Milk in the Northeast Marketing Area; Decision on Proposed Amendments to Marketing Agreement and to Order, 4932-4955 [05-1410]
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Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 19 / Monday, January 31, 2005 / Proposed Rules
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Agricultural Marketing Service
7 CFR Part 1001
[Docket No. AO–14–A70; DA–02–01]
Milk in the Northeast Marketing Area;
Decision on Proposed Amendments to
Marketing Agreement and to Order
Agricultural Marketing Service,
USDA.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: This decision proposes to
permanently adopt changes in
provisions of the Northeast marketing
area contained in a Recommended
Decision published in the Federal
Register on March 25, 2004, with one
minor modification. This document is
subject to approval by producers by
referendum.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Gino Tosi, Marketing Specialist, Order
Formulation and Enforcement Branch,
USDA/AMS/Dairy Programs, STOP
0231—Room 2968, 1400 Independence
Avenue, SW., Washington, DC 20250–
0231, (202)690–1366, e-mail
gino.tosi@usda.gov.
This Final
Decision proposes to adopt amendments
that would establish year-round supply
plant performance standards, exclude
milk received by supply plants from
producers not eligible to be pooled on
the Northeast order from supply plant
performance standards, remove the
‘‘split-plant’’ provision, establish a oneday ‘‘touch base’’ standard, establish
explicit diversion limits for pool plants,
prohibit the ability to pool the same
milk on the Federal milk order and a
marketwide pool administered by
another government entity, and grant
authority to the Market Administrator to
adjust the touch-base and diversion
limit standards as market conditions
warrant. Additional amendments that
amend reporting and payment date
provisions, with one minor modification
from what was proposed in the
Recommended Decision, are also
adopted.
This administrative action is governed
by the provisions of Sections 556 and
557 of Title 5 of the United States Code
and, therefore, is excluded from the
requirements of Executive Order 12866.
The amendments to the rules adopted
herein have been reviewed under
Executive Order 12988, Civil Justice
Reform. They are not intended to have
a retroactive effect. If adopted, the
proposed amendments would not
preempt any state or local laws,
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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regulations, or policies, unless they
present an irreconcilable conflict with
this rule.
The Agricultural Marketing
Agreement Act of 1937, as amended (7
U.S.C. 601–674), provides that
administrative proceedings must be
exhausted before parties may file suit in
court. Under section 608c(15)(A) of the
Act, any handler subject to an order may
request modification or exemption from
such order by filing with the Secretary
a petition stating that the order, any
provision of the order, or any obligation
imposed in connection with the order is
not in accordance with the law. A
handler is afforded the opportunity for
a hearing on the petition. After a
hearing, the Secretary would rule on the
petition. The Act provides that the
district court of the United States in any
district in which the handler is an
inhabitant, or has its principal place of
business, has jurisdiction in equity to
review the Secretary’s ruling on the
petition, provided a bill in equity is
filed not later than 20 days after the date
of the entry of the ruling.
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis and
Paperwork Reduction Act
In accordance with the Regulatory
Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.), the
Agricultural Marketing Service has
considered the economic impact of this
action on small entities and has certified
that this final decision will not have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
For the purpose of the Regulatory
Flexibility Act, a dairy farm is
considered a ‘‘small business’’ if it has
an annual gross revenue of less than
$750,000, and a dairy products
manufacturer is a ‘‘small business’’ if it
has fewer than 500 employees. For the
purposes of determining which dairy
farms are ‘‘small businesses,’’ the
$750,000 per year criterion was used to
establish a production guideline of
500,000 pounds per month. Although
this guideline does not factor in
additional monies that may be received
by dairy producers, it should be an
inclusive standard for most ‘‘small’’
dairy farmers. For purposes of
determining a handler’s size, if the plant
is part of a larger company operating
multiple plants that collectively exceed
the 500-employee limit, the plant will
be considered a large business even if
the local plant has fewer than 500
employees.
In September 2002, the time of the
hearing, there were 16,715 producers
pooled on and 143 handlers regulated
by the Northeast order. Of these, 97
percent of the producers and 71 percent
of the handlers would be considered
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small businesses. The adoption of the
amended pooling standards serve to
revise and establish criteria that ensure
the pooling of producers, producer milk,
and plants that have a reasonable
association with, and are consistently
serving, the fluid milk needs of the
Northeast milk marketing area. Criteria
for pooling milk are established on the
basis of performance standards that are
considered adequate to meet the Class I
fluid needs of the market and to
determine those that are eligible to share
in the revenue that arises from the
classified pricing of milk. Criteria for
pooling are established without regard
to the size of any dairy industry
organization or entity. The amendments
to the reporting and payment date
provisions serve to streamline and
simplify handler payments to the
market administrator. The criteria
established in the amended pooling
standards and reporting and payment
date provisions are applied in an equal
fashion to both large and small
businesses. Therefore, the Department
has determined that the adopted
amendments will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities.
A review of reporting requirements
was completed under the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C.
Chapter 35). It was determined that
these adopted amendments would have
no impact on reporting, recordkeeping,
or other compliance requirements
because they would remain identical to
the current requirements. No new forms
are proposed and no additional
reporting requirements would be
necessary.
This action does not require
additional information collection that
requires clearance by the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) beyond
currently approved information
collection. The primary sources of data
used to complete the approved forms
are routinely used in most business
transactions. The forms require only a
minimal amount of information which
can be supplied without data processing
equipment or a trained statistical staff.
Thus, the information collection and
reporting burden is relatively small.
Requiring the same reports for all
handlers does not significantly
disadvantage any handler that is smaller
than the industry average.
Prior documents in this proceeding:
Notice of Hearing: Issued July 26,
2002; published August 1, 2002 (67 FR
49887).
Supplemental Notice of Hearing:
Issued August 14, 2002; published
August 16, 2002 (67 FR 53522).
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Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 19 / Monday, January 31, 2005 / Proposed Rules
Recommended Decision: Issued
March 17, 2004; published March 25,
2004 (69 FR 15562)
Preliminary Statement
A public hearing was held on
proposed amendments to the marketing
agreement and order regulating the
handling of milk in the Northeast
marketing area. The hearing was held,
pursuant to the provisions of the
Agricultural Marketing Agreement Act
of 1937, as amended (7 U.S.C. 601–674),
and the applicable rules of practice and
procedure governing the formulation of
marketing agreements and marketing
orders (7 CFR part 900), at Alexandria,
Virginia, on September 10–13, 2002,
pursuant to a Notice of Hearing issued
July 26, 2002, and published August 1,
2002 (67 FR 49887) and a Supplemental
Notice of Hearing issued August 14,
2002, and published August 16, 2002
(67 FR 53522).
Upon the basis of the evidence
introduced at the hearing and the record
thereof, the Administrator, on March 17,
2004, issued a Recommended Decision
containing notice of the opportunity to
file written exceptions thereto.
The material issues, findings,
conclusions, and rulings of the
Recommended Decision, with one
minor modification, are hereby
approved and adopted and are set forth
herein. The material issues on the
record of the hearing relate to:
1. Reporting and Payment Dates.
2. Pooling standards of the marketing
order:
a. Performance standards for supply
plants.
b. Unit pooling standards for
distributing plants.
c. Standards for producer milk.
3. Marketwide Service Payments.
4. Conforming changes to the order.
Findings and Conclusions
The following findings and
conclusions on the material issues are
based on evidence presented at the
hearing and the record thereof:
1. Reporting and Payment Dates
Several changes to the reporting and
payment date provisions of the
Northeast marketing order are adopted,
with one minor variation from what was
proposed in the Recommended
Decision. The adopted changes include:
(1) Changing the submission date of
monthly handler reports to on or before
the 10th day of the month; (2)
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Announcing the producer price
differential (PPD) and statistical uniform
price on or before the 14th day of the
month, but allowing the market
administrator additional days if the 14th
falls on a Saturday, Sunday, or national
holiday; (3) Requiring payments to the
producer settlement fund (PSF) be
received no later than two days after the
announcement of the PPD; (4)
Modifying the date which payments
from the PSF are to be disbursed to
handlers to the day after the due date
required for payment into the PSF; and
(5) Requiring final payments to
producers be made no later than the day
after the required date of payment to
handlers from the PSF.
The Recommended Decision would
have required partial payments to
producers be made no later than the last
day of the month. Upon consideration of
an exception received regarding
modification of the partial payment
date, the partial payment to dairy
farmers will continue to be due on or
before the 26th day of the month. This
issue is discussed later in this decision.
The following table summarizes the
adopted changes:
Current provision
Adopted changes
Reason for change
PROPOSAL 1
Submission of monthly handler reports to Market Administrator.
Due on or before the 9th day of
the month.
Due on or before the 10th day of
the month.
Date of PPD and statistical uniform
price announcement.
Announce on or before the 13th
day of the month.
Announced on or before the 14th
day of the month, and up to two
additional public business days
thereafter if the 14th falls on a
weekend or national holiday.
Handler payments to the PSF .......
Payment must be made no later
than the 15th of the month, unless the 15th falls on a weekend or holiday, where the payment can be delayed until the
next business day.
Date when final payments are to
be disbursed to producers.
Payment must be received by
each producer no later than the
day after the 16th day of the
following month.
Payment must be made no later
than two days after the announcement of the PPD and
statistical uniform price, unless
the due date falls on a weekend or holiday, then the payment can be delayed until the
next business day.
Payment must be received the
following month by each producer no later than the day
after the required payment date
from the PSF unless the day
falls on a weekend or holiday,
then the payment can be delayed.
Allows handlers one more day to
submit reports to Market Administrator.
Maintains the time the Market Administrator has to announce the
PPD and statistical uniform
price and if the 14th falls on a
weekend or national holiday allows additional days.
A corresponding change made
because of extending the date
for filing Market Administrator
reports and the computation of
the PPD and statistical uniform
price.
PROPOSAL 4
Date on which payments from the
PSF are disbursed to handlers.
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Market Administrator must pay
each handler the amount owed,
if any, from the PSF no later
than the 16th after the end of
each month.
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Market Administrator must pay
each handler the amount owed,
if any, no later then the day
after handler payments to the
PSF are received unless the
day falls on a weekend or holiday, then the payment can be
delayed.
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A
corresponding change that
adds flexibility to the relationship between the date of payment to handlers from the PSF
and final payment to producers.
Helps to assure that producers receive full payment in the event
of the late payments to the
PSF.
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Currently, a handler’s report on milk
receipts and utilization is due to the
Market Administrator on or before the
9th day of the month. Submission of
this report triggers a sequence of other
reporting and payment dates. These
include: announcement of the PPD and
statistical uniform price on or before the
13th day of the month; handler
obligations to the PSF, due no later than
the 15th day of the month but subject
to a delay to the next business day if the
day falls on a weekend or holiday;
disbursement of funds from the PSF to
handlers, due no later than the 16th day
after the end of each month but also
delayed subject to a weekend or
holiday; partial payments from handlers
to producers and cooperative
associations, due on or before the 26th
day of the month and again delayed due
to a weekend or holiday; and final
payments to producers and cooperative
associations, made no later than the day
after payment to handlers from the PSF.
A portion of Proposal 1, submitted by
New York State Dairy Foods, Inc.
(NYSDF), Proposal 4, submitted by the
Northeast Market Administrator, the
Association of Dairy Cooperatives in the
Northeast (ADCNE) and NYSDF, and
Proposal 12, submitted by the Northeast
market administrator, are adopted. All
three proposals seek to modify various
reporting and payment provisions of the
order. NYSDF is a trade association
representing milk handlers and
processors in the Northeast marketing
area. ADCNE represents a number of
dairy farmer cooperatives whose milk is
pooled on the Northeast order. Their
members include Agri-Mark, Inc. (AgriMark), Dairy Farmers of America, Inc.
(DFA), Dairylea Cooperative Inc.
(Dairylea), Land O’ Lakes, Inc. (LOL),
Maryland and Virginia Milk Producers
Cooperative, Inc. (MVMP), O–AT–KA
Cooperative, Inc. (O–AT–KA), St.
Albans Cooperative Creamery, Inc. (St.
Albans), and Upstate Farms
Cooperative, Inc. (Upstate). Worcester
Creameries, Elmhurst Dairy,
Mountainside Farms, and Steuben
Foods also testified in support of
Proposal 1.
Proposal 1 would require monthly
handler reports to be received by the
Market Administrator on or before the
10th day of the month. This, in turn,
triggers a sequence of other reporting
deadline and payment date provisions
that would be similarly changed. The
Recommended Decision included a
provision that would require partial
payments to dairy farmers be made on
or before the last day of the month. This
Final Decision, however, will keep the
partial payment date as currently
provided by the order. The adopted
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changes include: (1) Announcement of
the PPD and statistical uniform price a
day later—from the 13th to the 14th day
of the month. If the 14th day of the
month falls on a Saturday, Sunday, or
national holiday, the Market
Administrator would have up to two
additional public business days to
announce the PPD and the statistical
uniform price; (2) Handler payments to
the PSF be made no later than two days
after the announcement of the PPD
unless the due date falls on a weekend
or holiday, then the payment can be
delayed until the next business day; and
(3) Final payments to producers be
received no later than the day after the
required date of payment from the PSF
unless the due date falls on a weekend
or holiday, then the payment can be
delayed until the next business day.
Proposal 4 would modify the day which
payments from the PSF are to be
disbursed to handlers from the 16th of
the month to the day after the due date
required for payment into the PSF.
Proposal 12 seeks to make a technical
correction to the order provision
relating to payments to producers and
cooperatives, which will make the
provisions identical to other Federal
orders by changing ‘‘pool plant
operator’’ to ‘‘handler’’ throughout the
provisions of the order.
A witness appearing on behalf of
NYSDF testified in support of Proposal
1, stating that its adoption is necessary
to correct unnecessarily burdensome
regulations that have resulted from the
reporting and payment date provisions
adopted as part of Federal order reform.
According to the witness, the
amendments incorporated in Proposal 1
would essentially restore the reporting
and payment dates specified in the
former New York-New Jersey milk
marketing order. The witness indicated
that giving an additional day for
submitting handler reports to the Market
Administrator would lessen the
difficulties milk handlers are currently
experiencing in meeting the current
reporting deadline. The witness
explained that milk suppliers have
experienced considerable difficulties in
furnishing milk component and billing
data in time for meeting the currently
established reporting deadline. This
situation is compounded, the witness
explained, when handlers must account
for the co-mingling of tanker loads of
milk between cooperative and
independent milk producers. Often, the
witness stated, reports to the Market
Administrator contain erroneous and
estimated data because the reporting
handler did not receive the correct data
in time.
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The NYSDF witness also cited
testimony from the Northeast Market
Administrator that one third of handler
reports are often filed late. Moving the
reporting date from the 9th to the 10th
of the month would give milk suppliers
and buyers an additional day to
complete their work, thereby greatly
reducing the number of late reports to
the Market Administrator, the witness
concluded.
The second proposed change in
reporting dates contained in Proposal 1
would maintain the time the Market
Administrator has to announce the PPD
and statistical uniform price, and up to
two additional public business days
thereafter if the 14th falls on a weekend
or national holiday. According to the
NYSDF witness, this portion of the
proposal is consistent with the proposed
one-day extension for submission of
handler reports to the Market
Administrator and would extend to the
Market Administrator sufficient time to
make the necessary price computations
without undue pressure brought about
by weekends or holidays. The witness
also noted that while this proposal
could give the Market Administrator up
to two additional public business days
for making the price computations, it
would not require that the additional
time be used. If the Market
Administrator finds it feasible, a price
announcement could come earlier, the
witness stated.
The third change in reporting dates
offered by the NYSDF witness would
require handler payments to the PSF be
made no later than two days after the
announcement of the PPD. According to
the witness, this portion of the proposal
is intended primarily as a conforming
change made necessary by the one-day
proposed extension in the date for filing
Market Administrator reports and the
computation of the PPD and statistical
uniform price. Currently, handler
payments to the PSF must be made no
later than the 15th of the month, unless
the 15th falls on a weekend or national
holiday where the payment can be
delayed until the following business
day, the witness noted. The witness
expressed concern that compliance with
the current handler payment deadline
was difficult, and the proposed change
would better accommodate the flow of
money from handlers to the PSF. The
witness was of the opinion that this
portion of the proposal would provide
a more consistent time interval to gather
the Market Administrator classifications
on milk transfers at pool reporting time,
giving handlers a more consistent time
frame in which to make necessary
money transfers, for example, and
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improve concurrent billings for milk
that was transferred or diverted.
The NYSDF witness testified that
Proposal 1 would also require final
payments to dairy farmers be disbursed
no later than the day after the required
payment date to handlers from the PSF.
The primary purpose of this portion of
the proposal, the witness explained, is
to have the date of final payment to
dairy farmers conform with other
proposed date changes for the
computation of the statistical uniform
price and with when payments are
made into and out of the PSF. The
witness stressed that no change in the
requirement for ‘‘day-earlier’’ payment
to cooperatives was proposed, as
currently set forth in the provisions of
the order, and the final payment to
producers would still be due the day
after payments from the PSF are made
by the Market Administrator.
Accordingly, the witness noted, dates of
final payment could move a day or two
later, but only if the date of payment
from the PSF were extended by the
same number of days. This sequence in
the relationship of ‘‘date of final
payment’’ to the ‘‘date of payment from
the producer settlement fund’’ should
be continued, the witness said.
The NYSDF witness testified that the
last feature of Proposal 1 modifies the
date that partial payments are received
by producers to ‘‘on or before the last
day of the month’’, instead of the
current ‘‘26th day of the month’’. The
witness presented evidence which
demonstrated that a longer spread in
days between partial and final payment
exists now than prior to Federal order
reform. The witness testified that
making partial payments due ‘‘on or
before the last day of the month’’ would
conform more closely with the dates
previously set in the respective prereform orders and create better
‘‘spacing’’ between required pay dates.
The NYSDF witness was of the
opinion that adoption of Proposal 1 also
would accommodate ‘‘tolled’’ bulk milk
purchased by milk distributors for
processing and packaging into Class I
products at pool distributing plants. The
witness described ‘‘tolling’’ as a
situation where a plant is paid to
process raw milk, but the processing
plant does not take ownership of the
milk or incur a payment obligation to
producers. The witness noted that the
Northeast order requires that tolled milk
be purchased on the basis of the PPD
and component prices rather than on
the basis of Class I skim value and
butterfat prices. Therefore, the Market
Administrator must ‘‘credit’’ the handler
who processes cooperative receipts,
together with a Market Administrator
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assessment on the tolled milk. The
tolling processor must then prepare a
billing to the distributor of the tolled
milk at the difference between the Class
I cost of the skim and butterfat and also
a cooperative credit from the Market
Administrator, including the associated
Market Administrator fee, the witness
stated. The NYSDF witness noted that
doing this requires having detailed
component values as well as knowing
the final PPD. The billing involved is
made after the PPD announcement and
the billing by the Market Administrator
of the handler’s pool obligation, the
witness said.
In their post-hearing brief, NYSDF
emphasized that Proposal 1 takes the
existing payment structure and applies
it to the date that the Market
Administrator announces the PPD and
statistical uniform price. NYSDF
asserted that Proposal 1 does not set the
payment date to the PSF as the 16th of
the month. Rather, they noted, handlers
could be making payment earlier than
the 16th of the month if the PPD is
announced before the 14th day of the
month. NYSDF was of the opinion that
as a whole, Proposal 1 would allow the
Market Administrator to receive more
timely and accurate handler reports and
permit earlier price announcements and
earlier payments to and from the PSF.
NYSDF concluded that both dairy
farmers and handlers would benefit
from more accurate information that
would flow naturally from adoption of
Proposal 1.
NYSDF’s post-hearing brief concluded
that adoption of Proposal 1 would still
have producers in the Northeast
marketing area receiving a partial
payment for milk 5 days earlier than
was the case prior to Federal order
reform.
A witness appearing on behalf of
Marcus Dairy (Marcus) testified in
support of Proposal 1. Marcus is a
distributing plant which receives
approximately 60 percent of its milk
supply from independent dairy farmers,
with the remainder supplied by
cooperatives. The witness indicated
support for moving the handler
reporting date from the 9th to the 10th
day of the month, noting that an extra
day would help in receiving more
accurate information from cooperatives
and eliminate the need to estimate data
so that reports can be submitted on
time. The witness also testified that the
proposal should be accompanied by the
proposed change to the Market
Administrator PPD announcement date
from the 13th to the 14th of the month
while providing the flexibility for the
Market Administrator to make
announcements later in the event that
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the 14th falls on a holiday or weekend.
These modifications would also require
a similar change in the date when
payment to the PSF is due, the witness
noted. In light of this, the Marcus
witness expressed support for requiring
that payments to the PSF be made not
more than two days after the PPD
announcement and that final payments
to dairy farmers be received no later
than the day after the required date of
payment by the Market Administrator.
Marcus also supported moving the date
of partial payment from the ‘‘26th of the
month’’ to ‘‘on or before the 30th of the
month.’’ The witness was of the opinion
that adjusting these payment date
provisions would improve the cash flow
of dairy farmers.
A witness appearing on behalf of
ADCNE testified in opposition to
Proposal 1. The witness said that dairy
farmers, and those persons who provide
services to dairy farmers, are faced with
meeting deadlines that are sometimes
difficult or inconvenient. The witness
expressed the opinion that businesses
that rely on information from other
businesses do not necessarily have any
ability to force those other businesses to
change just because they provide
needed information. Accordingly, the
witness said, ADCNE does not view the
current reporting dates as unreasonable
or in need of change. Instead, the
ADCNE witness suggested that those
involved work together to resolve
producer payment issues instead of
seeking a regulatory change that would
result in delay of payments to dairy
farmers. Delaying producer payment
dates will unnecessarily impose
financial costs to dairy farmers in the
Northeast, the ADCNE witness
concluded.
In their post-hearing brief, NYSDF
responded to ADCNE’s views by
indicating that no amount of overtime
worked by employees of NYSDF can
create reports when other entities fail to
get needed report information to
handlers in a timely manner. NYSDF’s
brief also noted that many of their
members are small businesses subject to
Regulatory Flexibility Act analysis and
relief as necessary and that undertaking
expensive overtime in order to fill out
reports when they do not have all the
necessary information needed from
various entities negates the intent of the
Regulatory Flexibility Act.
Exceptions to the Recommended
Decision received from ADCNE opposed
adoption of all portions of Proposal 1.
ADCNE was of the opinion that
Northeast order milk handlers are fully
able to file reports on or before the 9th
of the month, and that moving the
reporting date from the 9th of the month
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to the 10th of the month is unjustified.
ADCNE was of the opinion that the
proponents of Proposal 1 did not
sufficiently demonstrate how the lack of
timeliness or accuracy of handler
reports has affected price
announcements by the Market
Administrator, or caused inaccurate or
late payments to dairy farmers. ADCNE
also described how moving the
reporting date could possibly delay
payments to dairy farmers and have a
negative effect on their cash flow.
ADCNE took particular exception to
the proposed change in the date of
partial payment from the 26th day of the
month to the last day of the month.
