Implementation of Regulations Required Under Title XI of the Food, Conservation and Energy Act of 2008; Conduct in Violation of the Act, 35338-35354 [2010-14875]
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35338
Proposed Rules
Federal Register
Vol. 75, No. 119
Tuesday, June 22, 2010
This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER
contains notices to the public of the proposed
issuance of rules and regulations. The
purpose of these notices is to give interested
persons an opportunity to participate in the
rule making prior to the adoption of the final
rules.
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Grain Inspection, Packers and
Stockyards Administration
9 CFR Part 201
RIN 0580–AB07
Implementation of Regulations
Required Under Title XI of the Food,
Conservation and Energy Act of 2008;
Conduct in Violation of the Act
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AGENCY: Grain Inspection, Packers and
Stockyards Administration, USDA.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
SUMMARY: The Department of
Agriculture (USDA), Grain Inspection,
Packers and Stockyards Administration
(GIPSA) is proposing to add several new
sections to the regulations under the
Packers and Stockyards Act, 1921, as
amended and supplemented (P&S Act).
The new regulations that GIPSA is
proposing would describe and clarify
conduct that violates the P&S Act and
allow for more effective and efficient
enforcement by GIPSA. The proposed
regulations would clarify conditions for
industry compliance with the P&S Act
and provide for a fairer market place.
DATES: We will consider comments we
receive by August 23, 2010.
ADDRESSES: We invite you to submit
comments on this proposed rule. You
may submit comments by any of the
following methods:
• E-mail: comments.gipsa@usda.gov.
• Mail: Tess Butler, GIPSA, USDA,
1400 Independence Avenue, SW., Room
1643–S, Washington, DC 20250–3604.
• Fax: (202) 690–2173.
• Hand Delivery or Courier: Tess
Butler, GIPSA, USDA, 1400
Independence Avenue, SW., Room
1643–S, Washington, DC 20250–3604.
• Federal e-Rulemaking Portal:
https://www.regulation.gov. Follow the
on-line instructions for submitting
comments.
Instructions: All comments will
become a matter of public record and
should be identified as ‘‘Farm Bill
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Comments,’’ making reference to the
date and page number of this issue of
the Federal Register. Comments will be
available for public inspection at
https://www.regulations.gov and in the
above office during regular business
hours (7 CFR 1.27(b)). Please call GIPSA
Management Support Services staff at
(202) 720–7486 to arrange a public
inspection of comments.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: S.
Brett Offutt, Director, Policy and
Litigation Division, P&SP, GIPSA, 1400
Independence Ave., SW., Washington,
DC 20250, (202) 720–7363,
s.brett.offutt@usda.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
The P&S Act sets forth broad
prohibitions on the conduct of entities
operating subject to its jurisdiction.
These broad provisions make
enforcement difficult and create
uncertainty among industry participants
regarding compliance. In enacting Title
XI of the Food, Conservation and Energy
Act of 2008 (Farm Bill) (Pub. L. 110–
246), Congress recognized the nature of
problems encountered in the livestock
and poultry industries and amended the
P&S Act. These amendments established
new requirements for participants in the
livestock and poultry industries and
required the Secretary of Agriculture
(Secretary) to establish criteria to
consider when determining whether the
P&S Act has been violated.
In accordance with the Farm Bill,
GIPSA is proposing regulations under
the P&S Act that would clarify when
certain conduct in the livestock and
poultry industries represents the making
or giving of an undue or unreasonable
preference or advantage or subjects a
person or locality to an undue or
unreasonable prejudice or disadvantage.
These proposed regulations also
establish criteria that GIPSA would
consider in determining whether a live
poultry dealer has provided reasonable
notice to poultry growers of a
suspension of the delivery of birds
under a poultry growing arrangement;
when a requirement of additional
capital investments over the life of a
poultry growing arrangement or swine
production contract constitutes a
violation of the P&S Act; and whether
a packer, swine contractor or live
poultry dealer has provided a
reasonable period of time for a grower
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or a swine producer to remedy a breach
of contract that could lead to
termination of the growing arrangement
or production contract.
The Farm Bill also instructed the
Secretary to promulgate regulations to
ensure that poultry growers, swine
production contract growers and
livestock producers are afforded the
opportunity to fully participate in the
arbitration process, if they so choose.
We are proposing a required format for
providing poultry growers, swine
production contract growers and
livestock producers the opportunity to
decline the use of arbitration in those
contracts that have an arbitration
provision. We are also proposing criteria
that we would consider in finding that
poultry growers, swine production
contract growers and livestock
producers have a meaningful
opportunity to participate fully in the
arbitration process if they voluntarily
agree to do so. We would use these
criteria to assess the overall fairness of
the arbitration process.
In addition to proposing regulations
in accordance with the Farm Bill,
GIPSA is proposing regulations that
would prohibit certain conduct because
it is unfair, unjustly discriminatory or
deceptive, in violation of the P&S Act.
These additional proposed regulations
are promulgated under the authority of
section 407 of the P&S Act, and
complement those required by the Farm
Bill to help ensure fair trade and
competition in the livestock and poultry
industries.
In recent years, there has been an
increased use of contracting in the
marketing and production of livestock
and poultry by entities under the
jurisdiction of the P&S Act. This
increased contracting coupled with the
market concentration has significantly
changed the industry and the rural
economy as a whole, making proposed
regulations necessary, especially in
those situations in which packers, live
poultry dealers or swine contractors use
their market power to harm producers
or impair private property rights of
growers and producers. Transparency,
competition and financial integrity of
the marketplace have also diminished.
Section 407 of the P&S Act (7 U.S.C.
228) provides that the Secretary ‘‘may
make such rules, regulations, and orders
as may be necessary to carry out the
provisions of this Act.’’ Pursuant to this
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authority, the Secretary has issued
regulations, published as Part 201 of
Title 9 of the Code of Federal
Regulations (CFR). Sections 11005 and
11006 of the Farm Bill became effective
June 18, 2008, and instruct the Secretary
to promulgate additional regulations as
described in this notice of proposed
rulemaking. These regulations, if
finalized, are also proposed to be
published in Part 201 of Title 9 of the
CFR.
Section 202 of the P&S Act (7 U.S.C.
192) prohibits packers, swine
contractors and live poultry dealers
from engaging in unfair and deceptive
practices, giving undue preferences to
persons or localities, apportioning
supply among packers, swine
contractors and live poultry dealers in
restraint of commerce, manipulating
prices, creating a monopoly, or
conspiring to aid in unlawful acts. The
Farm Bill requires promulgation of
regulations under the P&S Act dealing
with various industry behaviors. In
addition, GIPSA has identified 11 terms
requiring definition and three areas of
concern in which regulations will be
developed to address each of these
behaviors. Definitions of the terms,
tournament system, principal part of
performance, capital investment,
additional capital investment,
suspension of delivery of birds, forward
contract, marketing agreement,
production contract, competitive injury,
and likelihood of competitive injury
would be added to § 201.2 of the
regulations. The proposed regulations
are grouped under the general headings
of (1) undue or unreasonable preference
or advantage, (2) unfair, unjustly
discriminatory and deceptive practices,
and (3) arbitration.
In preparing to issue these proposed
regulations, GIPSA held three public
meetings in October 2008, in Arkansas,
Iowa, and Georgia to gather comments,
information, and recommendations from
interested parties. Attendees at these
meetings were asked to give input on
the Farm Bill requirements for
production contracts, arbitration, and
the four following topics included in
Farm Bill section 11006: (1) Undue or
unreasonable preferences or advantages,
(2) adequate notice to poultry growers of
suspension of delivery of birds, (3)
criteria for determining when requiring
additional capital investment over the
life of a contract constitutes a violation,
and (4) criteria for determining when
packers, swine contractors and live
poultry dealers have provided a
reasonable period of time to remedy a
breach of contract that could lead to
contract termination. Attendees
provided comments on these topics as
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well as other issues of concern under
the P&S Act, including packer livestock
procurement practices believed to
unjustly discriminate against producers
based on the volume of livestock they
sell.
GIPSA also gathered data concerning
market participants. There are roughly
30,000 swine producers and poultry
growers operating under production
contracts. More than 85 percent of these
producers and growers will be
contracted to one of the five largest
slaughtering firms. The average gross
sales revenue of the three largest of
these slaughtering firms is 23,000 times
that of a small grower or producer.
The proposed regulations are based
on comments, information, and
recommendations received in those
meetings along with GIPSA’s expertise,
experience, and interactions in the
livestock and poultry industries.
The P&S Act
The P&S Act was enacted in 1921 ‘‘to
comprehensively regulate packers,
stockyards, marketing agents and
dealers.’’ 1 The P&S Act ‘‘was framed in
language designed to permit the fullest
control of packers and stockyards which
the Constitution permits, and its
coverage was to encompass the
complete chain of commerce and give
the Secretary of Agriculture complete
regulatory power over packers and all
activities connected therewith.’’ 2 It was
hailed as a ‘‘far-reaching measure and
extend[ing] further than any previous
law into the regulation of private
business.’’ 3
The scope of the P&S Act is broad.
Section 202 of the P&S Act provides that
‘‘[i]t shall be unlawful for any packer or
swine contractor with respect to
livestock, meats, meat food products, or
livestock products in unmanufactured
form, or for any live poultry dealer with
respect to live poultry, to:
• Engage in or use any unfair,
unjustly discriminatory, or deceptive
practice or device; or
• Make or give any undue or
unreasonable preference or advantage to
any particular person or locality in any
respect, or subject any particular person
or locality to any undue or unreasonable
1 Hays Livestock Comm’n Co. v. Maly Livestock
Comm’n Co., 498 F.2d 925, 927 (10th Cir. 1974).
2 Bruhn’s Freezer Meats of Chicago, Inc. v. USDA,
438 F.2d 1332, 1339 (8th Cir. 1971) (citing H.R. Rep.
No. 67–324 (1921); H.R. Rep. No. 67–77 (1921)).
3 61 Cong. Rec. 1801 (1921) (statement of Rep.
Haugen); see also Wilson & Co. v. Benson, 286 F.2d
891, 895 (7th Cir. 1961) (‘‘The legislative history
shows Congress understood the sections of the [P&S
Act] under consideration were broader in scope
than the antecedent legislation.’’) (citing 61 Cong.
Rec. 1805 (1921)).
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prejudice or disadvantage in any
respect; or
• Sell or otherwise transfer to or for
any other packer, swine contractor, or
any live poultry dealer, or buy or
otherwise receive from or for any other
packer, swine contractor, or any live
poultry dealer, any article for the
purpose or with the effect of
apportioning the supply between any
such persons, if such apportionment has
the tendency or effect of restraining
commerce or of creating a monopoly; or
• Sell or otherwise transfer to or for
any other person, or buy or otherwise
receive from or for any other person,
any article for the purpose or with the
effect of manipulating or controlling
prices, or of creating a monopoly in the
acquisition of, buying, selling, or
dealing in, any article, or of restraining
commerce; or
• Engage in any course of business or
do any act for the purpose or with the
effect of manipulating or controlling
prices, or of creating a monopoly in the
acquisition of, buying, selling, or
dealing in, any article, or of restraining
commerce; or
• Conspire, combine, agree, or
arrange with any other person (1) to
apportion territory for carrying on
business, or (2) to apportion purchases
or sales of any article, or (3) to
manipulate or control prices; or
• Conspire, combine, agree, or
arrange with any other person to do, or
aid or abet the doing of, any act made
unlawful by subdivisions (a), (b), (c),
(d), or (e) of this section.’’ 4
The P&S Act sets forth similar
prohibitions on stockyard owners,
market agencies, and dealers. Section
312 provides that ‘‘[i]t shall be unlawful
for any stockyard owner, market agency,
or dealer to engage in or use any unfair,
unjustly discriminatory, or deceptive
practice or device in connection with
determining whether persons should be
authorized to operate at the stockyards,
or with the receiving, marketing,
buying, or selling on a commission basis
or otherwise, feeding, watering, holding,
delivery, shipment, weighing, or
handling of livestock.’’ 5
4 See also sections 2, 201 (defining the statutory
terms). Section 202 originally applied only to the
livestock and meat packing industries. Live poultry
dealers were added in 1935, see Pub. L. No. 74–272,
49 Stat. 648 (1935), and swine contractors were
added in 2002, Pub. L. 107–171, § 10502(b)(1), 116
Stat. 134, 509 (2002).
5 See also section 301, 302 (providing additional
definitions); section 304 (providing that ‘‘[a]ll
stockyard services furnished pursuant to reasonable
request made to a stockyard owner or market
agency at such stockyard shall be reasonable and
nondiscriminatory and stockyard services which
are furnished shall not be refused on any basis that
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In addition, the P&S Act imposes a
variety of more specific limitations and
requirements. In particular, it specifies
procedures for a poultry grower or
swine production contract grower
seeking to cancel a poultry growing
arrangement or swine production
contract; 6 requires disclosure of
additional capital investments in
production contracts; 7 establish
procedures for the use of arbitration; 8
imposes record-retention
requirements; 9 and requires that certain
contracts and rates to be available to the
Secretary and the public (without
confidential information).10 The P&S
Act further declares that ‘‘[a]ny delay or
attempt to delay by a market agency,
dealer, or packer purchasing livestock,
the collection of funds as herein
provided, or otherwise for the purpose
of or resulting in extending the normal
period of payment for such livestock’’ or
‘‘[a]ny delay or attempt to delay, by a
live poultry dealer which is a party to
any such transaction, the collection of
funds as herein provided, or otherwise
for the purpose of or resulting in
extending the normal period of payment
for poultry obtained by poultry growing
arrangement or purchased in a cash
sale,’’ is ‘‘an ‘unfair practice’ in violation
of this chapter.’’ 11
The P&S Act provides that ‘‘[t]he
Secretary may make such rules,
regulations, and orders as may be
necessary to carry out the provisions of
this chapter.’’ 12 The P&S Act also sets
forth procedures for enforcement
actions before the Secretary 13 and
private litigation.14
The Supreme Court upheld the
constitutionality of the P&S Act shortly
after its enactment in Stafford v.
