News Desk
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
Cattle Raisers meet with Mexico’s ag secretary
FORT
WORTH, Texas, June 7, 2006―Leaders
of Texas and Southwestern Cattle Raisers Association met June 2
with Franciso Javier Mayorga-Castaneda, secretary of agriculture
for Mexico, to discuss beef industry issues that involve our
southern neighbor.
Mayorga’s visit to the Fort Worth area was hosted by
TSCRA and the Texas Christian University Ranch Management Program.
Participating in the discussions were TSCRA Executive Vice
President Matt Brockman and David Winters, vice chair of TSCRA’s
Animal Health Committee, who ranches near Del Rio on the Mexican
border.
Foremost
among TSCRA’s concerns was reinstating exports of U.S. beef
cattle seedstock to Mexico. The border was closed in 2004 after
the December 2003 discovery of bovine spongiform encephalopathy in
Washington State.
“The
United States has proven unequivocally BSE is not a threat to our
cattle herd,” said Brockman. “We have tested over 700,000
cattle with only two positive results.”
TSCRA
urged the secretary to work with USDA to allow imports of beef
cattle under the same protocol that is currently being developed
for the export of dairy heifers to Mexico.
“Purebred
seedstock trade between Mexico and Texas has existed for decades,
resulting in mutual benefits for ranchers on both sides of the
border,” Winters emphasized.
From
Jan. 1, 1999, to December 2003, the United States exported 598,501
head of live cattle to Mexico, valued at $553.4 million.
TSCRA
also urged Secretary Mayorga to continue efforts to eradicate TB
in Mexico in order to avoid the imposition of more stringent entry
requirements for Mexican cattle.
Currently,
Mexico ships 10,000 head of feeder cattle a month to the United
States.
TSCRA
pointed out that tests from TB-infected cattle in four U.S. states
show the genetic fingerprint is very similar to that found in
Mexican-origin feeder cattle that had been imported.
Texas,
Minnesota, Michigan and New Mexico have lost their TB-free status
from USDA. Texas has implemented extremely costly procedures to
regain TB-free status. USDA is currently reviewing the state’s
application.
TSCRA
leaders emphasized the mutual benefit of trade between Mexico and
the United States, and Texas in particular.
“Much
of the success of this of this two-way trade has been because of
the close cooperation between the governments and livestock
industries of the two countries,” Brockman said.
TSCRA-17-2006
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