ADCNE argued that postponing the date
of partial payment would provide a
financial gain for handlers at the
expense of dairy farmers. ADCNE
explained how moving the date of
partial payment could cause financial
hardship by requiring dairy farmers to
carry more operating capital debt during
the four to seven day period that the
partial payment would be delayed.
ADCNE noted that a delayed payment
could increase the exposure of
producers to financial losses in the
event of a default by a handler. ADCNE
also disputed the assertions that
delaying the partial payment date until
the last day of the month would create
better spacing between payment dates to
producers and that moving the partial
payment back to a date that was
previously applicable in the pre-reform
orders was desirable.
An exception to the Recommended
Decision was also received by
Cooperative Milk Producers Association
(CMPA). CMPA did not take exception
to a specific proposal but opposed any
change in reporting and payment
deadlines that could delay payments to
dairy farmers.
The Northeast Market Administrator
testified in support of Proposal 4, which
seeks to move the date on which
payments from the PSF are dispersed to
handlers from the 16th day after the end
of the month to no later than the day
after handler payments to the PSF are
received. The Market Administrator
explained that a problem arises when
late payments to the PSF result in
insufficient funds to make payments out
of the PSF when both payments to and
from the PSF fall on the same day.
When this happens, order provisions
provide for a pro-rata reduction in
payments to handlers who can, in turn,
reduce payments to dairy farmers, the
Market Administrator noted. According
to the Market Administrator, Proposal 4
would allow one extra day for payments
from the PSF and cause dairy farmers to
receive their payments one day later
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three or four times a year. However,
dairy farmers would always be assured
of receiving the full amount owed, the
Market Administrator added.
A witness representing ADCNE also
testified in support of Proposal 4. Under
current provisions, the ADCNE witness
said, the date for payments to the PSF,
the 16th of the month, can sometimes
fall on the same day that payments from
the PSF are to be made. In their posthearing brief, ADCNE asserted the
adoption of Proposal 4 was necessary
for the proper administration of the PSF.
The Northeast Market Administrator
also testified in support of Proposal 12.
This proposal seeks to make a technical
correction to the order provisions
relating to payments to producers and
cooperative associations and would
make the Northeast order’s Payments to
producers and to cooperative
associations provision identical to other
Federal orders. The Market
Administrator explained that the
Proposal would simply amend
references to ‘‘pool plant operator’’ as
‘‘handler.’’
Reporting and payment date
provisions of the pre-reform New
England, New York-New Jersey, and
Mid-Atlantic orders served the different
needs and marketing conditions of their
respective marketing areas. Provisions
adopted under Federal order reform
established reporting and payment dates
that were reflective of the three
consolidated orders, while recognizing
the need to establish dates that would
be conducive to the marketing
conditions of the larger consolidated
Northeast order. The reporting and
payment date requirements adopted for
the consolidated Northeast order were
intended to reasonably accommodate
historical patterns and practices while
recognizing that fixed dates also needed
to be specified. For example, handler
reports to the Market Administrator
were due as soon as the 8th of the
month, or as late as the 10th of the
month. When the three pre-reform
orders were consolidated to form the
Northeast order, the new handler
reporting date was set for the 9th of the
month. This was also the case for the
date for the Market Administrator’s
announcement of the PPD and statistical
uniform price. In the pre-reform New
England and Mid-Atlantic orders, the
announcement was on the 13th of the
month, while in the pre-reform New
York/New Jersey order the
announcement was on the 14th of the
month. Current provisions in the
consolidated Northeast order require the
announcement by the 13th of the
month.
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This decision maintains a change in
the deadline for submitting handler
reports to the Market Administrator
from the 9th of the month to the 10th
of the month. The exceptions to the
Recommended Decision submitted by
ADCNE regarding handler reporting
deadlines are not persuasive. Delaying
the deadline for handler reports to the
Market Administrator from the 9th of
the month to the 10th of the month is
supported by the hearing record and
should reduce the number of late
reports and lessen the number of
inaccuracies and estimations contained
therein.
Changing the handler reporting date
deadline by one day will also be
accompanied by a change in the date the
Market Administrator is to announce
the PPD and statistical uniform price.
Also adopted is the feature of Proposal
1 which specifies that the Market
Administrator can make the PPD and
statistical uniform price announcement
up to two public business days later if
the 14th falls on a weekend or national
holiday.
The portion of Proposal 1 that
specifies handler payments to the PSF
be made no later than two days after the
PPD and statistical uniform price
announcement is also adopted. This
portion of Proposal 1 is a change made
necessary by the proposed one-day
extension in the date for filing handler
reports and the computation and
announcement of the PPD and statistical
uniform price. The adoption of this
portion of Proposal 1 also adds a
measure of flexibility to the payment
date provisions by making the date of
handler payments to the PSF dependent
on the date the Market Administrator
announces the PPD and statistical
uniform price. It also will provide the
opportunity for handlers to make
payments to the PSF earlier than the
16th of the month if the Market
Administrator announcement of the
PPD comes before the 14th of the
month.
Payments to handlers from the PSF
also necessitates a corresponding
change as a result of the adopted
changes for announcement of the PPD
and statistical uniform price and dates
for payment to the PSF. Evidence
presented at the hearing demonstrated
that sometimes payments to and from
the PSF can fall on the same day and
can lead to reduced payments to dairy
farmers because payments are pro-rated.
Amending the date that payments are
made from the PSF to handlers from
‘‘the day after the 16th day of the
month’’, to the day after handler
payments to the PSF are received will
better assure handlers of receiving their
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full payment each month from the PSF.
Prompt and complete payments to dairy
farmers are dependant on timely and
full payments from the PSF to milk
handlers. However, final payments to
dairy farmers should be made no later
than the day after the required payment
date from the PSF by the Market
Administrator.
Exceptions to the Recommended
Decision received from ADCNE for not
changing the date of partial payment to
dairy farmers are persuasive. The
proposed change in the partial payment
date is a separate issue from the
reporting dates issue that affects the
timing of the calculation and
announcement of the producer price
differential and statistical uniform price.
The revised reporting dates, as
discussed in other parts of this decision,
affect the timing of the final payment to
producers. ADCNE correctly noted in
their exceptions that neither the
Agricultural Marketing Agreement Act
nor existing Federal law require that the
monthly partial and final payments to
dairy farmers be made on an evenly
spaced basis. ADCNE’s comments also
clearly reveal the potential monetary
affect on producers of moving the
partial payment date to the last day of
the month. Despite the suggested benefit
of more even spacing between payment
dates and the explanation that the later
date would be more in line with the preorder reform date, the reasons and
supporting arguments for keeping the
partial payment date as is are valid and
sound. This Final Decision will
maintain the partial payment date as
currently specified by the order. The
partial payment to dairy farmers will
continue to be due on or before the 26th
of the month. The partial payment is
based on the lowest announced class
price for the preceding month. Since
that price is already known to handlers,
there is no need to delay partial
payments to dairy farmers because of
reporting and payment date changes
adopted in the decision.
Additionally, ADCNE took exception
to the use of the term ‘‘conforming
change’’ in the Recommended Decision.
Moving the date of handler payment to
the PSF, the date of partial payment,
and the date of final payment were
referred to in the Recommended
Decision as ‘‘conforming changes’’
resulting from adjusting the date which
handler reports are to be submitted to
the Market Administrator. The
Department would like to clarify that
the use of the term ‘‘conforming’’ in this
case was not intended to reference its
traditional use of the term ‘‘conforming
change’’—a resulting change in order
language in one section of the order
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stemming from a change in order
language in another. The term was
intended to clarify the changes in
reporting and payment dates
corresponding to and resulting from
moving the due date of handler reports.
2. Pooling Standards
Summaries of testimony regarding the
pooling standards of the Northeast order
are provided individually. The
discussion of all pooling standards and
the decision’s findings and conclusions
regarding pooling standards is presented
immediately after testimony summary
for ‘‘c’’. below.
a. Performance Standards for Supply
Plants
Certain amendments to the Pool plant
provision of the Northeast order are
adopted. Specifically, the adopted
amendments include: (1) Establishing a
supply plant performance standard of
10 percent of total milk receipts for each
of the months of January through
August and December, and 20 percent of
total milk receipts for each of the
months of September through
November; (2) Removing the ‘‘split
plant’’ feature; and (3) excluding milk
received from producers not eligible to
be pooled on the Northeast order from
the total volume of milk used to
determine the amount of milk that a
supply plant needs to deliver to a
distributing plant to become pooled.
These recommended changes are
represented in certain features of
Proposals 2, 5, and 8.
Proposal 10, which advocates
lowering performance standards, was
not included for adoption in the
Recommended Decision and is not
adopted in this Final Decision.
Furthermore, Proposal 9, which would
credit route distribution from the plant
and transfers in the form of packaged
fluid milk products against the supply
plant performance standards, was not
included for adoption in the
Recommended Decision and is not
adopted in this Final Decision.
Currently, supply plants in the
Northeast order need to ship at least 10
percent of their total milk receipts in the
months of August and December and 20
percent of their total milk receipts in
each of the months of September
through November to pool distributing
plants in order to qualify the supply
plant and all of its milk receipts for
pooling. A supply plant which meets
the performance standard in each of the
months of August through December is
automatically considered a pool plant
for each of the months of January
through July. Supply plants that do not
qualify as a pool plant in each of the
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4937
months of August through December
need to ship at least 10 percent of their
total milk receipts to distributing plants
during each of the months of January
through July in order to qualify the
supply plant and all of its milk receipts
for pooling in each of those months.
The order also currently provides a
‘‘split-plant’’ feature to accommodate a
supply plant that has both pool and
nonpool facilities. This feature was
adopted during Federal order reform to
provide for more uniform supply plant
provisions within the Federal milk
order system. It was not a feature
contained in any of the three pre-reform
orders consolidated to form the
Northeast order.
Proposal 2, submitted by NYSDF,
seeks to amend the Pool plant provision
of the order by: (1) Increasing the supply
plant performance standards by 5
percentage points to 15 percent for the
months of August and December, and by
5 percentage points to 25 percent for
each of the months of September
through November; and (2) Removing
the split-plant provision. In their posthearing brief, NYSDF slightly modified
the months applicable for the proposed
increased standards to specify a
performance standard of 15 percent in
the month of August and 25 percent for
each of the months of September
through December.
A witness representing NYSDF
testified that after implementation of
Federal milk order reform, milk
supplies pooled on the Northeast order
during the fall months have decreased.
During these months, the NYSDF
witness said, milk was shipped to areas
outside of the order, and it was difficult
for Northeast order fluid milk handlers
to acquire an adequate supply of milk to
meet the needs of their customers.
Although there was not as significant a
shortage in the first half of 2002 as there
was in 2000 and 2001, the witness
predicted that the situation would
change substantially beginning in late
2002 and during 2003.
The NYSDF witness characterized
milk shortages in the fall months for the
Northeast marketing area as a long-term
problem that requires long-term action.
In this regard, the witness stressed,
Proposal 2 is designed to increase the
amount of milk available to fluid milk
handlers during the fall months. The
witness said the proposed increase is
similar to provisions previously
contained in the pre-reform Middle
Atlantic and New England milk orders
and is identical to the adjustments made
to supply plant performance standards
by the Market Administrator in 2000
and 2001 for the months of August
through November.
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The NYSDF witness testified that
supply plant performance standards
applicable in the pre-reform orders
consolidated to form the current
Northeast milk order enabled
cooperatives to pool the milk of their
members separately from the milk of
independent producers and small
cooperatives who also supplied fluid
milk plants. After implementation of
Federal order reform, the witness said,
the new pooling provisions have
allowed cooperatives to pool not only
the milk of their members, but also the
milk of other smaller cooperatives and
independent producers. The current
pooling provisions, the witness
emphasized, are being used in a way
that allows large cooperatives to
guarantee themselves a higher volume
of milk pooled as Class I. In their posthearing brief, NYSDF added that this
arrangement has resulted in an
increased market share of total Class I
sales by larger cooperatives while the
total volume of milk available to Class
I handlers has remained unchanged.
Data presented by the NYSDF witness
showed that cooperatives now account
for over 80 percent of all milk pooled on
the Northeast order. The witness noted
that cooperatives have guaranteed nonmembers an outlet to pool their milk
and, on average, pool in excess of 100
million pounds of non-member milk
each month. The witness concluded that
because cooperatives pool such a large
amount of milk, cooperatives should not
have difficulty meeting the proposed
five percentage point performance
standard increase for supply plants.
The NYSDF witness emphasized that
their greatest concern regarding supply
plant performance standards is the issue
of ‘‘guaranteed’’ pooling of non-member
milk supplies and the lack of diversion
limit standards. The witness was of the
opinion that this has enabled milk to be
pooled on the order without bearing any
responsibility for serving the Class I
market or being made available as a
reserve supply to the market. The
witness was of the opinion that
inappropriate pooling has resulted in
the erosion of blend prices paid to
producers who do regularly supply the
Class I needs of the market.
The NYSDF witness further testified
that the split-plant feature for supply
plants should be removed because the
feature does not serve the purpose for
which it is intended. The witness
maintained that the split-plant
provision was created to allow a supply
plant to have separate facilities to
receive and process Grade B milk.
Currently, the witness said, no handlers
located in the Northeast order are using
the split-plant feature. However, if a
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supply plant chooses to rely on the
feature, it would be able to pool a
substantial amount of additional milk
simply by diverting milk to the nonpool side of the plant during those
months when no performance standards
or diversion limits are provided by the
order, the witness cautioned.
In conclusion, the NYSDF witness
said, it is the Class I market that
generates additional revenues which
accrue to all producers whose milk is
pooled on the Northeast marketing area.
Accordingly, the witness maintained,
entities that seek to have their milk
pooled on the order should bear some
responsibility in actually supplying the
Class I needs of the market. The witness
said that Proposal 2 is intended to end
what NYSDF characterized as ‘‘abusive’’
pool-riding methods and to ensure that
entities benefitting from revenue
generated by Class I sales have
demonstrated service in supplying the
Class I market.
A witness appearing on behalf of
Marcus also testified in support of
Proposal 2. According to the witness,
Marcus Dairy experienced milk supply
shortages during some months since
implementation of the consolidated
Northeast milk order. The witness stated
that adoption of Proposal 2 would help
alleviate supply shortfalls for the Class
I market during the fall months when
the milk is most needed.
A witness representing the ADCNE
testified in opposition to that portion of
Proposal 2 that would raise the supply
plant performance standards for the
months of August through December.
However, the witness supported the
proposal on the need to remove the
split-plant feature. The witness was of
the opinion that increasing supply plant
performance standards was
unwarranted and could cause disorderly
marketing conditions in the region
because some handlers would be forced
to depool a portion of the milk of their
producers. The witness stressed that the
Market Administrator already has the
authority to adjust these standards and
that this should continue as the way to
make future changes as marketing
conditions warrant.
Furthermore, the ADCNE witness
emphasized, Proposal 2 does not specify
some level of performance by supply
plants during the ‘‘free-ride’’ months of
January through July.1 According to the
witness, Proposal 2 also does not limit
the ability of producers located far from
the Northeast marketing area to be
pooled on the order without
1 The dairy industry term known as a ‘‘free-ride’’
period is often used to describe those time periods
when no performance standard is specified.
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maintaining a reasonable association to
the market and does not ensure that
Class I distributors will receive
additional milk when needed.
In their post-hearing brief, ADCNE
stressed that no evidence was presented
at the hearing that would warrant a
permanent change in performance
standards. ADCNE reiterated their
opinion that the current authority
provided to the Market Administrator to
make adjustments to the performance
standards was the most appropriate
method for the orderly marketing of
milk in the Northeast.
Proposal 5, submitted by ADCNE, also
seeks to amend the Pool plant provision
of the order. Specifically the proposal
would: (1) Require supply plants to
deliver at least 10 percent of their total
milk receipts to a distributing plant
during each of the months of January
through August and December; (2) Grant
authority to the Market Administrator to
impose additional shipping
requirements on handlers receiving
marketwide service payments; and (3)
Eliminate the split-plant provision.
The ADCNE witness testified that
current order provisions have
unintentionally provided the
opportunity for milk to be pooled and
priced under the terms of the Northeast
order without demonstrating a
reasonable level of service in supplying
the Class I needs of the market. Pooling
such milk could result in a lower blend
price for all producers who do regularly
supply the fluid needs of the market, the
witness specified. The witness stressed
that Proposal 5 is not meant to eliminate
the ability to pool the milk of producers
located far from the Northeast marketing
area. Instead, the witness explained,
Proposal 5 would assure that all milk
pooled on the Northeast order
demonstrate a consistent service to
supplying distributing plants and
consequently bear some of the burden of
incurring the additional costs of
supplying the Class I needs of the
market. According to the witness, there
are two aspects of the Pool plant
provision of the Northeast marketing
order that have enabled what the
witness described as ‘‘opportunistic
pooling’’: The split-plant feature and the
current level of supply plant
performance standards.
The ADCNE witness explained that
supply plants qualified as split-plants
can engage in opportunistic pooling by
receiving milk on the pool side of the
plant and then diverting the milk to the
nonpool side of the plant. Under current
provisions, during the months of August
and December a supply plant could
divert nine loads of milk to its nonpool
side for every one load of milk it
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receives on its pool side, the witness
explained. In addition, the witness
continued, during the months of
September through November, the
supply plant could divert eight loads of
milk for every two loads it receives at
the pool side of the plant. According to
the witness, once the plant meets the
performance standards in each of the
months of August through December,
the plant is automatically qualified as a
pool plant in the months of January
through July and can divert an
unlimited amount of milk.
Under current supply plant
performance standards, the ADCNE
witness said, a pool plant located far
from the marketing area could
potentially pool all of the milk located
near it during the spring months by
shipping a small amount of its milk
supply to a Northeast order pool plant
during the fall months. The lack of a
monthly touch-base standard, the
witness also asserted, has facilitated the
pooling of milk located far from the
marketing area by allowing producers to
qualify all of their milk for pooling by
delivering a minimal amount of milk to
a Northeast order pool plant. During
January through July when no
performance standards for supply plants
are stipulated, the witness noted, a plant
has the ability to pool all the milk of
every producer who had delivered to
the plant throughout the year.
According to the witness, theoretically
100 percent of the pool plant’s milk
receipts could be pooled on the
Northeast order.
The ADCNE witness presented data
estimating the impact of pooling distant
milk on the Northeast order blend price.
The witness estimated that for the
period of January 2001 through July
2002, the blend price was reduced by an
average of 16 cents per hundredweight.
The witness was of the opinion that if
Proposal 5 is adopted, most of the lost
blend price value would be restored.
The ADCNE witness testified that the
free-ride feature is no longer being used
for its intended purpose of allowing
producers that had been historically
pooled on the Northeast Order to remain
pooled. Instead, the witness stated, the
free-ride feature has created the ability
to pool milk on the order that was never
intended to be pooled. The witness
maintained that supply plants that
currently meet the performance
standards in September through
November would not be disadvantaged
with the new year-round monthly
performance standards because the
proposed standards for the months of
January through July are lower than
those specified for the fall months.
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Comments filed by ADCNE supported
adoption of all changes to the order’s
pooling standards contained in the
Recommended Decision.
A witness testifying on behalf of
NYSDF testified in opposition to
Proposal 5. While NYSDF agreed that
the order’s lack of performance
standards for all months has created
opportunities for distant milk to be
pooled on the order, a free-ride feature
is important for maintaining orderly
marketing conditions. The NYSDF
witness said that providing for months
without performance standards ensures
that the market’s reserves have the
ability to be pooled on the order during
months of abundant supply.
At the hearing, NYSDF offered a
modification to Proposal 5, proposing
that the performance standard during
the months of January through July only
apply to supply plants located outside
of the States that comprise the Northeast
order. The justification for this
modification, the witness said, is that
during the spring months when
additional milk is not usually needed by
distributing plants, it prevents the
uneconomic movement of milk by
supply plants located within the
marketing area. The NYSDF
modification would make Proposal 5
similar to amendments recently adopted
by the Mideast order, the witness noted.
Comments filed on behalf of NYSDF
in response to the Recommended
Decision supported most of the
proposed amendments to the order’s
pooling standards. NYSDF expressed
support for the proposed touch-base
standard and monthly diversion limits,
and agreed that the proposed changes
will better identify the producers that
are ready, willing and able to serve the
fluid market.
NYSDF took exception to the
proposed supply plant shipping
standards of 10 percent for the months
of January through June. It was the
opinion of NYSDF that this shipping
standard would cause difficulties for
small cooperatives, who currently pay
fees to larger cooperatives for pooling,
who would then have to pay a fee in
every month of the year to have their
milk pooled. NYSDF contended that the
minimum 10 percent shipping standard
should apply only to supply plants that
are located outside the states that
comprise the Northeast marketing area.
It is the opinion of NYSDF that supply
plants from ‘‘distant’’ areas must
demonstrate that their producer milk is
really serving the market in a reserve
supply capacity.
Proposal 8, submitted by Friendship
Dairies (Friendship), a partially
regulated handler on the Northeast
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4939
order, seeks to amend the order’s Pool
plant provision by excluding milk
received by supply plants from
producers who would not be eligible to
be pooled under the Northeast order and
pre-qualified cooperative producer milk
from the total volume of milk used to
determine the amount of milk a supply
plant would need to deliver to
distributing plants in order to satisfy the
supply plant performance standards.
The Producer provision of the
Northeast order describes those
producers who would not be eligible for
pooling on the Northeast order. They
include: an entity that operates their
own farm and plant at their sole
enterprise and risk, commonly referred
to as a producer handler; a dairy farmer
whose milk is received at an exempt
plant excluding producer milk diverted
to the exempt plant; a dairy farmer
designated as a producer under another
Federal order; a dairy farmer whose
milk is reported as diverted to a plant
fully regulated under another Federal
order that is assigned to Class I; or a
‘‘dairy farmer for other markets,’’ which
is a dairy farmer whose milk during
certain months of the year is received by
a pooling handler and that pooling
handler caused the milk from such dairy
farmer to be delivered to any plant as
other than producer milk or delivered to
any other Federal milk order.
A witness appearing for Friendship
testified that the current method used in
determining if a supply plant has met a
performance standard is examining the
total amount of milk received at the
plant and the amount of those receipts
shipped to distributing plants. As a
supply plant procures additional milk to
offset the milk it transfers or diverts to
distributing plants, the additional milk
receipts become included in the plant’s
total milk receipts, the witness said.
This increases the quantity of milk that
must be transferred or diverted by the
supply plant to distributing plants to
meet the performance standard for
pooling purposes, the witness
explained. Basing the supply plant
qualification percentage exclusively on
the supply plant’s producer milk
supply, the witness concluded, would
reduce the amount of milk that
Friendship would have to ship every
month to pool distributing plants in
order to be pooled under the terms of
the order. Friendship testified that they
must include milk received from
cooperatives that has already been
qualified for pooling by the cooperative
in the total receipts used to determine
the amount of milk they must ship to
meet supply plant performance
requirements. The Friendship witness
noted that adoption of Proposal 8 would
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address this by excluding pre-qualified
cooperative milk from the volume of
receipts upon which a supply plant
must make shipments in order to be
designated as a pool supply plant.
