- USDA CCC interest rates for December
- County harvest reports
- Last NE and IA harvest progress reports
- Iowa Gov extends temp. weight limit exemption
- Insecticides and non-target insects
- USDA's farm prices index down nearly 8% in November
- Decommissioning Old Wells Protects Water Quality
- Farm Payment Question Lingers
- Lame Duck Session Continues
- Soil tests help plan for next season
- Now's the time to order trees
- Dairy producers struggling
- Farm Credit elections upcoming
- Publisher among speakers at NC convention
- NE Pork 2nd annual Environmental Stewards award
- Nebraska Corn Board Checkoff Update
- GAO Report Critical of Certain Program Payments
- Key South Korean Retailers to Stock Beef
- Procedure Challenged in VeraSun Bankruptcy
- ERS Estimates Farm Income
- Interim director made permanent at Neb. sanctuary
- China lifts food price controls
- Colo., Kan. in top court in water dispute
- ND farmer defies government by draining wetlands
- Turning Long-time ‘Bane’ Into a Crop
- Comment Period on Greenhouse Gases Ends
- Agencies Set Energy Corridors
- Seedstock sire selection and cow herd management clinics
- Postville plant could reopen soon
- West Point Implement of Columbus new Massey Ferguson dealer
- Aurora Coop financial results
- Nebraska Energy Plan coming together
- Neb. farmers encouraged to sample soil
- Food deserts studied
- Moran asks Obama for Cuba trade reform
- Churches urge help in plant closing
Earlier this year - USDA’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service announced the U.S. was brucellosis free in livestock for the first time since 1934. But now Montana has lost its federal disease-free status for the disease. As a result - all cattle being shipped out of state must be tested. That’s expected to cost Montana ranchers six to 12-million dollars.
The state will have to wait until May of 2009 - a year after the most recent case of brucellosis - to request reinstatement of the disease-free status. To regain that status - state officials will expand cattle vaccinations and find ways to keep cattle from interacting with wildlife that carry the disease. Federal DNA testing points to wildlife as the source of the most recent infection - with elk the most likely culprit. An earlier infection - detected in May of 2007 - was the state’s first since 1985.
Wyoming is also at risk of losing its disease-free status. An infection was discovered in that state in June. Officials in Wyoming and Montana have complained federal brucellosis regulations are too rigid and do not account for the unique situation of the disease in Yellowstone National Park’s wildlife. But according to USDA - the spread of the disease to other states could carry a heavy economic toll - an estimated 80-million dollars annually.
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