Wallace. 15 The Court concluded that
the P&S Act reflected a permissible
exercise of Congress’ powers under the
Commerce Clause because of the
interstate nature of the livestock
industry.16 The Supreme Court
emphasized that the P&S Act was
‘‘remedial legislation,’’ whose ‘‘object
[was] the free and unburdened flow of
live stock from the ranges and farms of
the West and the Southwest through the
great stockyards and slaughtering
centers on the borders of that region,
and thence in the form of meat products
to the consuming cities of the country
in the Middle West and East, or, still, as
live stock, to the feeding places and
fattening farms in the Middle West or
East for further preparation for the
market.’’ 17 The Court explained that
there were multiple ‘‘evils’’ that the P&S
Act sought to remedy:
is unreasonable or unjustly discriminatory’’);
section 305 (providing that ‘‘[a]ll rates or charges
made for any stockyard services furnished at a
stockyard by a stockyard owner or market agency
shall be just, reasonable, and nondiscriminatory,
and any unjust, unreasonable, or discriminatory
rate or charge is prohibited and declared to be
unlawful’’); section 307 (‘‘It shall be the duty of
every stockyard owner and market agency to
establish, observe, and enforce just, reasonable, and
nondiscriminatory regulations and practices in
respect to the furnishing of stockyard services, and
every unjust, unreasonable, or discriminatory
regulation or practice is prohibited and declared to
be unlawful.’’).
6 Id. section 208.
7 Id. section 208.
8 Id. section 210.
9 Id. section 401.
10 Id. sections 222, 306.
11 Id. sections 409, 410.
12 Id. section 408.
13 Id. section 408. The [S]ecretary cannot proceed
against section 202 violations by live poultry
dealers by adjudications under this section.
Payment and trust violations that would constitute
unfair practices under section 202 may be
administratively adjudicated under section 411
only as violations of sections 410 and 207. Id.
sections 410, 411.
14 Id. sections 308, 404.
Section 202(a) of the P&S Act
prohibits ‘‘any unfair, unjustly
discriminatory, or deceptive practice.’’
Section 202(b) prohibits ‘‘any undue or
unreasonable preference or advantage
[or] prejudice or disadvantage.’’ USDA
has consistently taken the position that,
in some cases, a violation of section
202(a) or (b) can be proven without
proof of predatory intent, competitive
injury, or likelihood of injury.19 At the
same time, USDA has always
understood that an act or practice’s
effect on competition can be relevant 20
and, in certain circumstances, even
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The chief evil feared is the monopoly of
the packers, enabling them unduly and
arbitrarily to lower prices to the shipper, who
sells, and unduly and arbitrarily to increase
the price to the consumer, who buys.
Congress thought that the power to maintain
this monopoly was aided by control of the
stockyards. Another evil, which it sought to
provide against by the act, was exorbitant
charges, duplication of commissions,
deceptive practices in respect of prices, in
the passage of the live stock through the
stockyards, all made possible by collusion
between the stockyards management and the
commission men, on the one hand, and the
packers and dealers, on the other.18
Sections 202(a) and (b) of the P&S Act
15 258
U.S. 495 (1922).
at 516.
17 Id. at 513, 514, 521.
18 Id. at 514–15.
19 In re Ozark county Cattle Co., 49 Agric. Dec.
336, 365 (1990); 1 John H. Davidson et al.,
Agricultural Law section 3.47, at 244 (1981).
20 See In re Sterling Colo. Beef Co., 39 Agric. Dec.
184, 235 (1980) (considering and rejecting
respondent packer’s business justification for
challenged conduct).
16 Id.
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dispositive 21 with respect to whether
that act or practice violates section
202(a) and/or (b).
The longstanding agency position
that, in some cases, a violation of
section 202(a) or (b) can be proven
without proof of likelihood of
competitive injury is consistent with the
language and structure of the P&S Act,
as well as its legislative history and
purposes. Neither section 202(a) nor
section 202(b) contains any language
limiting its application to acts or
practices that have an adverse effect on
competition, such as acts ‘‘restraining
commerce.’’ Instead, these provisions
use terms including ‘‘deceptive,’’
‘‘unfair,’’ ‘‘unjust,’’ ‘‘undue,’’ and
‘‘unreasonable’’—which are commonly
understood to encompass more than
anticompetitive conduct.22 This is in
direct contrast to sections (c)–(e), which
expressly prohibit only those acts that
have the effect of ‘‘restraining
commerce,’’ ‘‘creating a monopoly,’’ or
producing another type of antitrust
injury. The fact that Congress expressly
included these limitations in sections
(c)–(e) but not in sections (a) and (b) is
a strong indication that Congress did not
intend sections (a) and (b) to be limited
to harm to competition. And Congress
confirmed the agency’s position by
amending the P&S Act to specify
specific instances of conduct prohibited
as unfair that do not involve any
inherent likelihood of competitive
injury.23
USDA’s interpretation of sections
202(a) and (b) is also consistent with the
interpretation of other sections of the
P&S Act using similar language—
sections 307 and 312. Courts have
recognized that the proper analysis
under these provisions depends on ‘‘the
21 See Armour & Co. v. United States, 402 F.2d
712, 717 (7th Cir. 1968) (a coupon promotion plan
(here coupons for fifty cents off specified packages
of bacon) is not per se unfair and violates section
202(a) if it is implemented with some predatory
intent or carries some likelihood of competitive
injury); In re IBP, Inc., 57 Agric. Dec. 1353, 1356
(1998) (contractual right of first refusal at issue
violated section 202 ‘‘because it has the effect or
potential of reducing competition’’).
22 When the P&S Act was enacted, Webster’s New
International Dictionary defined ‘‘deceptive’’ as
‘‘[t]ending to deceive; having power to mislead, or
impress with false opinions’’; ‘‘unfair’’ as ‘‘[n]ot fair
in act or character; disingenuous; using or involving
trick or artifice; dishonest; unjust; inequitable’’ (2d.
definition); ‘‘unjust’’ as ‘‘[c]haracterized by injustice;
contrary to justice and right; wrongful’’; ‘‘undue’’ as
‘‘[n]ot right; not lawful or legal; violating legal or
equitable rights; improper’’ (2d. definition); and
‘‘unreasonable’’ as ‘‘[n]ot conformable to reason;
irrational’’ or ‘‘immoderate; exorbitant.’’ Webster’s
New International Dictionary 578, 2237, 2238, 2245,
2248 (1st ed. 1917). This is the same understanding
of the terms today.
23 See sections 409, 410.
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facts of each case,’’ 24 and that these
sections may apply in the absence of
harm to competition or competitors.25
Although proof of harm to
competition is not necessary to satisfy
the statutory language, it is sufficient to
do so. Any act that harms competition
is necessarily also ‘‘unfair’’ and therefore
violates section 202(a).
The legislative history and purposes
of the P&S Act also support USDA’s
position. The Act ‘‘is a most
comprehensive measure and extends
farther than any previous law in the
regulation of private business, in time of
peace, except possibly the interstate
commerce act.’’ 26
In amending the P&S Act, Congress
made clear that its goals for the statute
extended beyond the protection of
competition. In 1935, for instance, when
Congress first subjected live poultry
dealers to sections 202(a) and (b),
Congress explained in the statute itself
that ‘‘[t]he handling of the great volume
of live poultry * * * is attendant with
various unfair, deceptive, and
fraudulent practices and devices,
resulting in the producers sustaining
sundry losses and receiving prices far
below the reasonable value of their live
poultry. * * * ’’ 27 Similarly, the House
Committee Report regarding 1958
amendments stated that ‘‘[t]he primary
purpose of [the P&S Act] is to assure fair
competition and fair trade practices’’
and ‘‘to safeguard farmers * * * against
receiving less than the true market value
of their livestock.’’ 28 The Report further
observed that protection extends to
‘‘unfair, deceptive, unjustly
discriminatory’’ practices by ‘‘small’’
companies in addition to ‘‘monopolistic
practices.’’ 29 In accordance with this
legislative history, courts and
commentators have, over a span
exceeding 70 years, recognized that the
purposes of the P&S Act are not limited
to protecting competition.30
24 Capitol Packing Company v. United States, 350
F.2d 67, 76 (10th Cir. 1965); see also Spencer
Livestock Comm’n Co. v USDA, 841 F.2d 1451,
1454 (9th Cir. 1988).
25 See, e.g., Spencer, 841 F.2d at 1455 (Section
312 covers ‘‘a deceptive practice, whether or not it
harmed consumers or competitors.’’).
26 H.R. Rep. 67–77, at 2 (1921); see also Swift &
Co. v. United States, 308 F.2d 849, 853 (7th Cir.
1962) (‘‘The legislative history showed Congress
understood the sections of the [P&S Act] under
consideration were broader in scope than
antecedent legislation such as the Sherman
Antitrust Act, sec. 2 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C.
13, sec. 5 of the Federal Trade Commission Act, 15
U.S.C. 45 and sec. 3 of the Interstate Commerce Act,
49 U.S.C. 3.’’).
27 Pub. L. 74–272, 49 Stat. 648, 648 (1935).
28 H.R. Rep. No. 85–1048 (1957), reprinted in
1958 U.S.C.C.A.N. 5212, 5213 (emphasis added).
29 Id. at 5213.
30 See, e.g., Stafford, 258 U.S. at 513–14; Spencer
Livestock Comm’n Co. v. USDA, 841 F.2d 1451,
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Recently, three courts of appeals have
disagreed with the USDA’s
interpretation of the P&S Act and have
concluded (in cases to which the United
States was not a party) that plaintiffs
could not prove their claims under
section 202(a) and/or (b) without
proving harm to competition or likely
harm to competition.31 After carefully
considering the analysis in these
opinions, USDA continues to believe
that its longstanding interpretation of
the P&S Act is correct. These court of
appeals opinions (two of which were
issued over vigorous dissents) 32 are
inconsistent with the plain language of
the statute; they incorrectly assume that
harm to competition was the only evil
Congress sought to prevent by enacting
the P&S Act; and they fail to defer to the
Secretary of Agriculture’s longstanding
and consistent interpretation of a statute
administered by the Secretary. To the
extent that these courts failed to defer to
the USDA’s interpretation of the statute
because that interpretation had not
previously been enshrined in a
regulation,33 the new regulations
constitute a material change in
circumstances that warrants judicial
reexamination of the issue.34
Competitive Injury
Although it is not necessary in every
case to demonstrate competitive injury
in order to show a violation of section
202(a) and/or (b), any act that harms
competition or is likely to harm
competition necessarily violates the
statute. Accordingly, proposed new
§ 201.2(t) defines competitive injury and
proposed new § 201.2(u) defines
likelihood of competitive injury.
Competitive injury occurs when an act
or practice distorts competition in the
market channel or marketplace. How a
1455 (9th Cir. 1988); United States v. Perdue Farms,
Inc., 680 F.2d 277, 280 (2d Cir. 1982); Bruhn’s
Freezer Meats, 438 F.2d at 1336–37; Bowman v.
USDA, 363 F.2d 81, 85 (5th Cir. 1966); United
States v. Donahue Bros., 59 F.2d 1019, 1023 (8th
Cir. 1932).
31 Wheeler, ___ F.3d ___, 2009 WL 4823002, No.
07–40651 (5th Cir. 2009) (en banc) (no violation of
section 202(a) or (b) without a likely effect on
competition); Been v. O.K. Indus., Inc., 495 F.3d
1217 (10th Cir. 2007) (‘‘unfair practice’’ is one that
injures or is likely to injure competition); London
v. Fieldale Farms Corp., 410 F.3d 1295 (11th Cir.
2005) (P&S Act prohibits only those unfair,
discriminatory, or deceptive practices that
adversely affect or are likely to adversely affect
competition). The issue is currently pending before
one other court of appeals. Terry v. Tyson Farms,
Inc., No. 08–5577 (6th Cir., argued March 3, 2009).
32 Wheeler, 2009 WL 4823002, at 14–28 (Garza, J.,
dissenting); Been, 495 F.3d at 1238–43 (Hartz, J.,
concurring in part and dissenting in part).
33 See London, 410 F.3d at 1226–27.
34 See National Cable & Telecomm. Ass’n v.
Brand X Internet Servs., 545 U.S. 967, 982–84
(2005).
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competitive injury manifests itself
depends critically on whether the target
of the act or practice is a competitor
(e.g., a packer harms other packers), or
operates at a different level of the
livestock or poultry production process
(e.g., a packer harms a producer). The
likelihood of competitive injury occurs
when an act or practice raises rivals’
costs, improperly forecloses competition
in a large share of the market through
exclusive dealing, restrains competition
among packers, live poultry dealers or
swine contractors or otherwise
represents a misuse of market power to
distort competition.35 The likelihood of
competitive injury also occurs when a
packer, swine contractor, or live poultry
dealer wrongfully depresses prices paid
to a producer or grower below market
value or impairs the producer or
grower’s ability to compete with other
producers or growers or to impair a
producer’s or grower’s ability to receive
the reasonable expected full economic
value from a transaction in the market
channel or marketplace.
To establish an actual or likely
competitive injury, it is not necessary to
show that a challenged act or practice
had a likely effect on resale price levels.
Even the antitrust laws do not require
such a showing. Because the P&S Act is
broader than the antitrust laws, such a
requirement of showing effect on resale
price levels is not necessary to establish
competitive injury under section 202 of
the P&S Act either (though such a
showing would suffice).
Unfair, Unjustly Discriminatory and
Deceptive Practices
GIPSA is proposing to add to the
regulations a new § 201.210(c) that
reiterates the Secretary’s position that
the appropriate analysis under section
202(a) depends on the nature and
circumstances of the challenged
conduct. A finding of harm or likely
harm to competition is always
sufficient, but not always necessary, to
establish a violation of sections 202(a)
and/or (b) of the P&S Act.