The Friendship witness also noted
that excluding milk received from
producers not eligible to be pooled on
the Northeast order from the
performance standards for supply plants
has been adopted in the pooling
provisions of other Federal orders. The
witness clarified that in these other
Federal orders where a similar provision
is present, the supply plant performance
standard is based on the amount of milk
produced by dairy farmers that is
pooled through association with the
supply plant, regardless of whether or
not it was diverted from the plant.
A witness appearing for ADCNE
expressed opposition to Proposal 8
noting that it would liberalize supply
plant performance standards. According
to the witness, the intent of supply plant
pooling provisions are to qualify both
the plant and the operator of the plant.
It is meaningless to qualify a supply
plant, the witness noted, in which the
operator does not control the milk of a
group of dairy farmers. A cheese plant
operator would never incur the costs to
ship milk from the plant to a
distributing plant, the witness offered
by example, unless the plant intended
to pool a group of dairy farmers and
draw from the pool.
ADCNE further noted opposition to
Proposal 8 in their post-hearing brief by
emphasizing that the operator of a
supply plant has an option of whether
or not to be pooled. According to
ADCNE, the operator of a plant can
acquire and maintain their own
producer milk supply and can pool the
plant by meeting the pooling standards
of the order or choose nonpool status
and purchase milk supplies from other
pool or non-pool handlers.
An exception to the Recommended
Decision filed by Bongrain Cheese
(Bongrain), a cheese manufacturer in
Pennsylvania, supported adoption of all
portions of Proposal 8. Bongrain was of
the opinion that the second portion of
Proposal 8 that would deduct the
volume of milk received from
cooperatives from the total volume of
milk used to determine the amount of
milk a supply plant needs to deliver to
distributing plants in order to satisfy
supply plant performance standards
should also be adopted. Bongrain was of
the opinion that milk purchased from
cooperatives has already been qualified
for pooling, and that current standards
put undue burden on cheese
manufacturers to buy additional milk
for the sole purpose of meeting
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performance standards. Bongrain noted
that excluding pre-qualified cooperative
milk from the volume of receipts upon
which a supply plant must make
shipments in order to qualify for
pooling would minimize unnecessary
movements of milk.
A proposal, published in the hearing
notice as Proposal 9, also submitted by
Friendship, seeking to amend the Pool
plant provision was not recommended
for adoption in the Recommended
Decision and is not adopted in this
Final Decision. The proposal would
credit route distribution from the plant
and transfers in the form of packaged
fluid milk products to distributing
plants to the total shipments from a
supply plant in determining if the
supply plant has met the performance
standard of the order. Currently, route
distribution is not credited against the
total milk receipts in determining if a
plant has met the supply plant
performance standard.
The Friendship witness stated that
Proposal 9 is meant to address only
Class I products packaged at the
Friendship plant and not Class I
products purchased from other plants,
which they subsequently distribute. To
exclude the possibility of a partially
regulated distributing plant becoming
fully regulated by the adoption of
Proposal 9, the Friendship witness
modified their proposal at the hearing to
only include route distribution and
transfers of packaged fluid milk in
qualifying supply plants whose milk
utilization is at least 50 percent in Class
II, Class III, or Class IV products.
The Friendship witness testified that
their plant has unique characteristics—
they produce non-fat dry milk (a Class
IV product) and cultured buttermilk (a
Class I product). It is the production of
buttermilk, the witness noted, that
causes their plant to be designated as a
partially-regulated distributing plant
under the consolidated Northeast order.
The witness testified that their plant
could not meet the supply plant
performance standards if the amount of
milk distributed on routes in the form
of packaged fluid milk products counted
towards pool qualification.
The Friendship witness maintained
that the Northeast order’s pooling
provisions are unfair because, in their
view, buttermilk satisfies an established
Class I demand, but is still factored into
determining if a supply plant has met
the order’s performance standards by
shipping milk to a distributing plant.
The Friendship witness asserted that
currently the only way to qualify their
plant is to fulfill someone else’s need for
Class I milk without receiving any credit
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for its own contribution to the Class I
market.
The witness stressed that Proposal 9
is not intended to qualify previously
partially-regulated distributing plants
which are not currently fully regulated
on the Northeast order. The witness saw
the potential for a distributing plant
who also manufactures products other
than Class I to meet the supply plant
performance standards under a liberal
reading of Proposal 9. To address this
unintended occurrence, the witness
modified Proposal 9 to apply only to
supply plants that process at least 50
percent of their total physical milk
receipts into products other than Class
I. With this modification, the witness
noted, the possibility of distributing
plants becoming pooled as supply
plants is eliminated.
A witness appearing on behalf of
ADCNE testified in opposition to
Proposal 9. The witness said that the
proposal does not specify that the
plant’s route distribution be located
within the Northeast marketing area and
could have the possible unintended
consequence of pooling partially
regulated distributing plants on the
order with route distribution greater
than the supply plant performance
standard of 10 or 20 percent.
Additionally, the ADCNE witness
testified that purchases and transfers of
Class I products into and out of
manufacturing plants could occur,
which would only serve to circumvent
the intent of the Federal order
provisions of requiring a supply plant to
actually supply the Class I market as a
condition for pooling its milk supply.
The ADCNE witness was of the opinion
that Proposal 9 combines the
characteristics of two different pooling
provisions for the benefit of a few
supply plants that may have Class I
sales and only serves to confuse the
pooling provisions of the order.
Additionally, ADCNE noted in their
post-hearing brief that such a change
could allow nonpool manufacturing
plants, currently without their own
producer supply, a means of ‘‘gaming’’
the system by transferring packaged
product into and then back out of the
plant for the sole purpose of meeting the
supply plant performance standard.
Such a change would be de-stabilizing
to the market, lead to disorderly
marketing conditions, and make
procurement efforts by Class I
processors more difficult and costly,
noted ADCNE.
Proposal 10, also submitted by
Friendship, proposed to lower the
supply plant performance standards by
5 percentage points to a new standard
of 5 percent in each of the months of
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August and December and by 10
percentage points to a new level of 10
percent in each of the months of
September through November. Proposal
10 was not recommended for adoption
in the Recommended Decision and is
not adopted in this Final Decision.
According to the Friendship witness,
the objective of the Federal milk
marketing order program is the
equitable sharing of Class I revenue
amongst all producers who supply the
marketing area. This objective is
defeated, the witness said, when
performance standards result in the
exclusion of some producers from the
order’s marketwide pool. According to
the witness, producers without access to
a Class I outlet have to ‘‘buy’’ market
access from those producers who
dominate the market’s Class I milk
supply or move milk not needed for
Class I use over long distances for the
sole purpose of meeting a performance
standard. This situation, said the
witness, only results in the
displacement of milk supplying other
Class I plants and in unwarranted
additional transportation costs to those
producers seeking to pool their milk on
the order.
The Friendship witness also testified
that the current supply plant
performance standard of 10 percent in
the months of August and December
and 20 percent in each of the months of
September through November were
chosen in an arbitrary manner to create
a ‘‘performance hurdle’’ that a plant
must leap in order to participate as a
pool supply plant on the Northeast
order. Reducing these performance
standards by 5 percentage points to 5
percent for each of the months of
August and December and by 10
percentage points to 10 percent in each
of the months of September through
November would assure sufficient
performance in supplying the Class I
market without causing unnecessary
milk shipments solely to meet the
pooling standards of the order, the
witness said.
b. Unit Pooling Standards for
Distributing Plants
A proposal, published in the
supplemental hearing notice as Proposal
14, was recommended for adoption in
the Recommended Decision and is
included for adoption in this Final
Decision. Specifically, Proposal 14
amends the Pool plant unit pooling
feature by specifying that a plant of the
pool plant unit which is not a
distributing plant must process at least
60 percent of its total producer milk
receipts (including milk received from
cooperative handlers) into Class I or
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Class II products and that the plant be
physically located in the Northeast
marketing area. Accordingly, the nondistributing plant of the pooling unit
would be permitted to process up to 40
percent of its total producer milk
receipts into Class III or IV products.
Proposal 14 was offered by NYSDF. A
witness representing the H.P. Hood
Company (H.P. Hood), a fully regulated
milk handler who pools milk on the
Northeast order, testified on behalf of
NYSDF.
The unit pooling provision of the
Northeast order currently allows for two
or more plants located in the marketing
area and operated by the same handler
to qualify for pooling as a ‘‘unit’’ by
meeting the total and in-area route
disposition standard as if they were a
single distributing plant. To qualify as a
pooling unit, at least one plant of the
unit must qualify as a pool distributing
plant on its own standing, and the other
plant(s) of the unit must process only
Class I or II milk products. The pooling
unit must also meet the total route
distribution standard of 25 percent, and
25 percent of its route distribution must
be within the marketing area.
The NYSDF witness testified that
adoption of Proposal 14 would allow
H.P. Hood and other similarly situated
unit-pool handlers greater flexibility in
how they pool their milk on the
Northeast order. According to the
witness, present unit pooling standards
unduly restrict milk use at the nondistributing plant(s) of the unit to Class
I or II products. The witness indicated
that adoption of Proposal 14 would also
aid cooperatives and other plants in
how they pool milk because a pooling
unit would be expanded to include milk
balancing operations that produce Class
III and Class IV milk products to be the
non-distributing plant(s) of the pooling
unit. The disparity in current
provisions, the NYSDF witness stressed,
is that the primary plant of a pooling
unit can still produce a limited amount
of Class III or IV products, while the
non-distributing plant(s) in the unit
cannot. According to the NYSDF
witness, Proposal 14 adds flexibility to
current provisions by allowing the nondistributing plant(s) in the unit to
process up to 40 percent of total
producer receipts into Class III or IV
milk products.
Comments submitted by NYSDF
supported amending the unit pooling
provision of the order. NYSDF noted
adoption of the proposal would make
the unit pooling provision more
equitable between handlers.
No testimony was received in
opposition to the adoption of Proposal
14.
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4941
c. Standards for Producer Milk
Several amendments to the Producer
milk provision of the Northeast order,
contained in certain features of both
Proposals 3 and 6, were included for
adoption in the Recommended Decision
and are adopted in this Final Decision.
Specifically, the following changes to
the Producer milk provision are
adopted: (1) Establishing an explicit
standard that one day’s milk production
of a dairy farmer be received at a pool
plant before the milk of the dairy farmer
is eligible for diversion to non-pool
plants; (2) Clarifying that a producer
may touch-base anytime during the
month; (3) Eliminating the ability to
simultaneously pool the same milk on
the Northeast order and on a
marketwide equalization pool operated
by another government entity; (4)
Establishing an explicit diversion limit
standard for producer milk of 90 percent
in each of the months of January
through August and December and of 80
percent in each of the months of
September through November (Milk in
excess of the diversion limits will not be
considered as producer milk, and the
pool plant must designate to the Market
Administrator which deliveries are to be
de-pooled. Furthermore, milk diverted
in excess of the diversion limit
standards will not result in a loss of
producer status under the order.); and
(5) Granting authority to the Market
Administrator to adjust the touch-base
standard and the diversion limit
standard as market conditions warrant.
The current Producer milk provision
of the Northeast order considers milk of
a dairy farmer to be producer milk when
the dairy farmer has delivered milk to
a pool plant. This event is commonly
referred to as ‘‘touching-base.’’ Once an
initial delivery is made, all the milk of
a producer is eligible to be diverted to
nonpool plants and continues to be
priced under the terms of the order.
While there are no specific year-round
diversion limits for distributing plants,
a diversion limit for supply plants is
functionally set at 100 percent minus
the applicable performance standard
specified for supply plants. Therefore,
in the months of August and December,
a supply plant can divert no more than
90 percent of its total milk receipts to
nonpool plants. During each of the
months of September through
November, a supply plant can currently
divert no more than 80 percent of its
total milk receipts to nonpool plants.
During each of the months of January
through July, no diversion limits for
supply plants are specified.
Additionally, the Northeast order
currently does not limit the ability to
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simultaneously pool the same milk of a
producer on the order and on a
marketwide equalization pool operated
by another government entity.
Proposal 3, offered by NYSDF, seeks
to modify the Producer milk provision
of the order by: (1) Establishing a twoday touch-base standard in each of the
months of August through December; (2)
Setting an explicit limit on the amount
of producer milk that can be diverted
from any type of pool plant to nonpool
plants at 60 percent of total receipts in
each of the months of August through
December, and 75 percent in each of the
months of January through July; (3)
Clarifying that any milk diverted in
excess of the diversion limits will not be
considered producer milk; and (4)
Providing authority to the Market
Administrator to adjust diversion limit
standards.
A witness appearing on behalf of
NYSDF was of the opinion that current
pooling provisions of the Northeast
order are inadequate and have resulted
in milk being pooled on the order that
does not demonstrate regular and
consistent performance in supplying the
Class I needs of the market. The witness
explained that after a pool plant
receives the milk of a producer, the
plant can then divert unlimited
quantities of that producer’s milk. The
diverted milk need never again be
physically received at a pool plant and
need not ever be made available for
satisfying the market’s Class I needs, the
witness said, yet such milk would
continue to be pooled and receive the
blend price of the Northeast order.
Consequently, the witness stated,
Northeast order producers are receiving
an otherwise lower blend price because
of the increased quantity of milk being
pooled at lower valued uses. The
witness characterized pooling milk in
this way as ‘‘artificial pooling.’’
NYSDF offered a modification to
Proposal 3 in their post-hearing brief.
The NYSDF modification proposed that
diversion limit standards for supply
plants should be 100 percent minus the
proposed supply plant performance
standards. Therefore, NYSDF wrote, the
diversion limit in August would be 85
percent, 75 percent in each of the
months of September through
November, and 90 percent in the month
of December.
The NYSDF witness testified that
milk in excess of the proposed diversion
limit standards should not be pooled
because the order would be pooling the
excess reserves of another market to the
detriment of those pooled producers
whose milk regularly and consistently
serves the Northeast Class I market.
According to the witness, during some
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months when milk production is
plentiful, total pool milk receipts from
as many as 800 producers located far
from the marketing area have exceeded
100 million pounds. The NYSDF
witness was of the opinion that the milk
of these producers was not only
unneeded to supply the Northeast order
fluid needs but a vast majority of the
distant milk was never physically
received on a regular or consistent basis
at a Northeast pool plant.
The NYSDF witness testified that
milk diverted in excess of the specified
diversion limits should not be
considered as producer milk and
therefore should not be pooled on the
order. The witness also emphasized that
the Market Administrator should be
given the authority to adjust diversion
limits and the touch-base standard as
market conditions warrant.
The NYSDF witness was of the
opinion that the two-day touch-base
standard offered in Proposal 3 is
reasonable and would eliminate the
ability to artificially pool milk on the
order by requiring a producer to deliver
at least two days’ milk production to a
pool plant in each of the pool-qualifying
months before the milk of that producer
would be eligible for diversion to
nonpool plants. The higher touch-base
standard in the months of August
through December would also more
fully assure fluid handlers an adequate
supply of milk to meet the needs of their
customers when milk supplies are less
abundant, the witness added.
A witness appearing on behalf of
ADCNE testified in opposition to
Proposal 3. The witness said that
implementation of a two-day touch-base
standard would result in disorderly
market conditions because the cost to
producers in meeting this pooling
standard could increase significantly.
The witness presented testimony
describing the vast geographic area and
other characteristics of the Northeast
order that would give rise to increased
costs to producers. The witness
explained that because most Northeast
order producers are not located near a
Class I handler, a higher touch-base
standard would result in the
uneconomic movement of milk and in
higher overall transportation costs. The
witness also suggested that higher
transportation costs could prevent some
producers from being able to pool their
milk on the order.
The ADCNE witness also expressed
opposition to the portion of Proposal 3
that would lower diversion limit
standards. The witness did agree that
the current lack of specific diversion
limits could cause harm in the orderly
marketing of milk. In ADCNE’s opinion,
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the proposed diversion limits for the
months of August through December are
too restrictive and could result in
disorderly marketing conditions. Rather,
ADCNE was of the opinion that
establishing performance standards for
supply plants in each of the months of
January through July was a more
appropriate alternative than making
restrictive changes to the order’s
diversion limit standards.
Proposal 6, offered by ADCNE, also
seeks to amend the Producer milk
definition of the Northeast order.
Specifically, the proposal seeks to: (1)
Establish year-round diversion limit
standards of 80 percent in each of the
months of September through
November, and 90 percent in each of the
months of January through August and
December; (2) Clarify that a producer
can touch-base anytime during the
month to make their milk eligible for
diversion to nonpool plants; (3) Clarify
that over-diverted milk will not result in
a dairy farmer losing producer status on
the order; (4) Eliminate the ability to
simultaneously pool the same milk on
the Northeast order and on a
marketwide equalization pool operated
by another government entity; and (5)
Provide authority to the Market
Administrator to adjust diversion limit
standards applicable to those handlers
who receive marketwide service
payments when warranted.
A witness appearing on behalf of
ADCNE testified that the pooling
provisions of the Northeast order need
to be considered on an emergency basis
to correct loopholes that could lead to
further erosion of blend prices and
disorderly market conditions. The
witness also testified that the lack of
specific year-round diversion limit
standards for distributing plants needs
to be corrected because the absence of
such standards currently allows
distributing plants the ability to pool
large quantities of milk during the
spring months when milk supplies are
plentiful through the diversion process.
According to the witness, the only
functional restrictions on diversions
from a distributing plant during those
months are economic considerations
and the amount of milk that a
distributing plant can physically
receive. Theoretically, the witness
explained, a single distributing plant
could pool all of the milk in the
Northeast Order because no diversion
limit is specified. The witness stressed
that if diversion limit standards are not
established for every month, an increase
in the amount of milk pooled on the
order could result in significantly lower
blend prices paid to producers.
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The ADCNE witness also explained
that a producer should not lose
producer status under the dairy farmer
for other markets provision of the
Northeast order in the event that a
handler over-diverts the milk of a
producer. In this regard, the witness
explained that Proposal 6 would allow
for pooling the milk of producers in the
following month in the event that milk
of a dairy farmer is over-diverted in the
current month.
The ADCNE witness also testified that
while no entities are currently engaging
in the practice of simultaneously
pooling the same milk on the Northeast
order and on a marketwide equalization
pool operated by another government
entity (commonly referred to as
‘‘double-dipping’’), the opportunity for
it exists, especially with the Western
New York State Milk Marketing Order
that shares a common milkshed with the
Northeast order marketing area. The
ADCNE witness stipulated that
eliminating the ability to double-dip
would have no effect on milk priced by
State-operated programs that provide for
marketwide pooling of milk pricing
premiums such as the Pennsylvania
Milk Marketing Board, the Maine Milk
Commission, or the Virginia Milk
Commission.
The pooling standards of all milk
marketing orders, including the
Northeast order, are intended to ensure
that an adequate supply of milk is
supplied to meet the Class I needs of the
market and to provide the criteria for
identifying those who are reasonably
associated with the market as a
condition for receiving the order’s blend
price. The pooling standards of the
Northeast order are represented in the
Pool Plant, Producer, and the Producer
milk provisions of the order. Taken as
a whole, these provisions are intended
to ensure that an adequate supply of
milk is supplied to meet the Class I
needs of the market. In addition, these
provisions provide the criteria for
identifying those producers and plants
whose milk is reasonably associated
with the market by supplying the Class
I needs and thereby sharing in the
marketwide distribution of proceeds
arising primarily from Class I sales.
Pooling standards of the Northeast order
are based on performance, specifying
standards that, if met, qualify a
producer, the milk of a producer, or a
plant to share in the benefits arising
from the classified pricing of milk.
Pooling standards that are
performance-based provide the only
viable method for determining those
eligible to share in the marketwide pool.
This is because it is the additional
revenue from the Class I use of milk that
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adds additional income, and it is
reasonable to expect that only those
producers who consistently bear the
costs of supplying the market’s fluid
needs should be the ones to share in the
distribution of pool proceeds. Pool plant
standards therefore are needed to
identify the milk of those producers
who are providing service in meeting
the Class I needs of the market. This is
important because producers whose
milk is pooled receive the market’s
blend price. If the pooling provisions do
not reasonably accomplish these aims,
the proceeds that accrue to the
marketwide pool from fluid milk sales
are not properly shared with the
appropriate producers and can result in
an unwarranted lowering of returns to
those producers who actually incur the
costs of supplying the fluid needs of the
market.
Similarly, pooling standards for
distributing and supply plants should
also provide for those features and
accommodations that reflect the needs
of proprietary handlers and cooperatives
in providing the market with fluid milk
and dairy products. When a pooling
feature can result in pooling milk which
would not reasonably demonstrate
serving the fluid needs of the market, it
is appropriate to re-examine the need
for continuing to provide that feature as
a necessary component of the pooling
standards of the order. The pooling
standards of an order serve to ensure an
adequate supply of fluid milk for the
market and the proper identification of
those producers whose milk does serve
the fluid needs of the market. A feature
which can diminish these aims should
be considered unnecessary.
The record provides sufficient
evidence to conclude that features of the
Pool plant provision are not appropriate
given the prevailing marketing
conditions of the Northeast order. The
hearing record reveals that both the lack
of supply plant performance standards
in every month and the lack of explicit
diversion limit standards for all pool
plants in every month of the year have
allowed producers from areas located
far from the marketing area to
participate in the distribution of
proceeds from the marketwide pooling
of milk without demonstration of a
reasonable level of consistent and
regular service in meeting the Class I
needs of the market. Current
performance standards have allowed
these producers to receive the Northeast
order’s blend price by simply making a
one-time delivery of milk to a pool plant
and thereafter divert unlimited
quantities of milk to nonpool plants
located nearer their farms and far from
the marketing area. Such milk pooled by
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4943
diversion cannot reasonably be
considered a reserve supply for the
marketing order area because it is never
again physically received by pool plants
regulated by the Northeast order.
Furthermore, such milk pooled by way
of diversion is not consistently
demonstrating performance to serving
the market’s Class I needs. The pooling
of milk through the diversion process
evidenced by the record increases the
total amount of milk pooled on the
order and lowers the blend prices paid
to all producers, especially to those
producers who consistently deliver milk
to the order’s pool plants.
The record provides evidence to
conclude that performance standards for
supply plants should be specified for
every month. The performance
standards proposed by the ADCNE are
reasonable in light of the prevailing
marketing conditions reflected in the
Northeast marketing area. The concerns
of NYSDF, who represented the
interests of the many distributing plants
regulated under the terms of the order,
make clear that since the Northeast milk
marketing area was created and
implemented as part of Federal milk
order reform in January 2000, the need
arose at least twice for the Market
Administrator to raise the performance
standards for supply plants. This was
done so that distributing plant bottlers
would be assured of sufficient milk
supplies to meet fluid demands.
In this regard, this decision can only
conclude that authority provided to the
Market Administrator to make the
needed adjustments to the performance
standards as marketing conditions
warrant functions well and as intended.
