Farm-To-Consumer Legal Defense Fund v. Schafer

CourtDistrict Court, District of Columbia
DecidedJuly 23, 2009
DocketCivil Action No. 2008-1546
StatusPublished

This text of Farm-To-Consumer Legal Defense Fund v. Schafer (Farm-To-Consumer Legal Defense Fund v. Schafer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Farm-To-Consumer Legal Defense Fund v. Schafer, (D.D.C. 2009).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

) FARM-TO-CONSUMER LEGAL ) DEFENSE FUND, et al., ) ) Plaintiffs, ) ) v. ) Civil Action No. 08-1546 (RMC) ) TOM VILSACK, Secretary, ) U.S. DEPARTMENT OF ) AGRICULTURE,1 et al., ) ) Defendants. ) )

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Plaintiffs sue the Secretary of the U.S. Department of Agriculture (“USDA”) and the

Director of the Michigan Department of Agriculture (“MDA”) seeking to enjoin the implementation

and enforcement of the National Animal Identification System (“NAIS”). Plaintiffs object to MDA’s

transition from the unique state-created animal and premises identification system to the nationally

uniform NAIS. Before the Court are USDA’s motion to dismiss and MDA’s motion to dismiss

and/or for summary judgment. For the reasons explained herein, the Court will grant USDA’s

motion to dismiss under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(1), and will grant MDA’s motion for

summary judgment under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56.

I. FACTS

The individual Plaintiffs are farmers who raise livestock in a sustainable manner, all

but one of whom live in Michigan. The lead Plaintiff is an advocacy group of which each individual

1 Pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 25(d), Tom Vilsack is substituted as Secretary for his predecessor, Ed Schafer, Secretary of the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Plaintiff is a member. They complain that USDA is “destroying their pleasant agricultural way of

life” by developing the NAIS. Pls.’ Opp’n to USDA’s Mot. to Dismiss at 6. Plaintiffs assert that

NAIS requires Premises Identification Numbers (“PINs”) for each of their farms and radio frequency

identification devices (“RFIDs”)2 for each of their cattle, both of which result in the collection of

information into a huge national database against their wills and in violation of their religious

beliefs.3 Because the MDA has adopted the NAIS format to identify individual cattle, imposes PINs

on their farms, and requires RFID tags when cattle are moved intrastate to market or slaughter,

Plaintiffs complain that it is complicit with USDA and also violating their rights.

A. The National Animal Identification System

Commencing in 2003, USDA has taken steps to develop the NAIS, a Federal-State-

Industry initiative that is designed to trace animals so that those associated with an incident of a

livestock disease such as bovine tuberculosis (“TB”) can be identified and the disease contained.

See 69 Fed. Reg. 35,575 (June 25, 2004). USDA issued an interim rule in November 2004 and a

final rule in July 2007, amending its regulations to recognize the NAIS identification format as an

2 An RFID tag is an object that can be applied to or incorporated into a product, animal, or person for the purpose of identification and tracking using radio waves. 3 Plaintiffs’ religious beliefs include the belief that they are “endowed by their Creator with dominion and control over all the animals on earth.” Pls.’ Opp’n to MDA’s Mot. to Dismiss and/or for Summ. J. at 15. This religious tenet assertedly is violated by NAIS “because dominion and control has now been transferred to USDA and MDA.” Id. Further, Plaintiffs believe “they are not allowed to take ‘the mark’ of NAIS” and that the imposition of PINs and RFIDs causes them to violate this tenet of their religion as well. Id. Plaintiffs Glen Mast and Robert Alexander, who are Old Order Amish, allege further injury: “one tenet of their beliefs is that they must be farmers, yet the cost of complying with NAIS is prohibitive and may force these two Plaintiffs to quit farming altogether.” Id. Additionally, their religious beliefs eschew technology, directly contrary to the use of RFIDs, scanners and computer programs, and discourage them from outside contact, yet their private data is stored in a national database. See id.

-2- additional numbering system to identify animals in interstate commerce and the premises where they

are held. See 69 Fed. Reg. 64,644 (Nov. 8, 2004); 72 Fed. Reg. 39,301 (July 18, 2007).

Conceptually at least, NAIS is intended to identify with particularity all livestock and poultry

entering the food chain through interstate commerce and the farms from which they came. Plaintiffs

are alarmed by such a gargantuan collection of personal information about themselves and their

livelihoods. See 1st Am. Compl. ¶ 46 (“In the 2004 interim rule, USDA recognized the massive

scope of NAIS, acknowledging the presence of over one million cattle producers and 95 million beef

and dairy cattle in the United States, not including hogs, sheep, poultry and other domestic animals,

which would ‘need to be identified if the NAIS were to be fully implemented.’”). Each of the

individual Plaintiffs “ha[s] either already decided that complying with NAIS is too costly and thus

[they] will have to quit farming altogether, that it infringes on their personal freedoms and invades

their privacy, or that the NAIS program violates their religious freedoms and beliefs.” Id. ¶ 3.

NAIS has three components: (1) premises identification (locations that manage or

hold animals), which constitutes a unique seven-character identifier; (2) animal identification (either

individually or with a group/lot number), which associates an animal with a premises and gives its

birthplace; and (3) animal tracking, so that as an animal moves from one to another premises, its

individual number will be associated with the new premises identification number. The Animal and

Plant Health Inspection Service, a component agency of USDA, administers the Animal Health and

Protection Act, 7 U.S.C. § 8301 et seq., which empowers the Secretary of USDA to control interstate

and foreign commerce in animals when necessary for the control of animal disease. It has developed

NAIS as part of that effort. Neither the regulations issued by USDA nor any rules or guidance

documents issued by USDA to develop aspects of NAIS govern the intrastate movement of cattle.

-3- Decisions to use NAIS compliant identifiers for the intrastate movement of cattle are made by the

states.

B. MDA Adoption of NAIS Format

Plaintiffs complain that USDA “is using the State of Michigan as a puppet to

implement NAIS in Michigan under the guise of eradicating TB, a disease that is not being caused

by animals on farms but rather is being caused by wildlife in Michigan.” 1st Am. Compl. ¶ 58.

MDA retorts that it has exercised its own discretion, over a period of years, to require animal

identification and premises identification in an effort to eradicate bovine TB in the state, and

independently decided to require PINs and RFID tags for cattle being moved within Michigan.

Michigan’s Animal Industry Act, Mich. Comp. Laws § 287.701 et seq., is similar to

the federal law in that its purpose is “to protect the health, safety, and welfare of humans and

animals.” Id. § 287.701(2). Section 9(8) of that law authorizes the Director of the MDA to require

the identification of animals and to control their movements intrastate:

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