He kills only young cattle at his processing plant: certified
Angus, 12 to 20 months old. Animals that young just don't get the disease — at
least, not at a detectable level. Testing every carcass is "highly
unnecessary," Tarpoff said.
Still, he's desperate to do it.
But the federal government won't let him.
Tarpoff's best customer, a Japanese beef
distributor, will import American cattle only if they've been tested for BSE (news
- web
sites). That's the policy of the Japanese government, since a dairy cow infected
with bovine spongiform encephalopathy, a brain-wasting disease, was discovered
last year in
"If our government just permitted us to test, we could have
that business back instantly," Tarpoff said.
Under a 1913 law, the U.S. Department of Agriculture (news
- web
sites) has sole authority to license "veterinary biologics," such
as diagnostic tests. So far, the agency has licensed the mad cow test kits only
to itself. They can be used only by USDA scientists or at seven USDA-approved
labs.
And they can be used only to further the USDA's surveillance
system, which monitors the nation's herd for BSE by testing less than 1% of
cattle sent to slaughter.
"Let's say you're conducting your own testing, and you get a
false positive. You yell out: 'Guess what? We have a positive!' Know what would
happen? Everybody in the world would stop trading with the
"Or let's say you get a cow that tests positive, but instead
of telling us, you go bury it out in the pasture," Rogers said.
"That's why we need to have one confirmatory agency in charge."
To which Tarpoff responds: fine.
He's happy to leave the government in charge. He'll send his
samples to a USDA lab. He'll let the USDA monitor his packinghouse to make sure
no steer is sold, or disposed of, unless it tests clean. He'll pay the
estimated $15 to $30 a test, so taxpayers don't have to.
"We'll fit in with whatever protocol they want," he
said.
But the USDA will not come up with a protocol — not for using the
mad cow test to guarantee the safety of specific meat products. "It's not
a food safety test. It's a surveillance test," chief veterinary officer W.
Ron DeHaven said this spring.
A fatal disorder that causes cattle to stagger and fall, BSE is
caused by malformed proteins, known as prions, which
eat holes in the brain. Humans can contract a form of BSE by eating infected
meat. More than 150 people worldwide, most of them in
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The USDA, however, has resisted calls by consumer advocates to
test more of the 35 million cattle slaughtered each year. After the BSE case
surfaced in
And starting this summer, the USDA plans to step up surveillance.
In the past, the agency tested about 20,000 animals a year. It will sample at
least 200,000 cattle — most of them injured, sick or older — in the next 18
months.
But the system is not perfect. This month, the USDA acknowledged
that a cow that staggered and fell at a slaughterhouse in
Insisting that American beef is the safest in the world, many
ranchers say the USDA has already done enough. The National Cattlemen's Beef
Assn., which represents 250,000 ranchers, strongly opposes universal testing.
Its producers worry that if one packinghouse — however small —
began marketing its beef as "BSE tested," consumers would infer that
it was safer. Then pressure would build on all producers to test every animal.
That could cost the industry $1 billion a year, according to Gregg
Doud, the group's chief economist.
Many ranchers also fear that letting a few small producers test
their cattle will hurt beef exports overall.
Dozens of nations closed their markets to American beef after the
USDA disclosed the mad cow case Dec. 23. Industry officials hope their most
lucrative market,
"I can understand their position. I truly can," Tarpoff said. "But from a business standpoint, it
hurts."
The cooperative he manages, Gateway Beef, was founded a year and a
half ago by 59 cattle ranchers in
With four huge processors controlling 80% of the
The cooperative sells to several posh restaurants and a kosher
grocery in
A distributor there offered a premium for "spare parts"
considered of little value in the
The co-op slaughters just 200 cattle a week. Even on such small
volume, Tarpoff estimates that the Japanese deal
would have brought in at least $50,000 a week. He was ready to ship his first
refrigerated boxes when the BSE case in
As he walks through his slaughterhouse cooler, Tarpoff
mourns the lost revenue.
Rows and rows of skinned steer, split down the middle, dangle from
meat hooks. Dark gray beef tongues dry on a silver tray. In the cutting room,
workers slice the fat from 70-pound hunks of marbled loin. All of this meat has
been sold, some at a good price. But it would be worth many times more if
Gateway could test it for BSE.
"All we're trying to do is satisfy our customer. That's what
business is all about," said Bill Boston, a co-op member.
"The government should dictate minimum safety standards. But
once that's done, if someone wants to go above and beyond, I would like to
think we live in a country where we're able to do that," said Bill
Fielding, chief operating officer for Creekstone
Farms Premium Beef, based in Arkansas City, Kan.
Last month, the USDA turned down Creekstone's
request to test all its cattle — which, like Gateway's, are mostly young.
Fielding has appealed that decision and is considering legal action. In the
meantime, he's making sure the USDA sees the more than 1,000 letters of support
he's received from consumers.
Politicians at the state and national levels have also taken up
the fight.
In Washington, Sen. Pat Roberts (news,
bio,
voting
record) (R-Kan.) has urged the USDA to stand firm against private testing.
But Sen. Barbara Boxer (news,
bio,
voting
record) (D-Calif.) has taken the agency to task.
In a letter last month to Agriculture Secretary Ann M. Veneman,
Boxer wrote: "I fail to understand why we would prevent our farmers and
ranchers from using the best practices to protect people from the dreadful
results of mad cow disease."
Scientists say there's very little, if any, public health value to
the testing Creekstone and Gateway have proposed.
Clinical studies have shown it takes at least 30 months for mad
cow disease to show up in most cattle, even if they're fed massive amounts of
infectious material.
At the height of the BSE epidemic in
Since Creekstone and Gateway slaughter
exclusively young cattle, testing at those plants would have "no
scientific value," Hueston said.
"It would be like going into an elementary school and testing
for Alzheimer's. They're all going to be negative," said Leon Thacker,
director of the Animal Disease Diagnostic Lab at
Still, Thacker understands why a beef producer would want to test,
if only to reassure his best-paying customer: "I can see both sides of
this one."