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Wednesday,

December 14, 2005

Part IV

Department of
Agriculture
Agricultural Marketing Service

7 CFR Parts 1124 and 1131


Milk in the Pacific Northwest and
Arizona-Las Vegas Marketing Areas; Final
Decision on Proposed Amendments to
Marketing Agreement and to Orders;
Proposed Rule

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74166 Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 239 / Wednesday, December 14, 2005 / Proposed Rules

DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE handler is afforded the opportunity for for being subject to the pooling and
a hearing on the petition. After a pricing provisions of the two orders.
Agricultural Marketing Service hearing, the Secretary would rule on the Entities currently defined as producer-
petition. The Act provides that the handlers under the terms of these orders
7 CFR Parts 1124 and 1131 district court of the United States in any will be subject to the pooling and
[Docket No. AO–368–A32, AO–271–A37;
district in which the handler is an pricing provisions of the orders if their
DA–03–04B] inhabitant, or has its principal place of route disposition of fluid milk products
business, has jurisdiction in equity to is more than 3-million pounds per
Milk in the Pacific Northwest and review the Secretary’s ruling on the month.
Arizona-Las Vegas Marketing Areas; petition, provided a bill in equity is Producer-handlers with route
Final Decision on Proposed filed not later than 20 days after the date disposition of less than 3-million
Amendments to Marketing Agreement of the entry of the ruling. pounds during the month will not be
and to Orders subject to the pooling and pricing
Regulatory Flexibility Act and provisions of the orders. To the extent
AGENCY: Agricultural Marketing Service, Paperwork Reduction Act that current producer-handlers for each
USDA. In accordance with the Regulatory order have route disposition of fluid
ACTION: Proposed rule. Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.), the milk products outside of the marketing
Agricultural Marketing Service has areas, such route disposition will be
SUMMARY: This document is the final considered the economic impact of this subject to an order’s pooling and pricing
decision proposing to adopt changes to action on small entities and has certified provisions if total in-area route
provisions of the producer-handler that this final decision will not have a disposition causes them to become fully
definitions of the Pacific Northwest and significant economic impact on a regulated.
Arizona-Las Vegas orders as contained substantial number of small entities. For Assuming that some current
in a Recommended Decision published the purpose of the Regulatory Flexibility producer-handlers will have route
in the Federal Register on April 13, Act, a dairy farm is considered a ‘‘small disposition of fluid milk products of
2005. This document is subject to business’’ if it has an annual gross more than 3-million pounds during the
approval by producers. revenue of less than $750,000, and a month, such producer-handlers will be
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Jack dairy products manufacturer is a ‘‘small regulated subject to the pooling and
Rower, Marketing Specialist or Gino business’’ if it has fewer than 500 pricing provisions of the orders like
Tosi, Associate Deputy Administrator employees. For the purposes of other handlers. Such producer-handlers
for Order Formulation and Enforcement, determining which dairy farms are will account to the pool for their uses
USDA/AMS/Dairy Programs, Order ‘‘small businesses,’’ the $750,000 per of milk at the applicable minimum class
Formulation and Enforcement Branch, year criterion was used to establish a prices and pay the difference between
STOP 0231-Room 2971, 1400 milk marketing guideline of 500,000 their use-value and the blend price of
Independence Avenue SW., pounds per month. Although this the order to the order’s producer-
Washington, DC 20250–0231, (202) 720– guideline does not factor in additional settlement fund.
2357 or (202) 690–1366, e-mail monies that may be received by dairy While this may cause an economic
addresses: jack.rower@usda.gov or producers, it should be an inclusive impact on those entities with more than
gino.tosi@usda.gov. standard for most ‘‘small’’ dairy farmers. 3-million pounds of route sales who
For purposes of determining a handler’s currently are considered producer-
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This size, if the plant is part of a larger handlers by the two orders, the impact
administrative action is governed by the company operating multiple plants that is offset by the benefit to other small
provisions of Sections 556 and 557 of collectively exceed the 500 employee businesses. With respect to dairy
Title 5 of the United States Code and, limit, the plant will be considered a farmers whose milk is pooled on the
therefore, is excluded from the large business even if the local plant has two marketing orders, such dairy
requirements of Executive Order 12866. fewer than 500 employees. farmers who have not heretofore shared
The amendments to the rules Producer-handlers are defined as in the additional revenue that accrues
proposed herein have been reviewed dairy farmers that process only their from the marketwide pooling of Class I
under Executive Order 12988, Civil own milk production. These entities sales by producer-handlers will share in
Justice Reform. They are not intended to must be dairy farmers as a pre-condition such revenue. This will have a positive
have a retroactive effect. If adopted, the to operating processing plants as impact on 486 small dairy farmers in the
proposed amendments would not producer-handlers. The size of the dairy Pacific Northwest and Arizona-Las
preempt any state or local laws, farm determines the production level of Vegas marketing areas. Additionally, all
regulations, or policies, unless they the operation and is the controlling handlers who dispose of more than 3-
present an irreconcilable conflict with factor in the capacity of the processing million pounds of fluid milk products
this rule. plant and possible sales volume per month will pay at least the
The Agricultural Marketing associated with the producer-handler announced Federal order Class I price
Agreement Act of 1937, as amended (7 entity. Determining whether a producer- for such use. This will have a positive
U.S.C. 601–674), provides that handler is considered small or large impact on 18 small regulated handlers.
administrative proceedings must be business must depend on its capacity as To the extent that current producer-
exhausted before parties may file suit in a dairy farm where a producer-handler handlers in the Pacific Northwest and
court. Under Section 608c(15)(A) of the with annual gross revenue in excess of the Arizona-Las Vegas orders become
Act, any handler subject to an order may $750,000 is considered a large business. subject to the pooling and pricing
request modification or exemption from The amendments would place entities provisions, such will be determined in
such order by filing with the Secretary currently considered to be producer- their capacity as handlers. Such entities
a petition stating that the order, any handlers under the Pacific Northwest or will no longer have restrictions
provision of the order, or any obligation the Arizona-Las Vegas orders on the applicable to their business operations
imposed in connection with the order is same terms as all other fully regulated that were conditions for producer-
not in accordance with the law. A handlers provided they meet the criteria handler status and exemption from the

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Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 239 / Wednesday, December 14, 2005 / Proposed Rules 74167

pooling and pricing provisions of the annual marketing exceeds 6-million rules of practice and procedure
two orders. In general, this includes pounds of milk and potentially subject governing the formulation of marketing
being able to buy or acquire any to the pooling and pricing provisions of agreements and marketing orders (7 CFR
quantity of milk from dairy farmers or the order because of route disposition Part 900), at Tempe, Arizona, beginning
other handlers instead of being limited exceeding 3-million pounds per month. on September 23, 2003; reconvened, and
by the current constraints of the two A review of reporting requirements continuing at Seattle, Washington, on
orders. Additionally, the burden of was completed under the Paperwork November 17, 2003; and reconvened
balancing their milk production is Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. and concluding at Alexandria, Virginia,
relieved. Milk production in excess of Chapter 35). It was determined that on January 23, 2004, pursuant to a
what is needed to satisfy their Class I these proposed amendments would notice of hearing issued July 31, 2003,
route disposition needs will receive the have minimal impact on reporting, and a correction to the notice issued
minimum price protection established recordkeeping, or other compliance August 23, 2003, and notices of
under the terms of the two orders. The requirements for entities currently reconvened hearings issued October 27,
burden of balancing milk supplies will considered producer-handlers under the 2003, and December 18, 2003.
be borne by all producers and handlers Pacific Northwest and the Arizona-Las Upon the basis of the evidence
who are pooled and regulated under the Vegas marketing orders because they introduced at the hearing and the record
terms of the two orders. would remain identical to the current thereof, the Administrator, on April 7,
During September 2003, the Pacific requirements applicable to all other 2005, issued a Recommended Decision
Northwest had 16 pool distributing regulated handlers who are currently containing notice of the opportunity to
plants, 1 pool supply plant, 3 subject to the pooling and pricing file written exceptions thereto.
cooperative pool manufacturing plants, provisions of the two orders. No new The material issues, findings,
7 partially regulated distributing plants, forms are proposed and no additional conclusions, and rulings of the
8 producer-handler plants and 2 exempt reporting requirements would be Recommended Decision are hereby
plants. Of the 27 regulated handlers, 16 necessary. approved and adopted and set forth
or 59 percent were considered large This notice does not require herein. The material issue on the record
businesses. Of the 691 dairy farmers additional information collection that of hearing relate to:
whose milk was pooled on the order, requires clearance by the Office of 1. The regulatory status of producer-
223 or 32 percent were considered large Management and Budget (OMB) beyond handlers.
businesses. If these amendatory actions currently approved information
are not undertaken, 68 percent of the Findings and Conclusions
collection. The primary sources of data
dairy farmers (468) in the Pacific used to complete the forms are routinely The following findings and
Northwest order who are small used in most business transactions. conclusions on the material issues are
businesses will continue to be adversely Forms require only a minimal amount of based on evidence presented at the
affected by the operations of large information which can be supplied hearing and the record thereof:
producer-handlers. without data processing equipment or a 1. The Regulatory Status of Producer-
For the Arizona-Las Vegas order, trained statistical staff. Thus, the Handlers
during September 2003 there were 3 information collection and reporting
pool distributing plants, 1 cooperative Amendments to the producer-handler
burden is relatively small. Requiring the
pool manufacturing plant, 18 partially definitions of the Pacific Northwest and
same reports for all handlers does not
regulated distributing plants, 2 the Arizona-Las Vegas milk marketing
significantly disadvantage any handler
producer-handler plants and 3 exempt orders are adopted. This decision will
that is smaller than the industry
plants (including an exempt plant result in all producer-handlers with in-
average.
located in Clark County Nevada) Prior documents in this proceeding: area route disposition of more than 3-
operated by 22 handlers. Of these Notice of Hearing: Issued July 31, million pounds of fluid milk products
plants, 15 or 68 percent were considered 2003; published August 6, 2003 (68 FR per month being subject to the pooling
large businesses. Of the 106 dairy 46505). and pricing provisions of the applicable
farmers whose milk was pooled on the Correction to Notice of Hearing: order. This action will cause some
order, 88 or 83 percent were considered Issued August 20, 2003; published current producer-handlers to become
large businesses. If these amendatory August 26, 2003 (68 FR 51202). subject to the pooling and pricing
actions are not undertaken, 17 percent Notice of Reconvened Hearing: Issued provisions of the orders.
of the dairy farmers in the Arizona-Las October 27, 2003; published October 31, Currently, the Pacific Northwest and
Vegas order who are small businesses 2003 (68 FR 62027). the Arizona-Las Vegas milk marketing
will continue to be adversely affected by Notice of Reconvened Hearing: Issued orders provide separate but similar
large producer-handler operations. December 18, 2003; published definitions that describe and define a
In their capacity as producers, 7 December 29, 2003 (68 FR 74874). special category of handler known as
producer-handlers would be considered Recommended Decision: Issued April producer-handlers. While there are
as large producers as their annual 7, 2005; published April 13, 2005 (70 FR specific differences in how each order
marketing exceeds 6-million pounds of 19636). defines and describes producer-
milk. Record evidence indicates that for handlers, both orders—as do all Federal
the Pacific Northwest marketing order at Preliminary Statement milk marketing orders—exempt
the time of the hearing, four producer- A public hearing held on proposed producer-handlers from the pooling and
handlers would potentially become amendments to the marketing agreement pricing provisions of the orders.
subject to the pooling and pricing and order regulating the handling of Exemption from the pooling and
provisions of the order because of route milk in the Pacific Northwest and pricing provisions of the orders
disposition of more than 3-million Arizona-Las Vegas marketing areas. The essentially means that the minimum
pounds per month within the marketing hearing was held pursuant to the class prices established under the orders
area. For the Arizona-Las Vegas order, provisions of the Agricultural Marketing that handlers must pay for milk are not
one producer-handler would be Agreement Act of 1937, as amended (7 applicable to producer-handlers and
considered a large producer because its U.S.C. 601–674), and the applicable producer-handlers receive no minimum

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74168 Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 239 / Wednesday, December 14, 2005 / Proposed Rules

price protection for surplus milk for the Pacific Northwest order more the period of January 2000 through July
disposed of within either order’s like the current Arizona-Las Vegas 2003, or about a 10–14 cents per
marketing area. Producer-handlers enjoy order. hundredweight (cwt) impact on the
keeping the entire value of their milk A fourth proposal, published in the order’s blend price. In addition, the
production disposed of as fluid milk hearing notice as Proposal 4, seeking to witness estimated lost revenue of about
products in the marketing area to prevent the simultaneous pooling of the $3 million, or about a 10-cent per cwt
themselves and do not share this value same milk on the Arizona-Las Vegas lower blend price for the period of
with other dairy farmers whose milk is milk marketing order and on a state- September 1997 through January 1999.
pooled on either of the two orders. operated order that provides for A second witness appearing on behalf
However, producer-handlers are marketwide pooling, (commonly of UDA also testified in support of
subject to strict definitions and referred to a ‘‘double-dipping’’) was Proposal 3. This witness explained that
limitations in their business practices. addressed in a separate final rule that the proposed 3-million pound route
Both orders limit the ability of was issued November 18, 2005 (70 FR disposition limit on producer-handlers
producer-handlers to buy or acquire 70991) and will become effective on was partly based on provisions of the
milk that may be needed from dairy January 1, 2006. Fluid Milk Promotion Act which
farmers or other handlers. Additionally, requires an assessment for the
Summary of Testimony
producer-handlers bear the entire promotion of fluid milk when a
burden of balancing their own milk Proposal 3 received testimony by a handler’s sales are greater than 3-
production. Milk production in excess witness appearing on behalf of United million pounds per month. The witness
of what is needed to satisfy their Class Dairymen of Arizona (UDA). UDA is a said that producer-handlers who have
I route disposition needs will receive dairy cooperative supplying the ability to enjoy this level of route
whatever price they are able to obtain. approximately 88 percent of the milk in disposition should not be exempted
Such milk does not receive the the Arizona-Las Vegas milk marketing from pooling and pricing provisions and
minimum price protection of the order. order (Order 131). The UDA witness that their continued exemption poses a
It is the exemption from the pooling testified in support of establishing a 3- serious threat to orderly marketing and
and pricing provisions of the Pacific million pound limit in route disposition the operation of the Federal milk order
Northwest and Arizona-Las Vegas of fluid milk products for producer- program.
orders that is the central issue of this handlers in the marketing area, which, The second UDA witness claimed that
proceeding. While producer-handlers if exceeded, would cause the producer- in December 1994, Sarah Farms was
are exempt from the pooling and pricing handler to become subject to the pooling considered an insignificant factor
provisions of the two orders, they are and pricing provisions of the order. The within the Order 131 marketing area
‘‘regulated’’ to the extent that producer- witness was of the opinion that the because their monthly raw milk
handlers submit reports to the Market current producer-handler definition production was less than 5 million
Administrator who monitors producer- contradicts the overall purposes of the pounds, of which less than 1.3 million
handler operations to ensure that such Federal milk order program to establish pounds of Class I products were
entities are in compliance with the uniform prices among all handlers and distributed within the marketing area.
conditions for such regulatory status. the marketwide sharing of revenue Relying on Market Administrator
For the purposes of brevity and among all producers who supply the statistics, the witness added that by
convenience, this decision will refer to market. 1996, UDA estimated that Sarah Farms’
those handlers who are subject to the The UDA witness asserted that Sarah monthly Class I route disposition had
pooling and pricing provisions of the Farms is the largest producer-handler in increased to more than 6 million
orders as ‘‘fully regulated handlers’’ in the Order 131 marketing area and avoids pounds. The witness also testified that
contrast to producer-handlers. the classified pricing and pooling from late 1998 until this proceeding,
requirements applicable to all other Sarah Farms had been one of only two
Overview of the Proposals handlers. The witness characterized this producer-handlers selling Class I
This proceeding considered three as the operation of an individual products in the marketing area. Relying
proposals seeking the application of handler pool within a marketwide pool. on Market Administrator statistics, the
each order’s pooling and pricing The witness stated that UDA is aware witness estimated that Sarah Farms’
provisions, or full regulation, of that historically Federal orders have Class I route sales within Order 131 had
producer-handlers when their route exempted producer-handler operations increased from about 7 million pounds
disposition of fluid milk products in the from the pricing and pooling provisions per month to as much as 15 million
marketing areas exceeded 3-million of orders because they were small and pounds per month by 2002.
pounds per month. These proposals had little impact in the marketplace. A witness appearing on behalf of the
were published in the hearing notice as The witness contrasted this historical Kroger Company (Kroger), a fully
Proposals 1, 2 and 3. Proposal 1 is perspective with Sarah Farms, regulated handler under the Pacific
applicable to the Pacific Northwest milk recognized as the largest producer- Northwest milk marketing order (Order
marketing order. Proposal 3 is handler in Order 131, by citing a trade 124) and Order 131, testified in support
applicable to the Arizona-Las Vegas journal article that ranked Sarah Farms of Proposals 1, 2, and 3. The witness
milk marketing order. Proposal 2, as the second largest U. S. dairy farm said that changes in marketing
applicable to only the Pacific Northwest with 13,000 cows in 1995. conditions in both orders necessitate
order, is identical to Proposal 1 but also The witness testified that UDA changes in how the orders define
seeks to limit a producer-handler from estimates Sarah Farms’ Class I sales producer-handlers. In the opinion of the
distributing fluid milk products to a within the Order 131 marketing area are witness, producer-handlers enjoy a
wholesale customer who is served by a about 12 million pounds per month. competitive sales advantage by being
fully regulated or partially regulated Because of Sarah Farms’ exemption exempted from the pooling and pricing
distributing plant in the same-sized from the pooling and pricing provisions provisions of both orders. The witness
package with a similar label during the of the order, the witness estimated a loss explained that producer-handlers have a
month. In this regard, Proposal 2 would in revenue to producers who pool milk sales advantage because they have the
make the producer-handler definition on the order at about $11,586,589 over flexibility to set their internal raw milk

