Meat
Industry May Shut Down For Weeks Due To U.S. Spending Cuts
- Without USDA inspectors, meat plants would have to close
- Production losses of $10 billion possible
- White House ties budget cuts to everyday life (Meatpackers say USDA can avoid mass shutdowns)
8
Febraury, 2013
By
Charles Abbott
WASHINGTON,
Feb 8 (Reuters) - The Obama administration warned on Friday that
across-the-board spending cuts set to take effect in March may result
in furloughing every U.S. meat and poultry inspector for two weeks,
causing the meat industry to shut down.
By
law, meatpackers and processors are not allowed to ship beef, pork,
lamb and poultry meat without the Agriculture Department's inspection
seal.
The
prospect of mass furloughs of meat and food inspectors was part of a
broader White House warning about the effects of the potential
spending cuts on everyday life. Meatpackers said a shut-down would
devastate consumers as well as their industry.
President
Barack Obama and congressional Republicans still must resolve
differences over spending cuts and tax increases, dubbed the "fiscal
cliff," which essentially was delayed by both sides from
happening on Jan. 1 and was pushed back until March.
"USDA's
Food Safety and Inspection Service may have to furlough all employees
for approximately two weeks," a White House statement said.
An
estimated $10 billion in production would be lost during a two-week
furlough, said a USDA official, and consumers could see meat
shortages and higher prices as a result.
Agriculture
Secretary Tom Vilsack lamented across-the-board spending cuts during
a speech to state agriculture directors earlier this week.
"There
is not much we can do when Congress says to cut every line item by a
certain percent," Vilsack said. He said employee pay accounted
for the bulk of spending at the meat safety agency.
USDA
spends about $1 billion on meat safety annually and has 8,400
inspectors at 6,290 slaughter and processing plants.
The
American Meat Institute, a trade group, said the USDA should try to
keep meat plants open while meeting targets for cuts, rather than
going ahead with a mass furlough.
It
said the agency could suspend non-essential programs and furlough
employees other than inspectors to avoid "inflicting unnecessary
hardship" on the meat industry.
A
trade group for ranchers and cattle feeders said "food safety is
a partnership" that requires government participation. "Our
common goal is to ensure that inspections remain unhindered,"
the National Cattleman's Beef Association said.
Chicago
livestock traders mostly viewed the White House threat as a budgetary
bluff.
"Can
you imagine the flak?" asked Joseph Ocrant, a trader who said he
was skeptical the White House would pull inspectors out of plants for
two weeks.
Americans
consume more than 200 pounds (91 kg) of meat apiece each year, an
average of slightly more than one-half pound a day.
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