In the Farm Bill, Congress required
criteria to be established to determine:
(1) Whether a live poultry dealer has
provided reasonable notice to poultry
growers of any suspension of the
delivery of birds under a poultry
growing arrangement; (2) when a
requirement of additional capital
investments over the life of a poultry
growing arrangement or swine
production contract constitutes a
35 See, e.g., Thomas G. Krattenmaker & Steven C.
Salop, Anticompetitive Exclusion: Raising Rivals’
Costs to Achieve Power over Price, 96 Yale L.J. 209
(1986); 11 Philip E. Areeda & Herbert Hovenkamp,
Antitrust Law 1821 (2d ed. 2005).
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violation of the P&S Act; and (3) if a
packer, swine contractor, or live poultry
dealer has provided a reasonable period
of time for a poultry grower or swine
production contract grower to remedy a
breach of contract that could lead to
termination of the growing arrangement
or production contract. Regulation in
these areas (and other areas in which
GIPSA is proposing regulation) is
important to preserve the rights of
poultry growers, swine production
contract growers and livestock
producers and maintain trust and
integrity in the marketplace. GIPSA has
been informed by growers and
producers, particularly where contracts
for the production or sale of livestock or
poultry are involved, that poultry
growers, swine production contract
growers and livestock producers are
sometimes at a distinct disadvantage in
negotiating the terms of an agreement.
These reports indicate that packers,
swine contractors and live poultry
dealers have exhibited a tendency to
exert their disproportionate positions of
power by misleading or retaliating
against poultry growers, swine
production contract growers or livestock
producers, and that some growers or
producers may have no choice but to
acquiesce to the packer’s, swine
contractor’s, or live poultry dealer’s
terms for entering into a contract or
growing arrangement, or acquiesce to
unfair conduct in order to continue in
business.
Proposed new § 201.210(a) would first
provide a statement of the broad
coverage of section 202(a). It would then
provide the following eight specific
examples of conduct deemed unfair:
• An unjustified material breach of a
contractual duty, express or implied, or
an action or omission that a reasonable
person would consider unscrupulous,
deceitful or in bad faith in connection
with any transaction in or contract
involving the production, maintenance,
marketing or sale of livestock or poultry.
• A retaliatory action or omission by
a packer, swine contractor, or live
poultry dealer in response to the lawful
expression, spoken or written,
association, or action of a poultry
grower, livestock producer or swine
production contract grower; a retaliatory
action includes but is not limited to
coercion, intimidation, or disadvantage
to any producer or grower in an
execution, termination, extension or
renewal of a contract involving livestock
or poultry;
• A refusal to provide to a contract
poultry grower or swine production
contract grower, upon request, the
statistical information and data used to
determine compensation paid to the
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contract grower or producer under a
production contract, including, but not
limited to, feed conversion rates, feed
analysis, origination and breeder
history;
An action or attempt to limit by contract
a poultry grower’s, swine production
contract grower’s, or livestock
producer’s legal rights and remedies
afforded by law, including, but not
limited to the following:
i. The right of a trial by jury (except
when arbitration has been voluntarily
agreed to);
ii. The right to all damages available
under the law;
iii. Rights available under bankruptcy
law;
iv. The authority of the judge or jury
to award attorney fees to the appropriate
party; or
v. A requirement that a trial or
arbitration be held in a location other
than the location where the principal
part of the performance of the
arrangement or contract occurs;
• Paying a premium or applying a
discount on the swine production
contract grower’s payment or the
purchase price received by the livestock
producer from the sale of livestock
without documenting the reason(s) and
substantiating the revenue and cost
justification associated with the
premium or discount;
• Termination of a poultry growing
arrangement or swine production
contract with no basis other than the
allegation by the packer, swine
contractor, live poultry dealer or other
person that the poultry grower or swine
production contract grower failed to
comply with an applicable law, rule or
regulation. If the live poultry dealer or
swine contractor believes that a poultry
grower or swine producer is in
violation, the live poultry dealer or
swine contractor must immediately
report the alleged violation to the
relevant law enforcement authorities if
they wish to use this alleged violation
as grounds for termination.
• A representation, omission, or
practice that is fraudulent or likely to
mislead a reasonable poultry grower,
swine production contract grower,
swine contract producer or livestock
producer regarding a material condition
or a term in a contract or business
transaction. Any act that causes
competitive injury or creates a
likelihood of competitive injury.
Proposed new § 201.212 would not be
part of the definition of ‘‘unfair,’’ but
rather a separate and distinct regulation.
It proposes to address various situations
where a packer (or group of packers) is
able to manipulate prices paid for
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livestock, such as where a packer-topacker sale signals the price that
packers will pay producers or where a
packer purchases cattle through
exclusive arrangements with dealers
and is able to depress the price paid to
producers through that conduct.36
Proposed new § 201.212(c) would
prohibit bonded packers from
purchasing livestock from other packers
or other packer-affiliated companies, but
allows waivers in emergency situations
such as a catastrophe or natural disaster
that may severely impact operations at
a particular packing company or plant.
The proposed regulation is intended to
limit the ability of packers to
manipulate prices.
Congress recognized, and GIPSA has
been informed by poultry growers and
industry organizations, that the
disproportionate negotiating power of a
live poultry dealer may sometimes
infringe on poultry grower’s rights.
Under a poultry growing arrangement, a
live poultry dealer has discretion on
whether it will perform under the
agreement; i.e., whether it will place
poultry on a poultry grower’s farm. The
poultry grower does not have the same
discretion and must raise and care for
poultry placed on his or her farm by the
live poultry dealer. There have been
instances in which a live poultry dealer
has failed to place poultry on a poultry
grower’s farm for an extended period of
time without notifying the poultry
grower of the reasons for or the
anticipated length of delay in placing
additional poultry. Without sufficient
information, a poultry grower is unable
to protect his or her financial interests
and make informed business decisions.
GIPSA is proposing to add a new
§ 201.215 that would require a live
poultry dealer to give adequate notice of
any suspension of delivery of poultry. In
proposed new § 201.215, live poultry
dealers would be required to provide
notice of any suspension of delivery of
birds at least 90 days prior to the
suspension taking effect. This 90-day
period would allow the poultry grower
time to consider options for utilizing his
or her poultry houses and for keeping
up with any loan payments, some of
which are government guaranteed loans.
Live poultry dealers may request a
waiver from the GIPSA Administrator of
the 90-day notice requirement in
emergency situations such as a
catastrophic or natural disaster where
the dealer could not have foreseen the
reduction in delivery of poultry.
36 Chapter 6 ‘‘Dynamic Price Competition and
Tacit Collusion’’ in Jean Tirole’s The Theory of
Industrial Organization (1988) provides a general
discussion of price signaling and competition.
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Capital investments required by a
packer, swine contractor, or live poultry
dealer during the life of a growing
arrangement or production contract may
violate the P&S Act. Congress required
the Secretary to develop criteria to
consider when determining if such a
requirement is a violation of the P&S
Act. Proposed new §§ 201.216 and
201.217 would provide several
requirements designed to preserve trust
between the parties and limit the risk
incurred by poultry growers or swine
production contract growers. Some
contracts are multiyear and provide
long-term security while others are short
term and could terminate at the end of
a single growing period. Among the
proposed requirements is that a contract
be of sufficient length to allow the
poultry growers or swine production
contract growers to recoup 80 percent of
investment costs related to the capital
investment. For example, in situations
where a poultry grower or swine
production contract grower is required
to make capital investments as a
condition to enter into or continue a
contract, that requirement may be
considered unfair if the packer, swine
contractor, or live poultry dealer did not
offer a contract duration that would
allow the poultry grower or swine
production contract grower to recover
80 percent of its investment cost, at a
repayment rate based on a percentage of
the grower’s yearly compensation. The
term ‘‘investment cost’’ includes any
balance due on the initial capital
investment and any additional capital
investments, plus accrued loan interest,
if any, at the legal rate of interest where
the principal part of the performance
takes place under the contract. We are
proposing that 80 percent of the
investment costs represent the portion
of the overall value of the poultry
grower’s or swine production contract
grower’s property that the growing or
raising facilities represent with a
poultry growing arrangement or swine
production contract in place.
Proposed new § 201.216 that would
establish criteria the Secretary may
consider when determining whether a
requirement that a poultry grower or
swine production contract grower make
additional capital investments over the
life of a swine production contract or
poultry growing arrangement constitutes
an unfair practice in violation of the
P&S Act. Establishing these criteria is
expected to deter or reduce unfair
conduct and help preserve the value of
the poultry grower’s or swine
production contract grower’s property
rights and protect against financial loss
by the grower. Allowing for grower
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discretion to accept or reject proposed
capital investments made by the live
poultry dealer provides for increased
flexibility to accommodate mutually
advantageous investment opportunities.
Congress recognized the need for
poultry growers or swine production
contract growers to have reasonable
time to remedy a breach of contract that
could lead to termination of that
contract. GIPSA’s proposed new
§ 201.218 would include criteria that the
Secretary will consider when
determining whether a poultry grower
or swine production contract grower has
been given sufficient time to remedy a
breach of contract. Proposed new
§ 201.218 would set forth procedures
that a packer, swine contractor, or live
poultry dealer must follow before it can
terminate a contract or poultry growing
arrangement based on a breach by the
poultry grower or swine production
contract grower.
Undue or Unreasonable Preference or
Advantage
In enacting the 2008 Farm Bill,
Congress required the Secretary to
establish criteria to be considered in
determining whether conduct
constitutes an undue or unreasonable
preference or advantage in violation of
the P&S Act. Through telephone calls
received from producers and poultry
growers, complaints received by its field
agents, and comments made at
meetings, conferences and conventions,
GIPSA has learned that packers, swine
contractors and live poultry dealers
sometimes treat similarly situated
poultry growers and livestock producers
differently. Disparate treatment of
similarly situated growers and
producers can be a violation of the P&S
Act when that disparate treatment is
undue or unreasonable. According to
producer comments made at public
meetings, as well as comments and
complaints from individual producers, a
packer may offer better price terms to
producers that can provide larger
volumes of livestock than the packer
offers to a group of producers that
collectively can provide the same
volume of livestock of equal quality,
without a legitimate justification for the
disparity. In one case, a Midwestern
packer was offering a higher price to an
individual producer who could deliver
full truck loads of cattle. A group of
producers approached the same packer
and offered collectively to provide a full
truck load of like cattle, but the packer
refused to offer the same price terms to
the group of producers. GIPSA is
therefore proposing a new § 201.211 to
address undue or unreasonably
preferential treatment of poultry
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growers, swine production contract
growers or livestock producers.
New proposed § 201.211 establishes
criteria that the Secretary may consider
in determining if differential treatment
constitutes an undue or unreasonable
preference or advantage, or an undue or
unreasonable prejudice or disadvantage,
under the P&S Act. The criteria include
whether contract terms are offered to all
producers that can provide the required
volume, kind and quality of livestock,
either individually or collectively. Other
considerations include whether any
price premium based on a producer’s or
a group of producers’ ability to deliver
livestock meeting specified conditions
is offered to other producers or groups
of producers that can meet that
condition. (For example, producers have
reported to GIPSA that some packers
will offer price premiums for early
delivery to one producer that it does not
offer to other producers or groups of
producers that are willing and able to
meet the same early morning delivery
conditions at equal convenience to the
packer). Finally, the Secretary may
consider whether differences in price
paid for livestock, based on the cost of
acquiring or handling the livestock, are
disclosed equally to all producers.
GIPSA would consider the particular
circumstances of any pricing disparity
in determining whether to initiate an
enforcement action alleging a violation
of the P&S Act, including whether there
is a legitimate justification for the
disparity. This provision would not
require packers to purchase livestock if
their needs are already satisfied or
impose a public utility duty to deal with
all sellers.
In the course of its enforcement of the
P&S Act, GIPSA has reviewed the
records of many live poultry dealers and
numerous poultry growing settlement
documents. GIPSA has also received
complaints from poultry growers
regarding how settlements occur. These
complaints indicate that some live
poultry dealers have established pay
schedules under which poultry growers
that raise and care for the same type and
kind of poultry receive different rates of
pay; improperly grouped together those
poultry growers who raise and care for
live poultry in different types of poultry
housing for settlement purposes; and,
under a tournament system, paid some
poultry growers less than the base pay
amount in the poultry growing
arrangement. These complaints also
indicate that some poultry growers are
not given the production information
that is used in the compensation
formula to determine their ranking in
the tournament system. These practices,
if not corrected, create a reasonable
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likelihood of competitive injury. GIPSA
is proposing a new § 201.214 that would
require live poultry dealers that pay
poultry growers on a tournament system
to pay all poultry growers raising and
caring for the same type of poultry the
same base pay, and that would prohibit
paying poultry growers less than the
base pay amount. New proposed
§ 201.214 would also require that
poultry growers be ranked in settlement
groups with other poultry growers that
raise and care for poultry in the same
type of houses.
If a packer, swine contractor, or live
poultry dealer believes it can justify
disparate treatment of poultry growers,
swine production contract growers or
livestock producers, it must have a
legitimate business reason for that
differential treatment. GIPSA is
proposing to add a new paragraph (b) to
§ 201.94 that would require packers,
swine contractors or live poultry dealers
to maintain records that justify their
treatment of poultry growers, swine
production contract growers, or
livestock producers. This justification
need not be extensive but should be
enough to identify the benefit-cost basis
of any pricing differentials received or
paid, and may include increased or
lower trucking costs; market price for
meat; volume; labor, energy, or
maintenance costs, etc. For example, a
packer’s participation in a branded
program for a particular type of beef that
returns a premium to the packer could
be used to justify a higher price paid to
producers that sell the type of cattle that
meets the specifications of the branded
program. In general, the data needed to
justify a different treatment would
identify those pecuniary costs and
benefits associated with the treatment
that demonstrate its decreased costs or
increased revenues from a standard
business practice. Therefore, GIPSA
would consider the particular
circumstances of any pricing disparity
in determining whether a violation of
the P&S Act occurred, including
whether there is a legitimate
justification for the disparity.