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price at a level well below the they are responsible for balancing their 124. Relating past business experiences
announced Federal order minimum fluid milk needs and cannot transfer as a fully regulated handler known as
Class I price that fully regulated balancing costs to other pooled market Sunshine Dairy, the witness explained
handlers must pay. participants. how business was lost to a producer-
The Kroger witness also testified that The WUD witness also testified that handler competitor. The witness
regulated handlers in Orders 124 and some producer-handlers were becoming attributed this loss of business to the
131 have been forced to respond to much larger than fully regulated fluid competitive sales advantage enjoyed by
competitive situations with producer- processors in Orders 124 and 131. The producer-handlers resulting from their
handlers in supplying retail grocery witness was of the opinion that large exemption from the pooling and pricing
outlets. This was due in part to the producer-handlers were effectively provisions of the order.
competitive sales advantage producer- taking greater and greater shares of the The NDA witness testified that as a
handlers have in being able to lower Class I market in both orders and caused fully regulated handler known as
their price to retailers while still pooled milk to be forced into lower- Sunshine Dairy they had also lost a
maintaining an adequate profit margin, valued manufacturing uses. According small customer who, at that time, was
the witness explained. The witness said to the witness, these outcomes are buying about 25,000 gallons of milk per
that Kroger’s retail outlets could not do having a direct negative impact on week. The witness said that this
this competitively without eroding their handlers and producers in both orders customer grew to constitute more than
profit margins. Because of these and are generating instability in the 10 percent of its fluid milk sales
competitive situations, the witness Federal milk marketing order system. volume. According to the witness, even
concluded that producer-handlers The WUD witness asserted that when though they had provided great service
exceeding more than 3 million pounds producer-handler sales growth and products, they lost the account
per month in Class I sales was a threatened the sales of fully regulated because the customer could save
reasonable estimate of when producer- handlers under California’s State-wide hundreds of thousands of dollars a year
handlers are in direct competition with regulatory system, the State acted to by procuring milk from a producer-
fully regulated handlers and should maintain and protect their pooling and handler. According to the witness,
therefore receive the same regulatory pricing system by placing a limit on the Sunshine Dairy lost this account
treatment. The same regulatory volumes of sales producer-handlers because the producer-handler was able
treatment of producer-handlers as fully could have within the State before to price its milk at a level below the
regulated handlers above this threshold becoming fully regulated. The witness minimum Federal order Class I price.
would, according to the witness, re- was of the opinion that the Federal The witness also testified that the
establish equity among handlers order program also needs to act by producer-handler subsequently lost this
competing for Class I sales in these two adopting the proposed amendments to account to a fully regulated handler that
marketing areas. similarly limit the sales volume of was of national scope.
The Kroger witness was of the producer-handlers. The NDA witness expressed the
opinion that the volume of producer- A witness appearing on behalf of the opinion that the goal of the Federal
handler route disposition was a key Alliance of Western Milk Producers Order system is to maintain order in the
aspect of the disorderly marketing (Alliance), an organization representing market. In this regard, the witness
conditions in Orders 124 and 131. California cooperatives, also testified in testified that handlers should not be
However, the witness indicated that a support of Proposals 1, 2, and 3. The exempt from the pooling and pricing
producer-handler’s processing plant size witness indicated that how the Federal provisions of an order because they own
alone was not necessarily an accurate order program deals with the producer- their cows and produce their own milk
indicator of processing plant efficiency. handler issue is of interest to California supply when other handlers are not
The witness testified that smaller plants dairy farmers because changes in Orders exempted. The witness stressed that
can be very competitive. In this regard, 124 and 131, which border California, such an exemption is unfair, noting that
the witness said that Kroger’s largest will have a direct impact on the State’s the vast majority of dairy farmers should
plant was not its most efficient bottling milk marketing and regulatory program. not receive smaller paychecks for the
plant. The witness was of the opinion that same product as producer-handlers
A witness appearing on behalf of producer-handlers have a tremendous because they lack a processing plant.
Western United Dairymen (WUD), the competitive advantage in the A witness appearing on behalf of
largest dairy farmer association in marketplace because they are not Maverick Milk Producers Association
California representing approximately subject to minimum pricing and are (Maverick), a cooperative of dairy
1,100 of California’s 2,000 dairy farmers, thereby able to avoid a pooling farmers located in Arizona that markets
testified in support of Proposals 1 and obligation to share their Class I revenue its milk in California and Arizona,
3. The witness expressed the opinion with all pooled market participants. The testified in support of Proposal 3. The
that a primary reason for the exemption witness asserted that unless some witness testified that all handlers who
of producer-handlers from the pricing limitation is put on the route sales market their milk in Order 131 should
and pooling provisions of Orders 124 volume of producer-handlers, it may be subject to the pooling and pricing
and 131 had been because these entities encourage new producer-handlers to provisions of the order, including
were customarily small businesses that enter the market and further erode the producer-handlers. The witness inferred
operate self-sufficiently and do not have equitable pricing principles relied on by from Market Administrator statistics
a significant impact in the marketplace. the Federal milk order program. that the largest producer-handler in
The WUD witness testified that the A witness appearing on behalf of Order 131, Sarah Farms, had cost
regulatory exemption for producer- Northwest Dairy Association (NDA) Maverick members in excess of $1.2
handlers has been largely unchanged in testified in support of Proposals 1 and million in revenue since 1999 because
the Federal order system for more than 2. The witness provided a business Sarah Farms had not been subject to the
50 years. The witness explained that example demonstrating how producer- pooling and pricing provisions of the
there had been no significant handlers enjoy a pricing and marketing order. The witness testified that the
demonstration of unfair advantages advantage by being exempt from the estimated loss of revenue to the Order
accruing to producer-handlers because pooling and pricing provisions of Order 131 pool was based on an assumption

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that Sarah Farms produced about 18 are exempt from the pricing and pooling The Shamrock witness concluded that
million pounds of milk per month that provisions of Order 131. According to a sales volume limitation of 3 million
would have been pooled as Class I milk. the witness, the price of Class I products pounds per month for producer-
A former executive and co-owner of offered to wholesale customers by handlers was reasonable because a 3
Vitamilk, an independent handler no producer-handlers can be lower than million pound limit would represent
longer operating as a going concern, what Shamrock can offer profitably and about three percent of the total Class I
formerly located in Seattle, Washington, that Sarah Farms, a producer-handler of sales in the Order 131 marketing area.
appeared on behalf of Dairy Farmers of the order, has been able to raid their In addition, the witness testified that a
America (DFA) and testified in support customer base. Furthermore, the witness plant which processes 3 million pounds
of Proposals 1 and 2. This DFA witness said that Shamrock’s ability to maintain per month is an indicator of a very
testified that in seeking alternative its policy of equitable pricing among its efficient plant operation. From these
markets for its milk products, Vitamilk customers, be able to hold its prices views, the witness concluded that a
began to compete with producer- fairly constant to maintain customer producer-handler with route disposition
handlers for school milk supply loyalty, and avoid bidding against itself in excess of 3 million pounds per month
contracts through one of its wholesale for its own customers is undermined is able to fully exploit economies of size
distributors. However, their bid because of the producer-handler pricing and should therefore be treated the same
attempts were unsuccessful, the witness advantage over fully regulated handlers. as fully regulated handlers.
testified, because the school district The witness said Shamrock is unable to The Shamrock Foods witness
sought fixed-price contracts for quickly adjust their business practices conceded that there are additional
packaged fluid milk which they could to meet such competition because of challenges faced by producer-handlers
not supply in competition with a their size and because of different in terms of managing milk supplies and
producer-handler. While conceding that regulatory treatment. disposing of surplus milk which fully
Vitamilk was inexperienced in bidding The Shamrock witness was of the regulated handlers do not face. The
for school-lunch business, the witness opinion that the producer-handler witness also acknowledged that there
asserted that the fixed price contract exemption from minimum pricing and are costs associated with managing
offered by the producer-handler was pooling provisions threatens the marketing risk, including the disposal of
below the combined value of the economic viability of Order 131. For surplus milk production. However, the
Federal order Class I price plus example, the witness explained that witness was of the opinion that these
Vitamilk’s cost allocations to marketing, major customers such as Safeway,
costs are more than covered by the
processing, distribution, overhead, competitive advantages that exist by
Kroger, Wal-Mart and strong
distributor profit, and risk. being exempt from the pooling and
independents like Costco, Bashas and
This DFA witness explained that pricing provisions of the order. One
Vitamilk tried to retain other customers Sam’s Club buy milk on a wholesale
example the witness provided was that
by lowering their prices in an effort to basis to resell to retail consumers. The
a producer-handler can balance its
keep and gain sales volume even though witness noted that these customers seek
supply by selling fluid milk products
the price represented no contribution to the opportunity to buy milk at prices
into an unregulated area such as
covering their indirect costs. The similar to those offered by the producer-
California.
witness testified that prices offered by a handler—at prices below the Federal A witness appearing on behalf of
local producer-handler were 11 to 12 order Class I price. The witness testified Shamrock Farms, which is affiliated
cents per gallon below Vitamilk’s best that if Proposal 3 or some other with Shamrock Foods, testified in
net price to distributors. According to restriction limiting route disposition support of Proposal 3. Shamrock Farms
the witness, even though Vitamilk’s volume is not adopted, either there will milks 6,500 cows and is located in
customers reported satisfaction with the have to be an expansion of producer- Maricopa County, Arizona. The witness
company’s service and other non-price handler supplies by expanding their testified that Shamrock Farms has
attributes, the producer-handler’s ability farms or existing fully regulated always been a pooled producer on Order
to provide fluid milk products at a handlers will need to reorganize their 131 and its predecessor order. The
lower cost resulted in the loss of business practices to develop their own- witness asserted that Sarah Farms
customer accounts. The witness asserted farm production and become a operates dairy farms with approximately
that the loss of accounts was caused producer-handler to remain 10,000 to 12,000 milking cows. While
largely by the producer-handler’s competitive. the witness conceded the lack of hard
inability to price Class I products below The Shamrock witness offered data to confirm this assertion, the
what a fully regulated Class I handler testimony regarding market research witness arrived at this estimate of farm
could price its products. In addition, the they routinely conduct through on-going size by counting the number of milk
witness testified that in 2003 Vitamilk surveys of retail grocery stores in Order tankers per day that delivered to the
even attempted to sell its Class I 131. The witness explained that Sarah Farms’ plant in Yuma, Arizona.
products at prices below breakeven and Shamrock salespersons do this to gather A consultant witness appearing on
was still unable to find a price whereby market intelligence on their behalf of Dairy Farmers of America
it could successfully recapture business competitors. According to the witness, (DFA), proponents of Proposals 1, 2, and
lost to a producer-handler. Shamrock’s marketing research 3, had prepared a study that analyzed
A witness appearing on behalf of indicated that prices for bottled fluid and compared the value of raw milk to
Shamrock Foods Company (Shamrock), milk offered by Sarah Farms was a large producer-handler with the cost
a fully regulated handler located in typically 6 to 8 cents a gallon below of milk to fully regulated handlers and
Arizona and Colorado, testified in their price—equating to about 48 to 64 described the economic impact of
support of Proposal 3. The witness cents on a per cwt basis. The witness competition between these two business
maintained that Shamrock is at a testified that their market research also entities. The study conducted by this
competitive disadvantage with revealed that Sarah Farms’ production witness was based on a proprietary
producer-handlers because Shamrock is and route disposition had grown from database of 150 milk processing plants
required to pay the Federal order Class approximately 8 million pounds in 1998 owned by businesses for which this
I price for milk while producer-handlers to nearly 17.2 million pounds by 2003. witness’ company performed accounting

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and other consulting services. subject to the pooling and pricing witness indicated no direct knowledge
According to the witness, 20 plants provisions of an order compete for route of the costs of labor employed by
were selected as being representative of sales, the producer-handler will always producer-handlers in Orders 124 or 131.
the costs for 6 different size classes of have a price advantage which could be The witness did conclude that use of
bottling plants. The witness explained as large as the difference between the non-union labor by producer-handlers
that the plant cost data was adjusted by Federal order Class I price and the would provide them with a clear cost
applying regional consumer price index order’s blend price. The witness also advantage over similar or larger size
(CPI) factors as published by the U.S. said that the examination across all fully regulated handlers that typically
Department of Labor. According to the types of retail outlets reveals that a employed unionized labor.
witness, this method of adjusting data, producer-handler will always have a The DFA consultant witness was of
the selection of relevant plants, the price advantage in competing with fully the professional opinion that current
analytic methods employed in regulated handlers. Federal order regulations provide
conducting the study, and the The consultant witness for DFA producer-handlers with a significant
interpretation of the study results were provided a comparative cost analysis of cost advantage that cannot be matched
all based on Generally Accepted servicing a warehouse store account by by fully regulated handlers that are
Accounting Principles (GAAP). a fully regulated fluid milk plant and a subject to pooling and pricing
The DFA consultant witness large producer-handler using actual regulations. If the proposal to place a 3
acknowledged that while the study of retail prices for 2-percent milk in million pound per month volume limit
plant costs was based on actual plant Phoenix, Arizona, during January on producer-handlers route disposition
data acquired from fully regulated through June 2003. The witness testified is adopted, it will eliminate what the
handlers, the study did not include data that based on the study’s data and witness described as an unfair economic
from plants located in either the Pacific assumptions, a large producer-handler advantage for large producer-handlers
Northwest or the Arizona-Las Vegas can service such an account and return while serving to protect a more modest
marketing areas. The witness also a substantial above-market premium pricing advantage for small producer-
acknowledged that the data for the over the producer blend price. However, handlers.
smallest plants in the study were taken the study reveals that the handler In additional testimony, the
from producer-handler plants located in paying the Class I price for its raw milk consultant witness for DFA
western Pennsylvania, an area not supply will have little or no margin, the acknowledged the difficulty in
regulated by a Federal milk marketing witness contrasted. The producer- reconciling the 150,000 pound per
order. The witness also explained that handler’s raw milk cost advantage, the month route disposition limit
the study’s actual data could not be witness said, allows it to service these established for exempt plants with the
offered for inspection and examination stores profitably at a price that cannot proposed 3 million pound per month
in this proceeding because individual be matched by a fully regulated handler. limit for producer-handlers. According
plant cost and related information were The witness concluded that producer- to the witness, the difference in these
proprietary, adding that this also handlers are in a position to acquire any two limits are for two distinctly
explained why the data used in the account they choose to service by different entities and can be rationalized
study were averaged. The witness offering a price which the regulated by the Department by acknowledging a
further testified that the selection of plant cannot meet. value commensurate with milk
appropriate plants for inclusion in the In other testimony, the DFA production risks incurred by a
study from all of the plants in the consultant witness provided a pro-forma producer-handler that are not incurred
witness’ proprietary database was based income statement for a regulated by handlers who buy milk from dairy
on professional judgment and handler in Order 124 developed using farmers. A handler who buys milk from
experience. certain assumptions about costs, prices dairy farmers does not incur the
The DFA consultant witness and income. The witness demonstrated production risks associated with
explained that the analysis of the data through an analysis of the pro-forma operating a farm enterprise, the witness
derived for the Northwest or the income statement that a large producer- said. In this regard, the witness
Arizona-Las Vegas marketing areas handler would be able to successfully acknowledged that the study focused
suggests that as plant volumes increase compete with fully regulated handlers if only on plant processing costs and not
per unit processing costs decrease and regulated. The witness concluded from on the cost of producing milk in the
that the highest per unit processing this analysis that a successful producer- farm enterprise function of a producer-
costs are found at the smallest plant handler would be economically viable handler.
sizes. At large plant sizes, the witness even if it were subject to the order’s A witness representing Dean Foods
contrasted, a processor, regardless of pooling and pricing provisions. (Dean) testified in support of proposals
regulatory status, can increase milk The DFA consultant witness testified establishing a volume limit on
processing volume at a nominal that the cost data used in the study’s producer-handler route disposition. The
additional per unit cost. pro-forma income statement example witness testified that while Dean Foods
Relating an additional example of the was generated using statistical methods does not operate bottling plants in either
study’s findings, the DFA consultant based on one month’s representative Orders 124 or 131, they do operate fluid
witness testified that, other things being data for similar sized regulated handlers milk plants in many States regulated by
equal, a hypothetical plant bottling 3 and assumed that producer-handlers Federal milk marketing orders and in
million pounds of milk per month in 2- and regulated handlers employed union areas not subject to Federal milk order
gallon pack containers would have per labor and operated within collective regulation. The witness testified that
unit processing costs that were bargaining agreements. The witness where Dean faces competition from
significantly higher than a plant testified that based on own business plants that do not pay regulated
producing 20 million pounds of milk experience, the characterization of labor minimum prices, Dean is affected. The
per month in the same size container costs would be representative of large witness stressed that milk bottling
packs. In addition, the witness testified fully regulated handler operations in the plants need to have equitable raw milk
that the study suggests that where a Pacific Northwest or the Arizona-Las costs for the Federal milk order system
large producer-handler and a handler Vegas marketing areas. In contrast, the to remain valid.