The temporary increase in supply plant
performance standards brought forth the
milk supply needed to satisfy the needs
of distributing plants. Accordingly, this
Final Decision sees no compelling
reason to adopt the higher supply plant
performance standards offered by
NYSDF. To the extent that the needs of
distributing plants have necessitated the
need to increase the availability of
supply to meet fluid needs, the order
provisions have done so. It is reasonable
to conclude, therefore, that the order
will continue to react as needed to
changing marketing conditions into the
future.
Handlers and producers are better
served by eliminating the ability of a
supply plant to automatically be a pool
plant if the supply plant had been a
pool plant in some prior period as the
order currently provides. The granting
of automatic pool plant status to a plant
does not provide the certainty needed
by distributing plants for the order to
assure them an adequate supply of milk
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for Class I uses. Together with other
pooling standard inadequacies, it
provides an avenue through which more
milk can be pooled on the Northeast
order than can be considered as part of
the legitimate milk supply of the pool
plant where automatic pool plant status
has been granted. The opportunity to
pool milk in this way only serves to
increase the volume of milk pooled (at
lowered valued uses) without that milk
either being committed to, or
demonstrating, serving the Class I needs
of the market as a condition for
receiving the order’s blend price.
Therefore, the supply plant performance
standards should be amended to specify
performance to the market in every
month of the year. The performance
standards of 10 percent in each of the
months of January through August and
December and 20 percent in each of the
months of September through November
are adopted. Accordingly, exceptions
filed by NYSDF regarding the adoption
of year round supply plant performance
standards previously referenced in this
decision offer no persuasive justification
in demonstrating how the order’s
supply plant performance standards
could not be changed by the Market
Administrator when marketing
conditions warrant their increase or
decrease.
The pool plant feature contained in
the Northeast order for split-plants
should be removed. No similar
provision was contained in the three
pre-reform orders consolidated to form
the Northeast order. The split-plant
provision was included in the
consolidated Northeast order in an effort
to provide for the uniformity of
provisions throughout the reformed
Federal milk order system. The
provision was established with the
intent to allow handlers the ability to
process Grade A milk in the pool side
of the plant and process Grade B milk
in the nonpool side of the plant.
It is clear from the record that
handlers in the Northeast marketing
area are not utilizing this feature of the
pool plant provision, and no milk is
being pooled on the order in this
manner. However, if utilized, the feature
could be used as a mechanism for
pooling milk on the order that would
not need to demonstrate a consistent
service to the Class I market. This
feature could be used as a loophole
through which deliveries of milk to the
pool side of a split-plant can then be
diverted to the nonpool side of the
plant. The diverted milk would never
then need to serve the market’s Class I
needs. The split-plant feature could
unintentionally provide the opportunity
for milk to become pooled on the
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Northeast order without that milk
demonstrating a reasonable level of
service in meeting the market’s fluid
needs but would share in the revenue
generated from Class I sales.
The removal of the split-plant feature
is broadly supported by the hearing
participants. Since the split-plant
feature is not currently utilized by any
Northeast handler, no producers
currently serving the Northeast market
would be adversely affected by its
removal from the terms of the order.
The hearing record supports the
adoption of certain features of Proposal
8 offered by Friendship. In simple
terms, the proposal calls for excluding
milk received by a supply plant from
two sources—milk received from
sources not eligible for pooling (for
example, milk received from a producer
handler or from a dairy farmer for other
markets) and from a cooperative
association—from the total volume of
milk receipts at the supply plant. By
excluding such milk receipts from the
total actual receipts, the proposal
essentially lowers the intended
performance standards for supply
plants.
As discussed above, the record reveals
concern by distributing plants that the
pooling standards of the Northeast order
need to specify higher performance
standards for supply plants and the
need for explicit diversion limits and
touch-base standards for producer milk.
While the higher performance standards
called for in the NYSDF proposal are
not recommended for adoption, the
adoption of certain features of Proposal
8 would essentially reduce the amount
of milk that supply plants ship to
distributing plants so that the Class I
needs of the market can be satisfied. The
current performance standards for
supply plants are sufficiently liberal,
especially in light of the more than 40
percent Class I use of milk in the
Northeast marketing area.
The part of Proposal 8 that excludes
milk received from producers not
eligible for pooling is adopted in this
Final Decision since that milk is not
eligible to be pooled on the Northeast
order. It is reasonable to exclude such
receipts for the purposes of determining
if the supply plant has met the intended
performance standards because milk not
eligible for pooling should not be used
as a factor for qualification.
The portion of Proposal 8 that is not
adopted in this Final Decision
specifically excludes supply plant milk
receipts from cooperatives as a factor for
qualification. Exceptions received from
Bongrain Cheese, discussed earlier in
this decision, noted support for
adoption of this portion of Proposal 8,
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and are not persuasive. This feature is
not adopted because it is viewed as
having more to do with a supply plant’s
ability to draw money from the PSF
than it does with demonstrating a
reasonable standard of performance in
supplying the Class I needs of the
market as a condition for participation
in the marketwide pool.
As discussed above, the hearing
record supports concluding that the
Northeast order is not adequately
identifying the milk of those producers
that are actually supplying the Class I
needs of the market on a regular and
consistent basis. In this regard, certain
changes to the Producer milk provision
are adopted in this Final Decision.
The current touch-base standard of
the Northeast order does not provide
detail sufficient to specify the quantity
of milk a producer must deliver to pool
plants. Currently the order only
indicates that if a producer delivers
milk to a Northeast order pool plant, the
milk of that producer becomes eligible
for diversion to nonpool plants.
Generally, milk marketing orders that
exhibit lower fluid demands require
fewer physical deliveries to a pool
plant, while markets with higher fluid
demands typically specify more
frequent deliveries. A touch-base
standard that is too high can result in
higher transportation costs to producers
and cause uneconomic shipments of
milk for the sole purpose of meeting a
pooling standard. If the standard is too
low, fluid handlers may be less assured
of an adequate supply of fluid milk to
meet the demands of the Class I market.
The hearing record supports
concluding that the touch-base standard
of the Producer milk provision, together
with generally inadequate diversion
limit standards for all pool plants,
contributes to the pooling of milk on the
order which does not demonstrate a
reasonable level of service in supplying
the Class I needs of the market. There
are competing proposals and views on
how the order should rely on both the
touch-base standard and diversion limit
standards so that, together with the
performance standards, the Class I
needs of the market are satisfied and the
order has appropriately identified the
milk of those producers whose milk
actually demonstrates service in
meeting the Class I needs of the market.
The ADCNE proposals place much
more weight on the need for explicit
diversion limit standards in each and
every month that are applicable to both
supply and distributing plants than on
a two-day touch-base standard proposed
by NYSDF. The ADCNE and NYSDF
both acknowledge the need for explicit
diversion limit standards for all pool
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plants, although their respective
positions of what those standards
should be differ only as to what are the
most appropriate levels for the
Northeast order.
This Final Decision adopts a one-day
touch-base standard in the initial pool
qualifying month. A touch-base
standard that would require more
frequent deliveries is not warranted
because it would result in higher
transportation costs to producers and
cause uneconomic shipments of milk for
the sole purpose of meeting a pooling
standard. A one-day touch-base
standard, together with other adopted
changes contained in this Final
Decision, should adequately contribute
in identifying the milk of those
producers who regularly supply the
market’s Class I needs and therefore can
be pooled under the terms of the order.
The position of the ADCNE that the
milk of a producer could touch-base
anytime during the initial qualifying
month is reasonable and is adopted for
the purpose of clarifying when meeting
this standard should occur.
Granting authority to the Market
Administrator to adjust the touch-base
standard is also adopted as a key
component of the adopted one-day
touch base standard. While this feature
of the touch-base standard was not
included in those proposals amending
the Producer milk provision of the
Northeast order, the record is specific
that this was intended. It is also
consistent with the authority already
granted to the Market Administrator to
adjust the performance standards of the
order for supply plants.
Providing for the diversion of milk is
a desirable and needed feature of an
order because it facilitates the orderly
and efficient disposition of milk not
needed for fluid use. When producer
milk is not needed for Class I use, some
provision should be made for milk to be
diverted to nonpool plants for use in
manufactured products. However, it is
essential that limits be established to
safeguard against excessive milk
supplies becoming associated with the
market through the diversion process.
In the context of this proceeding, milk
diverted by distributing and supply
plants is milk not physically received at
the plants. While diverted milk is not
physically received, it is nevertheless an
integral part of the milk supply of the
diverting plant. If such milk is not part
of the integral supply of the diverting
plant, then that milk should not be
associated with the diverting plant and
should not be pooled. Associating more
milk than is actually part of the
legitimate reserve supply of the
diverting plant can unnecessarily
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reduce the blend price paid to dairy
farmers who service the market’s Class
I needs.
Without reasonable diversion limits,
the order’s ability to provide for
effective performance standards and
orderly marketing is weakened.
Diversion limits that are set too high can
open the door for pooling much more
milk on the market than can be
reasonably associated with the reserve
supply for the market. The record
reveals that unlimited diversion limits
for distributing plants in the Northeast
order could have contributed to the
pooling of large volumes of milk that
have not demonstrated performance to
the Class I market. The same is also
revealed in the record by the lack of
explicit diversion limit standards for
supply plants in every month.
This Final Decision adopts diversion
limit standards for all pool plants as
proposed by ADCNE. Specifically, a
diversion limit standard of 90 percent in
each of the months of January through
August and December and 80 percent in
each of the months of September
through November is adopted. Milk
diverted in excess of the standards will
not be considered producer milk and
the pool plant must designate to the
Market Administrator which deliveries
will be depooled. If the pool plant fails
to make a designation, the Market
Administrator can depool all of that
month’s diversions to nonpool plants.
As also proposed by ADCNE, this
decision can find no reason to cause the
loss of producer status under the order
in the event a producer’s milk is caused
to be over diverted. Accordingly, the
proviso that a producer will not lose
producer status under the order in the
event that the milk of a producer is over
diverted is adopted.
To the extent that these diversion
limits may warrant future adjustments,
this Final Decision adopts explicit
authority to the Market Administrator to
adjust the diversion limit standards
when needed. In practice, such
authority has already been given to the
Market Administrator in that current
supply plant diversion limits are
functionally set at 100 percent minus
the applicable performance standard. In
past actions undertaken by the Market
Administrator to change supply plant
performance standards, the applicable
diversion limit was also functionally
changed as higher performance
standards adopted temporarily also
changed supply plant diversion limits.
Therefore, providing authority to change
the order’s diversion limit standards in
the way presented in this Final Decision
merely serves to clarify an authority
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4945
already granted to the Market
Administrator.
Since the 1960s, the Federal milk
order program has recognized the harm
and disorder that results to both
producers and handlers when the same
milk of a producer is simultaneously
pooled on more than one Federal order,
commonly referred to as ‘‘doubledipping.’’ In the past, this situation
caused disparate prices between
producers while handlers were not
assured of uniform prices, which gave
rise to competitive equity issues.
The need to prevent ‘‘doubledipping’’ became critically important as
distribution areas expanded and orders
merged. The issue of ‘‘double-dipping’’
on a marketwide equalization pool
operated by another government entity
and a Federal order can, for all intents
and purposes, have the same
undesirable outcomes that Federal
orders once experienced and
subsequently corrected. While ‘‘doubledipping’’ is not presently occurring in
the Northeast order, it is clear that the
Northeast order should be amended to
prevent the ability to pool the same milk
on both a Federal order and a
marketwide equalization pool operated
by another government entity. This
action is consistent with other recent
Federal order amendatory actions
regarding simultaneous pooling on a
Federal order and on another
government operated program.
The hearing record does not support
the adoption of Proposal 9, which seeks
to exclude a supply plant’s route
distribution of packaged fluid milk
products from the total volume of milk
that it would need to deliver to a
distributing plant for the purpose of
meeting the order’s performance
standards. As implied in the name, a
supply plant is a supplier of bulk milk
to distributing plants. Supply plant
performance standards are intended, in
part, to ensure that distributing plants
are supplied with enough fluid milk to
meet their needs. A plant’s route sales
in the marketing area are used to
determine the pool status of fully or
partially regulated distributing plants,
not of supply plants.
The hearing record supports the
adoption of Proposal 14 because it
serves to provide milk processors in the
Northeast with the more orderly
marketing of unit-pooled milk without
compromising the order’s intent to
ensure that the Class I needs of the
marketing area are satisfied. Unit
pooling serves to provide a degree of
regulatory flexibility for handlers by
recognizing specialization of plant
operations and to minimize the
uneconomical and inefficient movement
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of milk for the sole purpose of meeting
or retaining pool status.
If a plant has combined Class I and II
receipts of 60 percent or more,
including milk received from
cooperative handlers and milk diverted
from the plant, and is physically located
in the Northeast marketing area, it is
reasonable to conclude that the unit’s
plant does contribute in making milk
available on a regular and consistent
basis for meeting the fluid needs of the
order. Therefore, its adoption is
included in this Final Decision
provided all other standards and
conditions for unit pooling are met. This
should provide for greater flexibility in
the types of products a pooling unit may
produce, such as Class III or Class IV
dairy products, in a unit pooled plant.
Additionally, providing for the
secondary unit-pooled facility to be
located within the Northeast marketing
area, as well as being primarily involved
in producing Class I or Class II milk
products, retains safeguards that would
prevent the pooling of milk that may be
located far from the marketing area
which would not demonstrate the
standards of performance in servicing
the Class I needs of the market.
A proposal published in the hearing
notice as Proposal 11, seeking to amend
the dairy farmer for other markets
feature of the Producer provision, was
withdrawn at the hearing by the
proponent. No further reference to this
proposal will be made.
3. Marketwide Service Payments
A proposal, published in the hearing
notice as Proposal 7, seeking to establish
a 6-cent per hundredweight (cwt)
marketwide service payment in the form
of a market ‘‘balancing’’ credit to
handlers was not included for adoption
in the Recommended Decision is not
adopted in this Final Decision. As
proposed, a balancing credit would be
provided if the handler pools at least a
million pounds of milk per month,
provided less than 65 percent of such
pooled milk is shipped to distributing
plants for Class I use or represents at
least three percent of the total volume
of milk pooled on the Northeast order.
In the context of this proceeding,
‘‘balancing’’ refers to those actions
performed by handlers that add or
remove milk from their supply to
accommodate the fluctuating needs of
Class I. The Northeast order does not
currently contain a marketwide service
payment provision.
Proposal 7 was offered by ADCNE and
has received additional support or
endorsement in writing from the
National Milk Producers Federation
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(NMPF) and the New York State Farm
Bureau Federation.
A form of a marketwide service
payment was available to certain
cooperative handlers in the pre-reform
New York-New Jersey milk marketing
order. That order was combined with
the Middle Atlantic and New England
orders to form the consolidated
Northeast order. The service payment of
the New York-New Jersey order
consisted of two components: a
cooperative service payment and a
balancing payment. The balancing
component was far smaller than the
proposed six cents per cwt credit under
consideration in this proceeding. The
cooperative service payment could total
up to three cents per cwt. An additional
‘‘up to’’ one cent was provided for
balancing. By comparison, the
marketwide service payment proposal
considered in this proceeding is
dedicated entirely to compensating
eligible handlers for balancing
functions.
The ADCNE’s rationale for balancing
payments rests on the argument that the
Northeast order has a large number of
independent milk producers (dairy
farmers who are not members of a
cooperative) who avoid incurring the
costs of operating and maintaining
facilities that provide outlets for milk
when not needed for fluid use. In this
regard, they assert that the independent
producers essentially receive a higher
blend price for their milk because they
avoid the costs of balancing which are
largely absorbed by dairy farmer
cooperatives that own manufacturing
plants. As a matter of equity, ADCNE is
of the opinion that the entire market,
rather than only cooperatives, should
share in bearing the costs that arise from
providing these market balancing
operations and facilities.
In post hearing briefs, support for
Proposal 7 was completely withdrawn
by Agrimark, a major participant and
member of ADCNE who provided
testimony at the hearing in favor of
adopting a marketwide service payment
for balancing. In addition, LOL, also a
member of ADCNE, indicated their
change to a neutral and uncommitted
position for the adoption of a balancing
credit.2
Testimony advancing the adoption of
Proposal 7 was provided by
representatives of three members of
ADCNE. The majority of their testimony
relied on research conducted by USDA’s
Rural Cooperative Business Service
2 After the deadline for submitting post-hearing
briefs and the publication of the Recommended
Decision, LOL, in correspondence to the
Department, iterated that the Final Decision should
be based on the record of the proceeding.
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(RCBS), which examined market
balancing activities in the Northeast
milk marketing area. The research was
performed at the request of ADCNE.
An RCBS witness, who participated in
conducting the market balancing
research, provided testimony
concerning the study’s methodology,
underlying assumptions, and findings.
The witness emphasized that the
research performed and testimony given
was offered as a service to the industry
and interested parties and was not in
support of, or opposition to, any
proposal under consideration in the
proceeding.
The RCBS witness testified that the
study provided a framework that can be
used to estimate the costs associated
with balancing the Class I needs of the
Northeast marketing area by examining
the costs associated with unused milk
manufacturing capacity at butterpowder plants located within the
marketing area. According to the
witness, unused milk manufacturing
capacity results from increases or
decreases in the demand for fluid milk
by Class I handlers given the available
milk supply associated with the
marketing area. The witness explained
that the study also estimated changes in
costs associated with different
hypothetical levels of idled butterpowder plant capacity when subjected
to seasonal variations in milk supplies
that caused fluctuations in the amount
of milk manufactured at butter-powder
plants. The witness indicated that the
plant capacity data originated from
cooperatives that operated butterpowder plants in the pre-reform orders
consolidated to form the Northeast
marketing area.
The RCBS witness explained that the
study results are theoretical and do not
represent actual or existing conditions
in the Northeast marketing area.
According to the witness, the balancing
study employed a comparative static
methodology. For the purposes of the
study, the witness explained, the
research defined the necessary reserve
milk supply requirements of the market
as the amount of milk required to meet
daily operating fluctuations among
distributing plants (operating reserves)
and seasonal fluctuations (seasonal
reserves). According to the witness,
during periods of abundant milk supply
in the Northeast marketing area, such
reserve milk is used for Class IV
manufacturing purposes, specifically for
the manufacture of nonfat dry milk
(NFDM).
According to the RCBS witness, the
study suggests that seasonal variations
in the demand for fluid milk cause
variations in the supply of milk that
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would otherwise be used in
manufacturing. As a result, milk
available for the manufacturing of
NFDM fluctuates inversely with the
milk supplies needed to meet fluid milk
demand, the witness noted. The witness
said that as demand for milk for fluid
use increases, supplies of milk for
manufacturing tend to decline.
According to the witness, changes in
Class I (fluid) demand change the
amount of unused butter-powder plant
capacity and such unused capacity has
associated costs.
The RCBS witness explained that the
balancing study was conducted using
two different scenarios. The witness
said the first scenario assumes an
operating reserve of milk needed to
balance the regions’ needs at 10 percent
of total fluid demand. The second
scenario assumes, according to the
witness, an operating reserve of 20
percent. The witness testified that
operating costs were compared under
these two differing scenarios while
other factors were held constant. The
witness noted that while the study
focuses on estimating costs and changes
in estimated costs, the study did not
address methods by which to recover or
offset costs typically associated with
balancing services and operations. The
witness indicated that cost recovery
methods might include some form of
marketwide service payments
formalized under the term of a milk
marketing order, ‘‘give-up’’ charges (a
charge by a supplier for making milk
available, for example, to a distributing
plant), balancing or diversion fees (a
charge for accepting milk at a balancing
facility when not needed by a Class I
bottler), ‘‘over-order’’ premiums (a price
charged for milk above those minimum
prices set under the terms of a milk
marketing order), or by pricing formulae
included in the classified prices
established under a milk marketing
order.
A witness from Dairylea, a farmerowned agricultural marketing and
service organization, appeared on behalf
of the ADCNE and testified in support
of Proposal 7. The witness described the
Northeast marketing area as a milk
‘‘megamarket’’ characterized by high
population and milk production density
that requires marketwide service
payments for balancing the market’s
fluid needs. The witness asserted that
the Class I needs of the Northeast
market are so large and unique among
Federal milk orders that without
compensation for the costs incurred for
balancing, such activities might not
otherwise be provided. The witness
asserted that there is no other viable
market mechanism through which
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excess milk supplies can be adequately
disposed of other than through the
butter-powder balancing facilities of the
region’s six largest cooperative handlers.
The witness did note, however, that all
manufacturing handlers operating in the
Northeast marketing area also perform
balancing functions by simply procuring
milk from the area’s producers.
The Dairylea witness characterized
the Northeast as a unique milkproducing region because nearly 25
percent of farmers supplying the market
are independent producers and not
members of cooperatives. The witness
characterized the Northeast’s
independent producers as largely
serving the needs of Class I handlers
and as generally not involved in
providing balancing facilities and
services for the market. Additionally,
the witness testified that the marketing
area contains nearly 40 percent of all
dairy farmer cooperatives in the United
States. In comparing outlets for milk,
the witness testified that the Northeast
marketing area is represented by 32
proprietary handlers and 259 milk
plants.
The witness for Dairylea was of the
opinion that the unique characteristics
and size of the marketing area together
with the sheer volume of milk required
to supply the fluid needs of the
marketing area make it imperative that
marketwide service payments be
provided to compensate the largest
cooperative handlers for the costs that
they incur for balancing the market.
According to the witness, without
cooperatives performing this service,
some milk production in the marketing
area would not clear the market. The
witness did note that some milk
produced within the boundaries of the
Northeast marketing area is not pooled
on the order because it is delivered
south to other marketing areas where it
receives a higher blend price. The
witness similarly acknowledged that
milk produced west of the marketing
area is delivered to the Northeast
marketing area butter-powder plants
because being pooled on the Northeast
order often commands a higher blend
price.
The Dairylea witness also
acknowledged that other plants located
within the Northeast marketing area
(some 184 nonpool plants, many of
which are proprietary) also perform
significant balancing functions. The
witness was of the opinion that no
single nonpool plant could individually
provide significant market balancing
services, however, taken as a whole,
these plants do provide and perform
balancing functions.
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4947
The Dairylea witness testified that the
members of ADCNE had advanced a
conceptually similar marketwide service
payment proposal for balancing during
the Federal milk order reform effort. The
witness testified that Federal order
reform provided public debate and
analysis on the need for a marketwide
service payment for balancing. The
witness explained that USDA rejected
the marketwide service payment
proposal in the Federal milk order
reform Recommended Decision of 1998
and the Final Decision of 1999 because
the proposed balancing credit level
sought had not been adequately
explained.
A witness from Agrimark, also
appearing on behalf of ADCNE, testified
that the Food Security Act of 1985
(commonly referred to as the 1985 Farm
Bill) provided authority for Federal milk
marketing orders to allow handlers to
collect for services rendered that are of
benefit to all the market’s participants.
