Here are the facts in the California raw milk situation:

 

–Prior to January 1, 2008, consumers could buy all the raw milk they wanted, so long as the milk passed two categories of long-established tests for total bacteria and pathogens.

 

–As of January 1, 2008, a third category test requirement was arbitrarily added via AB 1735–that raw milk have a coliform count of less than 10 per milliliter. This would likely have significantly reduced the amount of raw milk allowed for sale.

 

–So great was the opposition that state politicians last week considered new legislation, AB 1604, which would rescind the 10-coliform-per-milliliter standard.

 

–At last week’s hearing, several members of the Assembly’s Agriculture Committee made strong speeches against AB 1735 and the way it was enacted. Raw milk advocates cheered.

 

–When the smoke of the speeches cleared, AB 1604 was changed, to rescind the 10-coliform-per-milliliter standard for only six months. Thereafter? The issue will be re-visited. Maybe a new standard of 50 coliforms per milliliter. Maybe another standard.

 

That’s a victory?

 

Supposing the state arbitrarily took away my right to vote. I then made a big stink, and the state said, okay, we’ll give you back your right to vote…but only for six months. After that, we’ll think about it further, and probably impose some limitations. Perhaps you can only vote in half the elections. We’ll see if you’ve been a good boy.

 

I am so relieved to be getting the state to show any flexibility I say, “Oh, thank you so much, kind state, you are truly benevolent.”

 

Nicole Parra may indeed be a decent person, capable of inspiring speeches. But she also pulled a classic political smooth move. She hung the California Department of Food and Agriculture out to dry, but when all the speeches and testimony were completed, the CDFA still had what it really was after: a new standard to make it tougher for raw milk producers to fill demand. I

 

I wouldn’t be surprised if she told the CDFA folks, “Hey, guys, there’s enough of an outcry here that I’m going to have to hang you out to dry. But don’t take it personally. We won’t get rid of the coliform standard. In six months, the raw milk people probably won’t be paying nearly as much attention, and, well…”

 

Okay, so maybe 50-coliforms-per-milliliter is achievable, but there’s no assurance that is the number, or if it is the number, that it remains the number. The precedent of a new type of standard has been established, and the CDFA survived extreme pressure to get rid of it.

 

This is what Aajonus Vonderplanitz has been warning us about for some weeks now, and what AuLait and Dave Milano are re-reminding us about.

 

The really good news in all this is that the raw milk advocates got organized, and lots of people let the governor and legislators know about their upset. The hearing, so vividly described by Sandrine Hahn, showed the depth of commitment by many people to right a flagrant wrong.

 

The real question going forward is whether individuals who value their nutritional freedom in California can continue to keep the pressure on, and get the coliform standard eliminated. I think that’s what this legislative maneuvering over AB 1604 is really about. The powers that be are betting that in six months, the hue and cry will have died down, and they can go back to tightening the screws on raw milk drinkers.