One of the common complaints that
GIPSA has received regarding undue
and unreasonable preferences or
advantages is that packers, swine
contractors and live poultry dealers
offer considerably better contract terms
to select sellers/growers, which impedes
other sellers/growers’ ability to
compete. GIPSA is proposing to add a
new § 201.212(a) that would prohibit
dealers operating as packer buyers from
purchasing livestock for any packer
other than the packer identifying that
dealer as its packer buyer. A dealer is
defined in the P&S Act as ‘‘any person,
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not a market agency, engaged in the
business of buying or selling in
commerce livestock, either on his own
account or as the employee or agent of
the vendor or purchaser.’’ 37 This section
is proposed under the authority of
section 303 of the P&S Act, requiring
market agencies and dealers to register
in such manner as the Secretary may
prescribe. A packer buyer is any person
regularly employed on salary, or other
comparable method of compensation, by
a packer to buy livestock for such
packer. Proposed new § 201.212(b)
would also prohibit packers from
entering into exclusive purchase
agreements with any dealer except those
dealers the packer has identified as its
packer buyers. This provision does not
eliminate exclusive arrangements, but
provides transparency by identifying the
dealer as a packer buyer for a specific
packer. Proposed new § 201.212(a) and
(b) would work in conjunction to
prevent apportioning territory by
independent dealers and packers. This
would open the market to other buyers,
increasing participation in the cow and
bull slaughter market and prevent
collusion between multiple packers
using one dealer as an exclusive agent
to manipulate prices.
GIPSA has also been informed
through discussion with livestock
producers that most livestock sellers
lack sufficient information on available
contract terms. To increase the amount
of information available that would
allow sellers to make informed business
decisions, GIPSA is proposing to add a
new § 201.213, which would require
packers, swine contractors, and live
poultry dealers to submit copies of
sample types of contracts to GIPSA and
GIPSA to make those samples available
for public viewing on its Web site.
Arbitration
With the Farm Bill, Congress
amended the P&S Act to add section
210, which addresses arbitration. The
Farm Bill requires that livestock
contracts and poultry growing
arrangements contain an option for
poultry growers and livestock producers
to accept or reject arbitration to settle
disputes. Many of these contracts
unilaterally drafted by packers, swine
contractors, or live poultry dealers
contain provisions limiting the legal
rights and remedies afforded by law to
poultry growers, swine production
contract growers, or livestock producers.
Section 210 of the P&S Act requires that
poultry growers, swine production
contract growers, or livestock producers
have the opportunity, prior to entering
37 Section
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a contract or poultry growing
arrangement, to decline to use
arbitration to resolve disputes arising
out of the contract or growing
arrangement. In accordance with section
210 of the P&S Act, under the proposed
regulation, the poultry grower, swine
production contract grower, or livestock
producer may decide later, after a
dispute arises, to resolve the dispute
using arbitration only if both parties
voluntarily agree to the use of
arbitration at that later time. Congress
directed the Secretary to promulgate
regulations to carry out section 210 of
the P&S Act, and to establish criteria to
consider when determining if the
arbitration process provided in a
contract provides a meaningful
opportunity for the poultry growers,
swine production contract growers, or
livestock producers to participate fully
in the arbitration process.
GIPSA has been informed by poultry
growers, swine production contract
growers, and livestock producers that
often the cost of the arbitration process
is prohibitive to resolving disputes
between a packer, swine contractor, or
live poultry dealer and a producer or
grower. For example, fees for arbitration
may need to be paid up front and can
be substantial. A poultry grower, swine
production contract grower, or livestock
producer may not have sufficient
resources available to pay the fees for
arbitration. Prior to enactment of the
Farm Bill, producers and growers with
contracts that required mandatory and
binding arbitration were often left with
no means available to resolve disputes
if they lacked sufficient resources to pay
arbitration fees. In proposing this new
rule, GIPSA relied on established fee
structures in employment arbitration
rules to determine appropriate fees to be
assessed to a producer or grower.
GIPSA also examined numerous
contracts offered, modified, amended,
renewed or extended after the effective
date of the Farm Bill to see how the
requirements of new section 210 of the
P&S Act were being implemented by
packers, swine contractors, or live
poultry dealers. GIPSA found little
consistency among the contracts. Some
contracts were very clear and allowed
the poultry growers, swine production
contract growers, or livestock producers
to easily recognize the choice regarding
arbitration. Other contracts created a
burdensome procedure for poultry
growers, swine production contract
growers, or livestock producers to make
the choice.
GIPSA is proposing to add a new
§ 201.219(b) to the regulations under the
P&S Act that would establish a uniform
means by which poultry growers, swine
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production contract growers, or
livestock producers are offered the
option to decline use of arbitration to
resolve disputes arising out of a
contract. Proposed new § 201.219(a)
would ensure that the poultry grower,
swine production contract grower, or
livestock producer has a meaningful
opportunity to participate in the
arbitration process. Proposed new
§ 201.219(a) would also provide criteria
the Secretary may consider in
evaluating the fairness of the arbitration
process. Among these criteria are:
Overall fairness in the procedures,
limits on costs to poultry growers, swine
production contract growers, or
livestock producers, reasonable time
limits for completion of the process,
reasonable access to discovery of
information by the growers or
producers, and a requirement that a
reasoned written opinion be issued by
the arbitrator.
Options Considered
The Farm Bill explicitly directs the
Secretary to promulgate certain
regulations. GIPSA also has exercised its
discretion and proposed other
regulations to further clarify the types of
conduct that violate the P&S Act. With
regard to both the mandatory and
discretionary regulatory provisions,
GIPSA considered alternative options.
Some of the alternatives considered
may have been less restrictive on the
regulated entity. For example, we
considered not requiring that regulated
entities maintain records that support
differential pricing or any deviation
from standard price or contract terms for
actions taken by packers, swine
contractors or live poultry dealers
involving poultry growers, swine
production contract growers, or
livestock producers. We also considered
requiring shorter notice periods for live
poultry dealers that suspend the
delivery of birds to poultry growers. We
determined, however, that these
alternatives would not improve fairness
and transparency in the marketplace,
nor would they foster trust and integrity
among buyers and sellers in the
livestock and poultry markets.
We considered proposing more
restrictive options. For instance, we
considered proposing prohibiting the
use of arbitration to resolve disputes.
That option, however, goes against a
popular method of dispute resolution in
other industries and is not in line with
the spirit of the Farm Bill.
GIPSA believes that these proposed
regulations best implement the purposes
of the P&S Act and the Farm Bill, and
will help protect producers and
consumers. GIPSA welcomes and will
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consider comments with regard to all
aspects of this proposed rulemaking.
Executive Order 12866 and Regulatory
Flexibility Act
This proposed rule has been
determined to be significant for the
purposes of Executive Order 12866 and,
therefore, has been reviewed by the
Office of Management and Budget. As
required by the Farm Bill, GIPSA is
proposing these regulations under the
P&S Act. Also, we have prepared an
economic analysis for this proposed
rule. The cost-benefit analysis of the
proposed regulations is initially
conducted on a section-by-section
analysis. Section 201.212, ‘‘Livestock
Purchasing Practices,’’ is subdivided
into two sub-section analyses. After the
section-by-section analyses and the
review of the Regulatory Flexibility Act
(RFA), a summary cost-benefit analysis
is presented.
Within the analysis, costs are
aggregated into three major types: (1)
Administrative costs, which include
items such as office work, postage,
filing, and copying; (2) costs of analysis,
such as a business conducting a
financial review; and (3) adjustment
costs, such as costs related to changing
business behavior to achieve
compliance with the proposed
regulation. Where applicable, GIPSA
also considered whether the regulations
would prohibit or deter efficient
conduct or significantly raise the costs
of production for packers, swine
contractors, live poultry dealers,
producers, or growers. Potential benefits
include gains from having market prices
for commodities or grower services
more accurately reflect supply-demand
conditions; from making decisions
based on more accurate price signals;
and from remedying anticompetitive
conduct and minimizing associated
dead weight losses and other
inefficiencies.
Proposed new § 201.2(l) through (t),
‘‘Terms Defined,’’ would contain
definitions for eight terms used in the
proposed regulations. These definitions
are of commonly used terms in the
industry and enter into the cost-benefit
analysis through the proposed
regulations.
Proposed new § 201.3(a) through (c),
‘‘Applicability of regulations in this
part,’’ would indicate that the proposed
regulations serve the intent of Congress
and similar to the previous section enter
into the cost-benefit analysis through
the proposed actionable regulations.
Proposed new § 201.94(b), would
require a regulated entity to maintain
records that support differential pricing
or any deviation from standard price or
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contract terms by an entity subject to
section 202 of the P&S Act and reflects
the routine record requirements of
section 401 of the P&S Act. The
proposed specifications amount to prior
indication of those circumstances in
which a regulated entity may expect to
maintain and make available specific
documentation. Document maintenance
and inspection would be required for
GIPSA’s regulatory and investigative
responsibilities and protected as
confidential documents under the P&S
Act. These business documents would
not be available to the public, consistent
with other current document
maintenance requirements of section
401 of the P&S Act. Increased industry
costs depend in part on the existing
level of record keeping a firm currently
maintains and the manner in which
those documents are maintained. Most
additional documents required under
the proposed regulation would be
related to the data used to complete
standardized financial statements, such
as income statements or balance sheet
statements, which are used for yearly
assessments of firm financial or
managerial performance. Generally, the
costs are of an administrative or of a
financial review nature. For example,
records supporting differential pricing
or any deviation from standard price or
contract terms may include projecting
anticipated incomes or losses, and
maintaining the documents presenting
those results. GIPSA believes that
potential benefits include ensuring that
decisions and actions are made based on
prices determined by supply-demand
conditions. An additional benefit is that
increased information transparency
reduces decision-making costs of such
transactions in the marketplace and
identifies who would best conduct these
transactions. GIPSA invites specific
comments on additional categories of
cost and benefit items as well as their
magnitudes.
Proposed new § 201.210(a) through
(c), ‘‘Unfair, unjustly discriminatory and
deceptive practices or devices,’’ would
list specific conduct, acts, or practices
that the agency believes to be unfair, or
constitutes an unjustly discriminatory,
or deceptive practice. The list is
consistent with GIPSA’s past
interpretations of section 202(a) of the
P&S Act.
To the extent that firms are engaged
in activity that GIPSA’s proposed
regulations would identify as a violation
of the P&S Act, firms will have
adjustment costs in ceasing the activity.
GIPSA, however, believes that these
types of instances are not widespread
and related costs are not anticipated as
large. Because these regulations merely
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clarify existing requirements, any such
costs must be incurred regardless of
whether the regulations are issued, and
are therefore not costs associated with
the regulations themselves.
Benefits from the regulation include
justifying and making known premium
and discount payments to ensure
transparent information to support
efficient allocation of resources by better
decision making. Two additional
benefits to the market place in general
are (1) establishing greater information
parity to facilitate contract evaluation
and negotiating power between the
packer, swine contractor, or live poultry
dealer and poultry growers, swine
production contract growers, or
livestock producers and (2) the
definition of entitlement claims
producers or growers have under
contract terms. GIPSA invites specific
comments on additional types of
categories of cost and benefit items as
well as their magnitudes.
Proposed new § 201.211, ‘‘Undue or
unreasonable preferences or advantages;
undue or unreasonable prejudice or
disadvantages,’’ would provide general
criteria that GIPSA would use to
determine if an act or practice
constitutes an undue or unreasonable
preference or advantage and undue or
unreasonable prejudice or disadvantage.
The proposed new regulation provides
general criteria for interpretation of
existing section 202(b) of the P&S Act.
These criteria are not designed to
prohibit instances where the
circumstances justify a price differential
to a poultry grower, swine production
contract grower, or livestock producer.
To the extent that firms were engaged
in activity that GIPSA may determine to
be a violation of the P&S Act based on
the criteria, firms will have an
adjustment cost in ceasing or desisting
in the activity. GIPSA, however,
believes that these types of instances are
not widespread and related costs are not
anticipated as large because these
regulations merely clarify existing
requirements, any such costs must be
incurred regardless of whether the
regulations are issued and are therefore
not costs associated with the regulations
themselves.
Benefits to the industry and the
market will arise from establishing
parity of negotiating power between the
packer, swine contractor, or live poultry
dealer and poultry growers, swine
production contract growers or livestock
producers by reducing the use of
monopsonistic power and the
accompanying dead weight losses.38
38 Nigel Key and Jim M. MacDonald discuss
evidence for the effect of concentration on grower
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GIPSA believes that potential benefits
are expected to exceed costs. GIPSA
invites specific comments on additional
categories of cost and benefit items as
well as their magnitudes.
Proposed new § 201.212, ‘‘Livestock
Purchasing Practices,’’ would identify
specific instances of industry conduct or
behavior that would constitute
violations under the proposed
§§ 201.210, ‘‘Unfair, unjustly
discriminatory and deceptive practices
or devices’’ and 201.211, ‘‘Undue or
unreasonable preferences or advantages;
undue or unreasonable prejudice or
disadvantages.’’ The cost-benefits of
these sections follow.39
Proposed new § 201.212(a) and (b)
would prohibit packers from limiting
sellers’ choices by excluding sellers who
meet the packers input needs, forming
unjustifiable exclusive agreements with
select sellers, and limiting packer-buyer
ties to a single packer. In general, the
prohibited behaviors are used to
apportion territory or restrain commerce
as a mechanism to exert market power
to effect lower seller prices. There are
about a dozen packers in the United
States that slaughter more than 100,000
head of cows and bulls and that
potentially could be affected by the
regulation. In a recent procurement
practice review, GIPSA identified 180
livestock auctions where one buyer
bought cull cattle for more than one
packer. Most of the packers reviewed
would not accept cattle from more than
one buyer at any one sale, regardless of
whether the buyer was a dealer,
commission agent, or employee.
