*Other forms of unpasteurized milk distribution may also be allowed in any particular state. **There is no law either legalizing or prohibiting herd shares. State is aware herd share programs currently exist and has taken no action to try to stop them.Map courtesy of Farm to Consumer Legal Defense Fund
Resistance has a glorified history in this country, beginning
with the founding fathers, and extending to the labor and civil
rights movements last century. We honor one of the resisters,
Dr. Martin Luther King, with a national holiday.
The ranks of food resisters are now expanding rapidly. Driven by
increasingly harsh crackdowns by local and federal agencies on
small producers and distributors of unpasteurized (raw) milk and
other nutrient-dense foods, growing numbers of individuals
involved in this part of the food chain are publicly refusing to
abide by government edicts and shutdown orders.
But the reality for today's rebels is far from glorious. Max
Kane, the owner of a buying club in Wisconsin that distributes
raw milk, is facing jail if his appeal on a contempt of court
conviction last December is denied. He had several times refused
orders from the Wisconsin Department of Agriculture, Trade, and
Consumer Protection to provide information about the farmers who
supply his milk and the names of his raw milk customers.
Stewart, the manager of Rawesome Foods, which was raided June 30
by agents from five federal, state, and local agencies, is
facing the possibility that the private food club he helped
found five years ago could be demolished and plowed under by the
Los Angeles Department of Building and Safety any day. Rawesome
was served with a "Substandard Order" last month after it defied
a closure order by public health authorities following the raid.
Brigitte Ruthman, owner of a 32-acre farm in the Massachusetts
Berkshires, could lose her dairy after she was served in August
with a cease-and-desist order for running a one-cow herd share
serving three shareholders with raw milk, and announced her
intention to resist. (For more on creative raw-milk
arrangements, see
my recent post.)
The point? Resistance is serious stuff all around. What
especially concerns the authorities is that most government
agencies don't have the manpower to cope with widespread
resistance. So they are becoming ever more aggressive about
making examples of those who resist, trying to send the message
that flouting official orders is a fool's course.
That message can be intimidating. "My wife gets a little upset,"
says Vernon Hershberger, the Wisconsin dairy owner who, in a
show of defiance, cut the seals placed on his farm-store
refrigerators in May and has since been hit with two more search
warrants.
As more individuals contemplate resistance, it's important to
consider the ramifications. Here are a half-dozen insights I've
gleaned from speaking with a number of resisters as to what you
can expect if you defy the real food police.
1. You will be treated harshly: The sight of
agriculture agents escorted by one or two state police vehicles
showing up in one's front yard is an intimidating one for most
people. The intent, of course, is to send a grim message to
others who may be contemplating a similar action. Sometimes
there are ongoing search warrants, as in the case of Vernon
Hershberger in Wisconsin. Sometimes there are additional
official orders, as in the case of Rawesome in California.
2. Get used to the loneliness: Some individuals
who resist expect other farmers to back them, and for consumers
to rally to the cause. While consumers have made noise in places
like Wisconsin and Massachusetts by phoning local politicians,
farmers are often shocked by the lack of support they receive
from other farmers. One farmer who spoke out loudly after his
raw dairy was shut down told me several neighboring farmers not
only didn't help, but used the event as an excuse to steal
customers from him. But even those unaffected farmers who are
sympathetic are mostly concerned with making a living so they
can keep up on their home and equipment payments.
3. Better have your family on board: There's
little worse than publicly standing up to the authorities then
having your spouse tell you shortly afterwards that you were a
fool, and that s/he can't take the pressure. One farmer told me
his wife dreads his business trips for fear she'll have to
confront the authorities herself.
4. It is stressful: You should assume you're
being watched a lot, and you never know when the authorities
will show up. The authorities will play on the fear and
uncertainty most people feel, sometimes keeping a farm under
observation, and even waiting till both parents are gone so they
can confront the teenage children left in charge and serve a
search warrant.
5. Going underground is no panacea: One farmer
who stood up in protest decided after a few months to simply do
her raw milk business underground, out of public view. But now,
each time she gets ready to ship or transport the contraband
food items, she feels increasingly nervous: "I'm not naturally a
sneak."
6. Be ready to obtain legal help: Farmers and
food distributors are often loath to seek out legal help because
it's so expensive -- $300 to $500 an hour isn't unusual. Based
on what I've observed, resisters should do whatever they can to
get legal assistance. There are too many instances where search
warrants are defective in one respect or another -- for example,
in not giving authorities the right to use force to gain entry
to buildings or storage areas. Sometimes, there aren't even laws
on the books covering the authorities' actions; in
Massachusetts, agriculture authorities said "cowshare"
arrangements are illegal when issuing a cease-and-desist order
to Brigitte Ruthman, yet there are no laws on the books covering
cowshares. She has since engaged an attorney to help her counter
the case. The Farm-to-Consumer
Legal Defense Fund can provide legal input as well.
There's little doubt that more farmers will stand up to what
seems to many uneven enforcement of food-safety laws, which
favor factory operations over smaller operations. For example,
officials have linked a new strain of E. coli to actual
illnesses,
reports the New York Times, yet they can't even force the
large meat processors to test whether their meat is tainted with
it.
Just understand that the glory days of food resistance haven't yet arrived.
Grist Get Off Your Ass opportunity: Learn more about the raw-milk resisters through Sandor Katz's The Revolution Will Not Be Microwaved: Inside America's Underground Food Movements, Nina Planck's Real Food, and Gumpert's own book, The Raw Milk Revolution.
Gloom and doom with a sense of humor®.
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