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The Dean witness said that the economic concept of ‘‘transfer that a handler had in a marketing area.
competitiveness and efficiency are not pricing,’’ the maximum price that a Below 3 million pounds per month
necessarily a function of processing producer-handler ‘‘pays’’ for route disposition, the witness said, the
plant size. On this theme, the witness transferring milk from its farm impact of an individual handler is
provided an example where a small, production enterprise to its processing negligible and therefore rationalizes
fully regulated milk bottler in Bryan, enterprise can be estimated even though why smaller handlers are exempt from
Texas, successfully bid to supply a the producer-handler does not actually fluid milk promotion assessments.
Texas state prison against a much larger sell raw milk to itself. According to the A witness appearing on behalf of DFA
Dean plant. The witness testified that witness, transfer pricing in the context testified in support of Proposals 1, 2,
the Bryan plant had processing capacity of the producer-handler issue, predicts and 3. The witness viewed the
of less than 3 million pounds per month that the price of milk assigned to milk exemption of producer-handlers from
but was more efficient than the Dean from the producer-handler farm the pooling and pricing provisions of
plant and that because of its enterprise essentially becomes the price Federal orders as a loophole that
management structure, it could adjust at which milk could be sold to a threatens the economic viability of the
more quickly to changing market regulated handler—the Federal order Federal milk order system and the
conditions. blend price. Accordingly, the witness economic well-being of pooled
A witness appearing on behalf of the asserted that a producer-handler’s producers. This witness, like the NMPF
National Milk Producers Federation advantage in raw milk procurement for witness, testified that a growing interest
(NMPF) testified in support of Proposals processing, as compared to fully by large dairy farmers in becoming
1 and 3. The witness was of the opinion regulated handlers, would be the producer-handlers is a major factor in
that productivity increases resulting difference between the Federal order DFA’s interest in seeking to amend the
from technological advances and the Class I price and the order’s blend price. producer-handler definition in the
growth of dairy farms enable large The NMPF witness testified that their Pacific Northwest or the Arizona-Las
producers to capture sufficient analysis reinforces the findings of the Vegas orders. The witness testified that
economies of scale in processing own- consultant witness for DFA regarding the exemption from the pooling and
farm milk and thereby compete the magnitude of the pricing advantage pricing provisions of these orders
effectively with established, fully producers-handlers enjoy over handlers provides producer-handlers with a
regulated handlers. In light of this, the who are subject to the pooling and competitive advantage over fully
witness testified that such producers pricing provisions of a Federal order. regulated handlers by effectively
can disrupt the orderly marketing of While noting that the DFA consultant permitting producer-handlers to
milk in a market, adding that dairy witness’ study used aggregated data that purchase milk at an internal price at or
farmers ‘‘turned producer-handlers’’ does result in a significant loss of below the Federal order blend price
could grow across a market causing information for analytical purposes, the while fully regulated handlers must pay
even greater disruption to orderly witness stressed that even with this the usually higher Class I price for milk.
marketing in other Federal milk limitation it nevertheless remains the According to this DFA witness, the
marketing orders. best data available to rely upon. difference between the Class I price and
The witness asserted that NMPF’s The NMPF witness was of the opinion the Federal order blend price represents
own analysis, and a plant study by that the producer-handler exemption a significant windfall generated solely
Cornell University revealed that larger from an order’s pooling and pricing by the regulatory exemptions accorded
fluid milk bottling plants have exhibited provisions also creates inequity among to producer-handlers.
decreasing processing costs on a per producers because it reduces the The DFA witness summarized that the
gallon basis as the size of processing amount of milk pooled as a Class I use proposed 3 million pound per month
facilities increase. The witness of milk, which in turn, lowers the total limitation on route disposition is based
explained that as the scale of processing revenue of the marketwide pool to be on four considerations. According to the
plants increase, average processing costs shared among pooled producers. witness, the proposed limit is: (1)
tend to remain fairly constant, with the According to the witness, this threatens Consistent with the minimum volume of
lowest per unit cost levels being orderly marketing. The witness related milk sales that triggers the fluid milk
exhibited over a relatively wide range of that farms with over 3 million pounds promotion assessment for handlers; (2)
processing capacities. The witness of monthly production represent about the level at which producer-handlers
testified that the lower per unit 15 percent of the U.S. milk supply and achieve competitive equity with fully
processing cost advantages of larger may represent some 40 percent of U.S. regulated handlers in terms of plant
plant sizes tend to be greatest for very fluid milk sales. According to the processing efficiency; (3) the level of
large processing plants rather than witness, the steadily increasing number route disposition that has a significant
among smaller plants. The witness said of farms with this magnitude of monthly impact on the pool value of milk; and
that significant cost and other milk production suggests that large (4) the level of route disposition that has
competitive advantages attributed to producers could exploit the producer- a significant impact on the order’s
economies of scale in fluid milk handler provision and thus further pooled producers and fully regulated
processing become evident at about the erode equity to both producers and handlers. The witness indicated that if
3-million pound per month processing handlers across the entire Federal milk a producer-handler’s volume is
level. marketing order system. sufficient to reduce a pool’s value by a
According to the NMPF witness, the The NMPF witness stated that the 3 penny (1 cent) per hundredweight it is
exemption of producer-handlers from million pound per month route significant and is of sufficient
the pooling and pricing provisions of disposition limit proposed for producer- magnitude to warrant ending producer-
Orders 124 and 131 allows producer- handlers as part of Proposals 1 and 3 is handler exemption from the pooling and
handlers to effectively pay the also consistent with the promotion pricing provisions of the orders. The
equivalent of the blend price for milk at assessment exemption of the Fluid Milk witness also concluded from the study
their plants, a price lower than the Class Promotion Program. According to the conducted by the consultant witness for
I price that fully regulated competitors witness, the promotion exemption limit DFA that when a producer-handler
pay. The witness testified that by using set by Congress was based on the impact reaches a 3 million pound per month

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distribution level, not only does the averaged some $317,000 per month, or explained that a large producer-handler
producer-handler reach similar plant the equivalent of 12.5 cents per cwt. experiencing increasing returns to its
processing cost efficiencies but it is also The DFA witness testified that the operation could continue to grow in size
of sufficient size to service a producer-handler price advantage over until it controlled a substantial share of
considerable number of retail outlets on fully regulated handlers provides a the Class I market. The witness testified
a competitive par with fully regulated powerful incentive for customers to that a producer-handler with route
handlers. According to the witness, purchase milk from producer-handlers disposition of 3 million pounds per
continuing the exemption from an rather than fully regulated handlers. The month could supply a small regional
order’s pooling and pricing provisions witness testified that producer-handlers grocery chain but likely would not be
beyond the 3 million pound sales have as much as a 15-cent per gallon able to diversify its marketing risk with
volume level causes serious market advantage over fully regulated handlers sales to other customers.
disruptions. in Order 131. According to the witness, According to the DFA witness, if
The DFA witness also testified that the advantage is based on the difference producer-handlers are allowed to gain
the exemption of producer-handlers between the Order 131 Class I price and Class I sales without restraint, fully
from the pooling and pricing provisions the order’s blend price which ranged regulated handlers and pooled
of the orders is encouraging large from 15.9 to as much as 18.3 cents per producers would likely come to view
producers to consider becoming gallon during the period of January 2000 Federal milk marketing orders as
producer-handlers in both Orders 124 through July 2003. ineffective. According to the witness,
and 131 and in other Federal order The DFA witness related that under these conditions producers
marketing areas. As an example, the wholesale milk buyers base possibly would seek to terminate the
witness testified that some retail outlets procurement decisions on tenths and orders. The DFA witness characterized
now seek packaged fluid milk supplies even hundredths of a cent differences in this potential scenario as a form of
from producer-handlers in an effort to the price per gallon, indicating that market disorder.
obtain lower cost milk supplies. The price differences of more than 15 cents The DFA witness said that rising
witness was of the opinion that without per gallon overwhelmingly favors the interest in the producer-handler option
a limit on route disposition volume, producer-handler in head-to-head price by large dairy farmers challenges the
producer-handlers will displace pooled competition. The witness testified that long-term viability of the entire Federal
producers and fully regulated handlers lower-priced packaged fluid milk milk order system. The witness did
as the dominant suppliers of fluid milk products from producer-handlers is acknowledge that no new producer-
not only in the Pacific Northwest and used by wholesale buyers of milk as handler operations have entered either
Arizona-Las Vegas marketing areas, but leverage in daily price negotiations with the Order 124 or 131 marketing areas in
ultimately throughout all other Federal fully regulated handlers and is a form of recent years. The witness also
milk marketing areas. The witness disorderly marketing. Such market acknowledged that market information
cautioned that the potential for the disorder, the witness said, causes all kept by the Department shows that the
growth of producer-handlers gives rise processors to receive lower prices for volume of sales by producer-handlers
to considering lowering Class I milk their packaged fluid milk products. had declined nationally from 1.47
prices as a means to counter the The DFA witness also expressed the billion pounds per year to 1.16 billion
competitive price advantage that opinion that the plant costs faced by a pounds per year between 1988 and
producer-handlers are afforded by large producer-handler are similar to 1998.
regulatory exemption from pooling and those faced by fully regulated handlers The DFA witness offered
pricing provisions. even though the witness had no direct modifications to Proposal 1 that would
The DFA witness testified that the knowledge of individual producer- also be applicable to Proposal 3.
current producer-handler definition handler businesses in Order 124 or 131. Basically, in addition to limiting a
creates market disorder because it While agreeing with the characterization producer-handlers route disposition to
disrupts the flow of Class I milk from that producer-handlers are a single and less than 3 million pounds per month,
pooled producers to regulated handlers. seamless milk production and the modification made extensive
In addition, the witness testified that processing enterprise, the witness changes in terminology as to how
pooled producers effectively subsidize asserted that higher balancing and producer-handlers are defined. The
the balancing costs of producer- operational costs attributable to intent of these modifications, the
handlers. In the opinion of the witness, producer-handler operations are not witness said, is to clarify that the
these outcomes are destabilizing and are significantly different than those burden of proof and the responsibility
producing disorder in both the Pacific associated with fully regulated handlers for providing all the details to
Northwest and Arizona-Las Vegas of the same processing plant size. The substantiate proof to the Market
marketing areas. In further explanation witness further asserted that the Administrator for producer-handler
of these points, the witness expressed producer-handler price advantage status rests with the producer-handler.
concern about the loss of Class I revenue combined with the ability to increase The DFA witness testified that Market
that would otherwise accrue to pooled production volume at negligible Administrators will continue to be
producers. As an example, relying on additional costs per unit exaggerates the relied upon by Federal orders to use
Market Administrator data in making advantage to a point where a producer- their discretion in determining
professional inferences, the witness handler can increase market share producer-handler status. According to
testified that the largest producer- nearly at will. the witness, the proposed modifications
handler in the Order 131 marketing Through a series of examples for the producer-handler definitions are
area, Sarah Farms, had monthly route depicting scenarios of different plant expected to provide flexibility for a
disposition in the range of 12.1 to 19.1 sizes, the DFA witness testified that Market Administrator to investigate and
million pounds. According to the producer-handlers with 80 and 90 audit proposed producer-handler
witness, the value of the sales revenue percent Class I utilization could operate operations and to ensure qualification
lost to the Order 131 pool by not profitably in spite of higher balancing requirements are met. In addition, the
subjecting Sarah Farms to the pooling costs associated with operating as a witness said that if Proposals 1 and 3
and pricing provisions of the order producer-handler. The witness are adopted, it was reasonable that

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existing producer-handlers in Orders and Northwest Independent Milk According to the NDA witness,
124 and 131 be given a period of time Producers, hereinafter collectively producer-handlers use pooled producers
to adjust their operations to the referred to as NDA, in support of and pooled handlers to balance their
proposed producer-handler Proposals 1, 2, and 3. The witness milk supply. The witness testified that
requirements. testified that the producer-handler ‘‘balancing off of the pool’’ involves
Another witness appearing on behalf exemption from the pooling and pricing producer-handlers selling milk to retail
of DFA testified in support of Proposals provisions of Order 124 provides an outlets until their milk supply is
1 and 3 on the basis that small and unfair competitive advantage to exhausted with retail outlets buying
average-sized dairy farmers, including producer-handlers at the expense of additional milk supplies from fully
producer-handlers with milk production pooled producers and fully regulated regulated handlers to meet the shortfall.
below 3 million pounds of milk per handlers. According to the witness, the According to the witness, the fully
month, have higher production costs historical justifications for exempting regulated handler is not only the
than larger dairy farms. The witness producer-handlers because such entities residual milk supplier but also
said that very large dairy farms tend to are small operators without significant effectively has the burden of balancing
have management expertise and market impact on prices and they do not the Class I needs of the market not
business sophistication, access to provide significant competition with fulfilled by the producer-handler.
capital, access to veterinary services, fully regulated handlers are no longer Consequently, these burdens are
and economies of size and scale that warranted. The witness testified that transferred to the market’s pooled
tend to lower their per unit costs of milk producer-handlers in Order 124 are now producers by the regulated handlers.
production. This DFA witness testified a significant force in the marketing area According to the witness, this tactic
that a dairy farm would need and are likely to continue to increase in allows a producer-handler to maximize
approximately 1,800 cows to achieve a size and market significance. The its revenue by obtaining the highest
3 million pound per month level of witness noted that Congress had price available while essentially
production available for bottling and effectively supported the Department’s avoiding any costs of surplus milk
route disposition. long-standing producer-handler disposal in lower-valued uses. This
The DFA witness did not know if 3 exemption from pooling and pricing advantage is amplified, the witness said,
million pounds of route disposition per provisions of Federal orders since the when a producer-handler is able to
month was the precise number above 1960’s. The witness stated that only a balance its milk production and sales
which producer-handlers should few large producer-handlers currently into areas not regulated by a Federal
become subject to the pricing and operate in the Order 124 marketing area. milk marketing order.
pooling provisions of Orders 124 and The witness indicated agreement with
131. Similarly, the witness did not other proponent testimony that a The NDA witness testified that the
know what economic impact adopting producer-handler’s raw milk cost was proposed 3 million pound per month
Proposals 1 and 3 would have on the Federal order blend price. route disposition limit for producer-
producer-handlers in the respective According to the witness, the blend handlers is also based on political
marketing areas. The witness did relate price represents an alternative market considerations and on an intuitive
having knowledge of interest being price available to a producer-handler. notion. The witness explained that
expressed by dairy farmers who had Accordingly, the witness asserted, the processing plants smaller than 3 million
monthly production in excess of 3 only reason a producer-handler would pounds per month are exempted by
million pounds per month seeking seek to continue an exemption from an Congress from the 20-cent per
possible producer-handler status. order’s pooling and pricing provisions hundredweight processor-funded fluid
A witness representing Northwest would be to maintain a competitive milk promotion program. As a result,
Dairy Association (NDA) testified that advantage. The witness related that from the witness related that the proponents
they market the milk of 603 milk a producer viewpoint the competitive are of the opinion that this level would
producers traditionally associated with advantage is the ability to retain the also prove to be acceptable in the
Order 124. The witness said that NDA entire Class I value and from the context of its application to handlers
also is the parent company of WestFarm handler viewpoint the competitive regulated under the terms of a milk
Foods, an operator of three distributing advantage is not accounting to the pool marketing order. In addition, the
plants located in Seattle, Washington, at the order’s Class I price. The witness witness testified that NDA’s subsidiary’s
and Portland and Medford, Oregon. The estimated the producer-handler (WestFarm Foods) own study of
witness added that NDA also operates advantage over the period of January processing plant size and costs suggests
four milk manufacturing plants in the 2000 through October 2003 to be the that the DFA plant size and cost study
Order 124 marketing area. The witness difference between the Order 124 Class may actually understate when plant
testified that while NDA does not have I and blend prices which averaged about processing cost efficiencies are gained.
a direct connection to Order 131, it 15.4 cents per gallon or $1.79 per cwt. According to the witness, NDA’s study
indirectly shares similar concerns with The NDA witness asserted that during suggests that this occurs at about the
the proponents of Proposal 3 in that a period of rapidly rising milk prices, 2.5-million pound per month level
they share a border with California and producer-handlers also have a indicating that plants of this size and
share similar concerns regarding the competitive advantage by being able to larger lower their processing costs by
Federal and State milk order systems. In enter into long-term fixed price about 10 cents per gallon. The witness
addition, the witness noted that Order contracts in a way fully regulated related that a plant processing 3 million
124 has the second largest volume of handlers cannot. In the opinion of the pounds per month would have a cost
producer-handler milk marketings of witness, by offering relatively long-term savings of approximately 11.4 cents per
any Federal order—second only to fixed price contracts, a producer- gallon. Accordingly, the witness
Order 131. handler may be able to attract and retain concluded that producer-handler plants
The NDA witness was also appearing customers using a pricing policy that dispose of Class I milk products in
on behalf of Tillamook County unavailable to fully regulated handlers. excess of 3 million pounds per month
Creamery Association, Farmers The witness stated that this represents should therefore become subject to the
Cooperative Creamery, Inland Dairy, a form of disorderly marketing. pooling and pricing provisions of Order

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124. The witness said this would ensure could be displaced by producer- changed. These changes were made
that all similar handlers would have the handlers. without compensation to those
same raw milk costs. The NDA witness testified that the operators who engaged in the practice of
The NDA witness also testified in rise of warehouse and very high volume double dipping.
support of Proposal 2. The witness ‘‘super stores’’ also has contributed to The NDA witness testified that
viewed this as preventing producer- the structural changes in the dairy opponents to placing a route disposition
handlers from expanding the benefit of industry with packaged fluid milk limit on producer-handlers incorrectly
their regulatory status by balancing their products being supplied as cheaply as argue that as vertically integrated
supply on the market’s pooled possible. According to the witness, enterprises, producer-handlers face
producers and at the same time tending ‘‘super stores’’ and warehouse stores are more risks and higher costs than do
to ensure that fully regulated handlers able to exert market power in obtaining pooled producers and fully regulated
would not become residual suppliers of the lowest market prices available for handlers. The witness asserted that the
fluid milk products to the market. fluid milk products at the wholesale Federal order program does not
The NDA witness speculated that the level. incorporate a value for risk in its
investment required for a processing The NDA witness testified that there regulatory framework. In addition, the
plant to produce only milk packaged in are approximately 800 pooled producers witness noted that some producer-
gallons is relatively small when on the Pacific Northwest order. handlers are continuing to stay in
According to the witness, all of these business even as the total number of
compared to a very large dairy farmer’s
producers are small businesses who producer-handlers has declined in the
existing investment in land, livestock,
would receive a benefit in the range of last several years in the Order 124
and equipment. The witness was of the
2.4—4 cents per hundredweight for marketing area. The witness related
opinion that the potentially higher
their milk if Proposal 1 were adopted. historical data from Market
returns on the additional investment for
An increase in producer income would Administrator sources indicating that 10
a processing plant producing only
result, the witness said, from the sharing of the 11 producer-handlers which have
gallon containers of packaged fluid milk
of Class I revenue by pooling the largest gone out of business in recent years in
would be attractive to very large dairy
producer-handlers in the marketing area the Order 124 marketing area had
farmers such that it would encourage
who individually have route disposition monthly route disposition of less than 3
large producers to become producer- in excess of 3 million pounds per million pounds.
handlers. According to the witness, month. According to the witness, the In other testimony, the NDA witness
such a scenario threatens the economic additional total Class I revenue that conceded that no handler is exempt
attractiveness of the Federal order would accrue to the Order 124 pool from, or subject to, Federal milk order
program and the prevailing structure of would be in the range of $2.8—$4.0 regulations on the basis of plant
the dairy industry. million per month. operating costs. In addition, the witness
While the NDA witness testified only The NDA witness addressed concerns testified that a Federal milk order which
to conditions affecting Order 124, the regarding instances where handlers and had many producer-handlers supplying
witness did indicate fluid milk dairy farmers have made investments 10 percent of the Class I market would
marketing has been undergoing based on the provisions of a Federal not represent a disruptive influence or
considerable structural changes for milk order. In rationalizing concerns create market disorder if the market
many years that are national in scope. about the impact a change in regulation share of the producer-handlers was
The structural changes taking place may have on business decisions using stable (did not grow.) Also, the witness
throughout the dairy industry are most current order provisions, the witness indicated that if the market share
markedly exhibited by consolidation in noted several past Federal order supplied by producer-handlers was
the production, processing, marketing, decisions where regulatory changes had stable but the number of producer-
and distribution of dairy products, the an impact on persons that had built and handlers supplying that market
witness said. As an example, the designed their business practices on decreased, the impact of producer-
witness illustrated that Vitamilk’s existing order provisions. For example, handlers on the marketing conditions in
decision to go out of business was a the witness noted that the elimination of the area would not be considered
direct result of the acquisition of its two the ‘‘bulk tank handler’’ provision in the disorderly.
largest grocery store customers by Western milk marketing order by a The NDA witness testified that a route
Safeway and Kroger. The witness noted tentative final decision would have disposition volume below 3 million
that Safeway and Kroger are both effectively reduced the value that pounds per month does not tend to lend
national companies that also process proprietary bulk tank handlers could a price or cost advantage to producer-
milk as fully regulated handlers for their assign to their facilities. In addition, the handlers. The witness said that the
own stores and other customers. The witness related how the implementation impact of a producer-handler on a
witness was of the opinion that Vitamilk of Federal milk order reform eliminated marketing area’s blend price is directly
could not find other profitable business individual handler pools and reduced related to the size of the marketing area.
because it was unable to compete the value of those investments. In this regard, the witness related that
effectively with existing producer- According to the witness, these changes a 3 million pound milk bottling plant in
handlers and other competitors in the occurred as a matter of course with the the Upper Midwest Federal order, for
Pacific Northwest after losing a operators of those facilities absorbing example, would have a deminimus
significant portion of its business by the the actual costs of the regulatory impact on that order’s blend price but
Safeway and Kroger acquisition of their changes. The witness also testified that nevertheless maintained that a 3 million
customers. The witness was of the the elimination of ‘‘double dipping’’ in pound route disposition limit was a
opinion that as consolidation continues the Upper Midwest, Central, Mideast, reasonable trigger to cause producer-
within the dairy industry, a Class I Northeast, Pacific Northwest, and handlers to become subject to the
handler may find a declining number of Western orders had negative impacts on order’s pooling and pricing provisions.
marketing alternatives and thus give rise the investments made by operators who The witness offered that an appropriate
to market disorder. The witness was of were able to take advantage of those limit could be more than 3 million
the opinion that fully regulated handlers regulatory features before they were pounds, possibly as high as 4-million