To the extent that firms are engaged
in activities that these regulations
would specify as violations of the P&S
Act, the adjustment cost in ceasing the
activity will correspond to the inability
(or reduced ability) to exercise
monopsony power. GIPSA notes that
many of these activities are currently
considered violations of the P&S Act
and as such, will not require additional
cost to comply. To GIPSA’s knowledge,
compensation in ‘‘Local Monopsony Power in the
Market for Broilers? Evidence from a Farm Survey’’
selected paper American Agri. Economics Assn.
meeting Orlando, FL, July 27–29, 2008.
39 Marvin Hayenga, Ted Schroeder, and John
Lawrence provide an overview of the type of
concerns GIPSA has about the purchasing practices
of large packers in: ‘‘Churning out the Links:
Vertical Integration in the Beef and Pork Industries’’
https://www.choicesmagazine.org/2002-4/2002-403.pdf, accessed 7/1/2009. A similar article by Ted
Schroeder, James Mintert, and Eric Berg is ‘‘Valuing
Market Hogs: Information and Pricing Issues’’ https://
www.oznet.ksu.edu/library/agec2/samplers/
mf2644.asp, accessed 7/1/2009. An additional
reference is the Interim Livestock Meat Marketing
Study Report prepared for GIPSA by RTI,
International at: https://www.gipsa.usda.gov/GIPSA/
webapp?area=home&subject=lmp&topic=ir-mms.
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this activity is restricted to cull cattle
procurement, and GIPSA does not
believe that the costs associated with
ceasing to exclude other sellers will
result in a large cost to the industry. In
markets that will support additional
buyers, those new buyers will now be
able to purchase and sell cattle to
packers in situations where exclusive
agreements previously prevented them
from competing. Any cost of compliance
to packers and existing buyers would
thus be primarily due to increased
prices they might have to pay due to
more competitive markets. Benefits are
the prevention of monopsonistic
conduct and greater market access for
producers.
Proposed new § 201.212(c) would
prohibit packers from purchasing,
acquiring, or receiving swine or
livestock from another packer or packeraffiliated companies. Packer-to-packer
acquisitions have historically been
restricted to purchases from other
packers of ‘‘off’’ animals that did not fit
with the other packers’ specifications
but were procured in a larger lot of
animals. The practice was primarily
restricted to hog packers. Since 2006,
GIPSA has observed that the practice
has been expanded considerably and
GIPSA believes it to be contributing to
significant price distortions. In one
instance, the price distortion was almost
3 percent of the reported base price for
hogs. These price distortions in the
swine negotiated cash market have
larger price effects than just the cash
market as many contracts including
formula pricing often refer to the
reported base price. The cost of
compliance with the proposed
regulation would be localized to
packing companies and their affiliates,
which would be less able to exercise
their market power and pay lower, noncompetitive prices to producers. The
benefits of a more fair and competitive
market resulting from this rule are
expected to exceed the compliance costs
of the regulated entities. In
§ 201.212(c)(i), we are proposing that
packers be afforded the opportunity to
apply to the Administrator for a waiver
from the requirements of § 201.212(c) in
the event of catastrophic or natural
disaster or an emergency. The
recognition of exigent conditions (such
as fire damaging a plant resulting in a
packer needing to liquidate committed
procurement) and waivers based on
those conditions would minimize costs
related to packer-to-packer sales based
on efficiency reasons.
Proposed new § 201.213(a) through
(d), ‘‘Livestock and poultry contracts,’’
would act to increase transparency in
the marketplace regarding the value (fair
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compensation rate) of contracts. Total
administrative costs are estimated at
$25,000 per year for the affected parties
to submit contracts based on 0.25 hours
to prepare contracts; a per hour rate of
$25; and 995 poultry contract types,
2,751 swine contract types and 100
types of cattle contracts. GIPSA believes
the benefits to increased transparency
are expected to exceed its costs.40
Proposed new § 201.214,
‘‘Tournament system’’ would stipulate
that the lowest ranked poultry grower
for a live poultry dealer would receive
the base contract pay and all others
would receive premium(s) to allow for
better assessment of contract values at
the time of contract negotiation.41 As
this primarily involves actuarial
analysis and an adjustment in the
formula used to compute compensation
rates to poultry growers, it is not
anticipated to have costs beyond
administrative costs for changes to
contracts. GIPSA believes the benefits
would likely outweigh costs by
providing poultry growers with a more
consistent benchmark to compare
different contracts and the evaluation of
compensation terms for acceptability in
a particular contract. GIPSA invites
comments related to the cost of
conducting the actuarial analysis and
the benefits in allowing better
evaluation by poultry growers and/or
lenders of the expected income streams
from entering a poultry growing
contract.
Proposed new § 202.215(a) and (b),
‘‘Suspension of delivery of birds,’’ would
indicate a time requirement for
notifying a poultry grower prior to
suspension of delivery of birds,
including notification of the length of
suspension and date delivery will
resume. Proposed new § 201.215(c)
would allow a live poultry dealer to
apply for a waiver of the requirements
in § 201.215(a) and (b) in emergency or
other extraordinary circumstances. For
example, if a fire or other catastrophic
event occurs an immediate suspension
may be necessary. These provisions
delineate the private property rights
structure of a poultry grower by
allowing a poultry grower to have
adequate notice and make informed
40 Rachael E. Goodhue, Gordon C. Rausser, and
Leo K. Simon discuss poultry contracts and grower
compensation issues in: ‘‘Understanding Production
Contracts: Testing an Agency Theory Model’’
selected paper American Agric. Economics
meetings Salt Lake City, UT, May 15, 1998.
41 Armando Levy and Tomislav Vukina observe
the benefit of a fixed standard for comparing grower
performance within tournament systems in: ‘‘The
League Composition Effect in Tournaments with
Heterogeneous Players: An Empirical Analysis of
Broiler Contracts’’ in J. of Labor Economics, 2004,
pp. 353–377.
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decisions on the future use of resources,
which may include contract
termination.42 Costs related to the
regulation are related to potential prior
planning on the part of live poultry
dealers and actual notification. During
the normal course of the broiler
production cycle, GIPSA believes that a
live poultry dealer should know 90 days
ahead of time that they are going to
suspend delivery, meaning that the
regulations would not impose
additional costs by constraining a
dealer’s operational flexibility. The
benefits are related to allowing poultry
growers to make early decisions that
may include contract termination in the
event of suspension of bird delivery
prior to having to absorb costs related to
being idle. This benefit is tied to
ensuring that the live poultry dealer and
poultry growers have parity in their
contractual commitments. In general
economic terms, providing parity of
powers acts to reduce dead weight
losses from asymmetric market
positions. GIPSA invites comments on
how pervasive the practice is in the
industry and on the related magnitudes
of expected costs and benefits.
Proposed new § 201.216(a) through
(g), ‘‘Capital investments criteria,’’
would provide a partial list of criteria
that the Secretary would use when
determining whether requiring capital
investment in a poultry grower’s
operation is a violation of the P&S Act.
These provisions delineate the private
property rights structure of a grower or
producer by allowing a poultry grower
or swine production contract grower to
obtain adequate notice and make
informed decisions on the future use of
resources, which may include contract
termination. Costs related to the
regulation are related to potential prior
planning on the part of packers, live
poultry dealers or swine contractors and
actual notification. Additional costs
would be related to potential added
administrative costs of recordkeeping;
however, sound business practice
dictates that many of these incidents are
currently being documented. A
significant benefit is that the proposed
rule would reduce the occurrence of
‘‘hold-up’’ costs, i.e., the costs a grower
or producer is forced to absorb after
having made an initial fixed cost
42 Paul Milgrom and John Roberts discuss
property rights structures in ‘‘Economics,
Organization, and Management’’, 1992, Chap. 9,
Ownership and Property Rights. Note, for perfectly
efficient property rights structures resources must
be privately held and entitlements completely
specified. All benefits and costs of ownership
accrue to the owner. All property rights are
transferable from one owner to another in voluntary
exchange. And all rights from ownership are
enforceable and secure from involuntary seizure.
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investment.43 GIPSA believes benefits
are expected to be larger than costs, but
recognizes that, in general, this may
require a period of adjusting to a new
contractual relationship between
packers, swine contractors, and live
poultry dealers and poultry growers or
swine production contract growers. The
regulations allow for investments that
improve the cost of production or
improve health or safety. To the extent
the regulations prohibit investments
that do not improve production
performance; health or safety, there is
an increase in overall benefits. GIPSA
invites comments on the type and
magnitude of the costs and benefits of
this proposal.
Proposed new § 201.217(a), ‘‘Capital
investments requirements and
prohibitions,’’ would stipulate that
required capital investments must be
related to the effective life of the
contract via the amount of investment
recovered, designated at 80 percent of
the investment. The proposed regulation
protects poultry growers or swine
production contract growers from
opportunistic behavior by packers,
swine contractors, and live poultry
dealers by ensuring that the length of
the contract is sufficiently long to allow
the grower to recoup any capital
investments that were made as a
condition of entering into or continuing
a poultry growing arrangement or swine
production contract. GIPSA believes
that the benefit is that better decisions
on resource allocations that reduce
waste would be made after an initial
adjustment period by contractors.
Overall, benefits are expected to exceed
costs.
Proposed new regulation in
§ 201.217(b) would stipulate that a
packer, swine contractor, or live poultry
dealer cannot require additional capital
investment from a poultry grower or
swine production contract grower that
has given to the packer, swine
contractor, or live poultry dealer written
notice of intent to sell the grower’s or
producer’s farm, unless the requirement
was provided 90 days prior to the notice
of intent to sell the farm. The costs and
benefits of this are similar to
§ 201.217(a). The proposed new
regulations in § 201.217(c), (d) and (e)
stipulate that a packer, swine contractor,
or live poultry dealer cannot require
equipment upgrades to properly
43 The empirical evidence for hold-up costs is
discussed by T. Vukina and P. Leegomonchai in
‘‘Oligopsony Power, Assett Specificity, and Holdup: Evidence from the Broiler Industry’’, Amer. J. of
Agri. Economics, pp. 589–605, Aug., 2006. A
general discussion of the hold-up problem by Paul
Milgrom and John Roberts is found in ‘‘Economics,
Organization, and Management’’ pg. 136, 1992.
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working equipment without
compensation incentives, that the
density of poultry or swine cannot be
changed in response to requirements to
change equipment that is in good
working order, and that capital
investments cannot be obtained through
threat or intimidation. The costs and
benefits of this proposed regulation are
similar to the benefits in § 201.217(a).
GIPSA invites comments related to the
cost-benefit categories identified above
and the magnitudes of the costs and
benefits.
Proposed new § 201.218(a) through
(h), ‘‘Reasonable period of time to
remedy a breach of contract,’’ would
delineate rules for contract termination
to better delineate property rights by
allowing a grower to have adequate
notice for time to remedy and to make
informed decisions on the future use of
resources, which may include contract
termination. Costs related to the
regulation are related to potential prior
planning on the part of a packer, live
poultry dealer or swine contractor and
actual notification. Additional costs
would be related to potential added
administrative costs of record keeping;
however, sound business practice
dictates many of these incidents are
documented currently. GIPSA believes
that benefits are expected to be larger
than costs, but recognizes that, in
general, this may require a period of
adjusting to a new contractual
relationship between packers, swine
contractors, or live poultry dealers and
poultry growers or swine production
contract growers. GIPSA invites
comments on how pervasive potential
violations in the industry may be under
the proposed regulation and the related
magnitudes of expected costs and
benefits and if all types of cost-benefit
categories have been considered.
Proposed new § 201.219,
‘‘Arbitration,’’ is expected to enhance
property rights by establishing minimal
standards for the arbitration process.
These standards would provide a
meaningful opportunity for poultry
growers, swine production contract
growers, or livestock producers to fully
participate in arbitration; if that is the
dispute resolution mechanism they have
chosen in the agreement or contract.
Industry participants have indicated
that a benefit of GIPSA defining a bright
line position on the boundary between
appropriate and unfair as well as
reasonable and unreasonable conduct is
to help with the avoidance of costly
litigation that may be required to
discover that boundary on its own.
Additional costs would be related to
potential added administrative costs of
changes in contracts that would need to
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be made to reflect the proposed
regulation. GIPSA invites comments on
potential unforeseen consequences of
the proposed regulations, the related
magnitudes of expected costs and
benefits, and if all types of cost-benefit
categories have been considered.
The Small Business Administration
(SBA) defines small businesses by their
North American Industry Classification
System Codes.44 The affected entities
and corresponding size thresholds
under the proposed rule that would be
defined as a small business are as
follows: NAICS 12111, cattle producers;
NAICS 112210, hog producers and
swine contractors; and NAICS 112320
and 112330, broiler and turkey
producers if sales are less than $750,000
per year. Live poultry dealers, NAICS
31165, and hog and cattle slaughterers
are considered small businesses if they
have fewer than 500 employees.
The Census of Agriculture (Census)
indicates there are 727 swine
contractors. The Census provides the
number of head sold by size classes for
these entities, but not value of sales. In
order to estimate the size by the SBA
classification, the average value per
head for sales of all swine operations is
multiplied by production values for
firms in the Census size classes for
swine contractors. The estimates reveal
that about 300 entities had sales of less
than $750,000 in 2007 and would have
been classified as small businesses.
Additionally, there were 8,995 hog
producers with swine contracts, almost
all of these producers would have been
classified as small businesses.
GIPSA maintains data on cattle, hogs,
and sheep (collectively referred to as
‘livestock’) slaughterers and live poultry
dealers from the annual reports these
firms file with GIPSA. Currently, there
are 418 livestock slaughter firms and
140 live poultry dealers (all but 16 are
also poultry slaughterers and would be
considered poultry integrators) that
would be subject to the proposed
regulation. According to U.S. Census
data on County Business Patterns, there
were 42 livestock (other than poultry)
slaughter firms, and 64 poultry
slaughter firms, that had more than 500
employees in 2006. The difference
yields approximately 375 livestock
slaughter firms and 75 poultry
slaughters/integrators that have fewer
than 500 employees and would be
considered as small businesses that
would be subject to the proposed
regulation.
