Community | November 18, 2011 | 19 comments

The Feds Continual Targeting of Independent Food Merchants

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Anonmaly
From fines issued to little girls for unlicensed lemonade stands to armed raids on Amish dairies, the ongoing police state assault on independent food merchants has now gone from the outrageous to the surreal. Monte and Laura Bledsoe learned this the hard way when an official from their local health department crashed a recent dinner party they were hosting and forced them to destroy hundreds of dollars worth of organic foods they were planning to serve to their guests, all because they hadn’t first received an official stamp of approval from the ugly face of government bureaucracy.

On Oct. 21, the Bledsoes held their first annual “farm-to-fork” dinner, at their Quail Hollow Farm, a modest, seven-acre agricultural co-op in the scenic Moapa Valley to celebrate the bounty of crops they had just harvested.

Mrs. Bledsoe recently spoke to this AFP writer about the event and what transpired early into the festivities.

“It was a beautiful evening with clear weather. The crops were just bursting,” said Bledsoe. “It was a good time of year to have a celebratory dinner.”

According to Bledsoe, the dinner was open to the public and was announced in local newspapers. “This was apparently our big mistake,” she said. “We were getting ready to serve the first course of hors d’oeuvres when an inspector named Mary Oaks showed up.”

Ms. Oaks asked the Bledsoes for receipts of commercial food purchases and for the packaging the meat came in. “Of course we didn’t have that,” said Mrs. Bledsoe. “All of the food came from our farm or from local ranchers—rabbit, chicken, pork and lamb. That was the problem. It was not USDA certified.”

Because of that, Ms. Oaks demanded that the meat immediately be disposed of. She insisted that produce had to be thrown away, too, because it had been cut prior to inspection and was not at the appropriate serving temperature.

As Mrs. Bledsoe explained: “We were getting ready to put the food out, so the produce was soon to be brought to temperature. But because it wasn’t at that place when Ms. Oaks inspected them, she deemed all of the food unfit to eat.”

Mrs. Bledsoe then informed the inspector: “We have a big family gathering tomorrow. Can I at least save it for that?” Ms. Oaks said that would not be acceptable. Mrs. Bledsoe then told Ms. Oaks that their farm was fully sustainable and that everything they didn’t use would be fed to their animals or added to the compost pile.

“At least let me feed it to my pigs,” she implored. Ms. Oaks made a phone call to her supervisor, but again the answer was, “No.”

Ms. Oaks threatened that if the Bledsoes did not dispose of the food immediately, she would be forced to call the police and have all guests escorted off the property. Under duress, Mrs. Bledsoe knuckled under to the inspector’s threats and used her own store-bought bleach to pour over the food.

“At least 120 pounds of perfectly good food was made toxic,” said Mrs. Bledsoe. “What a waste.”

It was at this point that Mrs. Bledsoe’s husband remembered that they had a phone number for the Farm to Consumer Legal Defense Fund. Pursuant to a brief consultation, the Bledsoes were reminded of their Fourth Amendment rights and were then instructed on how to handle the situation.

“We asked the inspector if she had a search or arrest warrant,” said Mrs. Bledsoe. When Ms. Oaks was unable to provide an adequate municipal, state or federal statute that would establish reasonable cause that a crime had been committed, she was summarily told to leave the premises by the very authorities she summoned to disrupt the event.

“We won,” said Mrs. Bledsoe.

When asked if the latest controversy would jeopardize future farm-to-fork dinners, Mrs. Bledsoe adamantly replied: “Absolutely not. We realize now that we have some serious issues concerning our rights and food freedom.”

The Bledsoes have now been inspired to join a coalition with a local state representative to challenge state laws concerning organic farming.


http://americanfreepress.net/?p=1470
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19 comments // The Feds Continual Targeting of Independent Food Merchants

  • mybologna
    • 0
      mybologna  
    • Unfortunately, when republicans talk about deregulation they are not speaking about the burdensome regulations small businesses and small farmers suffers through. To them regulations are only good when they protect big industry from small farmers and small start ups. Its all like the mafia, pay to play, protect monopolies.

    • 6 months ago
  • mhaarts
    • 0
      mhaarts  
    • Growing your own food and supporting local farmers I feel is a fast and growing trend large scale companies are worried about, and will do anything to stop this from happening-

    • 6 months ago
  • Dusty_King
    • +1
      Dusty_King  
    • I am more inclined to buy from a local farmer than something that has a USDA stamp. I've been in those slaughter houses, the last thing they are is sanitary and free of disease. BUY LOCAL. F- the USDA, they are a joke.

    • 6 months ago
  • bailey78
    • +2
      bailey78  
    • This is a reminder ask for the paper work they must have with them before pouring bleach on the food. then call the local police force to have the Government prick removed and have a tresspass warrent given to them. Then if they come back they will go straight to jail. Unless their paper work is in order.

    • 6 months ago
  • mybologna
  • bailey78
    • 0
      bailey78  
    • mybologna:

      I have a great dislike for those that force their beliefs on others. I dislike it when the govenment trys to say what can and can not be eaten or sold to be eaten. The local boy scouts had a fish fry they were selling Redfish and spotted True both ar a game fish and can not be sold. Yet nothing was said. when a local home was destroyed by fire and the home owners friends had a fish fry that was also done with the local catch of redfish and spotted trout The local fish and game police shut them down and threatened them with fines and jail time if they didn't comply.