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pounds, while still reasonably meeting on the monthly changes in the order’s selective exemption from regulation
the overall objectives sought in Proposal Class I price. The witness further rather than for business reasons.
1. The witness cautioned that setting a asserted that producer-handlers are able According to the Dean witness, only
limit that is too low—for example at to displace the Class I use of milk on the a few types of firms have been
500,000 pounds per month—would Order 124 pool by selling fluid milk historically exempted from the pooling
essentially close the marketing and products into Alaska, an area not subject and pricing provisions of Federal orders
regulatory option of market entry as a to order regulation, at prices below the which include government and
producer-handler. Class I price. According to the witness, university facilities, small processors,
In agreeing with other testimony, a 3 when a producer-handler displaces and producer-handlers—characterizing
million pound limit was consistent with potential fully regulated handler sales in the producer-handler exemption as one
what the NDA witness characterized as Alaska, the fully regulated handler’s of administrative convenience. The
a political settlement reached with the milk is forced to a lower use value witness was of the opinion that
Department in determining when which lowers the blend price paid to producer-handlers should only be
handlers would become subject to a pooled producers. The witness asserted exempt from the pooling and pricing
fluid milk promotion program that if producer-handler competition provisions of Federal orders when the
assessment. According to the witness, was absent in Alaska, WestFarm Foods effect of providing a regulatory
important consideration was given to would be the dominant supplier to exemption has a negligible effect on
the threat of handlers with route customers in that market. While noting market participants. In this regard, the
disposition of less than 3 million that producer-handlers continue to witness was of the opinion that a penny
pounds per month being able to band provide significant competition to or more impact on the order’s blend
together and vote to terminate the fluid WestFarm’s bottling operations, the price was significant. Relating this
milk promotion program. The witness witness testified that none of the opinion to conditions in Order 131, the
indicated that a 3 million pound level producer-handlers are selling fluid milk witness determined that the order’s
is also a coincidentally useful volume as products below the Federal order blend price would be affected by a
it supports the DFA’s consultant minimum Class I price. penny when the route distribution of a
witness’ plant size and cost study and The WestFarm Foods witness testified producer-handler was at the 950,000
analysis. that WestFarm Foods must meet a pound per month level.
A witness appearing on behalf of The Dean witness testified that a dairy
specified level of Class I sales to qualify
NDA’s WestFarm Foods testified in farmer operating as a producer-handler
all of its milk receipts for pooling on
support of Proposals 1 and 2. The can receive a higher price than the
Order 124. According to the witness,
witness provided data comparing the alternative of an order’s blend price,
producer-handlers in the marketing area
variable costs of WestFarm’s Medford, depending on the internal transfer price.
Oregon, bottling plant that processes 12 have become very aggressive sellers of The witness explained that a processor
million pounds of milk per month with milk and have increased their sales operating as a producer-handler
a hypothetical plant processing less volume to the point where fully essentially has the ability to ‘‘acquire’’
than 3 million pounds per month. The regulated Class I handlers are having milk at a transfer price as the milk
witness testified that the results of this difficulty qualifying all of their moves from the farm enterprise to the
comparison were similar to the results producer milk receipts for pooling on processing enterprise. In this regard, the
of the DFA’s study. The witness testified the order. The witness attributed such witness related that such a transfer price
that WestFarm Food’s study similarly pooling difficulties to the lack of growth can be represented by the difference
concluded that as plant sizes increase, in the Class I market combined with between the order’s blend price and the
per unit processing costs tend to growing producer-handler route Class I price. However, the witness
decrease. disposition. In addition, the witness conceded that if the producer-handler is
The NDA witness testified that testified that NDA charges its customers viewed as a single seamless entity, the
WestFarm Foods has lost significant an over-order premium of between 30 application of transfer pricing may
sales of packaged fluid milk products to and 45 cents per cwt. reveal less information than would an
grocery stores and school milk contracts A witness appearing on behalf of evaluation of all costs and revenues in
to producer-handler competitors. The Dean Foods offered testimony in determining the extent of the
witness reported that WestFarm Foods support of Proposals 1, 2, and 3. The competitive advantage that a producer-
competed with one producer-handler in witness asserted that exemptions to handler may enjoy by regulatory
the Pacific Northwest for shelf space in pooling and pricing provisions of exemption from the pricing and pooling
11 different retail outlets. According to Federal milk marketing orders should be provisions of an order.
the witness, the total volume of these few. According to the witness, the basic The Dean witness also noted that
sales was approximately 8 million underlying objectives of an order are to using an internal transfer price may be
pounds per year. The witness indicated efficiently assure an adequate supply of of limited value as it does not involve
that the producer-handler was able to milk for fluid uses and to enhance price discovery achieved through arms-
offer longer term, fixed price contracts returns to dairy farmers. The witness length transactions. However, the
to retailers and thereby remove price said that the Federal milk orders witness was of the strong opinion that
volatility. The witness said that fully achieve these objectives by: using a regardless of a measure of operating
regulated handlers, like WestFarm classified pricing plan setting minimum performance or efficiency, a producer-
Foods, do not have this ability because class prices, utilizing the marketwide handler would always have a
they must pay the Federal order Class I pooling of the classified values of milk competitive advantage over a fully
price which fluctuates every month. to return a blend price to dairy farmers regulated handler. The witness asserted
The WestFarm Foods witness asserted and verifying handler reporting through that the competitive advantage which
that producer-handlers in Order 124 audits. The witness stressed that absent accrues to the producer-handler is the
offer prices for fluid milk products that uniform and universal application of an difference between the order’s Class I
range from 15 to 45 cents per gallon order to market participants, some price and the blend price. In this regard
cheaper than milk offered by fully market participants will reap the witness was of the opinion that
regulated Class I handlers, depending competitive advantages due solely to producer-handlers would always be able

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to compete more effectively than fully marketing alternatives than through a Milk was located in Waco, Texas, and
regulated handlers because of their cooperative. In the opinion of the had route disposition across a large part
exemption from the pooling and pricing witness, preserving the existing of Texas that is now part of the
provisions of an order. producer-handler definition provides Southwest milk marketing area.
The witness offered an opinion as to dairy farmers with an alternative According to the witness, Pure Milk was
why there has not been significant mechanism to market their milk directly the combination of a profitable dairy
market entry of new producer-handlers and retain all of the revenue earned. In farm whose milk was pooled on the
if being exempt from the pricing and this regard, the witness indicated that Texas order and a profitable fluid
pooling provisions of an order confers ARI could see no reason why the route distributing and manufacturing plant
significant competitive advantages over disposition of a producer-handler that produced an array of various fluid
fully regulated handlers. In this regard, should be limited to 3 million pounds milk products, ice cream and ice cream
the witness offered that resources do not per month while regulated handlers mixes. The witness was of the opinion
move easily between different have no limitations on route that limiting route disposition would
enterprises within the dairy industry disposition. render the option of becoming a
because of cost and regulatory risk. The A witness appearing on behalf of producer-handler an unattractive
witness also offered the opinion that if Braum’s Dairy (Braum’s), a producer- business option under any
large companies, such as Kroger, handler located in Tuttle, Oklahoma, circumstances. The witness stressed that
attempted to become a producer- testified in opposition to Proposals 1 without the ability to grow or otherwise
handler, legislative changes to prevent and 3. The witness testified that attain economies of size and scale, the
such outcomes would quickly result. Braum’s milks approximately 10,000 producer-handler business model could
The Dean Foods witness was of the cows and processes its milk production never be successful.
opinion that the notion of disorderly into fluid milk and cultured and ice The SBEDMD witness testified to
marketing should be seen to exist when cream products. The witness said that participating in a Federal milk order
the regulatory terms of trade between all of the milk and milk products hearing that similarly sought to limit the
competitors are different. Along this produced by Braum’s Dairy are route disposition of producer-handlers
theme, the witness testified that in marketed exclusively through its own under the Texas order in 1989.
Order 131, disorderly marketing retail outlets. The witness further According to the witness, the argument
conditions exist because the terms of testified that Braum’s does not have advanced at that time was that the
trade between competitors are not the sales to wholesale customers and competitive advantage of being exempt
same, citing specifically the regulatory maintained that they do not directly from the order’s pooling and pricing
exemption from pooling and pricing for compete with fully regulated handlers. provisions enjoyed by large producer-
producer-handlers and no similar The Braum’s witness is of the opinion handlers would undermine the
exemption for their fully regulated that Proposals 1 and 3 seek to eliminate economic viability of the Federal milk
competitors. However, the witness competition by producer-handlers for order program by causing harm to
contrasted the growing presence and the benefit of fully regulated handlers pooled producers and fully regulated
market share in fluid milk distribution and will result in many producer- handlers. The witness indicated that
by producer-handlers in Order 131 with handlers becoming fully regulated. The Pure Milk, operating as a producer-
the stable market share of producer- witness also was of the opinion that handler, failed not as a result of any
handlers in Order 124. Proposals 1 and 3 were advanced as a competitive advantage arising from
A witness appearing on behalf of Alan means to ultimately seek amending the exemptions from pooling and pricing
Ritchey, Incorporated (ARI), a family- producer-handler provision in all provisions but from the unique risks
owned dairy farm business located in Federal milk orders even though the and costs associated with operating as a
Texas and Oklahoma, testified in provision has worked well for the past producer-handler.
opposition to limiting route disposition 66 years. The SBEDMD witness testified that,
of producer-handlers as advanced in The witness indicated that Braum’s for a time, Pure Milk was convinced that
Proposals 1 and 3. The witness testified had not always been a producer-handler there was an advantage to operating as
that ARI marketed its milk through DFA but due to Federal order pooling rules a producer-handler instead of operating
because DFA was the only available for out-of-area milk that were as a pooled producer or a fully regulated
buyer in the area. The witness testified detrimental to Braum’s interests, the handler. The witness related that this
that ARI opposed Proposals 1 and 3 decision was made to become a view was held until Pure Milk lost a
because it would limit the option of producer-handler. The witness said that major customer that caused it to become
becoming a producer-handler for those in addition to the problems posed by consistently unprofitable. In this regard,
dairy farmers seeking alternative pooling rules when the company was a the witness testified that Pure Milk had
marketing options for their milk. The fully regulated handler, Braum’s also an account with a very large grocery
witness characterized the dairy industry attributed difficulty acquiring a reliable chain in Texas and explained that when
as consolidating and forcing dairy and sufficient quantity of high-quality the large grocery chain customer learned
farmers to consider abandoning their milk on a timely basis as a reason for of Pure Milk’s involvement in the 1989
traditional relationships with becoming a producer-handler. milk order hearing the account was lost.
cooperatives. The witness viewed A witness appeared in opposition to The witness characterized and
becoming a producer-handler as a high- Proposals 1 and 3, on behalf of described this business loss as an
risk business venture but an important Mallorie’s Dairy, Edaleen Dairy, and example of the regulatory risk of being
alternative that should continue to be Smith Brothers Dairy, all producers- a producer-handler.
available to dairy farmers. handlers in the Order 124 marketing The SBEDMD witness also testified
The ARI witness also testified that area. The witness was the owner of the that Pure Milk was unable to obtain and
cooperatives with membership and Pure Milk and Ice Cream Company retain significant long-term contracts
market presence which is national in (Pure Milk), a large Texas producer- except for some school business and
scope have market power that may be handler that is no longer in operation. prison sales. The witness said that as a
reducing the revenue of individual dairy This witness, hereinafter referred to as producer-handler, there was simply too
farmers who have no other milk the SBEDMD witness, testified that Pure much marketing risk and insufficient

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74178 Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 239 / Wednesday, December 14, 2005 / Proposed Rules

long-term contract business to justify pooling and pricing provisions was regions using the Consumer Price Index
the additional required investment in misplaced. The witness maintained that rather than the Producer Price Index, (2)
plant and equipment to operate as a producer-handler, the only measure the sample of plants did not include any
profitably. The witness testified that as of success is the profitability of the plants located in the two marketing
a result of losing a large retail account entire operation. However, the witness order areas, and (3) the sample of plants
after being its supplier for two years to said that Pure Milk used the marketing could not demonstrate any similarity to
a fully regulated handler, Pure Milk lost order’s blend price as a transfer price for producer-handlers in either of the two
sufficient revenue and decided to end the limited purpose of conducting marketing order areas.
operations as a producer-handler. internal evaluations of its production The SBEDMD second witness also
The SBEDMD witness also related performance and to derive a measure of testified that DFA’s plant cost study
that in order to operate its plant its plant’s operating efficiency. The results were similarly based on faulty
profitably, Pure Milk would have had to witness testified that the company did data. According to the witness, the
achieve a volume of 1.2 million pounds use Federal order minimum class prices statistical analyses used in the DFA
per month, a level it never attained. In as a basis for pricing milk to its plant cost study should have been based
addition, the witness said, the company customers and as a basis for making on observations of individual plant
was never able to contain costs to a level contract bids. costs rather than by averaging plant cost
at which it could compete effectively A second witness appearing on behalf across the various classes of plant sizes
with large fully regulated handlers in of Smith Brothers Farms, Edaleen Dairy, selected for inclusion in the study. In
the marketing area. The witness testified and Mallorie’s Dairy, testified in addition, the witness testified that the
that Pure Milk’s fully regulated opposition to Proposals 1, 2, and 3. This analyses should have considered all
competitors had larger plants and witness, hereinafter referred to as the plant costs by region, labor type, and
operated 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, SBEDMD second witness, was of the type of regulated handler rather than
while Pure Milk’s plant, in contrast, opinion that these proposals would relying only on selected costs.
operated about 17 hours a day, 5 days adversely restrain competition in the The SBEDMD second witness was of
a week. The witness concluded that dairy industry in both the Order 124 the opinion that the interest in
because their competitors operated at a and 131 marketing areas. The witness advancing Proposals 1 and 3 stems from
higher capacity, they had plant testified that the producer-handler what the witness characterized as the
efficiencies Pure Milk could not exemption from pooling and pricing in arbitrary setting of higher than needed
achieve. The witness attributed Pure Orders 124 and 131 serve a needed and Class I differentials in all Federal milk
Milk’s inability to achieve the desired useful purpose by providing market orders. According to the witness, higher
level of plant efficiency to the producer- niches and marketing alternatives for than needed Class I differential levels
handler definition which limited and operators with dairy production and were set because of proponent lobbying
constrained their ability to purchase processing expertise as a means to efforts during Federal milk order reform.
additional milk supplies from others remain competitive in an era of According to the witness, lowering
during their low production seasons. otherwise increasing industry Class I differential levels would
The witness also attributed Pure Milk’s consolidation. The witness was of the effectively reduce the incentive for
inability to achieve desired plant opinion that the best measure of further business expansion of producer-
efficiencies to their inability to market orderliness in dairy markets should be handlers.
surplus milk production at a profit on results rather than on the mechanics In addition, the SBEDMD second
during high milk production seasons. and operations of a milk marketing witness was of the opinion that
The witness described these as other order. According to the witness, orderly producer-handlers add much needed
examples of regulatory risk faced by a marketing implies protecting the rights competition in the Order 124 and 131
producer-handler. of producers to choose their market marketing areas. According to the
At the closing of the Pure Milk plant, outlet freely without coercion or witness, the high concentration ratio of
the witness indicated that he then unreasonable barriers to market entry. handlers-to-dairy farmers in both orders
managed Promised Land Dairy which The SBEDMD second witness has created a near monopsony of milk
operated as a small producer-handler criticized the proponent’s use of the buyers that has negative implications for
from 1996–1999 supplying specialty Cornell University processing plant prices received by dairy farmers. The
packaged fluid milk products to health study, also relied upon by the NMPF witness also characterized the high
food and grocery stores. The witness witness, as a basis to support the concentration ratio of handlers-to-dairy
said that Promised Land Dairy’s proposed 3 million pound per month farmers as contrary to the public interest
specialty operation, selling Jersey cow route disposition limit for producer- because it may result in higher prices to
milk in glass bottles, also failed to be handlers. The witness was critical of the consumers.
profitable for the same reasons as the Cornell study, in part, because the The SBEDMD second witness pointed
Pure Milk Company—the inability to minimum plant sizes considered in the to other changes in marketing
balance supplies, the inability to study were 4 times or 12 million pounds conditions that warrant not changing
achieve plant operating efficiencies, and larger than the 3 million pound limit the current regulatory exemptions of
the inability to obtain and retain a long- contained as part of Proposals 1 and 3. producer-handlers. The witness testified
term customer base. The witness The witness also was of the opinion that that the consolidation of cooperatives
testified that Promised Land Dairy the Cornell plant study yielded results through mergers into fewer and larger
ended its operation as a producer- that were statistically insignificant cooperatives, together with full-supply
handler because it could not achieve because the number of plants used in marketing contracts, has reduced dairy
profitability. the study was too small to reveal useful farmer income because cooperatives can
In additional testimony, the SBEDMD information. The witness explained that re-blend and re-distribute revenue to
witness was of the opinion that relying the sample of plants used in the study their members at a value below the
on the concept of transfer pricing as a was not applicable to considerations order’s blend price. The witness also
means for demonstrating that a pricing regarding marketing conditions in testified that cooperatives that are
advantage accrues to producer-handlers Orders 124 and 131 because: (1) The national in scope may not be meeting
by being exempt from the order’s data were improperly grouped into the local needs of their dairy farmer