The witness asserted that the disposal of
surplus milk (milk not needed for fluid
use) and the procurement of
supplemental milk supplies for fluid
handlers are specifically identified in
the provisions of the 1985 Farm Bill as
being of marketwide benefit. The
witness also asserted that payments for
reimbursing handlers who provide
services of marketwide benefit may be
made from the total sums payable by all
handlers for milk—the costs of which
are paid from the total value of milk
pooled before the computation of the
blend price.
In the opinion of the Agrimark
witness, such payments would be made
on a uniform basis by all pool
participants and thereby all would
equitably share in the cost associated
with balancing. According to the
witness, because independent producers
do not operate balancing facilities or
perform balancing functions, they have
avoided the burden of incurring
balancing costs while receiving the
benefit of the blend price.
Testimony of the Agrimark witness
reinforced the opinion of the Dairylea
witness that cooperatives perform the
bulk of market balancing functions in
the Northeast marketing area throughout
the year. As an example, the witness
cited data originating from the Market
Administrator’s office illustrating that
during 2001, cooperative-supplied milk
satisfied market shortfalls during those
months when milk production was at its
lowest in the region. In addition, the
witness noted that cooperatives
accommodated surplus milk diversions
from the Class I market when milk
production in the area was higher. The
witness stressed that the volume of
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deliveries to Class I bottlers by
cooperatives varied inversely with the
delivery volumes by independent milk
producers.
According to the Agrimark witness,
during November 2001, receipts by
Class I handlers from cooperative
suppliers were more than double the
level of receipts from independent
producers. In contrast, the witness
testified that receipts by Class I handlers
from cooperative suppliers reached their
low point during July 2001, a period of
the year when overall milk production
in the Northeast was highest. According
to the witness, milk deliveries by
cooperatives during November to the
Class I market were 29 percent above
those for July. This data clearly shows,
the witness asserted, that milk supplied
by cooperatives provided a larger share
of market balancing than did
independent producer milk.
Relying on data supplied by the
Market Administrator, the Agrimark
witness testified there are
approximately 4,000 independent
producers who pool their milk on the
Northeast order. The witness indicated
that these producers account for
approximately 6 billion pounds of milk
per year pooled on the order. Of this
milk volume, the witness asserted, some
80 percent is supplied for fluid uses in
a market whose total Class I use is only
45 percent of the total volume of milk
pooled. The witness testified that while
independent producer milk is not
refused by distributing plants from their
producers during slack demand months
of the year, cooperative-producer milk is
sometimes diverted from Class I use by
distributing plants for use in
manufacturing. According to the
witness, this further demonstrates that it
is cooperatives who own manufacturing
plants that provide the majority of
balancing services for the market.
The witness was of the opinion that
cooperative producers are receiving a
lower price because cooperatives have
absorbed the costs associated with
market balancing, and as such,
balancing costs are not equitably shared
among all the market’s producers. In
addition, the witness expressed the
opinion that milk supplied by
cooperatives is more likely to be the
milk that is diverted away from Class I
use than is milk supplied by
independent producers. Diversions tend
to be made, according to the witness, to
cooperatives that operate butter-powder
plants. The witness testified that all
costs and risks of operating such
balancing plants accrue only to the
cooperatives while such costs and risks
are essentially avoided by independent
producers.
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The Agrimark witness testified that
excess manufacturing plant capacity
occurring during high fluid demand
months causes losses for large
cooperative handlers that operate
balancing plants. According to the
witness, Agrimark may be reaching a
point where it can no longer operate
their balancing plants because of
excessive operating costs arising from
idled plant processing capacity. High
operating costs occur, according to the
witness, because there is insufficient
milk volume for the plants to operate
profitably at certain times of the year.
The Agrimark witness testified that
revenue from the manufacture and
distribution of Class IV products and
sales of Class I and II products
essentially subsidize the balancing
operations and activities of
cooperatives. In the opinion of the
witness, these subsidies are required
because the balancing costs they incur
are not recoverable from the
marketplace. The witness also provided
information relating to one of their
specific plants for comparison with the
RCBS study in order to validate the
RCBS study cost estimates. For example,
the witness indicated that a butterpowder plant, owned and operated by
Agrimark, was built in 1919 and has
been refurbished on a number of
occasions. The witness indicated that
while their plant costs and the cost
estimates in the RCBS study differ on a
number of factors, the RCBS study
nevertheless can be relied upon in its
totality as an accurate reflection of
Agrimark’s own plant costs.
A witness from LOL, also appearing
on behalf of ADCNE, testified that
marketwide service payments are
needed for the Northeast milk order to
keep balancing plants operating, thus
benefitting all market participants.
According to the LOL witness, only
cooperatives incur the brunt of
balancing costs and bear the burden of
receiving lower blend prices than would
be the case if balancing costs were more
equitably shared by all producers who
pool milk on the Northeast order.
Members of cooperatives are therefore at
a disadvantage in the marketplace as
compared to independent producers
who do not pay for balancing through
cooperative membership dues or
reduced revenues, the witness
concluded.
The LOL witness testified that
ADCNE cooperatives provided
balancing services for as much as 21.8
million pounds of milk per day during
peak milk production months during
2001. The witness testified that this
evidence was based on a survey that
LOL conducted using data received
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from ADCNE member butter-powder
plants for the months of May and
November of that year. In addition, the
witness noted, as did the Agrimark
witness, data presented by the Market
Administrator indicated that 80 percent
of independent producer milk is
delivered directly to distributing plants
for Class I use even though milk
supplied by cooperatives represented
the bulk of reserve milk pooled on the
Northeast order.
Relying on Market Administrator data
and the methodology for estimating
balancing costs from the RCBS study,
the witness asserted that to properly
balance the Northeast marketing area,
the cooperatives operating butterpowder plants must operate with a 20
percent operating reserve of milk during
all seasons. According to the witness,
during months of high fluid milk
demand, draws on milk supplies from
butter-powder plants for delivery to the
Class I market resulted in unused butterpowder capacity of as much as 11.5
million pounds in a single month.
Accordingly, the witness asserted, the
cooperative’s butter-powder plants
should receive compensation for the
cost of maintaining this available but
unused processing capacity. According
to the witness, the existence of such
capacity benefits all producers and
handlers participating in the Northeast
marketing area and provides a needed
alternative outlet for milk.
The LOL witness noted that the
balancing cost estimation developed in
the RCBS study suggests that four
modern, efficient, optimally located,
three-million pounds per day butterpowder plants would efficiently balance
the Northeast market even though there
are seven actual plants located in the
marketing area. Nevertheless, the
witness was of the opinion that the
RCBS study of four theoretical
manufacturing plants is an appropriate
proxy for all butter-powder plants
currently operating in the Northeast
region. The witness asserted that LOL’s
own data and analysis validates the
RCBS study’s methodology. According
to the witness, because the theory so
accurately reflects actual marketing
conditions, the operators of the seven
butter-powder plants have a sound basis
to justify a marketwide service payment
for unrecovered costs incurred by
balancing the market.
Testimony offered in opposition to
the marketwide service payment
proposal and the need in general for a
balancing credit was advanced by
representatives of NYSDF,
representatives from the International
Dairy Foods Association (IDFA), several
proprietary handlers including
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Friendship Dairy, Queensboro Farms,
Marcus Dairy, and Worcester
Creameries, Dean Foods, H.P. Hood, and
two independent dairy farmers.
Representatives for the proprietary
handlers testified and all maintained
that if a balancing credit feature were
adopted, they would not be eligible to
receive the proposed marketwide
service payments even though they too
incur costs for performing market
balancing functions. These witnesses
also testified that if Proposal 7 were
adopted, they would be placed at a
competitive disadvantage in procuring
milk when compared to large
cooperative handlers because they
would need to pay a higher effective
price for milk. In this regard, the
witnesses indicated that as small
businesses they would be treated
unfairly. Each of the proprietary
handlers pointedly observed that the
benefit of marketwide service payments
would accrue only to the large-scale
butter-powder processors located in the
Northeast marketing area.
A witness for Queensboro Farms
testified that as an operator of a supply
plant, the company provides balancing
services for the market that are similar
to those performed by large-scale NFDM
plants and accordingly should receive
compensation for providing balancing
services if a balancing credit for the
order is adopted. However, the witness
emphasized and asserted that the
proposal unfairly excludes proprietary
handlers on the basis of the milk
volume eligibility criteria. The witness
said that as a matter of fairness and
competitive equity, no handler should
receive a balancing credit if it is made
available only to the largest handlers.
Witnesses appearing on behalf of
Marcus Dairy and Worcester Creameries
provided testimony supporting the
Queensboro Farms witness. The witness
for Marcus Dairy noted that the
company’s cost of sourcing milk would
be higher, thus the prices paid to
farmers by them would be lower than
prices paid by the largest cooperative
handlers who would be eligible to
receive a marketwide service payment.
However, because Marcus Dairy is a
small business entity, it would not be
eligible for receiving a payment.
Similarly, witnesses for Worcester
Creameries and Friendship Dairy, both
proprietary handlers and small
businesses, provided supporting
testimony concluding that adoption of a
balancing credit, limited to criteria that
only a large cooperative could meet,
would needlessly harm them by
increasing their milk procurement costs.
A witness testifying on behalf of
NYSDF noted that every handler in the
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Northeast marketing area performs some
market balancing functions and
therefore should be eligible to receive a
credit if the decision is to adopt a
balancing credit feature for the
Northeast milk order. The witness
asserted that if the largest handlers
received marketwide service payments,
then smaller handlers would face
relatively higher costs and would
therefore be placed at a competitive
disadvantage in the price they pay for a
supply of milk.
A consultant witness for NYSDF
testified that adoption of Proposal 7
would serve to unduly enhance the
power of larger cooperatives at the
expense of smaller cooperatives. The
witness asserted that smaller
cooperatives pooling milk on the
Northeast order whose monthly milk
receipts are not sufficient to meet the
proposed criteria for receiving a
balancing credit might be forced to
affiliate with a larger cooperative
eligible to receive marketwide balancing
credits. The witness speculated that
although smaller cooperatives might
receive partial benefit from the credits
through affiliation, they also might be
absorbed into a larger cooperative’s milk
marketing operations as the price for
receiving this benefit. This witness was
also of the opinion that the members of
ADCNE have failed to reveal or consider
that handlers are charged over-order
premiums, give-up fees, or other
variously named charges that are
essentially already compensating for
balancing costs.
A witness appearing on behalf of
Dean Foods testified that surplus milk
from the Northeast marketing area could
at times be shipped to the fluid milk
deficit markets of the Southeast and
Florida marketing areas. According to
the witness, satisfying the demand for
fluid milk of the southern marketing
areas could serve the same balancing
function for the Northeast market’s
producers seeking compensation to
recover costs arising from operating
butter-powder plants.
Two independent dairy farmers, one
from western New York State and
another from Pennsylvania, testified
that dairy farmers already pay for
balancing as part of the expenses
deducted from their milk checks by
handlers. The dairy farmers testified
that while no specific fee is explicitly
itemized as a market balancing charge,
they viewed the deduction as a cost they
pay for balancing. They testified that
they and other producers have been
informed by their cooperative handlers,
who market their milk, that the cost of
balancing is a component of the
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4949
handling charges that are deducted from
their milk checks.
A witness representing IDFA testified
in opposition to Proposal 7. The witness
noted that the costs of balancing the
Northeast milk market are already
recovered through revenues received in
over-order premiums charged for milk
diverted from Class IV to Class I use. In
addition, the witness pointed out that
the Class IV product pricing formula
make allowance factors include
balancing costs in determining the Class
IV milk price. In this regard, the IDFA
witness viewed Proposal 7 as requiring
handlers to essentially pay anew for a
function already accounted for in
market prices.
In addition, the IDFA witness
expressed the opinion that
consideration of a marketwide service
payment proposal to compensate certain
handlers for market balancing services
should be heard on a national basis
instead of on a limited basis for only the
Northeast milk order. The IDFA witness
stated that adopting Proposal 7 would
have multi-regional impacts and
perhaps national impacts.
The IDFA witness noted that USDA
had previously rejected proposals for
marketwide service payments for
balancing advanced by ADCNE
cooperatives for the Northeast order as
part of Federal milk order reform.
According to the IDFA witness, USDA
rejected these proposals, in part because
the make allowances for Class IV
products already included a factor for
balancing cost recovery and that the
resulting Class IV prices would be at
market-clearing levels. The witness
concluded that this negates the need for
additional compensation for costs
already compensated.
Exceptions to the Recommended
Decision from ADCNE argued that the
Department did not accept the
fundamental reasoning behind the
marketwide service payment proposal—
that Class I balancing should be paid for
by all market participants. ADCNE took
specific exception to five separate issues
raised by the Recommended Decision.
ADCNE first suggested that the
Recommended Decision emphasized
non-record evidence more so than
record testimony. Specifically, it was
the opinion of ADCNE that the
Recommended Decision put more
weight on Agrimark and LOL’s change
of position after the close of the hearing
than it did on record testimony and
evidence received at the hearing.
ADCNE also argued that balancing
costs of ADCNE cooperatives were
sufficiently documented at the hearing.
ADCNE was of the opinion that the
Dairylea, Agrimark and LOL witnesses
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appearing on their behalf sufficiently
proved that the costs of operating
balancing plants in the Northeast were
far greater than the lowest cost figures
contained in the RCBS study, but were
ignored since the Recommended
Decision failed to acknowledge the
study as a lowest cost Class I balancing
model. ADCNE emphasized that their
member cooperatives lose money by
providing balancing services to the
Northeast market, and the equity
positions of cooperative members is put
at risk in doing so. ADCNE inferred that
since the costs of owning and operating
butter powder manufacturing facilities
reduce the proceeds to ADCNE
cooperative members, the milk of
ADCNE cooperatives and cooperative
members should receive preferential
treatment over milk shipped to
proprietary plants.
ADCNE took exception to the
consideration of plant revenues and
profitability in the Recommended
Decision. ADCNE was of the opinion
that profitability should not be used to
determine the need for a marketwide
service payment.
ADCNE also argued that the make
allowance factor in the formula used to
compute the price for milk used in Class
IV is not a substitute for a marketwide
service payment, and that the Class III/
IV Interim Decision was not specific as
to the intended definition of
‘‘balancing’’.
The Agricultural Marketing
Agreement Act of 1937 (AMAA), as
amended, provides authority for milk
marketing orders to contain provisions
for marketwide service payments. In
this context, a marketwide service
payment is a charge to all producers of
milk, irrespective of the use
classification of such milk, that is
deducted before computing the order’s
statistical uniform price. The AMAA
specifically identifies the types of
services that may be of marketwide
benefit. They include, but are not
limited to: (1) Providing facilities to
furnish additional supplies of milk
needed by handlers and to handle and
dispose of milk supplies in excess of
quantities needed by handlers; (2)
handling on specific days quantities of
milk that exceed quantities needed by
handlers; and (3) transporting milk from
one location to another for the purpose
of fulfilling requirements for milk of a
higher use classification or for providing
a market outlet for milk of any use
classification.
A current example of Federal milk
marketing orders that provides for
marketwide service payments is the
transportation funds for qualified
handlers in the Southeast and
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Appalachian milk marketing orders. In
these marketing orders, handlers pay an
assessment on producer milk assigned
to Class I each month into separate
transportation credit balancing funds
maintained and operated by the Market
Administrator for each order. These
funds, originally established in four prereform milk orders, were carried into
these two consolidated milk marketing
orders as a result of the need to import
milk into the southeastern regions of the
country from other areas during certain
times of the year. The provisions
provide payments from the funds to
handlers who import supplemental milk
for fluid use during the generally low
milk production months of July through
December. The provisions restrict the
payments to milk received from other
plants or farms located outside of the
marketing areas.
Another example of a marketwide
service payment provision includes the
transportation credits and assembly
credits employed in the Upper Midwest
milk marketing order. Unlike the
marketwide service payments of the
Appalachian and Southeast orders, the
Upper Midwest order’s marketwide
service payment provides credits to
handlers for their total class use value
before the blend price is calculated.
Because the credits reduce the total
dollar value of the pool, it results in a
lower blend price to all producers.
In the pre-reform New York-New
Jersey milk marketing order, a payment
was available to certain cooperative
handlers in the form of a cooperative
service payment and a balancing
payment. These provisions predate the
AMAA’s amendment by the 1985 Farm
Bill. Under the pre-reform New YorkNew Jersey order, qualified cooperatives
could receive up to three cents per cwt
on the amount of milk pooled on the
order in the form of a cooperative
service payment. Plus, there was a
component for a balancing payment that
could have been up to one cent per cwt
provided a cooperative association
operated a manufacturing facility. By
comparison, the marketwide service
payment proposal considered in this
proceeding is dedicated entirely to
compensating eligible handlers for
balancing functions and the rate of
compensation at six cents per cwt is
much higher.
In testimony offered by proponents
and opponents, as well as in the data
supplied for the record by the Market
Administrator, it is evident that the
Northeast order has certain unique
characteristics and marketing
conditions. The Northeast marketing
area is the single largest marketing area
for Class I milk. Approximately 75
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percent of the milk pooled on the order
is from members of cooperatives with
the remainder supplied by independent
producers. In this regard, the Northeast
marketing area has the largest base of
independent producers that pool milk
on the order relative to the other 9
Federal milk marketing orders. The
marketing area’s independent producers
tend to be the predominant suppliers of
the Class I needs of the marketing area
as revealed by evidence showing that
some 80 percent of independent milk
supplies are pooled by a Class I handler
in comparison to cooperative milk
supplies. Cooperative milk supplies for
the Northeast marketing area supply the
vast majority of the marketing area’s
milk used in Class III and Class IV dairy
products.
The Northeast’s market structure also
is unique given the large use of milk for
Class II products such as ice cream, sour
cream, yogurt, and cottage cheese. The
marketing area can also be characterized
as unique by the relatively large number
of proprietary handlers, many of whom
are manufacturing entities. These
handlers provide dairy farmers with
alternative outlets for their milk. None
of the handlers individually provide
balancing services on the scale offered
at the plants owned and operated by the
large cooperative members of the
ADCNE. However, taken as a whole,
these plants do provide real and
important balancing services that are
similar to those provided by the member
cooperatives of ADCNE.
As noted in the Recommended
Decision, the basis of the argument
advanced by the proponents of Proposal
7 is that without marketwide service
payments, balancing functions are
unprofitable and cost recovery is not
otherwise supported by market forces.
The underpinning of identifying costs
relies on the theoretical results of a
RCBS study that examined the costs of
balancing incurred by cooperatives that
operate butter-powder plants in the
Northeast by placing a value on unused
plant processing capacity. The optimal
cost structure for balancing the
Northeast marketing area is presented
by the proponents as an accurate
reflection of the existing structure of the
regional milk market. However, actual
costs, together with the profitability or
lack of profitability of these butterpowder plants, are never adequately
addressed. Profitability is important to
the issue as it can speak directly to
whether or not a marketwide service
payment can be justified. This is
important because it is the position of
the proponents that balancing activities
might not otherwise be provided to the
marketplace and because there are no
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other viable market mechanisms
through which excess milk supplies can
be adequately disposed of other than
through the butter-powder balancing
facilities of the region’s six largest
cooperative handlers.
Typically, a review of the profitability
would include a presentation and
discussion of actual costs and revenues.
In this proceeding, neither actual costs
nor actual revenues generated from the
sale of Class IV products or other
methods used to generate revenue are
addressed. The record does not contain
information regarding revenues for Class
IV products generated by the butterpowder operations or related jointproduct production processes from
some plants that produce NFDM.
Regarding costs, the proponents
preferred to rely on a theoretical cost
estimating framework rather than on
actual costs incurred in performing
balancing services. Without actual
revenues and costs available for review,
it is impossible to credibly assess
whether balancing costs are inequitably
shared. Similarly, without historical
cost and revenue data series, it is not
possible to reasonably consider how the
profitability of these operations has
changed over time under prevailing
and/or changing marketing conditions.
It is therefore not possible on the basis
of the record to determine if there is a
credible need to compensate
cooperatives for balancing the market
through the use of marketwide service
payments.
The record does not support adoption
of a marketwide service payment
provision for balancing services for the
Northeast milk marketing order. As
noted in the Recommended Decision,
arguments contained in the record in
support of Proposal 7 have focused on
the need to share the costs that are not
recoverable from the marketplace for
balancing the Class I needs of the
Northeast marketing area more equitably
with all producers who pool their milk
on the order. Costs have been explained
primarily by attempting to place a value
on unused butter-powder manufacturing
plant capacity where unused plant
capacity is caused by seasonal
fluctuations in the relative demands for
fluid milk given available milk supplies.
Proponents have relied primarily on a
theoretical framework developed in an
RCBS study, and to a much more
limited extent, actual plant replacement
cost data to estimate the costs they incur
for balancing the market. A balancing
cost estimate is derived in the RCBS
study from an analysis of competing
milk uses that cause butter-powder
plants to be operated at less than full
capacity which, in turn, is caused by
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seasonal fluctuations in the demand for
Class I milk.
ADCNE commented that the
Recommended Decision overlooked the
RCBS study as a lowest-cost model. This
argument is not persuasive. The RCBS
study provided an excellent model of
market balancing activities in the
Northeast on the basis of unused plant
capacity. As previously mentioned, the
RCBS study is theoretical and does not
represent actual or existing costs and
conditions in the Northeast marketing
area. Therefore, the RCBS study could
not be relied upon as the underpinning
of the ADCNE’s proposal alone, or as a
basis to explain how the requested rate
of six cents per cwt is derived. It is clear
that the RCBS study focused on
manufacturing facilities that produce
butter and powder, which cost far less
to produce than cheese. Denial of the
marketwide service payment proposal is
explained in the Recommended
Decision and in this Final Decision.
For all intents and purposes, butterpowder plants operated in the Northeast
milk marketing area are owned and
operated by members of ADCNE and
provide balancing services. The ADCNE
member proponents argue that a
significant share of independent
producers (dairy farmers who are not
members of cooperatives), do not bear
the cost burdens that cooperative
members (producers) bear by operating
and maintaining butter-powder plants.
ADCNE insists that these butter-powder
plants provide a market outlet for
cooperatives and independent milk
when not needed for the fluid market
and that such outlets provide a service
that is of marketwide benefit.
Proponents for adoption of Proposal 7
maintain that the blend price received
by independent producers is higher
than it would otherwise be if
independent producers had the burden
of maintaining and providing services
that balance the market.
The central discussion of the proposal
to establish a marketwide service
payment by proponents is long on
articulating costs associated with
balancing. However, the discussion of
the role and adequacy of revenues
generated from providing balancing
related activities or revenue generated
in the marketplace from the sale of Class
IV products is nearly absent. For
example, proponent testimony is nearly
silent concerning the roles of over-order
premiums, give-up charges, make
allowances already a part of the pricing
formulae of the order, and other charges
that generate revenue to offset costs
incurred and characterized as associated
with providing balancing functions.
