uploaded-file-41131There is much California-related raw-milk news contained among the comments on my previous posting. Plus, there is additional news, not yet posted.

 

It all adds up to a highly fluid, and confusing, situation. Here is my understanding of the key developments:

 

— Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger’s office today sent out a highly misleading response to the many hundreds of individuals objecting to AB 1735, the ten-coliform-per-milliliter standard for raw milk that took effect yesterday. Henwhisperer posted the text following yesterday’s post, and a number of readers emailed it to me as well.

 

The key paragraph is this one: “Raw milk has been known to be a source of foodborne illness for decades.  For example, in September 2006, the California Department of Public Health linked six cases of infection with the deadly E. coli O157:H7 to the consumption of raw milk.  The median age of the victims was 8 years old.  In recent years, illness outbreaks have been attributed to raw milk consumption in several states.  In fact, raw milk sold for direct human consumption is illegal in all or part of 42 states.”

 

I mean, where do we begin in punching holes in those statements? The most distressing phrase is the “six cases of infection…” sentence. Per my Sunday posting, the California Department of Food and Agriculture paid more than $11,000 to Organic Pastures Dairy Co. last July because it couldn’t prove that statement, yet the state’s Department of Public Health, and now the governator’s office, continue to throw it around.

 

— The Farm-to-Consumer Legal Defense Fund lawyer representing Organic Pastures and Claravale Farm, Gary Cox, is currently drafting a letter to be sent to the California attorney general’s office demanding that the governor’s office “cease and desist” from spreading the lie about six children being infected with E.coli 0157:H7, says Mark McAfee of OPDC. “These are unfounded statements,” he says. The governor’s office “knows nothing about the settlement” between OPDC and CDFA from last July, he adds. “It’s the fish story that never ends.”

 

— The claim by Aajonus Vonderplanitz, the veteran raw-milk advocate, in his widely distributed email on Sunday that “raw milk will not be on your shelves in California very much after January 1, 2008,” has caused at least a minor uproar. Mark reports that “a few stores got flustered {by the email} and took (Organic Pastures) raw milk off the shelves.” He says he was able to explain to them that AB 1735 isn’t an outright ban on raw milk, but rather “a process” that over time could make raw milk less widely available, and got the milk restored to grocery shelves.

 

–The Farm-to-Consumer Legal Defense Fund and the Weston A. Price Foundation are both claiming that Aajonus erred in stating that the suit filed on behalf of OPDC and Claravale was flawed for not seeking some kind of immediate injunction. According to an email sent out this evening by the Fund:

 

"The Legal Defense Fund did not couple its complaint with a motion for preliminary injunction or temporary restraining order because its complaint was filed before the statute went into effect. Because AB 1735 was not in effect until January 1, 2008, seeking relief in the form of a temporary restraining order or a preliminary injunction would have been dismissed as not ripe for review. Contrary to erroneous claims made by the misleading email {from Aajonus} the Fund is prepared to seek preliminary injunctive relief if the State chooses to enforce the law against either Claravale Farm or Organic Pastures. If the State decides not to enforce the law, and allows the legislative process to take its course, these farmers are protected and can go about their business as usual."

–Finally, Mark says he has evidence that other states cited by CDFA as having a ten-coliform-per-milliliter standard aren’t enforcing it. He says he has filed Freedom of Information Act requests for actual coliform test results in several states to document the matter.

 

All the preceding may have the appearance of a three-ring circus, but in actuality, something very important is going on here. A large and diverse group of citizens has become very engaged in exposing a government sleight-of-hand for what it is. The sneak attack that led to AB 1735 was well planned in many respects, but I’m not sure it took into account the kind of uproar it has created.