I had an appropriately sobering New Year’s conversation with veteran raw milk combatant Aajonus Vonderplanitz, whom I had been trying to make contact with over the last couple days, since he announced his plan Sunday to raise $40,000 and file a new suit challenging AB 1735, California’s new ten-coliform-per-milliliter raw milk regulation that takes effect today.

 

He’s a health care practitioner who advocates a raw food diet, based heavily on raw dairy products, and he’s setting up a clinic in Thailand, so the best time to talk turned out to be about 1 this morning.

 

I’ve had some email correspondence with him over the last couple years, but this was our first actual conversation. I wanted to quiz him about his planned suit, since it struck me as an unfortunate dilution of the campaign against AB 1735. Why not combine forces, and funds, into one major suit, rather than split fund-raising efforts for two court actions? 

 

Aajonus told me he only decided to back a second suit when he concluded that Mark McAfee of Organic Pastures Dairy Co. and Ron Garthwaite of Claravale Farm, along with their attorney, Gary Cox of the Farm-to-Consumer Legal Defense Fund, were “making a big mistake.”

 

The big failure of the suit they filed last week is that it doesn’t seek an immediate permanent injunction to halt enforcement of AB 1735. “You’ve got to file for an injunction.” Otherwise, the suit could take years to be heard, and in the meantime California’s Department of Food and Agriculture has no incentive not to enforce AB 1735.

 

In addition, the suit should be focused on the health injuries facing California consumers who would be denied raw milk by enactment of AB 1735, rather than on the constitutional issues of the suit filed last week. He said that while he was originally planning a class action suit, he decided on the injury-based suit to force the court to depose each individual claiming injury. “So far, we have 700 plaintiffs,” he said. “I would like 10,000 plaintiffs. If they have to depose each person, it will cost the state a fortune.”

 

As evidence of the OPDC-Claravale suit’s weakness, he points to the CDFA’s statement immediately after the suit was filed, in a San Francisco Chronicle article, that the agency intends to immediately begin enfocement of AB 1735.

 

He says he tried to convince Mark, Ron, and Gary of their error, but they wouldn’t listen. “They think I’m not an attorney and I don’t know what I am talking about. I had to let them see they fucked up. That’s part of the learning process.”

 

Now that the screwup is apparent, he is moving ahead with the new suit, which he says will seek injunctive relief. For Aajonus’ explanation of his action, and the SF Chronicle article, see his blog posting on a raw-food web site.


Aajonus told me he has been fighting against unreasonable raw milk regulations since 1970, and claims he’s had success over the years changing the regulations in six states: Nebraska, Indiana, Pennsylvania, New York, Arizona, and California. His biggest success was in California, in 2000 and 2001, when he was instrumental in overturning Los Angeles County prohibitions on raw milk, which eventually led to the relaxation of regulations allowing retail sales by Organic Pastures and Claravale.

 

“I’ve studied the law for seven years. I put Los Angeles County through a legal process for seven years.”

 

He sees the current situation in California regarding AB 1735 as typical of the state and federal campaigns against raw milk. “It’s the same old stuff. They just re-attack. Every two to four years, they re-attack.”

 

Aajonus makes a lot of sense. I’ve pointed out several times my sense that Mark McAfee is being too trusting of assurances from state officials that they’ll support repeal of AB 1735. I understand that Mark is trying to lobby via consumer pressure, using the court suit as last-ditch threat.

 

But words that aren’t written down in some kind of legal or legislative form have no meaning to the regulators. Aajonus is saying that the only language they understand is active farmer resistance, substantive court action, and real legislation. In AB 1735, the regulators have the latter. For information on Aajonus’ planned legal campaign, go to www.saverawmilk.org.