Nevertheless, it is clear from the
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4951
testimony that producers and
proprietary handlers pay charges and
fees for either a supplemental supply of
milk or for the removal of milk when
not needed for fluid use. Producers and
proprietary handlers have had it
explained, in varying ways, that such
charges and fees are due to costs
associated with balancing—that is—
supplying additional milk to meet fluid
demand or the removal of milk for
surplus disposal when not needed by
distributing plants.
In their exceptions to the
Recommended Decision, ADCNE again
suggested that their members are
operating at a loss from the operation
and maintenance of their balancing
plants. This argument is not persuasive.
As already noted, no record evidence
adequately demonstrates that ADCNE
cooperatives are operating at a loss as a
result of owning and operating
balancing facilities. A balancing facility
does not necessarily need to experience
losses to warrant a marketwide service
payment. However, some measure of the
revenues and costs associated with the
procurement, production and sale of all
milk associated with the plant, at the
minimum, is necessary if for no other
reason to explain or justify the proposed
rate of six cents per cwt.
Opponents, including proprietary
handlers and independent dairy
farmers, also argue that balancing costs
have already been recouped by the large
cooperatives in various ways. The
record reveals that proprietary handlers
pay give-up charges and over order
premiums to cooperative suppliers to
obtain milk for Class I use when needed.
Costs also are recouped by the
imposition of variously-named charges
and fees incurred by Class I handlers
diverting some of their independent
milk supply to a butter-powder plant
when not needed for fluid use and in
fees deducted from independent
producer milk checks that have been
explained in various ways to be fees
charged for balancing.
Opponents correctly note that the
costs of balancing have already been
considered and are accounted for in the
Class IV product-price formula make
allowance used in all Federal milk
marketing orders for establishing the
Class IV milk price. ADCNE, however,
commented that the make allowance in
the Class IV product price formula does
not adequately cover balancing costs.
The Class III/IV pricing formulae
adopted in the Class III/IV Interim
Decision (65 FR 768832, published
December 7, 2002) included a factor to
offset the cost of balancing performed by
butter-powder manufacturing plants.
Official notice is hereby taken of the
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Class III/IV Final Decision (67 FR 67906,
published November 7, 2002). The Class
III/IV Final Decision that adopted
product price formulas for all Federal
milk marketing orders, including the
Northeast order, gave specific
recognition to costs associated with
balancing in the make allowance factor
in setting the Class III and Class IV milk
price. ADCNE’s exception is not
persuasive. As already stated, the Class
III/IV pricing formulae include a factor
to offset the cost of balancing performed
by butter-powder manufacturing plants.
The Class III/IV pricing formulae,
together with factors discussed herein
all speak to the issue of the inadequacy
of cost and revenue evidence that would
tend to explain a requested marketwide
service payment rate of six cents per
cwt.
Proprietary handlers also stress their
opposition to adoption of Proposal 7 on
the basis that they would be excluded
from receiving a balancing credit, not
because they do not provide balancing
services but because of their size. These
plants provide balancing services
through the production of Class II and
III products. ADCNE’s proposal would
provide a balancing payment to plants
that pool over a million pounds per
month, thus eliminating all but the large
ADCNE member butter-powder plants
from receiving any money. The
exclusion of small businesses creates
inequity among handlers in the price
they pay for their milk supply. Small
handlers should not need to pay higher
prices for milk relative to large
cooperative handlers who would be
eligible to receive a balancing credit.
Independent of the other reasons
discussed for not adopting a marketwide
service payment for balancing, neither
the Recommended Decision nor this
Final Decision can find record evidence
that adequately addresses why business
size should have a bearing on the
exclusion of small handlers who clearly
perform balancing functions or are
charged for balancing services but
would not be eligible for a balancing
credit.
None of the witnesses appearing on
behalf of ADCNE would provide
information for the record concerning
fees charged to distributing plants and
other commercial customers from whom
cooperative handlers receive payments
to compensate for, or to offset, balancing
costs. But the record is clear, however,
that such fees are charged in various
ways and forms. Because balancing
costs are recoverable and, in fact, are
recovered in various ways, the record
cannot support the notion that whatever
cost burden is being borne by any
financially interested business entity is
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so inequitable that it necessitates having
the Federal government establish a
provision to supervise the transfer of
funds from one set of business entities
to another.
Conversely, the record contains
evidence that investments by the large
cooperatives in balancing facilities have
taken place. For example, testimony by
the LOL witness for ADCNE reveals that
balancing services and plant expansion
for balancing operations took place
repeatedly at their Carlisle, PA, facility
over the period of 1984–2000, a time
span during which no marketwide
service payment was provided under
the terms of then Middle Atlantic milk
marketing order. Testimony by the
Agrimark witness appearing on behalf of
the ADCNE similarly reveals repeated
investment in their butter-powder plant
at Springfield, MA, at a time when no
marketwide service payment was
provided under the terms of the New
England milk marketing order.
In post hearing briefs and comments,
support for Proposal 7 was completely
withdrawn by Agrimark, one of the
cooperatives comprising ADCNE. In
addition, LOL, another cooperative
member of the ADCNE, changed their
position from support to a neutral
position. After the deadline for
submission of post-hearing briefs and
publication of the Recommended
Decision, LOL submitted a letter
changing their support from a neutral
position to asking that the Final
Decision be based on the record of the
proceeding.
ADCNE commented that the
Recommended Decision relied more on
non-record positions than on evidence
received at the hearing. This claim is
unfounded. The Recommended
Decision indicated that two major
hearing participants appearing on behalf
of the ADCNE, who are also
representatives of three ADCNE member
cooperatives, had changed their
individual positions on the marketwide
service payment proposal. The
Recommended Decision made note of
the change in position by Agrimark and
LOL as factual information as does this
Final Decision. With regard to LOL’s
plea that the Department rely on the
record of this proceeding, it is the
record of this proceeding alone that
provides the basis for not adopting the
marketwide service payment provision.
As noted in the Recommended
Decision, the record contains no
persuasive argument or compelling
evidence to find that there are cost
inequities between cooperative dairy
farmers and independent dairy farmers
that would warrant adoption of a
provision providing payments from one
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group of producers to another. The
applicable Class III and Class IV pricing
formulae and other free market
transactions charged by the large
cooperatives with balancing facilities
sufficiently offset balancing costs and
are adequate to sustain existing
balancing facilities and operations.
Additionally, the Northeast order Class
I price is sufficiently high to ensure that
a sufficient supply of milk for fluid use,
together with the Class IV price as
established under the order, will
provide for the orderly disposal of milk
when not needed for fluid use. The
Northeast order already provides for
cost equity in the minimum pricing
mechanisms and the marketplace is
providing the ability for transactions
outside the terms of the order that
currently do not exhibit the need for
additional regulation.
The record also does not support
adoption of Proposal 7 on the basis of
strictly theoretical costs. Offsetting costs
by providing a balancing payment must
be based on evidence of actual costs
incurred for two reasons. First, an
estimate of actual costs serves to
provide and define a reasonable basis
from which to determine a total value of
the service being provided and
corresponding rate at which
reimbursement should be made.
Secondly, it is real dollars that will be
transferred from one group of producers
to another. Accordingly, it is reasonable
to suppose that those who will have
their blend price reduced have an
adequate and supportable explanation
why, in the interest of producer and
handler equity, their revenue should be
reduced. In this regard, the record does
not provide any indication, other than
proponent assertions, that the revenues
generated are insufficient to offset
inequitably borne costs. Because actual
costs are not provided, a finding cannot
be made to determine whether or not
the proposed balancing credit rate of six
cents per cwt is reasonable.
There is no evidence to suggest that
milk of producers pooled on the
Northeast order will be unable to find
markets without the establishment of a
balancing credit. The record is clear in
demonstrating that balancing functions
and services are performed by large
cooperatives and they are able to
recover costs from those they serviced
without government intervention. The
record does not reveal or contain
evidence demonstrating disorderly
marketing conditions occurring because
balancing facilities and services are not
sufficiently recovering their costs.
This decision concludes that the
qualification criteria of Proposal 7 for
receipt of a balancing credit would
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unduly disadvantage handlers who
perform a balancing function for the
market, but for no reason other than
their size renders them ineligible to
recover balancing costs by receipt of a
credit. These handlers would suffer
adverse business consequences from the
higher effective prices they would need
to pay to procure a supply of milk. The
record does not reveal any justification
that explains why other handlers should
be denied a credit for performing a
similar service. Accordingly, this
decision concludes that the eligibility
criteria of Proposal 7 would have an
adverse impact on these businesses in
the Northeast marketing area.
Rulings on Proposed Findings and
Conclusions
Briefs and proposed findings and
conclusions were filed on behalf of
certain interested parties. These briefs,
proposed findings and conclusions, and
the evidence in the record were
considered in making the findings and
conclusions set forth above. To the
extent that the suggested findings and
conclusions filed by interested parties
are inconsistent with the findings and
conclusions set forth herein, the
requests to make such findings or reach
such conclusions are denied for the
reasons previously stated in this
decision.
General Findings
The findings and determinations
hereinafter set forth supplement those
that were made when the Northeast
order was first issued and when it was
amended. The previous findings and
determinations are hereby ratified and
confirmed, except where they may
conflict with those set forth herein.
(a) The tentative marketing agreement
and the order, as hereby proposed to be
amended, and all of the terms and
conditions thereof, will tend to
effectuate the declared policy of the Act;
(b) The parity prices of milk as
determined pursuant to section 2 of the
Act are not reasonable in view of the
price of feeds, available supplies of
feeds, and other economic conditions
which affect market supply and demand
for milk in the marketing area, and the
minimum prices specified in the
tentative marketing agreement and the
order, as hereby proposed to be
amended, are such prices as will reflect
the aforesaid factors, insure a sufficient
quantity of pure and wholesome milk,
and be in the public interest; and
(c) The tentative marketing agreement
and the order, as hereby proposed to be
amended, will regulate the handling of
milk in the same manner as, and will be
applicable only to persons in the
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4953
respective classes of industrial and
commercial activity specified in, the
marketing agreement upon which a
hearing has been held.
Dated: January 14, 2005.
A. J. Yates,
Administrator, Agricultural Marketing
Service.
Rulings on Exceptions
Order Amending the Order Regulating
the Handling of Milk in the Northeast
Marketing Area
(This order shall not become effective
unless and until the requirements of
§ 900.14 of the rules of practice and
procedure governing proceedings to
formulate marketing agreements and
marketing orders have been met.)
In arriving at the findings and
conclusions, and the regulatory
provisions of this decision, each of the
exceptions received was carefully and
fully considered in conjunction with the
record evidence. To the extent that the
findings and conclusions and the
regulatory provisions of this decision
are at variance with any of the
exceptions, such exceptions are hereby
overruled for the reasons previously
stated in this decision.
Marketing Agreement and Order
Annexed hereto and made a part
hereof are two documents, a Marketing
Agreement regulating the handling of
milk, and an Order amending the order
regulating the handling of milk in the
Northeast marketing area, which has
been decided upon as the detailed and
appropriate means of effectuating the
foregoing conclusions.
It is hereby ordered that this entire
decision and the two documents
annexed hereto be published in the
Federal Register.
Referendum Order To Determine
Producer Approval; Determination of
Representative Period; and Designation
of Referendum Agent
It is hereby directed that a referendum
be conducted and completed on or
before the 30th day from the date this
decision is published in the Federal
Register, in accordance with the
procedure for the conduct of referenda
[7 CFR 900.300–311], to determine
whether the issuance of the order as
amended and hereby proposed to be
amended, regulating the handling of
milk in the Northeast marketing area is
approved or favored by producers, as
defined under the terms of the order, as
amended and as hereby proposed to be
amended, who during such
representative period were engaged in
the production of milk for sale within
the aforesaid marketing area.
The representative period for the
conduct of such referendum is hereby
determined to be July 2004.
The agent of the Secretary to conduct
such referendum is hereby designated to
be Erik Rasmussen, the Northeast
Market Administrator.
List of Subjects in 7 CFR Part 1001
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Milk marketing orders.
Frm 00023
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
Findings and Determinations
The findings and determinations
hereinafter set forth supplement those
that were made when the order was first
issued and when it was amended. The
previous findings and determinations
are hereby ratified and confirmed,
except where they may conflict with
those set forth herein.
(a) Findings. A public hearing was
held upon certain proposed
amendments to the tentative marketing
agreement and to the order regulating
the handling of milk in the Northeast
marketing area. The hearing was held
pursuant to the provisions of the
Agricultural Marketing Agreement Act
of 1937, as amended (7 U.S.C. 601–674),
and the applicable rules of practice and
procedure (7 CFR Part 900).
Upon the basis of the evidence
introduced at such hearing and the
record thereof, it is found that:
(1) The said order as hereby amended,
and all of the terms and conditions
thereof, will tend to effectuate the
declared policy of the Act;
(2) The parity prices of milk, as
determined pursuant to Section 2 of the
Act, are not reasonable in view of the
price of feeds, available supplies of
feeds, and other economic conditions
which affect market supply and demand
for milk in the aforesaid marketing area.
The minimum prices specified in the
order as hereby amended are such
prices as will reflect the aforesaid
factors, insure a sufficient quantity of
pure and wholesome milk, and be in the
public interest; and
(3) The said order as hereby amended
regulates the handling of milk in the
same manner as, and is applicable only
to persons in the respective classes of
industrial or commercial activity
specified in, a marketing agreement
upon which a hearing has been held.
Order Relative to Handling
It is therefore ordered, that on and
after the effective date hereof, the
handling of milk in the Northeast
marketing area shall be in conformity to
and in compliance with the terms and
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Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 19 / Monday, January 31, 2005 / Proposed Rules
conditions of the order, as amended,
and as hereby amended, as follows:
The provisions of the order amending
the order contained in the
Recommended Decision issued by the
Administrator, Agricultural Marketing
Service, on March 17, 2004, and
published in the Federal Register on
March 25, 2004 (69 FR 15562), are
adopted with one minor change and
shall be the terms and provisions of this
order. The revised order follows.
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 601–674.
PART 1001—MILK IN THE
NORTHEAST MARKETING AREA
1. The authority citation for 7 CFR
part 1001 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 601–674.
2. Section 1001.7 is amended by:
a. Revising paragraphs (c)(1) and
(c)(2);
b. Removing paragraph (c)(3);
c. Redesignating paragraphs (c)(4) and
(c)(5) as (c)(3) and (c)(4);
d. Revising paragraphs (e)(1) and
(e)(2); and
e. Removing paragraph (h)(7).
The revisions read as follows:
§ 1001.7
Pool plant.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) * * *
(1) In each of the months of January
through August and December, such
shipments and transfers to distributing
plants must not equal less than 10
percent of the total quantity of milk
(except the milk of a producer described
in § 1001.12(b)) that is received at the
plant or diverted from it pursuant to
§ 1001.13 during the month.
(2) In each of the months of
September through November, such
shipments and transfers to distributing
plants must equal not less than 20
percent of the total quantity of milk
(except the milk of a producer described
in § 1001.12(b)) that is received at the
plant or diverted from it pursuant to
§ 1001.13 during the month.
*
*
*
*
*
(e) * * *
(1) At least one of the plants in the
unit qualifies as a pool distributing
plant pursuant to paragraph (a) of this
section;
(2) Other plants in the unit must
process at least 60 percent of monthly
receipts of producer milk, including
cooperative 9(c) milk, only as Class I or
Class II products and must be located in
the Northeast marketing area, as defined
in § 1001.2, in a pricing zone providing
the same or a lower Class I price than
the price applicable at the distributing
plant(s) included in the unit; and
*
*
*
*
*
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17:10 Jan 28, 2005
Jkt 205001
3. Section 1001.13 is amended by:
a. Revising paragraph (d)(1);
b. Redesignating paragraph (d)(2) as
paragraph (d)(3); and
c. Adding paragraphs (d)(2), (d)(4),
(d)(5) and (e).
The revision and additions read as
follows:
§ 1001.13
Producer milk.
*
*
*
*
*
(d) * * *
(1) Milk of a dairy farmer shall not be
eligible for diversion unless one day’s
milk production of such dairy farmer
was physically received as producer
milk and the dairy farmer has
continuously retained producer status
since that time. If a dairy farmer loses
producer status under the order in this
part (except as a result of a temporary
loss of Grade A approval), the dairy
farmer’s milk shall not be eligible for
diversion unless milk of the dairy
farmer has been physically received as
producer milk at a pool plant during the
month;
(2) Of the total quantity of producer
milk received during the month
(including diversion but excluding the
quantity of producer milk received from
a handler described in § 1000.9(c) or
which is diverted to another pool plant),
the handler diverted to nonpool plants
not more than 80 percent during each of
the months of September through
November and 90 percent during each
of the months of January through
August and December. In the event that
a handler causes the milk of a producer
to be over diverted, a dairy farmer will
not lose producer status;
(3) * * *
(4) Any milk diverted in excess of the
limits set forth in paragraph (d)(2) of
this section shall not be producer milk.
The diverting handler shall designate
the dairy farmer deliveries that shall not
be producer milk. If the handler fails to
designate the dairy farmer deliveries
which are ineligible, producer milk
status shall be forfeited with respect to
all milk diverted to nonpool plants by
such handler; and
(5) The delivery day requirement and
the diversion percentages in paragraphs
(d)(1) and (d)(2) of this section may be
increased of decreased by the Market
Administrator if the Market
Administrator finds that such revision is
necessary to assure orderly marketing
and efficient handling of milk in the
marketing area. Before making such a
finding, the Market Administrator shall
investigate the need for the revision
either on the Market Administrator’s
own initiative or at the request of
interested persons if the request is made
in writing at least 15 days prior to the
PO 00000
Frm 00024
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
month for which the requested revision
is desired to be effective. If the
investigation shows that a revision
might be appropriate, the Market
Administrator shall issue a notice
stating that the revision is being
considered and inviting written data,
views, and arguments. Any decision to
revise an applicable percentage or
delivery day requirement must be
issued in writing at least one day before
the effective date.
(e) Producer milk shall not include
milk of a producer that is subject to
inclusion and participation in a
marketwide equalization pool under a
milk classification and pricing program
imposed under the authority of another
government entity.
4. Section 1001.30 is amended by
revising the introductory text to read as
follows:
§ 1001.30 Reports of receipts and
utilization.
Each handler shall report monthly so
that the Market Administrator’s office
receives the report on or before the 10th
day after the end of the month, in the
detail and on prescribed forms, as
follows:
*
*
*
*
*
5. Section 1001.62 is amended by:
a. Revising introductory text; and
b. Adding paragraph (h).
The revision and addition reads as
follows:
§ 1001.62
prices.
Announcement of producer
On of before the 14th day after the
end of the month, the Market
Administrator shall announce the
following prices and information:
*
*
*
*
*
(h) If the 14th falls on a Saturday,
Sunday, or national holiday, the Market
Administrator may have up to two
additional business days to announce
the producer price differential and the
statistical uniform price.
6. Section 1001.71 is amended by
revising the introductory text to read as
follows:
§ 1001.71 Payments to the producersettlement fund.
Each handler shall make payment to
the producer-settlement fund in a
manner that provides receipt of the
funds by the Market Administrator no
later than two days after the
announcement of the producer price
differential and the statistical uniform
price pursuant to § 1001.62 (except as
provided for in § 1000.90). Payment
shall be the amount, if any, by which
the amount specified in paragraph (a) of
this section exceeds the amount
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specified in paragraph (b) of this
section:
*
*
*
*
*
7. Section 1001.72 is revised to read
as follows:
§ 1001.72 Payments from the producersettlement fund.
No later than the day after the due
date required for payment to the Market
Administrator pursuant to § 1001.71
(except as provided in § 1001.90), the
Market Administrator shall pay to each
handler the amount, if any, by which
the amount computed pursuant to
§ 1001.71(b) exceeds the amount
computed pursuant to § 1001.71(a). If, at
such time, the balance in the producersettlement fund is insufficient to make
all payments pursuant to this section,
the Market Administrator shall reduce
uniformly such payments and shall
complete the payments as soon as the
funds are available.
8. Section 1001.73 is amended by
revising paragraphs (a)(2) and (e)
introductory text to read as follows:
§ 1001.73 Payments to producers and to
cooperative associations.
*
*
*
*
*
(a) * * *
(2) Final payment. For milk received
during the month, payment shall be
made during the following month so it
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17:10 Jan 28, 2005
Jkt 205001
is received by each producer no later
than the day after the required date of
payment by the Market Administrator,
pursuant to § 1001.72, in an amount
computed as follows:
*
*
*
*
*
(e) In making payments to producers
pursuant to this section, each handler
shall furnish each producer (except for
a producer whose milk was received
from a cooperative association handler
described in § 1000.9(a) or 9(c)), a
supporting statement in such form that
it may be retained by the recipient
which shall show:
*
*
*
*
*
Marketing Agreement Regulating the
Handling of Milk in the Northeast Marketing
Area
The parties hereto, in order to effectuate
the declared policy of the Act, and in
accordance with the rules of practice and
procedure effective thereunder (7 CFR part
900), desire to enter into this marketing
agreement and do hereby agree that the
provisions referred to in paragraph I hereof
as augmented by the provisions specified in
paragraph II hereof, shall be and are the
provisions of this marketing agreement as if
set out in full herein.
I. The findings and determinations, order
relative to handling, and the provisions of
§§ 1001.1 to 1001.86 all inclusive, of the
order regulating the handling of milk in the
PO 00000
Frm 00025
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
4955
Northeast marketing area (7 CFR 1001 which
is annexed hereto); and
II. The following provisions: Record of
milk handled and authorization to correct
typographical errors.
(a) Record of milk handled. The
undersigned certifies that he/she handled
during the month of July, 2004, ll
hundredweight of milk covered by this
marketing agreement.
(b) Authorization to correct typographical
errors. The undersigned hereby authorizes
the Deputy Administrator, or Acting Deputy
Administrator, Dairy Programs, Agricultural
Marketing Service, to correct any
typographical errors which may have been
made in this marketing agreement.
Effective date. This marketing agreement
shall become effective upon the execution of
a counterpart hereof by the Department in
accordance with Section 900.14(a) of the
aforesaid rules of practice and procedure.
In witness whereof, the contracting
handlers, acting under the provisions of the
Act, for the purposes and subject to the
limitations herein contained and not
otherwise, have hereunto set their respective
hands and seals.