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members in markets where such A witness appearing on behalf of production risks, and processing risks
cooperatives are the dominant buyer of Smith Brothers Dairy (Smith Brothers), that, when combined into a single
milk because it leaves producers a producer-handler located in the Order business enterprise, are greater than
without alternative marketing options 124 marketing area, testified in those borne by either pooled producers
except to sell their milk through the opposition to Proposals 1 and 2. or fully regulated handlers. The witness
dominant cooperative. With such According to the witness, Smith asserted that any pricing advantage the
changes to marketing conditions, the Brothers has been operating as a producer-handler may have is offset by
witness concluded that becoming a producer-handler for some 43 years. The the combination of these costs and by
producer-handler provides dairy witness testified that Smith Brothers is the loss of opportunity to produce,
farmers a useful and needed alternative a family owned and operated enterprise acquire and market other dairy
to limited marketing options resulting that survives by serving niche markets products.
from dairy industry consolidations. not well served by other market The witness testified that Smith
The SBEDMD second witness participants, including fully regulated Brothers, in part, balances its own milk
characterized the application of the handlers. The witness testified that the production by selling surplus milk into
pooling and pricing provisions of largest single market niche served by Alaska, an area not regulated by a
Orders 124 and 131 as essentially an Smith Brothers is home delivery, Federal milk order, and characterized
imposition of a tax on producer- representing approximately 70 percent Alaska as an under-served market.
handlers. The witness said that the of its fluid milk sales. According to the A second witness, an independent
pooling and pricing provisions of the witness, Smith Brothers purposely milk distributor appearing on behalf of
orders should apply only to those pursued this market niche beginning in Smith Brothers, also testified in
handlers that purchase milk from 1980 when home delivery represented opposition to Proposals 1 and 2. The
producers. Along this theme, while only a third of their fluid milk sales. witness testified to operating a milk
acknowledging that producer-handlers The witness was of the opinion that the distribution business for more than 26
are also handlers, the witness did not goal of the proponents advancing the years and was one of approximately 60
view an intra-firm transfer of milk from adoption of Proposal 1 is to eliminate other independent distributors selling
the farm production enterprise to the producer-handlers as competitors in the Smith Brothers dairy products to market
processing plant enterprise as Order 124 marketing area. niches including coffee shops,
equivalent to a purchase of milk by a The witness maintained that Smith independent convenience stores, the
handler from a dairy farmer. The Brothers has not been a disruptive factor home delivery market, and daycare
witness testified to awareness of a court in the Order 124 marketing area. The
operations that larger market
ruling equating intra-firm transfers of witness testified that Smith Brothers
participants do not serve. The witness
does not directly compete for customers
milk as identical to purchases of milk attributed long-term business success as
with large fully regulated handlers as it
but considered such rulings not being a distributor to personal service,
does not have sales to grocery chains,
relevant to the context of this nostalgia, and product quality. The
convenience stores, or large commercial
proceeding for limiting the route witness also attributed sales success by
retailers in the marketing area. Relying
disposition volume of a producer- advertising that the milk distributed is
on Market Administrator statistics for
handler. produced without growth hormones and
Order 124, the witness related the
A third witness appearing on behalf of that the milk is produced and processed
decline in the number of producer-
Smith Brothers Farms, Edaleen Dairy, handlers from 73 in 1997 to 11 in 2000 by a family farm business.
and Mallorie’s Dairy, also testified in and a decline in route disposition by all A third witness for Smith Brothers
opposition to Proposals 1 and 2. The producer-handlers of nearly 6 percent Dairy also testified in opposition to
witness provided financial information between 2000 and mid-2003 as evidence Proposals 1 and 2. The witness was of
regarding efficient dairy processing that clearly demonstrates producer- the opinion that these proposals are
plant size and costs. The witness handlers are not a source of market designed to eliminate producer-handlers
indicated that successful long-term disorder. The witness also discounted as competitors of fully regulated
operators in the fluid processing the notion that producer-handlers enjoy handlers. The witness was also of the
business must operate their plants a competitive advantage by noting the opinion that both proposals are
efficiently and process sufficient lack of entry of new producer-handlers intended to serve as an intentional
volumes to achieve a competitive cost in the Order 124 marketing area. market entry barrier for other large
structure. The witness said that The Smith Brothers witness testified producers who may seek to become
establishing a maximum monthly that the majority of regulated handlers producer-handlers as a means to regain
processing limit of 3 million pounds for in Order 124 are much larger, more control of their milk marketings.
producer-handlers limits them to diversified, and not interested in the The witness related that Smith
operating plants that would be unable to niche market of home delivery that Brothers evaluates itself as a single
capitalize on the economies of scale Smith Brothers serves. The witness integrated enterprise. The witness
required to further reduce per unit costs testified that limiting a producer- testified that as the person responsible
to more competitive levels. handler’s route disposition to less than for measuring the efficiency of the
A former Market Administrator of the 3 million pounds per month would operation, Smith Brothers does not rely
pre-reform Central Arizona milk cause them to not only lose their status on the concept of transfer pricing as a
marketing order testified in opposition as a producer-handler but may even means to measure the efficiency or
to Proposal 1, 2, and 3. The witness result in Smith Brothers terminating market value of their milk production.
explained that if regulated, producer- operations altogether. The witness testified that Smith
handlers would be subject to the The Smith Brothers witness explained Brothers does not compare its cost of
pooling and pricing provisions of an that producer-handlers face different production to the Federal order Class I
order by being required to pay into the costs and risks than do pooled price or the blend price in measuring
producer-settlement fund of the order producers and fully regulated handlers. the efficiency of its operations.
on the basis of their Class I sales in the According to the witness, producer- According to the witness, Smith
marketing area. handlers have balancing risks, farm Brothers compares their total costs to

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the prices the company receives for its for example, that a very large customer, and cost of balancing its milk supply
products (total receipts). such as a warehouse customer, may be and operates at its sole risk and
A witness appearing on behalf of such a large part of a producer-handler’s enterprise, a regulatory constraint not
Edaleen Dairy, a producer-handler capacity that losing such a customer can applicable to fully regulated handlers.
located in the Order 124 marketing area, risk continued economic viability of the The Edaleen Dairy witness amplified
testified in opposition to Proposals 1 entire operation because it is so difficult the above differences between
and 2. The witness stated that as the to absorb the loss of revenue and to find producers-handlers, dairy farmers, and
milk production manager and co-owner new customers. fully regulated handlers. With respect to
of Edaleen Dairy, their cost of milk The Edaleen Dairy witness testified dairy farmer and producer-handler
production is higher than that estimated that producer-handlers also serve differences, the witness noted that a
by those proposing a limit on the route market niches that fully regulated pooled producer can deliver milk to
dispositions of producer-handlers. The handlers do not service. The witness alternative buyers if its primary buyer is
witness testified that Edaleen Dairy’s said that if a limit on producer-handler not available but that a producer-
milk production costs exceeded a recent route disposition had been in place handler can only deliver milk to its own
Order 124 blend price of $10.50 per cwt. when the Starbucks account became plant and a dairy farmer has no legal
The witness testified that Edaleen available, for example, the opportunity requirement or economic responsibility
Dairy once held a milk supply contract to service that account would not have for the viability of any particular
with Starbucks by replacing Sunshine been possible. The witness asserted that processing plant or handler. With
Dairy, a fully regulated handler. limiting the sales volume of producer- respect to the fully regulated handler
According to the witness, the contract handlers also would effectively and producer-handler differences, the
provided more than a year’s lead time eliminate servicing new market niches witness noted that a fully regulated
for Edaleen Dairy to develop additional that might arise in the future. In this handler can acquire any quantity of
milk production and processing regard, the witness cited the example of milk from any number of dairy farmers
capacities. The witness said that the coffee-kiosk shops that were not of and the business failure of any
Starbucks account was offered to interest to fully regulated handlers until individual dairy farmer does not have
Edaleen Dairy on the basis of its the mid-1990’s. an overwhelming impact on the
customer service, product quality and The Edaleen Dairy witness testified economic viability of a fully regulated
price. that an important element of why their handler’s operation.
The witness testified that Edaleen producer-handler operation is valued by The Edaleen Dairy witness testified
Dairy eventually lost its Starbucks’ their customers is because they have that combined risks—as a producer and
contract to Safeway, a fully regulated complete and total control of the as a handler—are not incurred by either
handler, noting that Starbucks phased production and processing of their milk. a pooled producer or a fully regulated
out Edaleen Dairy as a supplier over a The witness testified that without the handler. The witness testified, for
6-month period. The witness said that producer-handler exemption from the example, that if a producer-handler
reasons given for the loss of the account pooling and pricing provisions of Order loses a sale it continues to have milk
was that Safeway offered to supply milk 124, Edaleen Dairy would not be able to production that must be disposed of and
at a lower price and Starbucks’ rapid offer such a differentiated fluid milk the costs of that milk production must
growth gave rise to geographical supply product to its customers. be paid regardless of whether a market
needs that Edaleen Dairy could not A second witness, also appearing on exists for that milk. According to the
meet. The witness explained that the 6- behalf of Edaleen Dairy, testified in witness, the risks and costs of
month phase-out of Edaleen Dairy as a opposition to Proposals 1, 2, and 3. The production, processing, and marketing
milk supplier to Starbucks was unusual witness testified that Edaleen Dairy accrue to the entire operation because
in the dairy business. The witness said operates an efficient dairy farm producer-handlers are a single operating
that more typically account operation and processing plant as a enterprise.
terminations are given with a month’s producer-handler. The witness was of Additionally, the Edaleen Dairy
notice or less. the opinion that a producer-handler witness said, there are inseparable links
The witness testified that Edaleen operates a farm and a plant with risks between the production and processing
Dairy’s balancing costs are greater than that differ from the risks faced by dairy portions of the producer-handler
that of the pooled producers of Order farmers and processing plant operators. because if either the milk production
124. The witness also testified that According to the witness, a producer- process fails or the processing process
during periods of low market prices for handler differs from pooled dairy fails, both processes affect the single
milk, balancing costs are particularly farmers in three different ways: (1) operating entity. The witness testified
difficult to manage. The witness related Pooled producers are guaranteed the that the regulation of the processing and
that Edaleen Dairy’s surplus milk minimum Federal order blend price, (2) marketing operations of a producer-
production is sold to fully regulated pooled producers do not bear the handler coincidentally regulates the
handlers but they are paid $1.50 per cwt marketing risk and additional costs dairy farm portion of the producer-
less than the Class III price. involved in selling their milk, and (3) handler enterprise. According to the
The Edaleen Dairy witness testified pooled producers do not bear the risks witness, the most important benchmark
that there are several factors that tend to and costs of operating a processing for a producer-handler is whether in the
restrain the growth of producer- plant. With regard to how a producer- long-run the total revenue received for
handlers. According to the witness, handler differs from fully regulated its milk exceeds the total costs of its
environmental regulations, marketing handlers, the witness cited three operation.
and production risks, and management important differences: (1) Fully The Edaleen Dairy witness testified
risks all act to limit the ability for regulated handlers purchase their milk that the Federal order blend price is
business expansion. The witness said supply and therefore do not incur the irrelevant to a successful producer-
that the size of potential customers also risk of production, (2) fully regulated handler and bears no relation to the
can constrain a producer-handler’s handlers know the cost of raw milk prices received from its milk sales. The
operational flexibility and ability to before buying it from dairy farmers, and witness expressed the irony of
expand the business. The witness said, (3) a producer-handler bears the risk testimony concerning the importance of

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the blend price to producer-handlers by Dairy markets its milk on a wholesale restriction on sales volume would force
parties who do not operate as producer- basis directly and through independent a dramatic change to Sarah Farms’
handlers. The witness said that Edaleen distributors and small independent business structure and practices when
Dairy ignores what the Federal order retailing establishments ranging from there was no evidence of an unfair
blend price may be for the month and grocery stores to coffee shops. regulatory advantage by being exempt
seeks to sell milk at the highest possible According to the witness, the milk from the Order 131 pooling and pricing
price but never intentionally below the production enterprise of their producer- provisions.
Federal order Class I price. The witness handler operation is very efficient, The witness testified that Sarah
noted that during the past several years producing an average of 80 pounds of Farms’ sales exceed 3 million pounds
there have been times when the Class I milk per day per cow. The witness per month, noting that the majority of
price fell below the cost of production. testified that Mallorie’s Dairy’s largest its current sales, and sales since
During such times, the witness was of customer is an independent distributor becoming a producer-handler in 1995,
the opinion that fully regulated handlers who has developed a niche market by are in Arizona. The witness said that
have a distinct advantage over producer- supplying small companies that other some major customers include Sam’s
handlers. fully regulated handlers do not serve. Club, Basha’s (a grocery store chain),
The Edaleen Dairy witness testified According to the witness, Mallorie’s Costco, and other smaller independent
that cooperatives have certain regulatory Dairy lost a grocery store chain account retailers. The witness said that Sarah
advantages by being able to re-blend which had been one of its large long- Farms’ growth was directly related to its
pool proceeds and actually pay their term customers to a fully regulated ability to fill a market void left by
members less than the order blend handler. The witness stressed that any competitors who exited the dairy
price. The witness claimed that re- price advantage that Mallorie’s Dairy business leaving an opportunity that
blending allows cooperatives to use derives from the existing producer- others could not completely fill.
their bottling operations to essentially handler exemption from the pooling and The witness asserted that Sarah Farms
subsidize their processing operations. pricing provisions of Order 124 is offset produces a differentiated product from
The witness testified that if a producer- by the cost of balancing its milk supply, that of its competitors by marketing its
handler’s route disposition was more about 20 percent of its production. The fluid milk products with tamper
than 3 million pounds per month, the witness said that Mallorie’s Dairy resistant caps and by delivering their
required payment into the producer- performs its balancing requirements by fluid milk products to customers within
settlement fund would return no benefit selling its surplus milk to a local 24 hours of milking which, according to
to the producer-handler. According to cooperative at the lower of the Class III the witness, adds up to 7 days to the
the witness, the proceeds paid to the or Class IV price minus a substantial shelf life of its products. The witness
producer-settlement fund would simply discount. According to the witness, also said that Sarah Farms’ gallon-sized
be distributed to other pooled balancing sales represents about 10 fluid milk products are shipped in
producers. This would, according to the percent of Mallorie’s’ total sales while cardboard containers, which further
witness, have an adverse impact on specialty milk sales to commercial food differentiates these products from their
small businesses such as Edaleen Dairy, processors represent the remainder. competitors.
a business with fewer than 500 The Mallorie’s Dairy witness was The Sarah Farms witness testified that
employees. unsure of the full impact that adoption being a producer-handler is a high-risk
In addition, the Edaleen Dairy witness of Proposals 1 and 2 would have on undertaking. Relying on Market
saw no justification for limiting the Mallorie’s Dairy. However, the witness Administrator data, the witness noted
route disposition of producer-handlers said that Mallorie’s Dairy would lose its that the number of producer-handlers in
in Order 124 because Market producer-handler status and thus be Order 131 has declined from six in 1980
Administrator statistics indicate a forced to expand its plant size in order to only two in 2003, an important
declining market share of the Class I to continue operating, to remain indicator of the high-risk nature of being
market by producer-handlers. The competitive and to exploit their current a producer-handler.
witness also asserted that limiting the marketing strengths while seeking new The witness testified that Sarah Farms
route distribution of producer-handlers business from warehouse stores such as pays its own balancing costs and does
would essentially close the marketing Costco and Walmart. not transfer these costs to other fully
option that becoming a producer- The founder of Sarah Farms, a regulated handlers or pooled producers
handler offers to large producers. The producer-handler located in the Order of Order 131. In addition, the witness
witness viewed such restrictions as 131 marketing area, testified in testified that as a producer-handler,
acting to reduce competition among opposition to Proposals 1, 2, and 3. The Sarah Farms simultaneously bears all of
handlers rather than enhancing it. witness was of the opinion that the its own production, marketing, and
A third witness, the founder of purpose of the public hearing was to processing costs and risks unlike pooled
Edaleen Dairy, also testified in eliminate Sarah Farms as a competitor producers and fully regulated handlers.
opposition to Proposals 1, 2, and 3. The in the Order 131 marketing area. The The witness also was of the opinion that
witness related that when acquiring witness said that imposing a 3-million a fluid milk processing plant under
financing, bank loan officers will only pound per month route disposition limit construction in Clark County, Nevada,
consider Edaleen Dairy’s cows as on producer-handlers would restrict the an area exempt from Federal milk
appropriate collateral for financing. The growth of Sarah Farms while leaving regulation, poses a greater competitive
witness testified that bankers place no competing cooperatives and proprietary threat to producers and fully regulated
asset value for loan collateralization on handlers free to compete without handlers than any other entity. The
Edaleen Dairy’s processing plant additional restraints. The witness was of witness also testified that Sarah Farms
facilities. the opinion that imposing a route does not sell its milk below the Order
A witness appearing on behalf of disposition limit on producer-handlers 131 Class I price plus the cost of
Mallorie’s Dairy, a producer-handler as advanced in Proposal 3, was based on transportation, packaging, and
located in the Order 124 marketing area, projected future conditions and was processing.
testified in opposition to Proposals 1 therefore both unjustified and A witness representing Food City, a
and 2. The witness said that Mallorie’s speculative. According to the witness, a retail grocery chain, testified on behalf

