And now:Ish <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

From:         Piercing Eyes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
forwarded for informational purposes only...contents have not been verified

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Sat, 15 May 1999 11:29:50 EDT
Subject: Gov't To Help Ailing Bison Industry

Gov't To Help Ailing Bison Industry
.c The Associated Press
 By PHILIP BRASHER

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Nearly extinct a century ago, the buffalo is back -- and
taxpayers are paying for it.

Buffalo ranching is growing so fast there is not a market for all the meat.
As a result, the federal government is stepping in to shore up the industry:
The Agriculture Department recently announced it will buy $6 million in
surplus ground bison this year, one-quarter of the industry's ground-meat
production.

The biggest beneficiary of the purchases likely would be billionaire Ted
Turner, the industry's largest producer and its most prominent proponent.

``People who got into buffalo are basically the rich who got into it for a
novelty,'' complains Randy Mosser, a North Dakota cattle rancher. ``Why do
they need a bailout?''

The bison industry is a victim of its own success.

At the turn of the century there were fewer than 1,500. Now there are an
estimated 250,000 nationwide, and the number is growing as much as 20 percent
a year, according to industry insiders.

Ranchers are so eager to increase their herds that virtually every female
calf is kept for breeding; only males are slaughtered.

Turner, vice chairman of Time Warner Inc., raises 17,000 bison on ranches
totaling 1.4 million acres in Montana, Nebraska and New Mexico. He is buying
50,000 more acres, in South Dakota.

Bison steaks, roasts and similar cuts are popular in Europe and also sell
well in restaurants and steakhouses in parts of this country. But the ground
meat, which is too expensive and too lean, and therefore dry when cooked, for
some consumers' tastes, has been stacking up in processors' warehouses. More
than a third of a typical bison winds up as ground meat.

So the two major bison packers -- the North American Bison Cooperative, of
which Turner is a member, and the Denver Buffalo Co. -- asked USDA to buy the
surplus meat.

USDA bought $2.5 million worth of ground bison last year, and agreed in March
to make the additional $6 million in purchases. The government is paying
$3.45 a pound for the bison, more than twice what it pays for ground beef.
The bison meat is being given to federal nutrition programs for Indians and
migrant workers.

``We made it very clear to the industry that they need to take some
responsibility in adjusting their production to meet the market forces in the
market place. We are not going to be buying bison indefinitely,'' said
Enrique Figueroa, administrator of USDA's Agricultural Marketing Service.

The bison buyout will be only a fraction of the government's food purchases
this year. USDA spends nearly $290 million a year just for meat for various
nutrition programs, including school lunches.

But at Turner's urging, members of the bison cooperative agreed last month to
increase its marketing budget from less than $20,000 a year to $2.5 million.
The cooperative processes 65 percent of the nation's bison.

``We think that there is a market for the meat. ... but the industry has
concentrated more on production than marketing,'' said Russ Miller, who
manages Turner's ranches.

Turner aside, industry officials say it is unfair to portray bison ranchers
as a wealthy lot.

Many Indian tribes are raising bison, and struggling farmers and cattle
ranchers were drawn to the business by the relatively high prices they could
get for bison meat. The buffalo is naturally suited to the harsh northern
Plains climate.

Dennis Sexhus, whose grandfather homesteaded in North Dakota a century ago,
planted his wheat farm to grass in 1994 and now raises 100 bison.

``It's a great use of the land,'' he said.

AP-NY-05-15-99 1129EDT

 Copyright 1998 The Associated Press.  The information  contained in the AP
news report may not be published,  broadcast, rewritten or otherwise
distributed without  prior written authority of The Associated Press.

Reprinted under the fair use http://www4.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.html
doctrine of international copyright law.
           &&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&
          Tsonkwadiyonrat (We are ONE Spirit)
                     Unenh onhwa' Awayaton
                  http://www.tdi.net/ishgooda/       
           &&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&
                             

Reply via email to