Another factor, however, that is
important in determining the economic
44 See: https://www.sba.gov/idc/groups/public/
documents/sba_homepage/serv_sstd_tablepdf.pdf
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effect of the regulations is the number
of contracts held by a firm. GIPSA
records for 2007 indicated there were
20,637 poultry production contracts in
effect, of which 13,216 or 64 percent
were held by the largest 6 poultry
integrators, and 95 percent (19,605)
were held by the largest 21 firms. These
21 firms are all in the large business
SBA category, whereas the 19,605
poultry growers holding the other end of
the contract are all small businesses by
SBA’s definitions. A similar situation
exists in hog production where the large
majority of hog producers hold contracts
with the very largest of the swine
contractors, which similar to poultry
tend to also be slaughterers. For
example, the 2007 Census indicates the
437 largest swine contractors (annual
sales greater than 5,000 head at an
average value of $5.9 million) accounted
for 99 percent of all sales by swine
contractors. The situation in general for
the nation’s 29,632 combined swine
producers and poultry growers
operating under contract is that they are
almost all small businesses with a
contract held by one of the top five very
large swine or poultry slaughters. The
SBA considers a grower or producer to
be a large business if their gross income
is $750,000 per year. To illustrate the
magnitude in size differences between a
large grower/producer and a swine
contractor/poultry dealer the gross sales
revenue difference is 1:23,000. To the
extent the proposed regulations impose
costs; these costs are expected to be
borne primarily by swine contractors,
live poultry dealers, and slaughterers.
The cost has two parts, a financial
review component and an
administrative cost. The costs of
conducting a financial review such as
projecting income or loss (to justify
volume discounts on procurement for
example) or an actuarial analysis (e.g.,
for tournament systems) are related to
the type of contracts. These costs would
increase with the number of contracts a
firm has, and in the majority of cases,
these are large business entities. For
those small business entities, the
proposed regulation is not expected to
be a significant expense. This will be
discussed in more detail below.
Five of the proposed regulations
(§ 201.214 on tournament
compensation, § 201.215 on suspension
of delivery of birds, § 201.216 and
§ 201.217 dealing with capital
investments, and § 201.218 on the time
to remedy contract breaches) are
specific to production contracts; and
four of the proposed regulations
(§ 201.219 arbitration, § 201.210 on
unfairness, § 201.211 on undue
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preferences, and § 201.213 on contract
presentation) deal with both marketing
and production contracts.
Summarizing the costs that the
proposed regulations related to
production contracts entail, these costs
are substantively borne by packers,
swine contractors, and live poultry
dealers. Those entities that are small
businesses in this group tend to have
few (1–3) production contracts, and
costs of submitting contracts to GIPSA
is estimated to be roughly $6.25 per
contract type, hence the costs to smaller
businesses would be minimal. In cases
involving records retention, the larger
costs tend to relate to the analysis in
instances where the firm will seek to
engage in an activity that requires
additional records retention. The
instances include where price
differentials or deviations from standard
price or contract terms are offered by
packers, live poultry dealers or swine
contractors. An average fee for this type
of analysis was estimated at $2,190.
GIPSA believes there will be an
estimated 70 analyses conducted per
year. The other administrative costs are
related to producer or grower
notification or potential contract
revisions and are also not expected to be
large for the small live poultry dealers
or swine contractor, or for the larger
firms with multiple contract types.
Although the marketing contracts are
not nearly as concentrated with
producers as production contracts, the
proposed regulations that relate to both
production and marketing contracts are
expected to have similar cost
distributions between producers/
growers and contractors/live poultry
dealers. That is, there are a larger
number of overall marketing contracts
in place as opposed to production
contracts for the affected entities. In
part, this is because marketing contracts
are widely used within the cattle and
swine markets, whereas production
contracts are used to a lesser degree.
Summarizing the costs that these
regulations would entail to the industry,
the entities affected would primarily be
live poultry dealers and cattle and hog
slaughterers. The costs related from
compliance with the records retention
(when needed), notification costs, and
contract revisions, also if applicable, are
similar to the sections related to the
production contracts for similar reasons
and also are not expected to be large to
the entities that are small businesses
subject to these sections of the proposed
regulations.
Proposed new § 201.212(a) through (c)
on livestock purchasing patterns entail
costs borne by packers that are not
related to production or marketing
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contracts. Proposed new § 201.212(a)
through (c) would likely apply only to
cow-bull slaughterers; to the extent they
are engaged in practices that would
require costs for them to alter
purchasing behavior. The costs from
changing behavior, if required, would
likely be the difference between any
lower price from reduced competition
in the input market purchases price and
the competitive market valued price.
The firms likely to be affected by the
increased costs are in the category of
larger packers and are considered to be
large businesses. For example, bonds
that these firms carry to cover a 2-day
period of livestock purchases are in
excess of $1 million. Proposed new
§ 201.212(c) would relate to packer-topacker purchases with costs primarily
borne by hog packers. Sales of hogs
either in substantive numbers or for
occasional ‘‘off-hogs,’’ which are hogs
purchased that may not fit a packer’s
specifications, are activities only the
larger packers are engaged in. The effect
of the proposed regulations on all small
businesses described in the analysis is
expected not to have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small business entities as
defined in the Regulatory Flexibility Act
(5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.).
Executive Order 12988
This proposed rule has been reviewed
under Executive Order 12988, Civil
Justice Reform. These actions are not
intended to have retroactive effect,
although in some instances they merely
reiterate GIPSA’s previous
interpretation of the P&S Act. This rule
would not pre-empt state or local laws,
regulations, or policies unless they
present an irreconcilable conflict with
this rule. There are no administrative
procedures that must be exhausted prior
to any judicial challenge to the
provisions of this rule. Nothing in this
proposed rule is intended to interfere
with a person’s right to enforce liability
against any person subject to the P&S
Act under authority granted in section
308 of the P&S Act.
Paperwork Reduction Act
In accordance with section 3507(d) of
the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.), this rule
announces that GIPSA is seeking
approval for a new information
collection. Upon OMB approval this
package will be merged with 0580–
0015.
Title: Implementation of Regulation
Required Under Title XI of the Food,
Conservation and Energy Act of 2008;
Undue and Unreasonable Preferences;
Unfair, Unjustly Discriminatory and
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Deceptive Practices; Dispute Resolution
under the Packers and Stockyards Act,
1921.
OMB Number: 0580–NEW.
Type of Request: New.
Methodology Used for Calculating Time
and Cost Estimates
Personnel costs were obtained from
the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics,
Table B–4 ‘‘Average Hourly Earnings’’
(August 7, 2009). Burden hour estimates
are based on previous GIPSA experience
with time required to maintain records,
complete forms, submit required
information, management review, and a
legal review for possible changes in
contracts or business practices.
Estimates are based on average data
situations of similar type and
complexity required during the course
of investigations conducted by GIPSA.
The estimates also reflect GIPSA’s
experience in assembling large amounts
of data.
Time Burden and Cost Estimate for
Records Retention (§ 201.94(b))
There is not expected to be a cost and
time burden on swine contractors as
their contracts are set based on a
production facility square footage basis.
Livestock packers have the largest
number of differentiating agreements
and these are almost exclusively with
the larger packers. Using the top 10
packers as the group affected, they have
an estimated average of 10 alternative
agreements, yielding a required 100
analyses for the packers. A per firm cost
of $2,190 per analysis is estimated based
on 30 hours preparation time at $25 per
hour administrative wages plus 40
hours at $36 per hour analyst wage. This
yields a total packer cost of $219,000.
The live poultry dealers affected are
estimated to number 14 (10 percent of
non processing live poultry dealers)
with an average number of
differentiating agreements of five per
firm to yield 70 poultry industry
analyses. This provides a cost of
$153,300 for the poultry industry or a
combined industry costs of $372,300 per
year.
Contract Submission Time Burden and
Cost Estimate (§ 201.213 Livestock and
Poultry Contracts)
The live poultry dealer business costs
are based on an estimated 199 live
poultry dealers. The estimated number
of poultry production agreements is
20,637 and the estimated number of
types of contracts is 995 (an average of
5 per entity). The total burden is 249
hours (995 × 0.25 hours committed).
This yields a total cost to the poultry
industry of $6,219 (249 hours × $25 per
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hour wage). The swine industry costs
are based on an estimate of 727 swine
contractors and 35 swine packers with
55 plants. The estimated number of
swine contractor production agreements
is 2,181 (3 per contractor). The
estimated number of types of marketing
agreements is 570 (an average of 10.3
per packing plant). Together this is
2,751 swine reportable contracts. This
yields a total burden of 666 hours (2,751
× 0.25 committed hours). Yielding a
total swine industry cost of $17,194 (688
hours × $25 per hour wage). The cattle
industry costs are based on 4,157
markets and dealers, 259 packers, but an
estimate of only 100 written marketing
agreements types across all the entities.
This yields an hourly industry burden
of 25 hours (100 × 0.25 committed
hours). For a total cattle industry cost of
$626 (25 hours committed × $25 hour
wage rate). The combined poultry,
swine, and cattle industry costs for
contract submission are estimated at
$24,038 per year.
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with PROPOSALS
Time Burden and Cost Estimate for
Suspension of Delivery of Birds
(§ 201.215)
The number of grower contracts is
approximately 20,000. Taking 10
percent of the contracts as the annual
rate of delivered notices yields 2,000
notices delivered per year. Multiplying
the 2,000 notices by an average time
burden of 0.25 hours to provide notice
at a wage rate of $25 per hour yields a
cost of $12,500 per year to meet this
requirement.
Time Burden and Cost Estimate for
Reasonable Period of Time To Remedy
a Contract Breach (§ 201.218)
The number of poultry grower and
swine contracts affected is
approximately 24,000. Using one
percent of the contracts as the annual
rate of contract breaches needing
notification yields 240 notices per year.
Applying an average time burden of 1
hour to provide notice at a wage rate of
$25 per hour yields a cost of $6,000 per
year to meet this requirement.
As required by the Paperwork
Reduction Act (44 U.S.C. 350(c)(2)(A))
and it’s implementing regulations (5
CFR 1320.8(d)(1)(i)), we specifically
request comments on the following:
1. Whether the proposed collection of
information is necessary for the proper
performance of the functions of the
agency, including whether the
information will have practical utility;
2. The accuracy of the agency’s
estimate of the burden of the proposed
collection of information, including the
validity of the methodology and
assumptions used;
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3. Ways to enhance the quality,
utility, and clarity of the information to
be collected;
4. Ways to minimize the burden on
the collection of information on those
who are to respond, including through
the use of appropriate automated
electronic, mechanical, or other
technological collection techniques or
other forms of information technology;
and
5. The cost to small businesses for
records retention (i.e. number of price
differentials offered) and submitting
different types of contracts.
All responses to this rule will be
summarized and included in the request
for the Office of Management and
Budget approval. All comments will
also become a matter of public record.
E-Government Act Compliance
GIPSA is committed to complying
with the E-Government Act, to promote
the use of the internet and other
information technologies to provide
increased opportunities for citizen
access to Government information and
services, and for other purposes.
List of Subjects in 9 CFR Part 201
Confidential business information,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Stockyards, Surety bonds,
Trade practices.
For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, we propose to amend 9 CFR
part 201 as follows:
PART 201—REGULATIONS UNDER
THE PACKERS AND STOCKYARDS
ACT
1. The authority citation for part 201
is revised to read as follows:
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 181–229, 229c.
2. Section 201.2 is amended by
adding new paragraphs (l) through (u) to
read as follows:
§ 201.2
Terms defined.
*
*
*
*
*
(l) Tournament system means any
method used by a live poultry dealer to
calculate some portion of the payment
made to poultry growers based on a
comparison of one poultry grower’s
performance with that of one or more
other poultry grower’s performance.
(m) Principal part of performance
means the raising of, and caring for
livestock or poultry, when used in
connection with a livestock or poultry
contract.
(n) Capital investment means any
initial capital investment of $25,000 or
more paid by a grower for growing and
raising facilities. Such term includes the
total cost of equipment, goods,
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professional services and labor utilized,
plus any interest incurred and any
increased labor and operating costs that
are directly attributable to the capital
investment.
(o) Additional capital investment
means a combined amount of $25,000 or
more paid by a poultry grower or swine
production contract grower beyond the
initial investment for growing and
raising facilities by the grower to make
a capital improvement to the raising or
growing facility. Such term includes the
total cost of equipment, goods,
professional services and labor utilized,
plus any interest incurred and any
increased labor and operating costs that
are directly attributable to the capital
investment. The term does not include
costs of maintenance or repair.
(p) Suspension of delivery of birds
means the failure of a live poultry dealer
to deliver a new poultry flock before the
date payment is due for a poultry
grower’s previous flock under section
410 of the Act.
(q) Forward contract means fixed
price or basis contract, oral or written,
for the purchase of a specified quantity,
or a lot or lots of livestock, where
delivery will occur more than 14 days
after the agreement is entered. Price may
be determined when an agreement is
entered (fixed price), or provisions may
be made for the price to be determined
at a later date, for example, based on
prices on the futures market (basis
contract) or a publicly reported price.
(r) Marketing agreement means an
agreement to purchase livestock at a
future date with the price to be
determined at or after the time of
slaughter, where delivery will occur
more than 14 days after the agreement
is entered. A marketing agreement (also
known as a marketing contract) is an
ongoing (open-ended or for a fixed
period of time) oral or written
agreement in which a seller agrees to
sell all or part of its slaughter livestock
to a packer when the livestock are ready
for slaughter, and the packer agrees to
purchase the livestock, with price
determined by an agreed formula. Terms
of sale are not negotiated for individual
lots of livestock within the agreement
when livestock are purchased through a
marketing agreement. A marketing
agreement may include a commitment
for the seller to deliver a specified
number of livestock each week, month,
etc., or may allow the seller
considerable discretion in the number of
livestock delivered under the
agreement.
(s) Production contract means a
contract that details specific poultry
grower or swine production contract
grower and packer, swine contractor or
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live poultry dealer responsibilities for
production inputs and practices, as well
as a mechanism for determining
payment.
(t) A competitive injury occurs when
conduct distorts competition in the
market channel or marketplace.