Signature
By (Name) lllllllllllllll
(Title) lllllllllllllllll
(Address) llllllllllllllll
(Seal)
Attest
[FR Doc. 05–1410 Filed 1–28–05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410–02–P
E:\FR\FM\31JAP2.SGM
31JAP2
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 70, Number 19 (Monday, January 31, 2005)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 4932-4955]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 05-1410]
[[Page 4931]]
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Part III
Department of Agriculture
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Agricultural Marketing Service
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
7 CFR Part 1001
Milk in the Northeast Marketing Area; Decision on Proposed Amendments
to Marketing Agreement and to Order; Proposed Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 19 / Monday, January 31, 2005 /
Proposed Rules
[[Page 4932]]
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DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Agricultural Marketing Service
7 CFR Part 1001
[Docket No. AO-14-A70; DA-02-01]
Milk in the Northeast Marketing Area; Decision on Proposed
Amendments to Marketing Agreement and to Order
AGENCY: Agricultural Marketing Service, USDA.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This decision proposes to permanently adopt changes in
provisions of the Northeast marketing area contained in a Recommended
Decision published in the Federal Register on March 25, 2004, with one
minor modification. This document is subject to approval by producers
by referendum.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Gino Tosi, Marketing Specialist, Order
Formulation and Enforcement Branch, USDA/AMS/Dairy Programs, STOP
0231--Room 2968, 1400 Independence Avenue, SW., Washington, DC 20250-
0231, (202)690-1366, e-mail gino.tosi@usda.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This Final Decision proposes to adopt
amendments that would establish year-round supply plant performance
standards, exclude milk received by supply plants from producers not
eligible to be pooled on the Northeast order from supply plant
performance standards, remove the ``split-plant'' provision, establish
a one-day ``touch base'' standard, establish explicit diversion limits
for pool plants, prohibit the ability to pool the same milk on the
Federal milk order and a marketwide pool administered by another
government entity, and grant authority to the Market Administrator to
adjust the touch-base and diversion limit standards as market
conditions warrant. Additional amendments that amend reporting and
payment date provisions, with one minor modification from what was
proposed in the Recommended Decision, are also adopted.
This administrative action is governed by the provisions of
Sections 556 and 557 of Title 5 of the United States Code and,
therefore, is excluded from the requirements of Executive Order 12866.
The amendments to the rules adopted herein have been reviewed under
Executive Order 12988, Civil Justice Reform. They are not intended to
have a retroactive effect. If adopted, the proposed amendments would
not preempt any state or local laws, regulations, or policies, unless
they present an irreconcilable conflict with this rule.
The Agricultural Marketing Agreement Act of 1937, as amended (7
U.S.C. 601-674), provides that administrative proceedings must be
exhausted before parties may file suit in court. Under section
608c(15)(A) of the Act, any handler subject to an order may request
modification or exemption from such order by filing with the Secretary
a petition stating that the order, any provision of the order, or any
obligation imposed in connection with the order is not in accordance
with the law. A handler is afforded the opportunity for a hearing on
the petition. After a hearing, the Secretary would rule on the
petition. The Act provides that the district court of the United States
in any district in which the handler is an inhabitant, or has its
principal place of business, has jurisdiction in equity to review the
Secretary's ruling on the petition, provided a bill in equity is filed
not later than 20 days after the date of the entry of the ruling.
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis and Paperwork Reduction Act
In accordance with the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601 et
seq.), the Agricultural Marketing Service has considered the economic
impact of this action on small entities and has certified that this
final decision will not have a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
For the purpose of the Regulatory Flexibility Act, a dairy farm is
considered a ``small business'' if it has an annual gross revenue of
less than $750,000, and a dairy products manufacturer is a ``small
business'' if it has fewer than 500 employees. For the purposes of
determining which dairy farms are ``small businesses,'' the $750,000
per year criterion was used to establish a production guideline of
500,000 pounds per month. Although this guideline does not factor in
additional monies that may be received by dairy producers, it should be
an inclusive standard for most ``small'' dairy farmers. For purposes of
determining a handler's size, if the plant is part of a larger company
operating multiple plants that collectively exceed the 500-employee
limit, the plant will be considered a large business even if the local
plant has fewer than 500 employees.
In September 2002, the time of the hearing, there were 16,715
producers pooled on and 143 handlers regulated by the Northeast order.
Of these, 97 percent of the producers and 71 percent of the handlers
would be considered small businesses. The adoption of the amended
pooling standards serve to revise and establish criteria that ensure
the pooling of producers, producer milk, and plants that have a
reasonable association with, and are consistently serving, the fluid
milk needs of the Northeast milk marketing area. Criteria for pooling
milk are established on the basis of performance standards that are
considered adequate to meet the Class I fluid needs of the market and
to determine those that are eligible to share in the revenue that
arises from the classified pricing of milk. Criteria for pooling are
established without regard to the size of any dairy industry
organization or entity. The amendments to the reporting and payment
date provisions serve to streamline and simplify handler payments to
the market administrator. The criteria established in the amended
pooling standards and reporting and payment date provisions are applied
in an equal fashion to both large and small businesses. Therefore, the
Department has determined that the adopted amendments will not have a
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
A review of reporting requirements was completed under the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. Chapter 35). It was
determined that these adopted amendments would have no impact on
reporting, recordkeeping, or other compliance requirements because they
would remain identical to the current requirements. No new forms are
proposed and no additional reporting requirements would be necessary.
This action does not require additional information collection that
requires clearance by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) beyond
currently approved information collection. The primary sources of data
used to complete the approved forms are routinely used in most business
transactions. The forms require only a minimal amount of information
which can be supplied without data processing equipment or a trained
statistical staff. Thus, the information collection and reporting
burden is relatively small. Requiring the same reports for all handlers
does not significantly disadvantage any handler that is smaller than
the industry average.
Prior documents in this proceeding:
Notice of Hearing: Issued July 26, 2002; published August 1, 2002
(67 FR 49887).
Supplemental Notice of Hearing: Issued August 14, 2002; published
August 16, 2002 (67 FR 53522).
[[Page 4933]]
Recommended Decision: Issued March 17, 2004; published March 25,
2004 (69 FR 15562)
Preliminary Statement
A public hearing was held on proposed amendments to the marketing
agreement and order regulating the handling of milk in the Northeast
marketing area. The hearing was held, pursuant to the provisions of the
Agricultural Marketing Agreement Act of 1937, as amended (7 U.S.C. 601-
674), and the applicable rules of practice and procedure governing the
formulation of marketing agreements and marketing orders (7 CFR part
900), at Alexandria, Virginia, on September 10-13, 2002, pursuant to a
Notice of Hearing issued July 26, 2002, and published August 1, 2002
(67 FR 49887) and a Supplemental Notice of Hearing issued August 14,
2002, and published August 16, 2002 (67 FR 53522).
Upon the basis of the evidence introduced at the hearing and the
record thereof, the Administrator, on March 17, 2004, issued a
Recommended Decision containing notice of the opportunity to file
written exceptions thereto.
The material issues, findings, conclusions, and rulings of the
Recommended Decision, with one minor modification, are hereby approved
and adopted and are set forth herein. The material issues on the record
of the hearing relate to:
1. Reporting and Payment Dates.
2. Pooling standards of the marketing order:
a. Performance standards for supply plants.
b. Unit pooling standards for distributing plants.
c. Standards for producer milk.
3. Marketwide Service Payments.
4. Conforming changes to the order.
Findings and Conclusions
The following findings and conclusions on the material issues are
based on evidence presented at the hearing and the record thereof:
1. Reporting and Payment Dates
Several changes to the reporting and payment date provisions of the
Northeast marketing order are adopted, with one minor variation from
what was proposed in the Recommended Decision. The adopted changes
include: (1) Changing the submission date of monthly handler reports to
on or before the 10th day of the month; (2) Announcing the producer
price differential (PPD) and statistical uniform price on or before the
14th day of the month, but allowing the market administrator additional
days if the 14th falls on a Saturday, Sunday, or national holiday; (3)
Requiring payments to the producer settlement fund (PSF) be received no
later than two days after the announcement of the PPD; (4) Modifying
the date which payments from the PSF are to be disbursed to handlers to
the day after the due date required for payment into the PSF; and (5)
Requiring final payments to producers be made no later than the day
after the required date of payment to handlers from the PSF.
The Recommended Decision would have required partial payments to
producers be made no later than the last day of the month. Upon
consideration of an exception received regarding modification of the
partial payment date, the partial payment to dairy farmers will
continue to be due on or before the 26th day of the month. This issue
is discussed later in this decision. The following table summarizes the
adopted changes:
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Current provision Adopted changes Reason for change
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
PROPOSAL 1
Submission of monthly handler reports Due on or before the Due on or before the Allows handlers one
to Market Administrator. 9th day of the month. 10th day of the month. more day to submit
reports to Market
Administrator.
Date of PPD and statistical uniform Announce on or before Announced on or before Maintains the time the
price announcement. the 13th day of the the 14th day of the Market Administrator
month. month, and up to two has to announce the
additional public PPD and statistical
business days uniform price and if
thereafter if the 14th the 14th falls on a
falls on a weekend or weekend or national
national holiday. holiday allows
additional days.
Handler payments to the PSF.......... Payment must be made no Payment must be made no A corresponding change
later than the 15th of later than two days made because of
the month, unless the after the announcement extending the date for
15th falls on a of the PPD and filing Market
weekend or holiday, statistical uniform Administrator reports
where the payment can price, unless the due and the computation of
be delayed until the date falls on a the PPD and
next business day. weekend or holiday, statistical uniform
then the payment can price.
be delayed until the
next business day.
Date when final payments are to be Payment must be Payment must be A corresponding change
disbursed to producers. received by each received the following that adds flexibility
producer no later than month by each producer to the relationship
the day after the 16th no later than the day between the date of
day of the following after the required payment to handlers
month. payment date from the from the PSF and final
PSF unless the day payment to producers.
falls on a weekend or
holiday, then the
payment can be delayed.
PROPOSAL 4
Date on which payments from the PSF Market Administrator Market Administrator Helps to assure that
are disbursed to handlers. must pay each handler must pay each handler producers receive full
the amount owed, if the amount owed, if payment in the event
any, from the PSF no any, no later then the of the late payments
later than the 16th day after handler to the PSF.
after the end of each payments to the PSF
month. are received unless
the day falls on a
weekend or holiday,
then the payment can
be delayed.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 4934]]
Currently, a handler's report on milk receipts and utilization is
due to the Market Administrator on or before the 9th day of the month.
Submission of this report triggers a sequence of other reporting and
payment dates. These include: announcement of the PPD and statistical
uniform price on or before the 13th day of the month; handler
obligations to the PSF, due no later than the 15th day of the month but
subject to a delay to the next business day if the day falls on a
weekend or holiday; disbursement of funds from the PSF to handlers, due
no later than the 16th day after the end of each month but also delayed
subject to a weekend or holiday; partial payments from handlers to
producers and cooperative associations, due on or before the 26th day
of the month and again delayed due to a weekend or holiday; and final
payments to producers and cooperative associations, made no later than
the day after payment to handlers from the PSF.
A portion of Proposal 1, submitted by New York State Dairy Foods,
Inc. (NYSDF), Proposal 4, submitted by the Northeast Market
Administrator, the Association of Dairy Cooperatives in the Northeast
(ADCNE) and NYSDF, and Proposal 12, submitted by the Northeast market
administrator, are adopted. All three proposals seek to modify various
reporting and payment provisions of the order. NYSDF is a trade
association representing milk handlers and processors in the Northeast
marketing area. ADCNE represents a number of dairy farmer cooperatives
whose milk is pooled on the Northeast order. Their members include
Agri-Mark, Inc. (Agri-Mark), Dairy Farmers of America, Inc. (DFA),
Dairylea Cooperative Inc. (Dairylea), Land O' Lakes, Inc. (LOL),
Maryland and Virginia Milk Producers Cooperative, Inc. (MVMP), O-AT-KA
Cooperative, Inc. (O-AT-KA), St. Albans Cooperative Creamery, Inc. (St.
Albans), and Upstate Farms Cooperative, Inc. (Upstate). Worcester
Creameries, Elmhurst Dairy, Mountainside Farms, and Steuben Foods also
testified in support of Proposal 1.
Proposal 1 would require monthly handler reports to be received by
the Market Administrator on or before the 10th day of the month. This,
in turn, triggers a sequence of other reporting deadline and payment
date provisions that would be similarly changed. The Recommended
Decision included a provision that would require partial payments to
dairy farmers be made on or before the last day of the month. This
Final Decision, however, will keep the partial payment date as
currently provided by the order. The adopted changes include: (1)
Announcement of the PPD and statistical uniform price a day later--from
the 13th to the 14th day of the month. If the 14th day of the month
falls on a Saturday, Sunday, or national holiday, the Market
Administrator would have up to two additional public business days to
announce the PPD and the statistical uniform price; (2) Handler
payments to the PSF be made no later than two days after the
announcement of the PPD unless the due date falls on a weekend or
holiday, then the payment can be delayed until the next business day;
and (3) Final payments to producers be received no later than the day
after the required date of payment from the PSF unless the due date
falls on a weekend or holiday, then the payment can be delayed until
the next business day. Proposal 4 would modify the day which payments
from the PSF are to be disbursed to handlers from the 16th of the month
to the day after the due date required for payment into the PSF.
Proposal 12 seeks to make a technical correction to the order provision
relating to payments to producers and cooperatives, which will make the
provisions identical to other Federal orders by changing ``pool plant
operator'' to ``handler'' throughout the provisions of the order.
A witness appearing on behalf of NYSDF testified in support of
Proposal 1, stating that its adoption is necessary to correct
unnecessarily burdensome regulations that have resulted from the
reporting and payment date provisions adopted as part of Federal order
reform. According to the witness, the amendments incorporated in
Proposal 1 would essentially restore the reporting and payment dates
specified in the former New York-New Jersey milk marketing order. The
witness indicated that giving an additional day for submitting handler
reports to the Market Administrator would lessen the difficulties milk
handlers are currently experiencing in meeting the current reporting
deadline. The witness explained that milk suppliers have experienced
considerable difficulties in furnishing milk component and billing data
in time for meeting the currently established reporting deadline. This
situation is compounded, the witness explained, when handlers must
account for the co-mingling of tanker loads of milk between cooperative
and independent milk producers. Often, the witness stated, reports to
the Market Administrator contain erroneous and estimated data because
the reporting handler did not receive the correct data in time.
The NYSDF witness also cited testimony from the Northeast Market
Administrator that one third of handler reports are often filed late.
Moving the reporting date from the 9th to the 10th of the month would
give milk suppliers and buyers an additional day to complete their
work, thereby greatly reducing the number of late reports to the Market
Administrator, the witness concluded.
The second proposed change in reporting dates contained in Proposal
1 would maintain the time the Market Administrator has to announce the
PPD and statistical uniform price, and up to two additional public
business days thereafter if the 14th falls on a weekend or national
holiday. According to the NYSDF witness, this portion of the proposal
is consistent with the proposed one-day extension for submission of
handler reports to the Market Administrator and would extend to the
Market Administrator sufficient time to make the necessary price
computations without undue pressure brought about by weekends or
holidays. The witness also noted that while this proposal could give
the Market Administrator up to two additional public business days for
making the price computations, it would not require that the additional
time be used. If the Market Administrator finds it feasible, a price
announcement could come earlier, the witness stated.
The third change in reporting dates offered by the NYSDF witness
would require handler payments to the PSF be made no later than two
days after the announcement of the PPD. According to the witness, this
portion of the proposal is intended primarily as a conforming change
made necessary by the one-day proposed extension in the date for filing
Market Administrator reports and the computation of the PPD and
statistical uniform price. Currently, handler payments to the PSF must
be made no later than the 15th of the month, unless the 15th falls on a
weekend or national holiday where the payment can be delayed until the
following business day, the witness noted. The witness expressed
concern that compliance with the current handler payment deadline was
difficult, and the proposed change would better accommodate the flow of
money from handlers to the PSF. The witness was of the opinion that
this portion of the proposal would provide a more consistent time
interval to gather the Market Administrator classifications on milk
transfers at pool reporting time, giving handlers a more consistent
time frame in which to make necessary money transfers, for example, and
[[Page 4935]]
improve concurrent billings for milk that was transferred or diverted.
The NYSDF witness testified that Proposal 1 would also require
final payments to dairy farmers be disbursed no later than the day
after the required payment date to handlers from the PSF. The primary
purpose of this portion of the proposal, the witness explained, is to
have the date of final payment to dairy farmers conform with other
proposed date changes for the computation of the statistical uniform
price and with when payments are made into and out of the PSF. The
witness stressed that no change in the requirement for ``day-earlier''
payment to cooperatives was proposed, as currently set forth in the
provisions of the order, and the final payment to producers would still
be due the day after payments from the PSF are made by the Market
Administrator. Accordingly, the witness noted, dates of final payment
could move a day or two later, but only if the date of payment from the
PSF were extended by the same number of days. This sequence in the
relationship of ``date of final payment'' to the ``date of payment from
the producer settlement fund'' should be continued, the witness said.
The NYSDF witness testified that the last feature of Proposal 1
modifies the date that partial payments are received by producers to
``on or before the last day of the month'', instead of the current
``26th day of the month''. The witness presented evidence which
demonstrated that a longer spread in days between partial and final
payment exists now than prior to Federal order reform. The witness
testified that making partial payments due ``on or before the last day
of the month'' would conform more closely with the dates previously set
in the respective pre-reform orders and create better ``spacing''
between required pay dates.
The NYSDF witness was of the opinion that adoption of Proposal 1
also would accommodate ``tolled'' bulk milk purchased by milk
distributors for processing and packaging into Class I products at pool
distributing plants. The witness described ``tolling'' as a situation
where a plant is paid to process raw milk, but the processing plant
does not take ownership of the milk or incur a payment obligation to
producers. The witness noted that the Northeast order requires that
tolled milk be purchased on the basis of the PPD and component prices
rather than on the basis of Class I skim value and butterfat prices.
Therefore, the Market Administrator must ``credit'' the handler who
processes cooperative receipts, together with a Market Administrator
assessment on the tolled milk. The tolling processor must then prepare
a billing to the distributor of the tolled milk at the difference
between the Class I cost of the skim and butterfat and also a
cooperative credit from the Market Administrator, including the
associated Market Administrator fee, the witness stated. The NYSDF
witness noted that doing this requires having detailed component values
as well as knowing the final PPD. The billing involved is made after
the PPD announcement and the billing by the Market Administrator of the
handler's pool obligation, the witness said.
In their post-hearing brief, NYSDF emphasized that Proposal 1 takes
the existing payment structure and applies it to the date that the
Market Administrator announces the PPD and statistical uniform price.
NYSDF asserted that Proposal 1 does not set the payment date to the PSF
as the 16th of the month. Rather, they noted, handlers could be making
payment earlier than the 16th of the month if the PPD is announced
before the 14th day of the month. NYSDF was of the opinion that as a
whole, Proposal 1 would allow the Market Administrator to receive more
timely and accurate handler reports and permit earlier price
announcements and earlier payments to and from the PSF. NYSDF concluded
that both dairy farmers and handlers would benefit from more accurate
information that would flow naturally from adoption of Proposal 1.
NYSDF's post-hearing brief concluded that adoption of Proposal 1
would still have producers in the Northeast marketing area receiving a
partial payment for milk 5 days earlier than was the case prior to
Federal order reform.
A witness appearing on behalf of Marcus Dairy (Marcus) testified in
support of Proposal 1. Marcus is a distributing plant which receives
approximately 60 percent of its milk supply from independent dairy
farmers, with the remainder supplied by cooperatives. The witness
indicated support for moving the handler reporting date from the 9th to
the 10th day of the month, noting that an extra day would help in
receiving more accurate information from cooperatives and eliminate the
need to estimate data so that reports can be submitted on time. The
witness also testified that the proposal should be accompanied by the
proposed change to the Market Administrator PPD announcement date from
the 13th to the 14th of the month while providing the flexibility for
the Market Administrator to make announcements later in the event that
the 14th falls on a holiday or weekend. These modifications would also
require a similar change in the date when payment to the PSF is due,
the witness noted. In light of this, the Marcus witness expressed
support for requiring that payments to the PSF be made not more than
two days after the PPD announcement and that final payments to dairy
farmers be received no later than the day after the required date of
payment by the Market Administrator. Marcus also supported moving the
date of partial payment from the ``26th of the month'' to ``on or
before the 30th of the month.'' The witness was of the opinion that
adjusting these payment date provisions would improve the cash flow of
dairy farmers.
A witness appearing on behalf of ADCNE testified in opposition to
Proposal 1. The witness said that dairy farmers, and those persons who
provide services to dairy farmers, are faced with meeting deadlines
that are sometimes difficult or inconvenient. The witness expressed the
opinion that businesses that rely on information from other businesses
do not necessarily have any ability to force those other businesses to
change just because they provide needed information. Accordingly, the
witness said, ADCNE does not view the current reporting dates as
unreasonable or in need of change. Instead, the ADCNE witness suggested
that those involved work together to resolve producer payment issues
instead of seeking a regulatory change that would result in delay of
payments to dairy farmers. Delaying producer payment dates will
unnecessarily impose financial costs to dairy farmers in the Northeast,
the ADCNE witness concluded.
In their post-hearing brief, NYSDF responded to ADCNE's views by
indicating that no amount of overtime worked by employees of NYSDF can
create reports when other entities fail to get needed report
information to handlers in a timely manner. NYSDF's brief also noted
that many of their members are small businesses subject to Regulatory
Flexibility Act analysis and relief as necessary and that undertaking
expensive overtime in order to fill out reports when they do not have
all the necessary information needed from various entities negates the
intent of the Regulatory Flexibility Act.
Exceptions to the Recommended Decision received from ADCNE opposed
adoption of all portions of Proposal 1. ADCNE was of the opinion that
Northeast order milk handlers are fully able to file reports on or
before the 9th of the month, and that moving the reporting date from
the 9th of the month
[[Page 4936]]
to the 10th of the month is unjustified. ADCNE was of the opinion that
the proponents of Proposal 1 did not sufficiently demonstrate how the
lack of timeliness or accuracy of handler reports has affected price
announcements by the Market Administrator, or caused inaccurate or late
payments to dairy farmers. ADCNE also described how moving the
reporting date could possibly delay payments to dairy farmers and have
a negative effect on their cash flow.
ADCNE took particular exception to the proposed change in the date
of partial payment from the 26th day of the month to the last day of
the month. ADCNE argued that postponing the date of partial payment
would provide a financial gain for handlers at the expense of dairy
farmers. ADCNE explained how moving the date of partial payment could
cause financial hardship by requiring dairy farmers to carry more
operating capital debt during the four to seven day period that the
partial payment would be delayed. ADCNE noted that a delayed payment
could increase the exposure of producers to financial losses in the
event of a default by a handler. ADCNE also disputed the assertions
that delaying the partial payment date until the last day of the month
would create better spacing between payment dates to producers and that
moving the partial payment back to a date that was previously
applicable in the pre-reform orders was desirable.
An exception to the Recommended Decision was also received by
Cooperative Milk Producers Association (CMPA). CMPA did not take
exception to a specific proposal but opposed any change in reporting
and payment deadlines that could delay payments to dairy farmers.
The Northeast Market Administrator testified in support of Proposal
4, which seeks to move the date on which payments from the PSF are
dispersed to handlers from the 16th day after the end of the month to
no later than the day after handler payments to the PSF are received.
The Market Administrator explained that a problem arises when late
payments to the PSF result in insufficient funds to make payments out
of the PSF when both payments to and from the PSF fall on the same day.
When this happens, order provisions provide for a pro-rata reduction in
payments to handlers who can, in turn, reduce payments to dairy
farmers, the Market Administrator noted. According to the Market
Administrator, Proposal 4 would allow one extra day for payments from
the PSF and cause dairy farmers to receive their payments one day later
three or four times a year. However, dairy farmers would always be
assured of receiving the full amount owed, the Market Administrator
added.