    • 6 months ago
  • CalgarC
  • nardo1224
  • VoyagerFilms
  • ecoalex
    • 0
      ecoalex  
    • Image
    • A dairy in Fresno Ca that sold raw milk had elevated e-coli (manure) in it.

      I had a dairy,I did feed the raw milk to my family,but I was extremely careful.

      A factory farm such as in Fresno is unable to be clean enough,it's a matter of scale,and employees.

      People especially the young and old can get seriously sick from raw milk.I would say no to raw milk unless it was from a small producer whom I knew very well.

      Or,you can take your chances.

      http://www.fox40.com/news/headlines/ktxl-raw-milk-warning-from-state-health-depa...

      Google Fresno raw milk dairy and choose your own source.

    • 6 months ago
  • cmc101
  • notonmywatch59
  • wynnmeg61
    • +4
      wynnmeg61  
    • Well you know they can't have us actually feeding ourselves, how are they going to keep control of us if they allow such atrocious things.

    • 6 months ago
  • artemis6
  • Anonmaly
    • +7
      Anonmaly  
    • I don't want to call out any party, the fact remains small scale farmers, non processed milk distributors, anyone that isn't a part of serious commercial farming has found themselves under attack.

      It's been shown time and time again, often food grown organically, in a close proximity to it's final destination, is way better for so many different reasons...

      You've got the petroleum issues; from the amount of gasoline/diesel it takes to ship food, and the petroleum based fertilizers, the damage to local ecosystems due to runoff.. And just the detached method of farming produces an inferior crop...

      Then there is the GM issue, not everyone wants "frankenfoods" that are so predominant in commercial farming, the shit is not healthy or safe, or even studied extensively enough...

      As a person who plans to make a living/future off small scale organic farming in the near future, I find this trend of attacking people like me (or their livelihoods is) very disturbing.....

    • 6 months ago
  • chew_chew
    • +6
      chew_chew  
    • Anonmaly:

      I find this very disturbing, too, Aanonmaly. And I agree with you 100% on this matter.

      It may, or may not be insignificant, but there is one small bit of good news here: at least now, the Bledsoes are aware of the problem, and are taking steps to do what they can to correct it. Kudos to them for that.

      And the "Inspector Clouseau" person (Ms Oaks) sounds like she should probably get a life.

    • 6 months ago
  • Anonmaly
    • +5
      Anonmaly  
    • chew_chew:

      In some regards another "reactionary" post on my part, still it's hard not to find this kind of thing disturbing, especially in the context of reading about the crack-downs on everything from Amish milk to lemonade stands....

      I've seen a few documentaries on how commercial food is handled, most notably "Earthlings", and I've been in small scale slaughterhouses, been and have been around small scale vegetable gardeners... The difference in handling as well as mentality of the types of people handling the food is night & day...

      I don't even trust the FDA anymore, and whether it's the lobbyists or whoever making it harder on non corporate entities, it's just to much crap...

      Of course allot of this authoritarian, corporate corruption/collusion with government in order to keeps us enslaved to them is the reason for "occupy". No not this particular issue, but if you'll notice it's the same type of political practices everywhere that have people protesting in the streets.

    • 6 months ago
  • chew_chew
    • +4
      chew_chew  
    • Anonmaly:

      "... it's just too much crap..."

      In so many areas of our daily lives, that pretty much sums it up, seems to me.

      Yeah, I think the *idea* of the FDA is a good thing, but they have been owned, and I no longer trust them to look out for our best interests, either. Without placing any blame for how that happened, it needs to change.

      I am of the opinion that commercial food (and the larger the commercial entity, the more important this becomes, to me) is an area where regulation makes sense. That is, I want to know the food I purchase at the grocery or a restaurant is safe and fit to eat. I do not trust the free market to do that, as it has demonstrated time-and-again that greed will *almost* always win out over public safety. And since I am unable to visit the peanut butter factory (as an arbitrary example), I want to know that someone is watching them to be sure the product is made in a way which will not make me sick; or kill me; or kill anyone in my family; or kill any other human being, for that matter.

      Locally grown produce is a different thing, to me. If I can visit the farm, and am allowed to see what happens to the produce from the ground to the point I make the purchase, why should government be involved in that? So long as I trust the farmer, and am allowed to do my homework finding out *from* the farmer *if* they use pesticides (for example), then any government is just in the way and a waste of taxpayer dollars.

      I wish you luck with your organic farming, btw. If I lived near enough, I would certainly want to be one of your customers. It is obvious your passion runs deep, and your intentions are sincere.

    • 6 months ago
  • cmc101
    • 0
      cmc101  
    • chew_chew:

      i want more FDA inspectors on the ground.
      To trust a neighbor with my life after listening to what he say about regulation interfering with his profits it give shivers down my spine.
      I don't want him to spray flea killer in my neighborhood he may kill my dog and do harmful effects to my small children

    • 6 months ago
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