(u) Likelihood of competitive injury
means there is a reasonable basis to
believe that a competitive injury is
likely to occur in the market channel or
marketplace. It includes but is not
limited to situations in which a packer,
swine contractor, or live poultry dealer
raises rivals’ costs; improperly
forecloses competition in a large share
of the market through exclusive dealing;
restrains competition among packers,
swine contractors, or live poultry
dealers; or represents a misuse of market
power to distort competition among
other packers, swine contractors, or live
poultry dealers. It also includes
situations in which a packer, swine
contractor, or live poultry dealer
wrongfully depresses prices paid to a
producer or grower below market value,
or impairs a producer’s or grower’s
ability to compete with other producers
or growers or to impair a producer’s or
grower’s ability to receive the
reasonable expected full economic value
from a transaction in the market channel
or marketplace.
§§ 201.3 and 201.4 [Redesignated as
§§ 201.4 and 201.5]
3. Sections 201.3 and 201.4 are
redesignated as §§ 201.4 and 201.5
respectively.
4. A new § 201.3 is added to read as
follows:
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with PROPOSALS
§ 201.3
part.
Applicability of regulations in this
(a) Applicability to live poultry
dealers. The regulations in this part
when applicable to live poultry dealers
shall apply to all stages of a live poultry
dealer’s poultry production, including
pullets, laying hens, breeders and
broilers, excluding hens that only
produce table eggs.
(b) Applicability to contracts. The
regulations in this part, when
referencing contracts or agreements
generally, apply to all swine production
contracts, poultry growing arrangements
and livestock production and marketing
contracts, including but not limited to,
formula and forward contracts.
(c) Scope of Sections 202(a) and (b) of
the Act. The appropriate application of
section 202(a) and (b) of the Act
depends on the nature and
circumstances of the challenged
conduct. A finding that the challenged
act or practice adversely affects or is
likely to adversely affect competition is
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not necessary in all cases. Conduct can
be found to violate section 202(a)
and/or (b) of the Act without a finding
of harm or likely harm to competition.
(d) Effective dates. The regulations in
this part, when governing or affecting
contracts, shall apply to any poultry
growing arrangement, swine production
contract or livestock marketing or
production contract entered into,
amended, altered, modified, renewed or
extended after [EFFECTIVE DATE OF
FINAL RULE].
5. Section 201.94 is amended by
redesignating the existing undesignated
text as paragraph (a) and by adding a
new paragraph (b) to read as follows::
§ 201.94 Information as to business;
furnishing of by packers, swine contractors,
live poultry dealers, stockyard owners,
market agencies, and dealers; records
retention.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) A packer, swine contractor or live
poultry dealer must maintain written
records that provide justification for
differential pricing or any deviation
from standard price or contract terms
offered to poultry growers, swine
production contract growers, or
livestock producers.
6. New §§ 201.210 through 201.219
are added to read as follows:
*
*
*
*
*
Sec.
201.210 Unfair, unjustly discriminatory and
deceptive practices or devices.
201.211 Undue or unreasonable preferences
or advantages; undue or unreasonable
prejudice or disadvantages.
201.212 Livestock purchasing practices.
201.213 Livestock and poultry contracts.
201.214 Tournament systems.
201.215 Suspension of delivery of birds.
201.216 Capital investments criteria.
201.217 Capital investments requirements
and prohibitions.
201.218 Reasonable period of time to
remedy a breach of contract.
201.219 Arbitration.
*
*
*
*
*
§ 201.210 Unfair, unjustly discriminatory
and deceptive practices or devices.
(a) The term ‘‘unfair, unjustly
discriminatory and deceptive practice or
device’’ as it is used in § 202 of the Act,
includes, but is not limited to:
(1) An unjustified material breach of
a contractual duty, express or implied,
or an action or omission that a
reasonable person would consider
unscrupulous, deceitful or in bad faith
in connection with any transaction in or
contract involving the production,
maintenance, marketing or sale of
livestock or poultry.
(2) A retaliatory action or omission by
a packer, swine contractor, or live
poultry dealer in response to the lawful
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expression, spoken or written,
association, or action of a poultry
grower, livestock producer or swine
production contract grower; a retaliatory
action includes but is not limited to
coercion, intimidation, or disadvantage
to any producer or grower in an
execution, termination, extension or
renewal of a contract involving livestock
or poultry;
(3) A refusal to provide to a contract
poultry grower or swine production
contract grower, upon request, the
statistical information and data used to
determine compensation paid to the
contract grower or producer under a
production contract, including, but not
limited to, feed conversion rates, feed
analysis, origination and breeder
history;
(4) An action or attempt to limit by
contract a poultry grower’s, swine
production contract grower’s, or
livestock producer’s legal rights and
remedies afforded by law, including, but
not limited to the following:
(i) The right of a trial by jury (except
when arbitration has been voluntarily
agreed to);
(ii) The right to all damages available
under the law;
(iii) Rights available under
bankruptcy law;
(iv) The authority of the judge or jury
to award attorney fees to the appropriate
party; or
(v) A requirement that a trial or
arbitration be held in a location other
than the location where the principal
part of the performance of the
arrangement or contract occurs;
(5) Paying a premium or applying a
discount on the swine production
contract grower’s payment or the
purchase price received by the livestock
producer from the sale of livestock
without documenting the reason(s) and
substantiating the revenue and cost
justification associated with the
premium or discount;
(6) Termination of a poultry growing
arrangement or swine production
contract with no basis other than the
allegation by the packer, swine
contractor, live poultry dealer or other
person that the poultry grower or swine
production contract grower failed to
comply with an applicable law, rule or
regulation. If the live poultry dealer or
swine contractor believes that a poultry
grower or swine producer is in
violation, the live poultry dealer or
swine contractor must immediately
report the alleged violation to the
relevant law enforcement authorities if
they wish to use this alleged violation
as grounds for termination.
(7) A representation, omission, or
practice that is fraudulent or likely to
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mislead a reasonable poultry grower,
swine production contract grower, or
livestock producer, swine contract
producer or livestock producer
regarding a material condition or a term
in a contract or business transaction.
(8) Any act that causes competitive
injury or creates a likelihood of
competitive injury.
§ 201.211 Undue or unreasonable
preferences or advantages; undue or
unreasonable prejudice or disadvantages.
The Secretary may consider the
following criteria, among others, in
determining if an undue or
unreasonable preference or advantage,
or an undue or unreasonable prejudice
or disadvantage, has occurred in
violation of the Act:
(a) Whether contract terms based on
number, volume or other condition, or
contracts with price determined in
whole or in part by the volume of
livestock sold are made available to all
poultry growers, livestock producers or
swine production contract growers who
individually or collectively meet the
conditions set by the contract.
(b) Whether price premiums based on
standards for product quality, time of
delivery and production methods are
offered in a manner that does not
discriminate against a producer or group
of producers that can meet the same
standards.
(c) Whether information regarding
acquiring, handling, processing, and
quality of livestock is disclosed to all
producers when it is disclosed to one or
more producers.
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with PROPOSALS
§ 201.212
Livestock purchasing practices.
(a) Dealers who operate as packer
buyers must purchase livestock only for
the packer that identifies that dealer as
its packer buyer.
(b) A packer may not enter into an
exclusive arrangement with a dealer
except those dealers the packer has
identified as its packer buyers and
reported to the Secretary on approved
forms.
(c) A packer shall not purchase,
acquire, or receive livestock from
another packer or another packer’s
affiliated companies, including but not
limited to, the other packer’s parent
company and wholly owned
subsidiaries of the packer or its parent
company.
(d) A packer may apply to the
Administrator for a waiver of
§ 201.212(c) in case of a catastrophic or
natural disaster, or other emergency.
§ 201.213
Livestock and poultry contracts.
(a) Packers and swine contractors
purchasing livestock under a marketing
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arrangement including, but not limited
to, forward contracts, formula contracts,
production contracts or other marketing
agreements, and live poultry dealers
obtaining poultry by purchase or under
a poultry growing arrangement must
submit a sample copy of each unique
type of contract or agreement to GIPSA.
(b) Sample copies of marketing
arrangements and poultry growing
arrangements must be submitted within
10 business days of entering into the
agreement.
(c) Packers, swine contractors and live
poultry dealers must notify GIPSA
within 10 business days when a sample
contract submitted to GIPSA is no
longer in use.
(d) Because it is in the public interest
that sample copies of each unique
contract be made public, except for
provisions containing trade secrets,
confidential business information and
personally identifiable information,
GIPSA may post on its Web site a copy
of each unique contract it receives.
Provisions containing trade secrets,
confidential business information and
personally identifiable information will
not be made public.
(e) Packers, swine contractors and live
poultry dealers must identify
confidential business information when
submitting contracts to GIPSA.
§ 201.214
Tournament systems.
(a) If a live poultry dealer is paying
growers on a tournament system, all
growers raising the same type and kind
of poultry must receive the same base
pay. No live poultry dealer shall offer a
poultry growing arrangement containing
provisions that decrease or reduce
grower compensation below the base
pay amount.
(b) Live poultry dealers must rank
growers in settlement groups with other
growers with like house types.
§ 201.215
Suspension of delivery of birds.
The criteria the Secretary may
consider when determining whether or
not reasonable notice has been given for
suspension of delivery of birds include,
but are not limited to:
(a) Whether a live poultry dealer has
provided to a poultry grower written
notice of its intent to suspend the
delivery of birds under a poultry
growing arrangement at least 90 days
prior to the date it intends to suspend
delivery of birds;
(b) Whether written notice under
paragraph (a) in this section has stated
the reason for the suspension of
delivery, the length of the suspension of
delivery, and the date the delivery of
birds will resume.
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(c) A live poultry dealer may apply to
the Administrator for a waiver of
§ 201.215(a) in case of a catastrophic or
natural disaster, or other emergency.
§ 201.216
Capital investments criteria.
The criteria the Secretary may
consider when determining whether a
requirement that a poultry grower or
swine production contract grower make
additional capital investments over the
life of a production contract or growing
arrangement constitutes an unfair
practice in violation of the Act include,
but are not limited to:
(a) Whether a poultry grower or swine
production contract grower is provided
discretion to decide against the capital
investment requirement;
(b) Whether the investment is the
result of coercion, retaliation or threats
of coercion or retaliation by the packer,
swine contractor or live poultry dealer;
(c) Whether the packer, swine
contractor or live poultry dealer intends
to substantially reduce or end
operations at the slaughter plant or
processing facility that processes the
poultry grower’s or swine production
contract grower’s poultry or swine, or if
the packer, swine contractor or live
poultry dealer in fact substantially
reduces or ends operations at the
slaughter plant or processing facility
within 12 months of requiring the
additional capital investment;
(d) A live poultry dealer may apply to
the Administrator for a waiver of
§ 201.216(c) in case of a catastrophic or
natural disaster, or other emergency;
(e) Whether the packer, swine
contractor, or live poultry dealer
required some poultry growers or swine
production contract growers to make
additional capital investments, but did
not require other similarly situated
poultry growers or swine production
contract growers to make the same
additional capital investments;
(f) The age of, and recent upgrades to
or capital investments in, the poultry
grower’s or swine production contract
grower’s operations;
(g) Whether the cost of the required
capital investments can reasonably be
expected to be recouped by the poultry
grower or swine production contract
grower; and
(h) Whether the poultry grower or
swine production contract grower was
given a reasonable time period to
implement the required capital
investments.
§ 201.217 Capital investments
requirements and prohibitions.
(a) Any requirement that a poultry
grower or swine production contract
grower make initial or additional capital
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investments as a condition to enter into
or continue a growing arrangement or
production contract must be
accompanied by a contract duration of
a sufficient period of time for the
poultry grower or swine production
contract grower to recoup 80 percent of
the cost of the required capital
investment. These contracts would still
be subject to the contractual rights
dealing with growers and producer
misconduct.
(b) No packer, swine contractor, or
live poultry dealer may require an
additional capital investment from a
poultry grower or swine production
contract grower who has given to the
packer, swine contractor, or live poultry
dealer written notice of intent to sell the
grower’s or producer’s farm and
facilities, unless notice of such
additional capital investment was given
at least 90 days prior to the producer’s
or grower’s notice of intent to sell.
(c) No packer, swine contractor, or
live poultry dealer shall require
equipment changes on equipment
previously approved and accepted by
the packer, swine contractor, or live
poultry dealer if existing equipment is
in good working order unless the
packer, swine contractor, or live poultry
dealer provides adequate compensation
incentives to the poultry grower or
swine production contract grower.
(d) No packer, swine contractor, or
live poultry dealer shall reduce the
number of birds/swine placed with a
poultry grower or swine production
contract grower or terminate a growing
arrangement or production contract
based solely on the failure of a grower
or producer to make equipment changes
so long as existing equipment is in good
working order.
(e) A packer, swine contractor, or live
poultry dealer shall not engage in
conduct or use a device with the intent
or having the effect of limiting the
ability of the poultry grower or swine
production contract grower to
voluntarily choose to enter into a
growing arrangement, production
contract or an agreement to make
additional capital investments. Such
conduct or device includes, but is not
limited to, use of intimidation, threats,
false or misleading information,
statements or data, or the concealment
of any material information, statements
or data.
§ 201.218 Reasonable period of time to
remedy a breach of contract.
The criteria the Secretary may
consider when determining whether a
packer, swine contractor or live poultry
dealer has provided a poultry grower or
swine production contract grower a
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reasonable period of time to remedy a
breach of contract that could lead to
contract termination include, but are not
limited to:
(a) Whether the packer, swine
contractor or live poultry dealer that
intends to take an adverse action against
a poultry grower or swine production
contract grower based on a breach of
contract by the grower or producer,
including termination of a contract, has
provided written notice of the breach of
contract to the producer or grower upon
initial discovery of a breach of contract.