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of Sarah Farms. The witness testified pricing, which stressed NDA, is not producer-handlers sales to 3 million
that Food City, and its parent company, applicable to producer-handlers. pounds per month on the basis that it
the Basha’s operate some 144 stores in The rapid and extensive growth of was the same benchmark as in the Fluid
Arizona, New Mexico, and California. Sarah Farms was also noted by NDA Milk Promotion Act of 1990. Rather,
The witness said that Food City buys who claimed that Sarah Farms now has UDA finds merit in regulating large
milk from Sarah Farms and from a fully captured 15 to 20 percent of all the producer-handlers above 3 million
regulated handler. The witness Class I sales in Order 131. This equates, pounds per month in route sales
indicated that Food City’s opposition to the NDA brief said, to a reduction in because at such a size they are able to
Proposal 3 was to help assure that Food Class I premium dollars by at least $2.5 achieve economies of scale that enable
City continues to have more than a million per year. In the Order 124 area, them to be competitive factors in the
single supplier for its fluid milk needs. added NDA, producer-handlers account market and able to compete with fully
The witness indicated that in the longer for about 10 percent of total in-area regulated handlers.
term, the availability of multiple Class I sales and similarly reduce Class A brief was filed on behalf of
suppliers tends to assure competitive I premium dollars. Shamrock Foods Company, Shamrock
pricing, reliable service, and product A brief filed on behalf of DFA Farms Company and the Dean Foods
quality. The witness said that Food reiterated their support for the adoption Company in continued support of the
City’s interest in multiple suppliers of proposals 1, 2, and 3 stressing that adoption of Proposal 3. They
transcended the issue of whether the small dairies which do not impact total emphasized that Sarah Farms’ doubling
supplier is a fully regulated handler or pool value should be the only exempted of Class I sales between 1998 and 2003
a producer-handler. producer-handlers. DFA noted that in was not known and could not have been
Order 124 the three largest producer- known during the time of adopting the
Post Hearing Briefs and Motions handlers, which average nearly 5.0 consolidated orders as a part of Federal
Post hearing briefs filed on behalf of million pounds of Class I sales each per milk order reform. In this regard, they
proponents and opponents made month, are larger in size than one-third also noted that at the time of Federal
extensive arguments as they relate to of the order’s fully regulated milk order reform, the Department
case law, arguing legal contexts for why distributing plants. According to the could not have known of the growing
large producer-handlers should or DFA brief, in Order 131, Sarah Farms importance to integrated operations
should not become subject to the has captured more than 15 million such as Kroger and Safeway of price
pooling and pricing provisions of the pounds of Class I sales per month. DFA competition from large warehouse box
Pacific Northwest and the Arizona-Las was of the opinion that orderly stores such as Costco caused by large
Vegas marketing orders. Presented marketing conditions can only be producer-handler sales. Lastly, they
herein are discussions of the briefs as maintained if any exceptions to indicated that no limit had been placed
they relate to the economic and classified pricing are limited and on producer-handlers during Federal
marketing conditions of the two orders. justified. DFA emphasized that large milk order reform because it could not
A brief filed on behalf of NDA producer-handlers in the two orders have been known that losses to pooled
reiterated its support for the adoption of have captured a significant share of the participants would increase by a
Proposals 1, 2, and 3. They noted that Class I sales which thereby reduces multiple of nearly four from before to
both Orders 124 and 131 have fully returns to all producers while retaining after implementation of order reform.
regulated handlers operating plants substantial Class I proceeds for each A brief filed on behalf of NMPF
whose route disposition of Class I milk producer-handler on an individual continued to iterate its support for
are smaller than the largest producer- handler pool basis. adoption of proposals that would limit
handlers in the two orders. NDA The DFA brief also reiterated reasons the size of producer-handlers. NMPF
stressed that the Department cannot why 3 million pounds of Class I route was of the opinion that the exemption
ignore a situation where the smallest distribution should be established as the for producer-handlers violates the
regulated handlers in the market are not cap for producer-handler exemption principles of producer equity upon
provided equitable minimum prices as from full regulation. They stated that which the milk order program relies. In
intended by Congress when the AMAA there is a similar benchmark applicable addition, they were of the opinion that
established the requirement that in the Fluid Milk Promotion Act of producer-handler exemption threatens
classified pricing be uniform to all 1990. They also indicated that volumes orderly marketing. They explained that
handlers. of milk sales from stores in the farms with over 3 million pounds of
In brief, NDA took issue with the marketing areas indicate that at the 3 monthly production account for about
notion by opponents that producer- million pound level, a handler could 15 percent of the total U.S. milk supply
handler balancing costs are greater than supply a number of small stores. They which equates to about 40 percent of
that of fully regulated handlers. NDA noted that at this threshold size, fluid milk sales. Continued exemption
argued that the milk order program does producer-handlers’ economies of scale of producer-handlers from pooling and
not attempt to consider all costs or are sufficient enough that as handlers, pricing, the NMPF maintained,
address issues of profitability. They producer-handlers can be competitive threatens both producer and handlers.
noted that balancing costs are typically with fully regulated handlers. Lastly, A Statement of Interest was filed on
borne by regulated handlers over and DFA maintained that, as producers, behalf of two cooperatives, Select Milk
above the minimum cost structure producer-handlers have substantial Producers and Continental Dairy
reflected in the orders. In this regard, economies of scale in on-farm milk Products, indicating support for
NDA noted that opponents expanded on production that if exempt from pooling, adoption of Proposal 3 as submitted by
the burden of their own balancing costs gives producer-handlers a significant UDA. Select Milk Producers is a New
but did not consider balancing costs advantage in the marketplace for fluid Mexico milk marketing cooperative and
incurred by fully regulated handlers. milk sales. Continental Dairy Products is an Ohio
They further explained that balancing A brief filed on behalf of UDA milk marketing cooperative.
costs may also be absorbed by continued to iterate its support for the A consolidated brief filed on behalf of
marketwide pooling through the adoption of Proposal 3. They indicated Edaleen Dairy, Mallorie’s Dairy, Smith
mechanism of Class III and Class IV that they did not support limiting Brothers Farms, and Sarah Farms

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stressed that as producer-handlers who certification of the hearing record on determining whether a producer-
have sales in excess of three million June 1, 2004. Given that the objection handler is a small or large business rest
pounds per month, adoption of any goes to the weight to be given to the on the producer-handler’s capacity as a
proposal that would subject them to the testimony and exhibits and not to their producer. Proponents noted that most
pooling and pricing provisions of the admissibility, the motion is denied. handlers, regardless of their regulatory
orders would cause their organizations A Motion to Strike the exceptions and status, would be considered small
to be severely affected. They stressed comments of the large producer- businesses because of the 500 employee
that if they become required to make handlers—Sarah Farms, Edaleen Dairy, threshold established by the Small
equalization payments to the producer- Mallorie’s Dairy, and Smith Brothers Business Administration’s definition of
settlement funds, this would take Farms—was filed on behalf of DFA. a large business for milk processing
millions of dollars per year away from This motion was received on July 11, plants.
their operations and redistribute it to 2005, and sought to prevent the The Shamrock, et al., comment
other producers with no return benefit introduction of new material into the reiterated the position of the proponents
to their operations. record by opponent producer-handlers. that an impact of more than a penny per
In brief, Edaleen Dairy, Mallorie’s The Department has concluded that the cwt per month on an order’s blend price
Dairy, Smith Brothers Farms, and Sarah testimony, briefs, and the relevance of is sufficient to indicate a significant
Farms indicated that the advantages comments and exceptions filed by all impact on the blend price that dairy
producer-handlers have as alleged by parties are clearly delineated in the farmers receive by pooling milk on these
proponents, vanish when the financial context of the official record. orders. In addition, they agreed with the
benefits of not having to pay minimum Accordingly, the motion by DFA, and a Recommended Decision’s finding that
prices and avoiding equalization subsequent motion filed jointly on producer-handlers with route
payments to the producer-settlement behalf of DFA, Dean, UDA, Shamrock disposition of fluid milk products in
fund are offset by their balancing costs. Farms and Shamrock Foods, are denied. excess of 3 million pounds per month
Any remaining advantage should be A Motion to Supplement the Public had a significant and disruptive impact
viewed as acceptable given the Record due to ex parte communications in these marketing areas. According to
increased risks producer-handlers incur was filed on behalf of Sarah Farms on the comment, these impacts are large
in the marketplace. They indicated that April 7, 2005. This motion sought enough to warrant a new review of the
rational persons would not take on additional information to amplify the producer-handler exemption from the
additional risk without the prospect of public record of this proceeding based pooling and pricing provisions of the
additional rewards. on the attendance of the AMS Dairy orders.
In brief, Edaleen Dairy, Mallorie’s Programs Deputy Administrator at the Shamrock, et al., took exception to the
Dairy, Smith Brothers Farms, and Sarah annual meeting of Dairylea Cooperative recommended 3 million pound per
Farms stressed that, in their opinion, where a speaker publicly addressed month in-area Class I route disposition
neither milk supply or prices for milk in issues germane to this proceeding and as the threshold beyond which
the two marketing areas had fluctuated producer-handlers in the Federal milk producer-handlers would become
unreasonably, noting that milk was in order program in a speech. A subject to the pooling and pricing
such sufficient supply that with or Memorandum to the Record Regarding provisions of the orders. They explained
without producer-handlers supplies are Ex Parte Communications was issued on that this threshold was too generous and
plentiful. They did not view their fluid May 23, 2005, by the Deputy should have been set at some level less
milk sales in the marketing area as Administrator, Dairy Programs than 3 million pounds per month.
contributing to the erosion of classified explaining that no Dairy Programs Shamrock, et al., was joined in this
prices or blend prices. They cited officials engaged in ex parte discussions exception by the National Milk
hearing record statistics to assert that of the material issues of this proceeding Producers Federation. Shamrock et al.,
they are not a cause of market disorder at the Dairylea Cooperative meeting on also took exception to the charge of ex
or cause the inefficient movement of October 12–13, 2004, nor at the DFA parte communications between USDA
milk. They cited the reduction in the annual meeting on March 23–24, 2005, officials and certain leaders of DFA
number of producer-handlers, nor at any other forum. This alleged by large producer-handlers who
emphasizing that between 1975 and memorandum is available for public would likely become regulated if the
2000, the Pacific Northwest order inspection at the Office of the USDA orders were amended. According to the
producer-handler numbers fell from 73 Hearing Clerk and at the Dairy Programs comment, such allegations were
to 11 with average daily pounds of Web site, www.ams.usda.gov/dairy/. unwarranted.
production increasing only 4.7 percent Comments and exceptions by DFA
between 1985 and 2000. For the Comments and Exceptions similarly supported the findings of the
Arizona-Las Vegas order, they noted A number of proponents for Recommended Decision. The comments
that since 1982, the number of regulating large producer-handlers, by DFA called for immediate
producer-handlers fell from seven to including Shamrock Foods Company, implementation of the proposed full
two. According to the brief, on the basis Dean Foods Company, United Dairymen regulation of producer-handlers with in-
of such statistics, there can be no of Arizona, and Shamrock Farms area route disposition of fluid milk
finding that producer-handlers have (hereinafter Shamrock, et al.) submitted products in excess of 3 million pounds
unabated growth or that they are a joint comments and exceptions to the per month. They noted that each
source of market disruption. Recommended Decision. The month’s delay in implementing the
A motion to strike the testimony and proponents were joined by the Alliance proposed rule significantly reduces the
related exhibits concerning plant of Western Milk Producers representing blend price for pooled producers. They
operating costs offered by DFA’s California cooperatives (1100 dairy agreed with the Recommended Decision
consultant witness was filed on behalf farmer members) in support of the and the Shamrock, et al; conclusion that
of Edaleen Dairy, Mallorie’s Dairy, Recommended Decision’s findings. a producer-handler’s characterization of
Smith Brothers Farms and Sarah Farms. The Shamrock, et al., comments being a small or large business should
The presiding Administrative Law Judge agreed with the Recommended be based on the producer-handler’s
received this motion after the Decision’s finding that the criteria for capacity as a producer.

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DFA’s comments also noted that the included Sarah Farms, Mallorie’s Dairy, explanations of activities that the
record of the proceeding supported the Edaleen Dairy, and Smith Brothers Recommended Decision incorrectly
conclusions of the Recommended Farms, Inc. Their exceptions specifically characterizes as market disruption and
Decision on the disorder caused by reiterated opposition to adopting any disorderly marketing.
exempting large producer-handlers from measure that would cause them to be In separate exceptions, Sarah Farms
the pooling and pricing provisions of subject to the order’s pooling and reiterated their opposition to the
the orders. In this regard, their pricing provisions. They also took findings of the Recommended Decision
comments reiterated from their post- exception to the finding that impacts on maintaining that market disorder
hearing brief that large producer- an order’s blend price are significant resulting from the alleged advantages
handler balancing costs are much lower and disruptive to orderly marketing. enjoyed by producer-handlers is not
in these marketing areas than historical This finding, they stressed, is arbitrary demonstrated in the record. They noted
balancing costs of small producer- and capricious because, in their that producer-handler market share in
handlers. As with Shamrock, et al., the opinion, record evidence is not the Pacific Northwest order had
comment noted that allegations of ex sufficient to reach this conclusion. declined in the year preceding the
parte communications between DFA The large producer-handlers’ joint hearing—from 10 percent to 9 percent.
and USDA officials were unfounded. exception disagreed with the They asserted that producer-handler
As with Shamrock, et al., DFA took Recommended Decision’s finding that market share in the Arizona-Las Vegas
exception to adopting a threshold of 3 large producer-handlers should be order was 10 percent during the same
million pounds per month of in-area viewed as large businesses in their period, concluding that no finding of
route disposition. They maintained that capacity as dairy farmers rather than in either competitive advantage or market
the threshold should include all route their capacity as handlers. In this disorder can be made. Mallorie’s Dairy,
disposition not just in-area route regard, they concluded that if producer- Edaleen Dairy, and Smith Brothers
disposition. DFA was joined in this handlers are considered for regulation Farms, presented separate and similar
exception by National Milk Producers on the basis that they are large in their exceptions.
Federation. capacity as dairy farmers, they cannot Each large producer-handler noted in
Six hundred ten e-mail comments have their exemption from pooling and their separate exception that at current
received expressed support for the pricing provisions removed because the route disposition levels, their monthly
Recommended Decision’s findings. AMAA provides the authority to only revenue would decline significantly if
These comments were from dairy farmer regulate handlers and not dairy farmers. they become required to make
members of cooperatives, employees of They continued to assert that they are equalization payments to the order’s
cooperatives, representatives of seamless integrated entities that cannot producer-settlement fund. Edaleen
producer and processor organizations be viewed in separate capacities as Dairy, for example, stated that their
from California, as well as producer and producers and handlers. Thus, the monthly revenue would decline by
processor organizations in the Pacific exception concluded that large $125,000. The other large producer-
Northwest and Arizona-Las Vegas producer-handlers should be viewed as handlers noted in their separate
marketing areas. Comments indicating small businesses because they have exceptions that owners, employees and
support received via the U.S. Postal fewer than 500 employees. customers would experience similar
Service and fax also were largely from The large producer-handlers’ took losses in revenue from reduced sales
dairy farmers, cooperatives, associations exception to the Recommended volume in their efforts to maintain
of cooperatives, and their employees. Decision’s findings concerning the producer-handler status.
Supporting comments for the impact on order blend prices noting that In separate exceptions Edaleen Dairy
Recommended Decision’s findings by milk market prices vary over time as noted that lowered revenues may in
dairy farmer and dairy farmer marketing conditions change. They turn reduce employment at their dairy
organizations focused on the pricing concluded that such variations in prices farm and processing plant and may even
and sales advantages that producer- are unrelated to the level of route affect employment in supporting service
handlers have by being exempt from disposition of producer-handlers businesses as a result of down-sizing
classified pricing and marketwide individually or in the aggregate. In their operations. They were joined in
pooling. Specifically, these comments addition, they stressed that even if large similar exceptions by Smith Brothers
stressed that the impact on fully producer-handlers enjoyed advantages Farms, Mallorie’s Dairy, and Sarah
regulated handlers and pooled as claimed by proponents, their Farms. All large producer-handlers also
producers is directly related to the size aggregate share of the market in the asserted that their full regulation would
of producer-handlers. In general, these Pacific Northwest during the period decrease competition and that their
comments contain the common theme 2000–2003 had decreased. customers would likely experience
that the pricing advantage enjoyed by The large producer-handlers’ joint increased prices and reduced product
producer-handlers has been the exception asserted that the record choices.
difference between an order’s Class I demonstrates that fully regulated Within the April 13–June 13, 2005,
price and blend price. The comments handlers are able to compete effectively comment period, 12,223 e-mail
generally support the conclusion that with large producer-handlers. They took comments and more than 5,600 hard-
small producer-handlers, having route exception to the Recommended copy comments were received through
disposition below 3 million pounds per Decision’s finding that large producer- the U.S. Postal Service or by fax that
month, have not been a significant handlers are the cause of market opposed fully regulating large producer-
factor in the Pacific Northwest or disruption and characterized the finding handlers. In addition, 1969 pages of
Arizona-Las Vegas marketing areas. as arbitrary and capricious. In their petitions containing a total of 26,267
The large producer-handlers from the view, such a finding is not established signatures opposing the findings of the
Arizona-Las Vegas and Pacific or supported in the record. The Recommended Decision were received.
Northwest marketing areas submitted exception maintains that normal The signed petitions were submitted by
joint comments and exceptions in variability in milk prices and gains or Edaleen Dairy, Mallorie’s Dairy, and
opposition to the findings of the losses of commercial accounts are Sarah Farms. Of the 12,223 e-mail
Recommended Decision. These entities contained in the record as examples and comments received, approximately