A witness representing ADCNE also testified in support of Proposal
4. Under current provisions, the ADCNE witness said, the date for
payments to the PSF, the 16th of the month, can sometimes fall on the
same day that payments from the PSF are to be made. In their post-
hearing brief, ADCNE asserted the adoption of Proposal 4 was necessary
for the proper administration of the PSF.
The Northeast Market Administrator also testified in support of
Proposal 12. This proposal seeks to make a technical correction to the
order provisions relating to payments to producers and cooperative
associations and would make the Northeast order's Payments to producers
and to cooperative associations provision identical to other Federal
orders. The Market Administrator explained that the Proposal would
simply amend references to ``pool plant operator'' as ``handler.''
Reporting and payment date provisions of the pre-reform New
England, New York-New Jersey, and Mid-Atlantic orders served the
different needs and marketing conditions of their respective marketing
areas. Provisions adopted under Federal order reform established
reporting and payment dates that were reflective of the three
consolidated orders, while recognizing the need to establish dates that
would be conducive to the marketing conditions of the larger
consolidated Northeast order. The reporting and payment date
requirements adopted for the consolidated Northeast order were intended
to reasonably accommodate historical patterns and practices while
recognizing that fixed dates also needed to be specified. For example,
handler reports to the Market Administrator were due as soon as the 8th
of the month, or as late as the 10th of the month. When the three pre-
reform orders were consolidated to form the Northeast order, the new
handler reporting date was set for the 9th of the month. This was also
the case for the date for the Market Administrator's announcement of
the PPD and statistical uniform price. In the pre-reform New England
and Mid-Atlantic orders, the announcement was on the 13th of the month,
while in the pre-reform New York/New Jersey order the announcement was
on the 14th of the month. Current provisions in the consolidated
Northeast order require the announcement by the 13th of the month.
This decision maintains a change in the deadline for submitting
handler reports to the Market Administrator from the 9th of the month
to the 10th of the month. The exceptions to the Recommended Decision
submitted by ADCNE regarding handler reporting deadlines are not
persuasive. Delaying the deadline for handler reports to the Market
Administrator from the 9th of the month to the 10th of the month is
supported by the hearing record and should reduce the number of late
reports and lessen the number of inaccuracies and estimations contained
therein.
Changing the handler reporting date deadline by one day will also
be accompanied by a change in the date the Market Administrator is to
announce the PPD and statistical uniform price. Also adopted is the
feature of Proposal 1 which specifies that the Market Administrator can
make the PPD and statistical uniform price announcement up to two
public business days later if the 14th falls on a weekend or national
holiday.
The portion of Proposal 1 that specifies handler payments to the
PSF be made no later than two days after the PPD and statistical
uniform price announcement is also adopted. This portion of Proposal 1
is a change made necessary by the proposed one-day extension in the
date for filing handler reports and the computation and announcement of
the PPD and statistical uniform price. The adoption of this portion of
Proposal 1 also adds a measure of flexibility to the payment date
provisions by making the date of handler payments to the PSF dependent
on the date the Market Administrator announces the PPD and statistical
uniform price. It also will provide the opportunity for handlers to
make payments to the PSF earlier than the 16th of the month if the
Market Administrator announcement of the PPD comes before the 14th of
the month.
Payments to handlers from the PSF also necessitates a corresponding
change as a result of the adopted changes for announcement of the PPD
and statistical uniform price and dates for payment to the PSF.
Evidence presented at the hearing demonstrated that sometimes payments
to and from the PSF can fall on the same day and can lead to reduced
payments to dairy farmers because payments are pro-rated. Amending the
date that payments are made from the PSF to handlers from ``the day
after the 16th day of the month'', to the day after handler payments to
the PSF are received will better assure handlers of receiving their
[[Page 4937]]
full payment each month from the PSF. Prompt and complete payments to
dairy farmers are dependant on timely and full payments from the PSF to
milk handlers. However, final payments to dairy farmers should be made
no later than the day after the required payment date from the PSF by
the Market Administrator.
Exceptions to the Recommended Decision received from ADCNE for not
changing the date of partial payment to dairy farmers are persuasive.
The proposed change in the partial payment date is a separate issue
from the reporting dates issue that affects the timing of the
calculation and announcement of the producer price differential and
statistical uniform price. The revised reporting dates, as discussed in
other parts of this decision, affect the timing of the final payment to
producers. ADCNE correctly noted in their exceptions that neither the
Agricultural Marketing Agreement Act nor existing Federal law require
that the monthly partial and final payments to dairy farmers be made on
an evenly spaced basis. ADCNE's comments also clearly reveal the
potential monetary affect on producers of moving the partial payment
date to the last day of the month. Despite the suggested benefit of
more even spacing between payment dates and the explanation that the
later date would be more in line with the pre-order reform date, the
reasons and supporting arguments for keeping the partial payment date
as is are valid and sound. This Final Decision will maintain the
partial payment date as currently specified by the order. The partial
payment to dairy farmers will continue to be due on or before the 26th
of the month. The partial payment is based on the lowest announced
class price for the preceding month. Since that price is already known
to handlers, there is no need to delay partial payments to dairy
farmers because of reporting and payment date changes adopted in the
decision.
Additionally, ADCNE took exception to the use of the term
``conforming change'' in the Recommended Decision. Moving the date of
handler payment to the PSF, the date of partial payment, and the date
of final payment were referred to in the Recommended Decision as
``conforming changes'' resulting from adjusting the date which handler
reports are to be submitted to the Market Administrator. The Department
would like to clarify that the use of the term ``conforming'' in this
case was not intended to reference its traditional use of the term
``conforming change''--a resulting change in order language in one
section of the order stemming from a change in order language in
another. The term was intended to clarify the changes in reporting and
payment dates corresponding to and resulting from moving the due date
of handler reports.
2. Pooling Standards
Summaries of testimony regarding the pooling standards of the
Northeast order are provided individually. The discussion of all
pooling standards and the decision's findings and conclusions regarding
pooling standards is presented immediately after testimony summary for
``c''. below.
a. Performance Standards for Supply Plants
Certain amendments to the Pool plant provision of the Northeast
order are adopted. Specifically, the adopted amendments include: (1)
Establishing a supply plant performance standard of 10 percent of total
milk receipts for each of the months of January through August and
December, and 20 percent of total milk receipts for each of the months
of September through November; (2) Removing the ``split plant''
feature; and (3) excluding milk received from producers not eligible to
be pooled on the Northeast order from the total volume of milk used to
determine the amount of milk that a supply plant needs to deliver to a
distributing plant to become pooled. These recommended changes are
represented in certain features of Proposals 2, 5, and 8.
Proposal 10, which advocates lowering performance standards, was
not included for adoption in the Recommended Decision and is not
adopted in this Final Decision. Furthermore, Proposal 9, which would
credit route distribution from the plant and transfers in the form of
packaged fluid milk products against the supply plant performance
standards, was not included for adoption in the Recommended Decision
and is not adopted in this Final Decision.
Currently, supply plants in the Northeast order need to ship at
least 10 percent of their total milk receipts in the months of August
and December and 20 percent of their total milk receipts in each of the
months of September through November to pool distributing plants in
order to qualify the supply plant and all of its milk receipts for
pooling. A supply plant which meets the performance standard in each of
the months of August through December is automatically considered a
pool plant for each of the months of January through July. Supply
plants that do not qualify as a pool plant in each of the months of
August through December need to ship at least 10 percent of their total
milk receipts to distributing plants during each of the months of
January through July in order to qualify the supply plant and all of
its milk receipts for pooling in each of those months.
The order also currently provides a ``split-plant'' feature to
accommodate a supply plant that has both pool and nonpool facilities.
This feature was adopted during Federal order reform to provide for
more uniform supply plant provisions within the Federal milk order
system. It was not a feature contained in any of the three pre-reform
orders consolidated to form the Northeast order.
Proposal 2, submitted by NYSDF, seeks to amend the Pool plant
provision of the order by: (1) Increasing the supply plant performance
standards by 5 percentage points to 15 percent for the months of August
and December, and by 5 percentage points to 25 percent for each of the
months of September through November; and (2) Removing the split-plant
provision. In their post-hearing brief, NYSDF slightly modified the
months applicable for the proposed increased standards to specify a
performance standard of 15 percent in the month of August and 25
percent for each of the months of September through December.
A witness representing NYSDF testified that after implementation of
Federal milk order reform, milk supplies pooled on the Northeast order
during the fall months have decreased. During these months, the NYSDF
witness said, milk was shipped to areas outside of the order, and it
was difficult for Northeast order fluid milk handlers to acquire an
adequate supply of milk to meet the needs of their customers. Although
there was not as significant a shortage in the first half of 2002 as
there was in 2000 and 2001, the witness predicted that the situation
would change substantially beginning in late 2002 and during 2003.
The NYSDF witness characterized milk shortages in the fall months
for the Northeast marketing area as a long-term problem that requires
long-term action. In this regard, the witness stressed, Proposal 2 is
designed to increase the amount of milk available to fluid milk
handlers during the fall months. The witness said the proposed increase
is similar to provisions previously contained in the pre-reform Middle
Atlantic and New England milk orders and is identical to the
adjustments made to supply plant performance standards by the Market
Administrator in 2000 and 2001 for the months of August through
November.
[[Page 4938]]
The NYSDF witness testified that supply plant performance standards
applicable in the pre-reform orders consolidated to form the current
Northeast milk order enabled cooperatives to pool the milk of their
members separately from the milk of independent producers and small
cooperatives who also supplied fluid milk plants. After implementation
of Federal order reform, the witness said, the new pooling provisions
have allowed cooperatives to pool not only the milk of their members,
but also the milk of other smaller cooperatives and independent
producers. The current pooling provisions, the witness emphasized, are
being used in a way that allows large cooperatives to guarantee
themselves a higher volume of milk pooled as Class I. In their post-
hearing brief, NYSDF added that this arrangement has resulted in an
increased market share of total Class I sales by larger cooperatives
while the total volume of milk available to Class I handlers has
remained unchanged.
Data presented by the NYSDF witness showed that cooperatives now
account for over 80 percent of all milk pooled on the Northeast order.
The witness noted that cooperatives have guaranteed non-members an
outlet to pool their milk and, on average, pool in excess of 100
million pounds of non-member milk each month. The witness concluded
that because cooperatives pool such a large amount of milk,
cooperatives should not have difficulty meeting the proposed five
percentage point performance standard increase for supply plants.
The NYSDF witness emphasized that their greatest concern regarding
supply plant performance standards is the issue of ``guaranteed''
pooling of non-member milk supplies and the lack of diversion limit
standards. The witness was of the opinion that this has enabled milk to
be pooled on the order without bearing any responsibility for serving
the Class I market or being made available as a reserve supply to the
market. The witness was of the opinion that inappropriate pooling has
resulted in the erosion of blend prices paid to producers who do
regularly supply the Class I needs of the market.
The NYSDF witness further testified that the split-plant feature
for supply plants should be removed because the feature does not serve
the purpose for which it is intended. The witness maintained that the
split-plant provision was created to allow a supply plant to have
separate facilities to receive and process Grade B milk. Currently, the
witness said, no handlers located in the Northeast order are using the
split-plant feature. However, if a supply plant chooses to rely on the
feature, it would be able to pool a substantial amount of additional
milk simply by diverting milk to the non-pool side of the plant during
those months when no performance standards or diversion limits are
provided by the order, the witness cautioned.
In conclusion, the NYSDF witness said, it is the Class I market
that generates additional revenues which accrue to all producers whose
milk is pooled on the Northeast marketing area. Accordingly, the
witness maintained, entities that seek to have their milk pooled on the
order should bear some responsibility in actually supplying the Class I
needs of the market. The witness said that Proposal 2 is intended to
end what NYSDF characterized as ``abusive'' pool-riding methods and to
ensure that entities benefitting from revenue generated by Class I
sales have demonstrated service in supplying the Class I market.
A witness appearing on behalf of Marcus also testified in support
of Proposal 2. According to the witness, Marcus Dairy experienced milk
supply shortages during some months since implementation of the
consolidated Northeast milk order. The witness stated that adoption of
Proposal 2 would help alleviate supply shortfalls for the Class I
market during the fall months when the milk is most needed.
A witness representing the ADCNE testified in opposition to that
portion of Proposal 2 that would raise the supply plant performance
standards for the months of August through December. However, the
witness supported the proposal on the need to remove the split-plant
feature. The witness was of the opinion that increasing supply plant
performance standards was unwarranted and could cause disorderly
marketing conditions in the region because some handlers would be
forced to depool a portion of the milk of their producers. The witness
stressed that the Market Administrator already has the authority to
adjust these standards and that this should continue as the way to make
future changes as marketing conditions warrant.
Furthermore, the ADCNE witness emphasized, Proposal 2 does not
specify some level of performance by supply plants during the ``free-
ride'' months of January through July.\1\ According to the witness,
Proposal 2 also does not limit the ability of producers located far
from the Northeast marketing area to be pooled on the order without
maintaining a reasonable association to the market and does not ensure
that Class I distributors will receive additional milk when needed.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ The dairy industry term known as a ``free-ride'' period is
often used to describe those time periods when no performance
standard is specified.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In their post-hearing brief, ADCNE stressed that no evidence was
presented at the hearing that would warrant a permanent change in
performance standards. ADCNE reiterated their opinion that the current
authority provided to the Market Administrator to make adjustments to
the performance standards was the most appropriate method for the
orderly marketing of milk in the Northeast.
Proposal 5, submitted by ADCNE, also seeks to amend the Pool plant
provision of the order. Specifically the proposal would: (1) Require
supply plants to deliver at least 10 percent of their total milk
receipts to a distributing plant during each of the months of January
through August and December; (2) Grant authority to the Market
Administrator to impose additional shipping requirements on handlers
receiving marketwide service payments; and (3) Eliminate the split-
plant provision.
The ADCNE witness testified that current order provisions have
unintentionally provided the opportunity for milk to be pooled and
priced under the terms of the Northeast order without demonstrating a
reasonable level of service in supplying the Class I needs of the
market. Pooling such milk could result in a lower blend price for all
producers who do regularly supply the fluid needs of the market, the
witness specified. The witness stressed that Proposal 5 is not meant to
eliminate the ability to pool the milk of producers located far from
the Northeast marketing area. Instead, the witness explained, Proposal
5 would assure that all milk pooled on the Northeast order demonstrate
a consistent service to supplying distributing plants and consequently
bear some of the burden of incurring the additional costs of supplying
the Class I needs of the market. According to the witness, there are
two aspects of the Pool plant provision of the Northeast marketing
order that have enabled what the witness described as ``opportunistic
pooling'': The split-plant feature and the current level of supply
plant performance standards.
The ADCNE witness explained that supply plants qualified as split-
plants can engage in opportunistic pooling by receiving milk on the
pool side of the plant and then diverting the milk to the nonpool side
of the plant. Under current provisions, during the months of August and
December a supply plant could divert nine loads of milk to its nonpool
side for every one load of milk it
[[Page 4939]]
receives on its pool side, the witness explained. In addition, the
witness continued, during the months of September through November, the
supply plant could divert eight loads of milk for every two loads it
receives at the pool side of the plant. According to the witness, once
the plant meets the performance standards in each of the months of
August through December, the plant is automatically qualified as a pool
plant in the months of January through July and can divert an unlimited
amount of milk.
Under current supply plant performance standards, the ADCNE witness
said, a pool plant located far from the marketing area could
potentially pool all of the milk located near it during the spring
months by shipping a small amount of its milk supply to a Northeast
order pool plant during the fall months. The lack of a monthly touch-
base standard, the witness also asserted, has facilitated the pooling
of milk located far from the marketing area by allowing producers to
qualify all of their milk for pooling by delivering a minimal amount of
milk to a Northeast order pool plant. During January through July when
no performance standards for supply plants are stipulated, the witness
noted, a plant has the ability to pool all the milk of every producer
who had delivered to the plant throughout the year. According to the
witness, theoretically 100 percent of the pool plant's milk receipts
could be pooled on the Northeast order.
The ADCNE witness presented data estimating the impact of pooling
distant milk on the Northeast order blend price. The witness estimated
that for the period of January 2001 through July 2002, the blend price
was reduced by an average of 16 cents per hundredweight. The witness
was of the opinion that if Proposal 5 is adopted, most of the lost
blend price value would be restored.
The ADCNE witness testified that the free-ride feature is no longer
being used for its intended purpose of allowing producers that had been
historically pooled on the Northeast Order to remain pooled. Instead,
the witness stated, the free-ride feature has created the ability to
pool milk on the order that was never intended to be pooled. The
witness maintained that supply plants that currently meet the
performance standards in September through November would not be
disadvantaged with the new year-round monthly performance standards
because the proposed standards for the months of January through July
are lower than those specified for the fall months.
Comments filed by ADCNE supported adoption of all changes to the
order's pooling standards contained in the Recommended Decision.
A witness testifying on behalf of NYSDF testified in opposition to
Proposal 5. While NYSDF agreed that the order's lack of performance
standards for all months has created opportunities for distant milk to
be pooled on the order, a free-ride feature is important for
maintaining orderly marketing conditions. The NYSDF witness said that
providing for months without performance standards ensures that the
market's reserves have the ability to be pooled on the order during
months of abundant supply.
At the hearing, NYSDF offered a modification to Proposal 5,
proposing that the performance standard during the months of January
through July only apply to supply plants located outside of the States
that comprise the Northeast order. The justification for this
modification, the witness said, is that during the spring months when
additional milk is not usually needed by distributing plants, it
prevents the uneconomic movement of milk by supply plants located
within the marketing area. The NYSDF modification would make Proposal 5
similar to amendments recently adopted by the Mideast order, the
witness noted.
Comments filed on behalf of NYSDF in response to the Recommended
Decision supported most of the proposed amendments to the order's
pooling standards. NYSDF expressed support for the proposed touch-base
standard and monthly diversion limits, and agreed that the proposed
changes will better identify the producers that are ready, willing and
able to serve the fluid market.
NYSDF took exception to the proposed supply plant shipping
standards of 10 percent for the months of January through June. It was
the opinion of NYSDF that this shipping standard would cause
difficulties for small cooperatives, who currently pay fees to larger
cooperatives for pooling, who would then have to pay a fee in every
month of the year to have their milk pooled. NYSDF contended that the
minimum 10 percent shipping standard should apply only to supply plants
that are located outside the states that comprise the Northeast
marketing area. It is the opinion of NYSDF that supply plants from
``distant'' areas must demonstrate that their producer milk is really
serving the market in a reserve supply capacity.
Proposal 8, submitted by Friendship Dairies (Friendship), a
partially regulated handler on the Northeast order, seeks to amend the
order's Pool plant provision by excluding milk received by supply
plants from producers who would not be eligible to be pooled under the
Northeast order and pre-qualified cooperative producer milk from the
total volume of milk used to determine the amount of milk a supply
plant would need to deliver to distributing plants in order to satisfy
the supply plant performance standards.
The Producer provision of the Northeast order describes those
producers who would not be eligible for pooling on the Northeast order.
They include: an entity that operates their own farm and plant at their
sole enterprise and risk, commonly referred to as a producer handler; a
dairy farmer whose milk is received at an exempt plant excluding
producer milk diverted to the exempt plant; a dairy farmer designated
as a producer under another Federal order; a dairy farmer whose milk is
reported as diverted to a plant fully regulated under another Federal
order that is assigned to Class I; or a ``dairy farmer for other
markets,'' which is a dairy farmer whose milk during certain months of
the year is received by a pooling handler and that pooling handler
caused the milk from such dairy farmer to be delivered to any plant as
other than producer milk or delivered to any other Federal milk order.
A witness appearing for Friendship testified that the current
method used in determining if a supply plant has met a performance
standard is examining the total amount of milk received at the plant
and the amount of those receipts shipped to distributing plants. As a
supply plant procures additional milk to offset the milk it transfers
or diverts to distributing plants, the additional milk receipts become
included in the plant's total milk receipts, the witness said. This
increases the quantity of milk that must be transferred or diverted by
the supply plant to distributing plants to meet the performance
standard for pooling purposes, the witness explained. Basing the supply
plant qualification percentage exclusively on the supply plant's
producer milk supply, the witness concluded, would reduce the amount of
milk that Friendship would have to ship every month to pool
distributing plants in order to be pooled under the terms of the order.
Friendship testified that they must include milk received from
cooperatives that has already been qualified for pooling by the
cooperative in the total receipts used to determine the amount of milk
they must ship to meet supply plant performance requirements. The
Friendship witness noted that adoption of Proposal 8 would
[[Page 4940]]
address this by excluding pre-qualified cooperative milk from the
volume of receipts upon which a supply plant must make shipments in
order to be designated as a pool supply plant.
The Friendship witness also noted that excluding milk received from
producers not eligible to be pooled on the Northeast order from the
performance standards for supply plants has been adopted in the pooling
provisions of other Federal orders. The witness clarified that in these
other Federal orders where a similar provision is present, the supply
plant performance standard is based on the amount of milk produced by
dairy farmers that is pooled through association with the supply plant,
regardless of whether or not it was diverted from the plant.
A witness appearing for ADCNE expressed opposition to Proposal 8
noting that it would liberalize supply plant performance standards.
According to the witness, the intent of supply plant pooling provisions
are to qualify both the plant and the operator of the plant. It is
meaningless to qualify a supply plant, the witness noted, in which the
operator does not control the milk of a group of dairy farmers. A
cheese plant operator would never incur the costs to ship milk from the
plant to a distributing plant, the witness offered by example, unless
the plant intended to pool a group of dairy farmers and draw from the
pool.
ADCNE further noted opposition to Proposal 8 in their post-hearing
brief by emphasizing that the operator of a supply plant has an option
of whether or not to be pooled. According to ADCNE, the operator of a
plant can acquire and maintain their own producer milk supply and can
pool the plant by meeting the pooling standards of the order or choose
nonpool status and purchase milk supplies from other pool or non-pool
handlers.
An exception to the Recommended Decision filed by Bongrain Cheese
(Bongrain), a cheese manufacturer in Pennsylvania, supported adoption
of all portions of Proposal 8. Bongrain was of the opinion that the
second portion of Proposal 8 that would deduct the volume of milk
received from cooperatives from the total volume of milk used to
determine the amount of milk a supply plant needs to deliver to
distributing plants in order to satisfy supply plant performance
standards should also be adopted. Bongrain was of the opinion that milk
purchased from cooperatives has already been qualified for pooling, and
that current standards put undue burden on cheese manufacturers to buy
additional milk for the sole purpose of meeting performance standards.
Bongrain noted that excluding pre-qualified cooperative milk from the
volume of receipts upon which a supply plant must make shipments in
order to qualify for pooling would minimize unnecessary movements of
milk.
A proposal, published in the hearing notice as Proposal 9, also
submitted by Friendship, seeking to amend the Pool plant provis