Raw Deal for Raw Milk
By Senator Mike Folmer
Posted June 1, 2008
Prior to Gov. Ed Rendell’s
administration, state government was supportive of the Commonwealth’s proud
heritage of raw milk production. In recent weeks and months, however,
state authorities have become hostile toward our raw milk farmers.
On April 25th, Mennonite
raw milk farmer Mark Nolt of Newville had his farm raided for the second
time. This time Nolt was arrested, while officials from the Pennsylvania
Department of Agriculture (PDA) seized $30,000 worth of cheese and other
products intended to feed families, including his own. PDA agents also
seized parts from equipment necessary for Nolt to run his raw milk operation,
thus crippling his livelihood and means for providing for himself and his
family.
The significant volume of
raw milk foods seized by the authorities was thrown away, even as nearly
1.2 million Pennsylvanians are at risk for hunger, according the PDA’s
web site.
Elizabethtown dairy farmer
Glenn Wise is a farmer-member of a private organization that sells milk
only to community members. He was issued three citations for allegedly
selling raw milk without the proper state permit.
While Wise, Nolt and several
others have been targeted for allegedly being in violation of the state’s
requirement to have a permit to sell raw milk, other raw milk farmers who
have permits have also been subject to the Rendell administration’s harassment.
Additionally, those wishing to obtain a raw milk permit have suddenly found
it more difficult to do so.
Why the crackdown on the
Commonwealths’ longstanding raw milk tradition? Answer: the administration
has succumbed to an irrational fear of the health aspects of raw milk.
The truth is this: properly
collected from cows fed with organic grass, raw milk has no appreciable
negative consequences for the consumer. In fact, raw milk from grass-fed
cows contains natural antibiotic properties that help protect it from pathogenic
bacteria. Raw milk is also more nutritious than pasteurized milk because
pasteurization destroys heat-sensitive vitamins and minerals, including
Vitamin B and thiamin, as well as positive enzymes. Pasteurization also
destroys friendly, pathogen-eating bacteria. Pasteurized milk sickens people
in far greater numbers than does the more heavily regulated raw product,
although admittedly far more people drink pasteurized milk.
Let me offer an important
disclaimer: any food can be contaminated, including raw and pasteurized
milk. What matters is how the milk is produced, handled and packaged.
Consumers should always employ
the concept of caveat emptor (“buyer beware”), and use their good sense
when purchasing raw milk and its byproducts.
The bottom line is this:
state government needs to get off the backs of our raw milk farmers. The
overwhelming majority are hardworking, conscientious people who take great
pride in producing a safe, healthful product to the numerous consumers
in Pennsylvania who appreciate the taste, quality, and benefits of raw
milk.
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