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11,590, or about 95 percent, opposed the distributing plant that supplies the same proposed to end when the volume of
Recommended Decision’s findings. product in a same-sized package with a Class I route disposition in the
These comments were generated as part similar label in the same month. While marketing area exceeds 3 million
of a write-in campaign by what each order has its own unique pounds per month.
appeared to be customers located in the definition, it is accurate to say that in In considering issues relating to size,
United States, Canada, and Mexico of general, producer-handlers are required producer-handlers are dairy farmers that
the large producer-handlers opposing to operate their businesses at their own process and sell only their own milk
their full regulation. enterprise and risk, meaning that the production. These entities are dairy
Other comments received in care and management of the dairy farmers as a pre-condition to operating
opposition to the Recommended animals and other resources necessary a processing plant as producer-handlers.
Decision included letters from the for the production, processing, and Consequently, the size of the dairy farm
United States Senators from Alaska and distribution of their Class I products are determines the production level of the
some members of the U.S. House of the sole responsibility of the producer- operation and is the controlling factor in
Representatives from the States of handlers. the capacity of the processing plant and
Oregon, Washington, and Arizona. Producer-handler exclusion from possible sales volume. Accordingly, the
Several Oregon and Washington elected pooling and pricing provisions also has major consideration in determining
State, county and municipal officials been historically based on the premise whether a producer-handler is a large or
and regional economic development that the objectives of the AMAA small business focuses on its capacity as
organizations provided exceptions (orderly marketing) could be achieved a dairy farm. Under SBA criteria, a dairy
expressing opposition to the without extending regulation to this farm is considered large if its gross
Recommended Decision’s findings. The category of handler. In previous revenue exceeds $750,000 per year with
exceptions speculated that fully rulemaking decisions, the Department a production guideline of 500,000
regulating producer-handlers might has articulated its authority to subject pounds of milk per month. Accordingly,
result in job losses at locations where producer-handlers to further regulation, a dairy farm with sales of its own milk
these producer-handlers produce and including being subject to marketwide that exceeds 3 million pounds per
bottle milk and market their dairy pooling and minimum pricing month is considered a large business.
products. Some of these comments provisions, if they singularly or Another factor to consider regarding
speculated that independent residential collectively have an impact on the the size of producer-handlers is their
milk route operators in Oregon might be market. For example, in a Final Decision ability to have an impact on the
forced out of business if large producer- (31 FR 7062–7064; May 13, 1966) for the market’s pooled participants. Indicators
handlers became fully regulated. Puget Sound order, a predecessor to the of market disruption affecting dairy
Exceptions opposing implementation Pacific Northwest order, the Department farmers who pool their milk on the
of the Recommended Decision were found that producer-handlers should orders and by the orders’ fully regulated
submitted on behalf of consumer and continue to be exempt from pooling and handlers should be determined on the
processor interests from unregulated pricing provisions of the order with the basis of prices that are uniform to
areas who currently purchase milk from caveat that the producer-handlers could producers and equitable among
some of the large producer-handlers. be subject to further regulation if handlers. When these price conditions
These parties expressed concern that justified by prevailing market are present, milk marketing order areas
milk prices in unregulated areas, such conditions. This position was amplified are considered to be exhibiting orderly
as Alaska, would rise significantly if in a subsequent Puget Sound Final marketing—a key objective of the
large producer-handlers became fully Decision (32 FR 1073–1074; July 21, AMAA that relies on the tools of
regulated. 1967) where the Department found that classified pricing and marketwide
a hearing should be held to consider the pooling. In the absence of equity among
Findings
regulation of producer-handlers if the producers and handlers such conditions
Although producer-handlers have not marketing area is susceptible to being are and should be deemed to be
been fully regulated as a general affected by producer-handlers or if disorderly.
practice, the AMAA provides the producer-handler sales could disrupt or As already discussed above, producer-
authority to regulate handlers of milk to operate to the detriment of other handler exemptions from the pooling
carry out the purposes of the AMAA. producers in the market. Such policy and pricing provisions of the orders are
With respect to producer-handlers, the was also articulated in another decision based upon the premise that the burden
legislative history indicates that there is concerning producer-handlers (Texas of surplus disposal of their milk
authority to regulate such operations if and Southwest Plains, Recommended production is borne by them alone.
they are so large as to disrupt the market Decision, 54 FR 27179, June 28, 1989). Consequently, they have not shared the
for producers. In the past during other That decision concluded that subjecting additional value of their production that
rulemaking proceedings, producer- producer-handlers to the pooling and arose from Class I sales with pooled
handlers have been found not to disrupt pricing provisions of the order would be dairy farmers. In this regard, to the
the marketing of milk and milk appropriate if it could be shown that extent that producer-handlers are no
products. producer-handlers cause market longer bearing the burden of surplus
Nevertheless, restrictions were placed disruption to the market’s dairy farmers disposal, specifically disposal of milk
on producer-handlers. Both the Pacific or regulated handlers. production in some form other than
Northwest and the Arizona-Las Vegas The proposals for fully regulating Class I, gives rise to considering
orders currently permit producer- producer-handlers in this proceeding, regulatory measures that would tend to
handlers to purchase up to 150,000 specifically making them subject to the provide price equity among producers
pounds per month of supplemental milk order’s pooling and pricing provisions, and handlers that is eroded when
only from pool sources. In addition, the are based primarily on issues relating to producer-handlers are permitted to
Arizona-Las Vegas order, prohibits the producer-handler size, specifically the retain the entire additional value of milk
disposition of Class I products by a volume of Class I route disposition. The accruing from Class I sales.
producer-handler to a wholesale producer-handler exemption from The record supports finding that
customer who is also serviced by a pool pooling and pricing provisions is producer-handlers with more than 3

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million pounds of route disposition per producer-handlers over fully regulated facilities, they are not assuming the
month in both the Pacific Northwest handlers. While this has always been entire burden of balancing their
and the Arizona-Las Vegas marketing the case, those producer-handlers with production with their fluid milk
areas are the primary source of route disposition of more than 3 million requirements as discussed later in this
disruption to the orderly marketing of pounds of milk per month in these two decision.
milk. This disorder is evidenced by orders are large enough to have a The record evidence supports
significantly inequitable minimum negative impact on the prices received concluding that the one large producer-
prices that handlers pay and reduced by pooled dairy farmers. Since fully handler represents between 12–18
blend prices that dairy farmers receive regulated handlers do not have the percent of the total Class I sales volume
under the terms of each area’s marketing ability to escape payment into the in the Arizona-Las Vegas marketing
order. Accordingly, producer-handler producer-settlement fund of the area. The record evidence supports a
status under the Pacific Northwest and difference in their use-value of milk and conclusion that the exemption of this
the Arizona-Las Vegas orders should the order’s blend price like producer- producer-handler has reduced the blend
end when a producer-handler exceeds 3 handlers, regulated handlers competing price received by pooled producers
million pounds per month of in-area against large producer-handlers are at a between $0.04 and $0.06 per cwt per
Class I route disposition. competitive price disadvantage. month in the Arizona-Las Vegas
Review of the intent of the producer- Even though producer-handlers argue marketing area. Similarly, record
handler provision and the marketing otherwise, this decision agrees with evidence reveals that producer-handler
conditions arising from this provision in proponent arguments, most notably by exemption from pooling and pricing in
these orders could warrant finding that the NMPF witness, that the difference the Pacific Northwest reduces the blend
the original producer-handler between the Class I price and the blend price to all other dairy farmers by
exemption is no longer valid or should price is a reasonable estimate of the $0.02–$0.04 per cwt. The Pacific
be limited to 150,000 pounds per month pricing advantage producer-handlers Northwest marketing area has eight
Class I route disposition limit. However, enjoy even if it is not possible to producer-handlers, with four having
the hearing notice for this proceeding determine the precise pricing advantage Class I route disposition exceeding 3
constrains such a finding to a level of of any individual producer-handler. million pounds per month. In the
not less than 3 million pounds per This pricing advantage is compounded aggregate, all producer-handlers in the
month of Class I route dispositions. as producer-handler size, and the Pacific Northwest account for nearly 10
Adopting a 3 million pound Class I accompanying increase in the volume of percent of the total Class I sales in the
route disposition limit on producer- Class I sales in the marketing area, marketing area. Importantly, the impact
handlers is supported in direct begins to increasingly affect the blend on the marketing area’s blend price by
testimony by proponent witnesses and price received by pooled producers. the exemption from the pooling and
other marketing data, most notably the The record contains specific examples pricing provision by any of the
volume of Class I route disposition demonstrating that producer-handlers individual producer-handlers whose
relative to the total volume of Class I with route disposition of more than 3 sales exceed 3 million pounds per
sales, and structural changes in the million pounds per month have and are month on average exceeds $0.01, a level
markets. Producer-handlers with more placing their fully regulated competitors found to be significant and disruptive to
than 3 million pounds of Class I route at a comparative sales disadvantage. For orderly marketing. While the marketing
disposition significantly affect the blend example, Shamrock Foods, a regulated conditions of the Pacific Northwest area
price received by producers. This handler with substantial sales in the differ from the Arizona-Las Vegas
decision finds merit in DFA’s and Arizona-Las Vegas marketing area, is marketing area in the number of
Dean’s testimony that a blend price constrained in competing on a price producer-handlers and the relative
impact of 1-cent per cwt is significant. basis for customers by the order’s market share of producer-handlers,
The reduction in the blend prices minimum prices that must be paid for evidence of market disruption by
received by producers in the Pacific milk procurement. Meanwhile, the large producer-handlers resulting in lower
Northwest and Arizona-Las Vegas producer-handler is able to compete for blend prices is a common factor of both
orders, attributable to producer-handler commercial customers at prices that a orders.
route disposition are significant and regulated handler is unable to match. The record, based on Market
greater than 1-cent per cwt. The record The competitive pricing advantage of Administrator data, supports
evidence supports a conclusion that the producer-handlers is clearly attributable concluding that the annualized
exemption of producer-handlers from to their exemption from paying the reduction in revenue received by the
pooling and pricing has reduced the difference between the Class I and blend average pooled producer in the Pacific
blend price between $0.04 to $0.06 per price into the producer-settlement fund. Northwest marketing area would range
cwt per month in the Arizona-Las Vegas This competitive pricing advantage has from $1,500–$3,000 from the $0.02–
marketing area and between $0.02 to been recognized previously by the $0.04 cents per cwt per month reduction
$0.04 per cwt per month for the Pacific Department (Milk in the Texas on the order’s blend price during 2003.
Northwest marketing area since January Southwest Plains Marketing Area, 54 FR For the Arizona-Las Vegas marketing
2000. The causes of the blend price 27182) and determined not to cause area the record supports concluding that
reduction arise from a producer- disorderly marketing conditions. the annualized reduction in revenue
handler’s ability to price fluid milk at an However, marketing conditions and the received by the average pooled producer
amount between the blend price and the overall dairy industry’s marketing would range between $11,000–$17,000
order’s Class I price combined with the structure have changed significantly in from the $0.04–$0.06 per cwt impact of
producer-handler’s size relative to the these orders resulting in disorderly large producer-handlers on that order’s
total volume of Class I milk disposition marketing conditions as evidenced by blend price per month for 2003.
in the respective marketing areas. lower blend prices received by pooled As in the Arizona-Las Vegas
In general, the difference between the producers. The producer-handlers are marketing area, producer-handlers in
Class I price and the blend price not significantly larger in these two orders the Pacific Northwest similarly enjoy a
paid into the producer-settlement fund and while they are solely responsible for competitive sales advantage because
is the pricing advantage enjoyed by their production and processing they do not procure milk at the order’s

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Class I price as required of fully by having the pooling and pricing essentially become the residual
regulated handlers. This has resulted in provisions of the orders apply to large suppliers of Class I milk to the market
fully regulated handlers not being able producer-handlers. Accordingly, this when a producer-handler’s production
to compete with producer-handlers for decision does not agree with the is not able to satisfy the fluid milk
Class I route sales. For example, arguments of either the large producer- demands of their customer. The retailer
Vitamilk testified that as regional handlers or in those exceptions of other need only purchase milk from fully
grocery chains were acquired by interested parties arguments that full regulated handlers to offset what a
national handlers in the Pacific regulation would eliminate their ability producer-handler is not able to supply.
Northwest marketing area, independent to provide home-delivery or hormone- This is of growing concern to both
regulated handlers such as Vitamilk free milk to their customers. No producer and regulated handler
found themselves unable to compete for provision of any Federal milk marketing interests in the Pacific Northwest and
sales with large producer-handlers in order prevents or promotes the the Arizona-Las Vegas marketing areas
the changed marketing environment of marketing practices that handlers use to because consumers are buying an
fewer wholesale customers on a price service their customer demands for increasing share of their grocery needs
basis. Vitamilk demonstrated that the home-delivery or in providing hormone- from discount outlets.
pricing advantage that accrues to free milk products. The record evidence, reinforced with
producer-handlers from their exemption The record supports concluding that subsequent comments, also reveals that
from pooling and pricing provisions producer-handlers with more than 3 producer-handlers in both the Pacific
created an insurmountable marketing million pounds of route disposition per Northwest and the Arizona-Las Vegas
obstacles that eliminated Vitamilk’s month have gained the ability to no marketing areas with route disposition
ability to compete for available longer bear the burden of the surplus of more than 3 million pounds per
customers in the marketing area on the disposal of their milk production. This month enjoy sales of fluid milk products
basis of minimum Class I prices represents a significant development into unregulated areas such as Alaska
established by the order. that warrants the need for regulatory and California. These examples
For both the Pacific Northwest and action because producer-handler contribute to demonstrating a shifting of
the Arizona-Las Vegas marketing areas, exemption from the pooling and pricing the burden of balancing their milk
record evidence demonstrates that large provisions of the orders has been production onto the order’s pooled
producer-handlers have a comparative rationalized on the basis that producer- producers. This outcome has the
pricing advantage over fully regulated handlers bear the entire burden of compounded disadvantage for regulated
handlers. Without full regulation of balancing their own production. A handlers and their producer-suppliers
large producer-handlers, the order is not producer-handler not bearing the because fully regulated handlers must
able to ensure equitable minimum burden of balancing their milk account to the marketwide pool for
prices to similarly situated handlers. production essentially shifts such Class I sales outside of the marketing
Such an advantage has resulted in fully burden to the market’s pooled producers area at the order’s Class I price. This
regulated handlers losing sales to while simultaneously retaining the full yields a two-fold advantage to producer-
producer-handlers on the basis of value of Class I sales for themselves. handlers—the ability to eliminate
minimum prices. Producer-handlers Record evidence, reinforced by balancing their milk production through
have similarly lost accounts to fully subsequent exceptions, demonstrates Class I sales at the expense of the
regulated handlers but for reasons other that large producer-handlers are able to regulated market and the ability to
than minimum prices established by the use their pricing advantage to transfer compete on a consistent basis at prices
orders. their burden of surplus disposal to that fully regulated handlers are unable
Consideration was given to the regulated handlers. Evidence provided to meet.
themes of the more than 12,000 e-mail by an affiliate of NDA demonstrates that This evidence contradicts the notion
comments, petition subjects and producer-handlers were able to use their that the balancing of their milk
arguments advanced by large producer- pricing advantage to displace sales of production is a burden borne
handlers that were received during the regulated handlers into Alaska. exclusively by the producer-handler.
briefing and comment periods of the According to the witness testimony, Thus it is reasonable to find that
Recommended Decision. One of these producer-handlers were able, at will, to producer-handlers with Class I route
themes is that large producer-handlers displace the established accounts of distribution in excess of 3 million
are family-owned business enterprises fully regulated handlers on the basis of pounds per month in the Pacific
in both orders that should receive minimum prices. The testimony Northwest and the Arizona-Las Vegas
support through their special status. supports concluding that such sales by marketing areas are not truly balancing
This concern does not acknowledge that large producer-handlers displace fluid their production. Accordingly, this
the producers who are the competitors milk sales of fully regulated handlers decision finds that the burden of
of large producer-handlers are nearly all that would otherwise have been balancing has been essentially shifted to
family-owned dairy farms who are producer-handler surplus. the market’s pooled participants. This
members of cooperatives. Another A changing retail environment gives decision also finds that large producer-
highly commented theme given rise to the potential of producer- handlers have and use a pricing
consideration in this decision and handlers entering into sales agreements advantage that cannot be overcome by
raised by large producer-handlers was to furnish the retailers with as much fully regulated handlers. This advantage
that certain market niches that they milk as the producer-handler can increases only as producer-handler size
serve in the public interest such as deliver. Marketing milk to national increases. Therefore, it is reasonable
providing home delivery and hormone grocery discounters creates an that large producer-handler status
free milk will not be provided by fully environment in which the producer- should be limited.
regulated handlers and may not occur if handlers can sell nearly their entire This decision considered the
they become fully regulated. There is no production to such a retailer, bypassing relevance of a 3 million pound route
record evidence to support concluding the need to balance their production. In disposition threshold on producer-
that home-delivery or availability of such a marketing environment, the handler route disposition. The relative
hormone free milk would be disrupted regulated market’s pooled producers impact on the market’s pooled

