency to revoke the Tester-Hagan Amendment and to require that even small-scale, direct |
marketing farms comply with the Food Safety Modernization Act, and |
WHEREAS, The various categories and methods of farming in addition to the various |
sizes of farms throughout the United States create myriad complexities requiring different |
regulatory treatment with which the US Department of Agriculture works, regulates, preserves |
and sustains since it is charged with overseeing, protecting and increasing agricultural |
opportunities. The USDA has thus earned the trust of American farmers; now therefore be it |
RESOLVED, That this Senate hereby respectfully requests that the President of the |
United States and Congress delay the implementation of the law and ensure the Tester-Hagan |
Amendment is complied with or delay the implementation of the law as it pertains to small farms |
until it can be further amended so that the United States Department of Agriculture is responsible |
for its implementation and so that it exempts small farms from regulations that are cost |
prohibitive and could force our farmers out of business; and be it further |
RESOLVED, That failing such amendments, this Senate respectfully requests that the |
Food Safety Modernization Act be repealed; and be it further |
RESOLVED, That the Secretary of State be and hereby is authorized and directed to |
transmit duly certified copies of this resolution to the Rhode Island Congressional Delegation. |
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LC002775/SUB A/2 |
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