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In 2005, the Department of Homeland Security announced plans to replace the old Plum Island Animal Disease Center off Long Island with a facility on the U.S. mainland to study Foot and Mouth Disease and other dangerous pathogens. Kansas won the job in 2008, with a site on the campus of Kansas State University in Manhattan.But today, more than three years later, the proposed $1.14 billion National Bio- and Agro-Defense Facility faces funding obstacles, safety questions, rising costs and political fallout. For Kansas and the Midwest, the stakes couldn’t be higher.Here you’ll find coverage and updates from Harvest Public Media, KCUR and Kansas Public Media.

We've Got The Tech To Track Cattle And Their Diseases, But Ranchers Worry About Big Data

GARDEN CITY, Kansas — Before June 2018, finding cattle that were potentially exposed to diseases was time-consuming and complicated, requiring a patchwork of information from auction houses, feedlots, producers and meatpacking plants.

That’s when Kansas spearheaded U.S. CattleTrace, filling a void when it comes to tracing deadly diseases in live cattle and possibly opening up new global markets for beef. Nine other states have signed onto the pilot program, which has distributed 65,000 ultra high-frequency tags that are scanned just like your online purchases.

But there’s a catch — CattleTrace is voluntary. Some ranchers say the program is just not worth their time or the possible invasion of privacy. And with more than 12 million cattle in feedlots across the U.S., one of the program’s officials even acknowledges that if a major “tragedy” strikes, it might not be effective because the program isn’t mandatory.

Cassie Kniebel, the program manager for U.S. CattleTrace, said it’s “something that we hope works for the industry and in the industry because it’s producer-driven,” she said. “So it’s not a government program.”

CattleTrace did start out with some government money, $500,000 in federal funds, and the same from the state of Kansas and private funding. It now exists as a nonprofit that wants to be the national disease traceability system, but it doesn’t expect to be implemented 100%.

Kansas is one of the leading states for meatpacking and feedlots, so a lot of cattle from other states come here. 

“We’re at a huge risk if there’s a disease outbreak because we have a lot of cattle moving into the state,” Kniebel said.

Kansas also is soon to be the home  to the nation’s top animal disease research facility, which will be located in Manhattan and is replacing Plum Island in New York.

How the program works

The U.S. Department of Agriculture requires that animals traveling between states have an identification tag and a veterinarian certificate, but the rule exempts animals under 18 months. Plus, cattle tags vary: low frequency, high frequency, metal clips, ear or back tags. CattleTrace wants to use one type of tag — ultra high frequency tag — to streamline data collection. 

“Think of it like when you have a chip for the toll booth going on the interstate and these are high frequency identification tags,” CattleTrace board member Mark Gardiner said. “... they can be scanned at the speed of commerce.”

So far, the CattleTrace database has captured 300,000 scans from ultra high frequency tags at auction markets, feedlots or meatpacking plants. It keeps tabs on an animal’s tag number, the date and time the tag was read, and the GPS coordinates of the animal. Once a cow is slaughtered, its tag is retired.

Nine other states are involved with CattleTrace — Texas, Oklahoma, Nebraska, Missouri, Kentucky, Virginia, Florida, Washington and Oregon — though Kansas has the most tagged animals. 

Mark Gardiner walks among his cattle at Gardiner Angus Ranch in Ashland, Kansas.
Credit Corinne Boyer / Kansas News Service
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Kansas News Service
Mark Gardiner walks among his cattle at Gardiner Angus Ranch in Ashland, Kansas.

Only state animal health officials may make requests for information from the database, which is exempt from the Freedom of Information Act. Kniebel said the design is intentional.

“The information is controlled kind of by the board of directors, so that access, that data privacy, is top of mind for producers,” Kniebel said.

Belvidere, South Dakota, rancher Kenny Fox already uses metal-clip ear tags for his calf-cow operation. The tags are free through the National Uniform Eartagging System, the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s animal disease tracing system for cattle over 18 months.

He’s worried about who’s controlling and securing CattleTrace’s database.

“Even if there isn’t a disease outbreak, who gets to count the numbers of cattle? Who gets to keep that data secure?” Fox said. “Other unscrupulous people might hack into the system and use those numbers of cattle against us for marketing purposes or, you know, many other things.”

The most-feared diseases

CattleTrace is most worried about a few highly contagious diseases: brucellosis, tuberculosis, bovine spongiform encephalopathy (aka BSE or Mad Cow Disease), rabies, and foot and mouth disease. The latter hasn’t been seen in the U.S. since 1929, but if it happened today, it would shut down the cattle industry.