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74188 Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 239 / Wednesday, December 14, 2005 / Proposed Rules

participants by producer-handlers that arise from inequitable Class I prices and confirmed, except where they may
having more than 3-million pounds of to handlers. A 3 million pound per conflict with those set forth herein.
route disposition in the market is month limitation on route disposition (a) The tentative marketing agreement
measurable and significant in both the would likely result in the full regulation and the order, as hereby proposed to be
Pacific Northwest and Arizona-Las of a current producer-handler in the amended, and all of the terms and
Vegas marketing areas. When Arizona-Las Vegas marketing area. Of conditions thereof, will tend to
considered in the aggregate, producer- the producer-handlers operating in the effectuate the declared policy of the Act;
handlers in the Pacific Northwest with Pacific Northwest marketing area, four (b) The parity prices of milk as
over 3 million pounds of route producer-handlers would likely become determined pursuant to Section 2 of the
disposition collectively have more regulated by adopting the 3 million Act are not reasonable in view of the
significant share of the Class I market pound per month limitation on route price of feeds, available supplies of
which further lowers the blend price disposition. Adoption of this limitation feeds, and other economic conditions
received by dairy farmers. will not completely eliminate the which affect market supply and demand
All handlers have different impact of the other producer-handlers for milk in the marketing area(s), and
production and processing costs. These in the Pacific Northwest marketing area the minimum prices specified in the
differences may be due to differing but should nevertheless result in a tentative marketing agreements and the
levels of plant operating efficiencies significant and immediate reduction in orders, as hereby proposed to be
related to their size or to that portion of market disorder and disruption by amended, are such prices as will reflect
their milk supply that may be produced assuring that similarly situated handlers the aforesaid factors, insure a sufficient
and supplied from their own farms. face the same minimum Class I prices quantity of pure and wholesome milk,
Whatever the cost differences, all fully and producers receive the same blend and be in the public interest;
regulated handlers must pay the same prices. (c) The tentative marketing
minimum Class I price and equalize The hearing notice contained a agreements and the orders, as hereby
their use-value of milk (generally, the proposal that would make the producer- proposed to be amended, will regulate
difference between the Class I price and handler definition of the Pacific the handling of milk in the same
the blend price) into the order’s Northwest order the same as that for the manner as, and will be applicable only
producer-settlement fund. Similarly, all Arizona-Las Vegas order, most notably to persons in the respective classes of
producers have differing milk the proposed requirement would not industrial and commercial activity
production costs. Producer cost permit a producer-handler to market to specified in marketing agreements upon
differences, for example, may be the the same client the same product in a which a hearing has been held; and
result of farm size or differing milk similar package with a similar label in (d) All milk and milk products
production levels attributable to the same month as a regulated handler. handled by handlers, as defined in the
management ability. Nevertheless, The record does not contain sufficient tentative marketing agreement and the
producers, regardless of their costs, evidence of disorderly marketing order as hereby proposed to be
receive the same minimum blend price. conditions that would support amended, are in the current of interstate
This decision finds that disorderly recommending a prohibition on commerce or directly burden, obstruct,
marketing conditions exist in the Pacific producer-handlers in marketing to the or affect interstate commerce in milk or
Northwest and Arizona-Las Vegas same client the same product in a its products.
marketing areas. The source of the similar package with a similar label in
disorder is directly attributable to the the same month as a regulated handler. Rulings and Exceptions
operations of large producer-handlers Additionally, the proposals contained In arriving at the findings and
and their exemption from the pooling in the hearing notice seeking the full conclusions, and the regulatory
and pricing provisions of the orders. regulation of producer-handlers when provisions of this decision, each of the
The record evidence for full regulation they surpass a 3-million pound per exceptions received was carefully and
of large producer-handlers with route month threshold in Class I route fully considered in conjunction with the
disposition in excess of 3 million dispositions in the marketing area were record evidence. To the extent that the
pounds per month support finding that substantially modified during the findings and conclusions and the
market disruption is present because the hearing. The modifications redescribe regulatory provisions of this decision
blend prices paid to producers in both producer-handlers and harmonize the are at variance with any of the
orders are measurably and significantly producer-handler definitions between exceptions, such exceptions are thereby
lowered. the two orders with changed overruled for the reasons previously
This decision finds that producer- terminology. The record evidence does stated in this decision.
handlers with route disposition in not support finding that a compelling
excess of 3 million pounds per month need exists to make the Pacific Marketing Agreement and Order
enjoy significant competitive sales Northwest producer-handler definition Annexed hereto and made a part
advantages because they do not account the same as that for the Arizona-Las hereof is one document—A Marketing
to the marketwide pool at the same Vegas order. The current producer- Agreement regulating the handling of
minimum Class I price for raw milk handler definitions of both orders milk.
procurement. This clearly gives large adequately describe those entities that It is hereby ordered that this entire
producer-handlers a pricing advantage qualify as producer-handlers. final decision and the Marketing
over fully regulated handlers when Agreement annexed hereto be published
competing for sales. This pricing General Findings
in the Federal Register.
advantage becomes amplified as The findings and determinations
producer-handler size increases further hereinafter set forth supplement those Referendum Order To Determine
affecting the minimum price producers that were made when the Pacific Producer Approval; Determination of
receive. Adoption of a 3 million pound Northwest and the Arizona-Las Vegas Representative Period; and Designation
per month threshold for producer- orders were first issued and when they of Referendum Agent
handlers should tend to significantly were amended. The previous findings It is hereby directed that a referendum
reduce disorderly marketing conditions and determinations are hereby ratified be conducted and completed on or

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before the 30th day from the date this (1) The said order as hereby amended, route distribution within the marketing
decision is published in the Federal and all of the terms and conditions area during the month not to exceed 3
Register, in accordance with the thereof, will tend to effectuate the million pounds and who the market
procedure for the conduct of referenda declared policy of the act; administrator has designated a
(7 CFR 900.300–311), to determine (2) The parity prices of milk, as producer-handler after determining that
whether the issuance of the order as determined pursuant to Section 2 of the all of the requirements of this section
amended and hereby proposed to be Act, are not reasonable in view of the have been met.
amended, regulating the handling of price of feeds, available supplies of (a) Requirements for designation.
milk in the Pacific Northwest and feeds, and other economic conditions Designation of any person as a
Arizona-Las Vegas marketing areas are which affect market supply and demand producer-handler by the market
approved or favored by producers, as for milk in the aforesaid marketing area. administrator shall be contingent upon
defined under the terms of the order, as The minimum prices specified in the meeting the conditions set forth in
amended and as hereby proposed to be order as hereby amended are such paragraphs (a)(1) through (5) of this
amended, who during such prices as will reflect the aforesaid section. Following the cancellation of a
representative period were engaged in factors, insure a sufficient quantity of previous producer-handler designation,
the production of milk for sale within pure and wholesome milk, and be in the a person seeking to have their producer-
the aforesaid marketing area. public interest; and handler designation reinstated must
The representative period for the (3) The said order as hereby amended demonstrate that these conditions have
conduct of such referendum is hereby regulates the handling of milk in the been met for the preceding month.
determined to be June 2003. same manner as, and is applicable only (1) The care and management of the
The agent of the Secretary to conduct to persons in the respective classes of dairy animals and the other resources
such referendum is hereby designated to industrial or commercial activity and facilities designated in paragraph
be James R. Daugherty, the Pacific specified in, a marketing agreement (b)(1) of this section necessary to
Northwest and Arizona-Las Vegas upon which a hearing has been held. produce all Class I milk handled
Market Administrator. (4) All milk and milk products (excluding receipts from handlers fully
List of Subjects in 7 CFR Parts 1124 and handled by handlers, as defined in the regulated under any Federal order) are
1131 tentative marketing agreement and the under the complete and exclusive
order as hereby proposed to be control, ownership and management of
Milk marketing orders.
amended, are in the current of interstate the producer-handler and are operated
Dated: December 9, 2005. commerce or directly burden, obstruct, as the producer-handler’s own
Lloyd C. Day, or affect interstate commerce in milk or enterprise and its own risk.
Administrator, Agricultural Marketing its products. (2) The plant operation designated in
Service. paragraph (b)(2) of this section at which
Order Related to Handling
Order Amending the Order Regulating the producer-handler processes and
It is therefore ordered, that on and packages, and from which it distributes,
the Handling of Milk in the Pacific
after the effective date hereof, the its own milk production is under the
Northwest and Arizona-Las Vegas
handling of milk in the Pacific complete and exclusive control,
Marketing Areas
Northwest and Arizona-Las Vegas ownership and management of the
(This order shall not become effective marketing areas shall be in conformity producer-handler and is operated as the
unless and until the requirements of to and in compliance with the terms and producer-handler’s own enterprise and
§ 900.14 of the rules of practice and conditions of the order, as amended, at its sole risk.
procedure governing proceedings to and as hereby amended as follows:
formulate marketing agreements and (3) The producer-handler neither
The provisions of the order amending receives at its designated milk
marketing orders have been met). the order contained in the production resources and facilities nor
Findings and Determinations Recommended Decision issued by the receives, handles, processes, or
Administrator, Agricultural Marketing distributes at or through any of its
The findings and determinations Service, on April 7, 2005, and published
hereinafter set forth supplement those designated milk handling, processing, or
in the Federal Register on April 13, distributing resources and facilities
that were made when the order was first 2005 (70 FR 19636), are adopted and
issued and when it was amended. The other source milk products for
shall be the terms and provisions of reconstitution into fluid milk products
previous findings and determinations these orders. The revised orders read as
are hereby ratified and confirmed, or fluid milk products derived from any
follows: source other than:
except where they may conflict with 1. The authority citation for 7 CFR
those set forth herein. (i) Its designated milk production
Parts 1124 and 1131 continues to read resources and facilities (own farm
(a) Finding. A public hearing was held
as follows: production);
upon certain proposed amendments to
the tentative marketing agreement and Authority: 7 U.S.C. 601–674. (ii) Pool handlers and plants regulated
to the order regulating the handling of under any Federal order within the
milk in the Pacific Northwest and PART 1124—MILK IN THE PACIFIC limitation specified in paragraph (c)(2)
Arizona-Las Vegas marketing areas. The NORTHWEST MARKETING AREA of this section; or
hearing was held pursuant to the 2. Amend the Producer-handler (iii) Nonfat milk solids which are
provisions of the Agricultural Marketing definition of the Pacific Northwest milk used to fortify fluid milk products.
Agreement Act of 1937, as amended (7 marketing order by revising § 1124.10 to (4) The producer-handler is neither
U.S.C. 601–674), and the applicable read as follows: directly nor indirectly associated with
rules of practice and procedure (7 CFR the business control or management of,
Part 900). § 1124.10 Producer-handler. nor has a financial interest in, another
Upon the basis of the evidence Producer-handler means a person handler’s operation; nor is any other
introduced at such hearing and the who operates a dairy farm and a handler so associated with the
record thereof, it is found that: distributing plant from which there is producer-handler’s operation.

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(5) No milk produced by the herd(s) first day of the month following the distributing plant from which there is
or on the farm(s) that supply milk to the month in which the requirements were route distribution within the marketing
producer-handler’s plant operation is: not met or the conditions for area during the month not to exceed 3
(i) Subject to inclusion and cancellation occurred. million pounds and who the market
participation in a marketwide (1) Milk from the milk production administrator has designated a
equalization pool under a milk resources and facilities of the producer- producer-handler after determining that
classification and pricing program handler, designated in paragraph (b)(1) all of the requirements of this section
under the authority of a State of this section, is delivered in the name have been met.
government maintaining marketwide of another person as producer milk to (a) Requirements for designation.
pooling of returns, or another handler. Designation of any person as a
(ii) Marketed in any part as Class I (2) The producer-handler handles producer-handler by the market
milk to the non-pool distributing plant fluid milk products derived from administrator shall be contingent upon
of any other handler. sources other than the milk production meeting the conditions set forth in
(b) Designation of resources and facilities and resources designated in paragraphs (a)(1) through (5) of this
facilities. Designation of a person as a paragraph (b)(1) of this section, except section. Following the cancellation of a
producer-handler shall include the that it may receive at its plant, or previous producer-handler designation,
determination of what shall constitute acquire for route disposition, fluid milk a person seeking to have their producer-
milk production, handling, processing, products from fully regulated plants and handler designation reinstated must
and distribution resources and facilities, handlers under any Federal order if demonstrate that these conditions have
all of which shall be considered an such receipts do not exceed 150,000 been met for the preceding month.
integrated operation, under the sole and pounds monthly. This limitation shall (1) The care and management of the
exclusive ownership of the producer- not apply if the producer-handler’s dairy animals and the other resources
handler. own-farm production is less than and facilities designated in paragraph
(1) Milk production resources and 150,000 pounds during the month. (b)(1) of this section necessary to
facilities shall include all resources and (3) Milk from the milk production produce all Class I milk handled
facilities (milking herd(s), buildings resources and facilities of the producer- (excluding receipts from handlers fully
housing such herd(s), and the land on handler is subject to inclusion and regulated under any Federal order) are
which such buildings are located) used participation in a marketwide under the complete and exclusive
for the production of milk which are equalization pool under a milk control, ownership and management of
solely owned, operated, and which the classification and pricing plan operating the producer-handler and are operated
producer-handler has designated as a under the authority of a State as the producer-handler’s own
source of milk supply for the producer- government. enterprise and its own risk.
handler’s plant operation. However, for (d) Public announcement. The market (2) The plant operation designated in
purposes of this paragraph, any such administrator shall publicly announce: paragraph (b)(2) of this section at which
milk production resources and facilities (1) The name, plant location(s), and the producer-handler processes and
which do not constitute an actual or farm location(s) of persons designated as packages, and from which it distributes,
potential source of milk supply for the producer-handlers; its own milk production is under the
producer-handler’s operation shall not (2) The names of those persons whose complete and exclusive control,
be considered a part of the producer- designations have been cancelled; and ownership and management of the
handler’s milk production resources and (3) The effective dates of producer- producer-handler and is operated as the
facilities. handler status or loss of producer- producer-handler’s own enterprise and
(2) Milk handling, processing, and handler status for each. Such at its sole risk.
distribution resources and facilities announcements shall be controlling (3) The producer-handler neither
shall include all resources and facilities with respect to the accounting at plants receives at its designated milk
(including store outlets) used for of other handlers for fluid milk products production resources and facilities nor
handling, processing, and distributing received from any producer-handler. receives, handles, processes, or
fluid milk products which are solely (e) Burden of establishing and distributes at or through any of its
owned by, and directly operated or maintaining producer-handler status. designated milk handling, processing, or
controlled by the producer-handler or in The burden rests upon the handler who distributing resources and facilities
which the producer-handler in any way is designated as a producer-handler to other source milk products for
has an interest, including any establish through records required reconstitution into fluid milk products
contractual arrangement, or over which pursuant to § 1000.27 that the or fluid milk products derived from any
the producer-handler directly or requirements set forth in paragraph (a) source other than:
indirectly exercises any degree of of this section have been and are (i) Its designated milk production
management control. continuing to be met, and that the resources and facilities (own farm
(3) All designations shall remain in conditions set forth in paragraph (c) of production);
effect until canceled, pursuant to this section for cancellation of the (ii) Pool handlers and plants regulated
paragraph (c) of this section. designation do not exist. under any Federal order within the
(c) Cancellation. The designation as a limitation specified in paragraph (c)(2)
producer-handler shall be canceled PART 1131—MILK IN THE ARIZONA- of this section; or
upon determination by the market LAS VEGAS MARKETING AREA (iii) Nonfat milk solids which are
administrator that any of the 3. Amend the Producer-handler used to fortify fluid milk products.
requirements of paragraph (a)(1) through definition of the Arizona-Las Vegas milk (4) The producer-handler is neither
(5) of this section are not continuing to marketing order by revising § 1131.10 to directly nor indirectly associated with
be met, or under any of the conditions read as follows: the business control or management of,
described in paragraphs (c)(1), (2) or (3) nor has a financial interest in, another
of this section. Cancellation of a § 1131.10 Producer-handler. handler’s operation; nor is any other
producer-handler’s status pursuant to Producer-handler means a person handler so associated with the
this paragraph shall be effective on the who operates a dairy farm and a producer-handler’s operation.

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Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 239 / Wednesday, December 14, 2005 / Proposed Rules 74191

(5) No milk produced by the herd(s) be considered a part of the producer- acquire for route disposition, fluid milk
or on the farm(s) that supply milk to the handler’s milk production resources and products from fully regulated plants and
producer-handler’s plant operation is: facilities. handlers under any Federal order if
(i) Subject to inclusion and (2) Milk handling, processing, and such receipts do not exceed 150,000
participation in a marketwide distribution resources and facilities pounds monthly. This limitation shall
equalization pool under a milk shall include all resources and facilities not apply if the producer-handler’s
classification and pricing program (including store outlets) used for own-farm production is less than
under the authority of a State handling, processing, and distributing 150,000 pounds during the month.
government maintaining marketwide fluid milk products which are solely
(3) Milk from the milk production
pooling of returns, or owned by, and directly operated or
resources and facilities of the producer-
(ii) Marketed in any part as Class I controlled by the producer-handler or in
milk to the non-pool distributing plant handler is subject to inclusion and
which the producer-handler in any way
of any other handler. participation in a marketwide
has an interest, including any
(6) The producer-handler does not equalization pool under a milk
contractual arrangement, or over which
distribute fluid milk products to a classification and pricing plan operating
the producer-handler directly or
wholesale customer who is served by a under the authority of a State
indirectly exercises any degree of
plant described in § 1131.7(a), (b), or (e), government.
management control.
or a handler described in § 1000.8(c) (3) All designations shall remain in (d) Public announcement. The market
that supplied the same product in the effect until canceled pursuant to administrator shall publicly announce:
same-sized package with a similar label paragraph (c) of this section. (1) The name, plant location(s), and
to a wholesale customer during the (c) Cancellation. The designation as a farm location(s) of persons designated as
month. producer-handler shall be canceled producer-handlers;
(b) Designation of resources and upon determination by the market
facilities. Designation of a person as a administrator that any of the (2) The names of those persons whose
producer-handler shall include the requirements of paragraph (a)(1) through designations have been cancelled; and
determination of what shall constitute (5) of this section are not continuing to (3) The effective dates of producer-
milk production, handling, processing, be met, or under any of the conditions handler status or loss of producer-
and distribution resources and facilities, described in paragraphs (c)(1), (2) or (3) handler status for each. Such
all of which shall be considered an of this section. Cancellation of a announcements shall be controlling
integrated operation, under the sole and producer-handler’s status pursuant to with respect to the accounting at plants
exclusive ownership of the producer- this paragraph shall be effective on the of other handlers for fluid milk products
handler. first day of the month following the received from any producer-handler.
(1) Milk production resources and month in which the requirements were (e) Burden of establishing and
facilities shall include all resources and not met or the conditions for maintaining producer-handler status.
facilities (milking herd(s), buildings cancellation occurred. The burden rests upon the handler who
housing such herd(s), and the land on (1) Milk from the milk production is designated as a producer-handler to
which such buildings are located) used resources and facilities of the producer- establish through records required
for the production of milk which are handler, designated in paragraph (b)(1)
pursuant to § 1000.27 that the
solely owned, operated, and which the of this section, is delivered in the name
requirements set forth in paragraph (a)
producer-handler has designated as a of another person as producer milk to
source of milk supply for the producer- of this section have been and are
another handler.
handler’s plant operation. However, for (2) The producer-handler handles continuing to be met, and that the
purposes of this paragraph, any such fluid milk products derived from conditions set forth in paragraph (c) of
milk production resources and facilities sources other than the milk production this section for cancellation of the
which do not constitute an actual or facilities and resources designated in designation do not exist.
potential source of milk supply for the paragraph (b)(1) of this section, except [FR Doc. 05–24024 Filed 12–9–05; 2:16 pm]
producer-handler’s operation shall not that it may receive at its plant, or BILLING CODE 3410–02–P

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