“When it’s something like hoof and mouth, everything will stop movement — in fact they call it a stop-movement order and no cattle can move,” said Ron Gill, an extension livestock specialist and associate department head of Texas A&M University’s animal science department.

“And if they’re on the highway, they’ll actually pull them to the side and make them stop and unload them somewhere,” he added. “So yeah, it’ll be ugly when that happens.”

Any of those diseases could prompt a disease trace request from CattleTrace, according to Justin Smith, Kansas’ Animal Health Commissioner at the state Department of Agriculture. He offered an example of what kind of drastic measures would need to be taken if there was an outbreak of foot and mouth disease.

“If we find that there’s a herd that we can point back to … and they are an infected herd … more than likely we will have to indemnify and euthanize and dispose of those animals in a humane way,” he said. “So they would be destroyed.”

If experts suspected a disease outbreak was afoot, Smith said he’d request information from CattleTrace, and the board of directors would have to approve his request. After that, he’d review data from every facility the animal was scanned at, and call those places to find out when the animal arrived and who brought the animal in.

This makes it easy to eliminate someone’s cattle from a disease investigation, he said.

“I don’t have to require surveillance testing. I don’t have to put quarantines on your facilities. I don’t have to put movement restrictions on your facilities.” Smith said. “You can go about your business, because through traceability, I was able to prove that your cattle are not subjected to this disease.”

Mark Gardiner is a board member of CattleTrace and a rancher in Ashland, Kansas. He called the program a good, safe system.
Credit Corinne Boyer / Kansas News Service
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Kansas News Service
Mark Gardiner is a board member of CattleTrace and a rancher in Ashland, Kansas. He called the program a good, safe system.

Moving forward

Gardiner, who’s also a rancher in Ashland, Kansas, knows disease traceability progress has been slow.

“Quite frankly, we in the United States have not done a good enough job of doing this,” he said.

But he’s hopeful that there are enough incentives for cattle producers to join — new markets.

“I can send my cattle and sell my cattle to the European Union or to China to markets that I can’t have if I don’t have this documentation,” Gardiner said.

Plus, Gill said, CattleTrace weeds out sick cattle, which may help keep grocery stores stocked with beef — regardless of how prices may fluctuate during a disease outbreak.

“That is the entire premise behind it is to try to show that we can show where did these (cattle) come from (and) get the rest of the cattle back in the market quicker,” Gill said.

But Fox is still skeptical, calling the ear tags “an extra expense.” He’d rather see more federal money being spent on zoonotic disease prevention at the country’s international borders and ports.

“We do not bring cattle or pigs in from countries that have foot and mouth disease,” Fox said. “We require that the meat be cooked at a certain temperature that prevents the disease from coming in here.”

Gardiner understands the arguments for and against a disease tracing system. He also knows that because participation isn’t mandatory, things might not go smoothly: “It wouldn’t work in the event of a tragedy as far as we might not be able to trace back where that animal came from.”

CattleTrace wants to incorporate 68% of U.S. cattle into its database, a far cry from the 0.1% it has. The nonprofit’s funding runs out in June. Kniebel said it plans to continue and has support from the cattle industry, but if funding doesn’t come through, the nonprofit would dissolve.

“It would be difficult to start again at ground zero and take another few years potentially to get something else going — at least an industry-driven initiative,” she said.

Corinne Boyer covers western Kansas for High Plains Public Radio and the Kansas News Service. You can follow her on Twitter @Corinne_Boyer or email cboyer (at) hppr (dot) org.

The Kansas News Service is a collaboration of KCUR, Kansas Public Radio, KMUW and High Plains Public Radio focused on health, the social determinants of health and their connection to public policy.

Kansas News Service stories and photos may be republished by news media at no cost with proper attribution and a link to ksnewsservice.org

Copyright 2020 High Plains Public Radio. To see more, visit High Plains Public Radio.

Corinne Boyer is a reporter for the at High Plains Public Radio in Garden City, Kansas. Following graduation, Corinne moved to New York City where she interned for a few record labels, worked as a restaurant hostess and for a magazine publisher. She then moved to Yongin, South Korea where she taught English and traveled to Taiwan, Thailand, Belgium and South Africa. Corinne loved meeting new people and hearing their stories. Her travels and experiences inspired her to attend graduate school. In 2015, she graduated with a Master of Science in journalism degree from the University of Oregon. She gained her first newsroom experience at KLCC—Eugene’s NPR affiliate. In 2017, she earned the Tom Parker Award for Media Excellence for a feature story she wrote about the opioid epidemic in Oregon. That year, she was also named an Emerging Journalist Fellow by the Journalism and Women Symposium.
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