(b) And whether the notice includes
the following:
(1) A description of the act or
omission believed to constitute a breach
of contract, including identification of
the section of the contract believed to be
breached;
(2) When the breach occurred;
(3) The means by which the poultry
grower or swine production contract
grower can satisfactorily remedy the
breach, if possible, based on the nature
of the breach; and
(4) A date that provides a reasonable
time, based on the nature of the breach,
by which the breach must be remedied.
(c) Whether, when establishing the
date by which a breach should be
remedied, the packer, swine contractor
or live poultry dealer considered the
poultry grower’s or swine production
contract grower’s ongoing
responsibilities related to poultry or
swine under their care and reasonable
time periods related to raising and
caring for the poultry or swine.
(d) Whether the written notice affords
the poultry grower or swine production
contract grower an opportunity to rebut
in writing an allegation that there has
been a breach of contract, and whether
sufficient time from the date of the
notice of the alleged breach is provided
for submitting the rebuttal. Generally,
this will be about 14 days.
(e) Whether attempts are made to
assert that the poultry grower or swine
production contract grower waived their
claims by failing to meet unreasonable
time restrictions.
(f) Whether the packer, swine
contractor or live poultry dealer
attempts to terminate a growing
arrangement or production contract if
the poultry grower’s or swine
production contract grower’s breach is
remedied within the time provided in
the notice, or by another mutually
agreed upon date.
(g) Whether the packer, swine
contractor or live poultry dealer gives
notice of such breach or failure to act
within 90 days of finding the breach or
failure. Such failure will generally be
considered to be a waiver of any
PO 00000
Frm 00016
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
35353
objections by the packer, swine
contractor or live poultry dealer to the
breach and to its legal claims based on
that breach.
(h) Whether the packer, swine
contractor or live poultry dealer
terminates a swine production contract
or poultry growing arrangement because
of a dispute or breach that is submitted
for arbitration, in which the poultry
grower or swine production contract
grower prevails in the arbitration
proceeding.
§ 201.219
Arbitration.
(a) The criteria the Secretary may
consider when determining whether the
arbitration process provided in a
contract provides a meaningful
opportunity for the poultry grower,
livestock producer, or swine production
contract grower to participate fully in
the arbitration process include, but are
not limited to:
(1) Whether the contract discloses
sufficient information in bold,
conspicuous print describing all the cost
of arbitration to be paid by the poultry
grower, swine production contract
grower, or livestock producer, the
arbitration process and any limitations
on legal rights and remedies in such a
manner as to allow the grower or
producer to make an informed decision
on whether to elect arbitration for
dispute resolution.
(2) Whether impartial and unbiased
qualified neutrals shall be used as
arbitrators;
(3) Whether the cost of arbitration to
the poultry grower, livestock producer
or swine production contract grower is
reasonable compared to the costs found
in a typical employer/employee
arbitration process. Cost of arbitration
includes, but is not limited to,
administrative fees, filing fees, and
arbitrator deposits and fees;
(4) Whether there are reasonable time
limits in the entire arbitration process
and any process or procedure resulting
from the outcome of the arbitration;
(5) Whether there are fair procedures
that comply with the terms of the
Federal Arbitration Act;
(6) Whether the poultry grower,
livestock producer, or swine production
contract grower is provided access to
and opportunity to engage in reasonable
discovery of information held by the
packer, swine contractor or live poultry
dealer;
(7) Whether the arbitration is used
only to resolve disputes relevant to the
contractual obligations of the parties;
and
(8) Whether a reasoned, written
opinion based on applicable law, legal
E:\FR\FM\22JNP1.SGM
22JNP1
35354
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 119 / Tuesday, June 22, 2010 / Proposed Rules
principles and precedent for the award
is required to be provided to the parties;
(b) The language described in
paragraph (a)(1) of this section shall
immediately precede the following
language, which must appear as follows
on the signature page of the contract in
bold conspicuous print:
Right to Decline Arbitration. A
poultry grower, livestock producer or
swine production contract grower has
the right to decline to be bound by the
arbitration provision set forth in this
agreement. A poultry grower, livestock
producer or swine production contract
grower shall indicate whether or not it
desires to be bound by the arbitration
provision by signing one of the
following statements:
I decline to be bound by the
arbitration provisions set forth in this
Agreement ________________________
________________
I accept the arbitration provisions as
set forth in this Agreement ___________
_____________________________
Failure to choose an option by signing
one of the above renders the contract
void.
J. Dudley Butler,
Administrator, Grain Inspection, Packers and
Stockyards Administration.
[FR Doc. 2010–14875 Filed 6–18–10; 11:15 am]
BILLING CODE 3410–KD–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Aviation Administration
14 CFR Part 39
[Docket No. FAA–2009–0555; Directorate
Identifier 2009–NE–18–AD]
RIN 2120–AA64
Airworthiness Directives; Honeywell
International Inc. TPE331–10 and
TPE331–11 Series Turboprop Engines
AGENCY: Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA), DOT.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking
(NPRM).
The FAA proposes to
supersede an existing airworthiness
directive (AD) for Honeywell
International Inc. TPE331–10 and
TPE331–11 series turboprop engines.
That AD currently requires removing
certain first stage turbine disks from
service. This proposed AD would
require the same actions, and would
also require performing fluorescent
penetrant inspections (FPI) and eddy
current inspections (ECI) on certain first
stage turbine disks that have a serial
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with PROPOSALS
SUMMARY:
VerDate Mar<15>2010
16:10 Jun 21, 2010
Jkt 220001
number (S/N) listed in this proposed
AD. This proposed AD results from our
determination that we need to expand
the affected population to include other
disks from the same heat lot as the
failed first stage turbine disk, and that
certain inspections are also required.
We are proposing this AD to prevent
uncontained failure of the first stage
turbine disk and damage to the airplane.
DATES: We must receive any comments
on this proposed AD by August 23,
2010.
ADDRESSES: Use one of the following
addresses to comment on this proposed
AD.
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: Go to
https://www.regulations.gov and follow
the instructions for sending your
comments electronically.
• Mail: Docket Management Facility,
U.S. Department of Transportation, 1200
New Jersey Avenue, SE., West Building
Ground Floor, Room W12–140,
Washington, DC 20590–0001.
• Hand Delivery: Deliver to Mail
address above between 9 a.m. and 5
p.m., Monday through Friday, except
Federal holidays.
• Fax: (202) 493–2251.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Joseph Costa, Aerospace Engineer, Los
Angeles Aircraft Certification Office,
FAA, Transport Airplane Directorate,
3960 Paramount Blvd., Lakewood, CA
90712–4137; e-mail:
joseph.costa@faa.gov; telephone (562)
627–5246; fax (562) 627–5210.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Comments Invited
We invite you to send any written
relevant data, views, or arguments
regarding this proposal. Send your
comments to an address listed under
ADDRESSES. Include ‘‘Docket No. FAA–
2009–0555; Directorate Identifier 2009–
NE–18–AD’’ in the subject line of your
comments. We specifically invite
comments on the overall regulatory,
economic, environmental, and energy
aspects of the proposed AD. We will
consider all comments received by the
closing date and may amend the
proposed AD in light of those
comments.
We will post all comments we
receive, without change, to https://
www.regulations.gov, including any
personal information you provide. We
will also post a report summarizing each
substantive verbal contact with FAA
personnel concerning this proposed AD.
Using the search function of the Web
site, anyone can find and read the
comments in any of our dockets,
including, if provided, the name of the
individual who sent the comment (or
PO 00000
Frm 00017
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
signed the comment on behalf of an
association, business, labor union, etc.).
You may review the DOT’s complete
Privacy Act Statement in the Federal
Register published on April 11, 2000
(65 FR 19477–78).
Examining the AD Docket
You may examine the AD docket on
the Internet at https://
www.regulations.gov; or in person at the
Docket Operations office between 9 a.m.
and 5 p.m., Monday through Friday,
except Federal holidays. The AD docket
contains this proposed AD, the
regulatory evaluation, any comments
received, and other information. The
street address for the Docket Operations
office (telephone (800) 647–5527) is the
same as the Mail address provided in
the ADDRESSES section. Comments will
be available in the AD docket shortly
after receipt.
Discussion
The FAA proposes to amend 14 CFR
part 39 by superseding AD 2009–17–05,
Amendment 39–15996 (74 FR 41327,
August 17, 2009). That AD requires
removal from service of first stage
turbine disks, P/Ns 3101520–1 and
3107079–1, serial numbers 2–03501–
2299, 2–03501–2300, 2–03501–2301, 2–
03501–2302, and 2–03501–2304, within
25 flight hours or 25 cycles-in-service
(CIS) after the effective date of this AD,
whichever occurs first. That AD was the
result of a report of an uncontained
failure of a first stage turbine disk that
had a metallurgical defect. That
condition, if not corrected, could result
in uncontained failure of the first stage
turbine disk and damage to the airplane.
Actions Since AD 2009–17–05 was
Issued
Since that AD was issued, we
determined that up to 360 other turbine
disks have been produced from the
same heat lot as the failed turbine disk
and might have similar inclusions.
These inclusions can result in cracks
that could result in an uncontained
separation of a turbine disks.
Relevant Service Information
We have reviewed and approved the
technical contents of Honeywell
International Inc. Alert Service Bulletin
TPE331–72–A2156, dated December 2,
2008, that describes S/Ns of the affected
turbine disks and procedures for initial
and repetitive FPI and ECI of the first
stage turbine disk.
FAA’s Determination and Requirements
of the Proposed AD
We have evaluated all pertinent
information and identified an unsafe
E:\FR\FM\22JNP1.SGM
22JNP1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 75, Number 119 (Tuesday, June 22, 2010)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 35338-35354]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2010-14875]
========================================================================
Proposed Rules
Federal Register
________________________________________________________________________
This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER contains notices to the public of
the proposed issuance of rules and regulations. The purpose of these
notices is to give interested persons an opportunity to participate in
the rule making prior to the adoption of the final rules.
========================================================================
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 119 / Tuesday, June 22, 2010 /
Proposed Rules
[[Page 35338]]
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Grain Inspection, Packers and Stockyards Administration
9 CFR Part 201
RIN 0580-AB07
Implementation of Regulations Required Under Title XI of the
Food, Conservation and Energy Act of 2008; Conduct in Violation of the
Act
AGENCY: Grain Inspection, Packers and Stockyards Administration, USDA.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Department of Agriculture (USDA), Grain Inspection,
Packers and Stockyards Administration (GIPSA) is proposing to add
several new sections to the regulations under the Packers and
Stockyards Act, 1921, as amended and supplemented (P&S Act).
The new regulations that GIPSA is proposing would describe and
clarify conduct that violates the P&S Act and allow for more effective
and efficient enforcement by GIPSA. The proposed regulations would
clarify conditions for industry compliance with the P&S Act and provide
for a fairer market place.
DATES: We will consider comments we receive by August 23, 2010.
ADDRESSES: We invite you to submit comments on this proposed rule. You
may submit comments by any of the following methods:
E-mail: comments.gipsa@usda.gov.
Mail: Tess Butler, GIPSA, USDA, 1400 Independence Avenue,
SW., Room 1643-S, Washington, DC 20250-3604.
Fax: (202) 690-2173.
Hand Delivery or Courier: Tess Butler, GIPSA, USDA, 1400
Independence Avenue, SW., Room 1643-S, Washington, DC 20250-3604.
Federal e-Rulemaking Portal: https://www.regulation.gov.
Follow the on-line instructions for submitting comments.
Instructions: All comments will become a matter of public record
and should be identified as ``Farm Bill Comments,'' making reference to
the date and page number of this issue of the Federal Register.
Comments will be available for public inspection at https://www.regulations.gov and in the above office during regular business
hours (7 CFR 1.27(b)). Please call GIPSA Management Support Services
staff at (202) 720-7486 to arrange a public inspection of comments.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: S. Brett Offutt, Director, Policy and
Litigation Division, P&SP, GIPSA, 1400 Independence Ave., SW.,
Washington, DC 20250, (202) 720-7363, s.brett.offutt@usda.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
The P&S Act sets forth broad prohibitions on the conduct of
entities operating subject to its jurisdiction. These broad provisions
make enforcement difficult and create uncertainty among industry
participants regarding compliance. In enacting Title XI of the Food,
Conservation and Energy Act of 2008 (Farm Bill) (Pub. L. 110-246),
Congress recognized the nature of problems encountered in the livestock
and poultry industries and amended the P&S Act. These amendments
established new requirements for participants in the livestock and
poultry industries and required the Secretary of Agriculture
(Secretary) to establish criteria to consider when determining whether
the P&S Act has been violated.
In accordance with the Farm Bill, GIPSA is proposing regulations
under the P&S Act that would clarify when certain conduct in the
livestock and poultry industries represents the making or giving of an
undue or unreasonable preference or advantage or subjects a person or
locality to an undue or unreasonable prejudice or disadvantage. These
proposed regulations also establish criteria that GIPSA would consider
in determining whether a live poultry dealer has provided reasonable
notice to poultry growers of a suspension of the delivery of birds
under a poultry growing arrangement; when a requirement of additional
capital investments over the life of a poultry growing arrangement or
swine production contract constitutes a violation of the P&S Act; and
whether a packer, swine contractor or live poultry dealer has provided
a reasonable period of time for a grower or a swine producer to remedy
a breach of contract that could lead to termination of the growing
arrangement or production contract.
The Farm Bill also instructed the Secretary to promulgate
regulations to ensure that poultry growers, swine production contract
growers and livestock producers are afforded the opportunity to fully
participate in the arbitration process, if they so choose. We are
proposing a required format for providing poultry growers, swine
production contract growers and livestock producers the opportunity to
decline the use of arbitration in those contracts that have an
arbitration provision. We are also proposing criteria that we would
consider in finding that poultry growers, swine production contract
growers and livestock producers have a meaningful opportunity to
participate fully in the arbitration process if they voluntarily agree
to do so. We would use these criteria to assess the overall fairness of
the arbitration process.
In addition to proposing regulations in accordance with the Farm
Bill, GIPSA is proposing regulations that would prohibit certain
conduct because it is unfair, unjustly discriminatory or deceptive, in
violation of the P&S Act. These additional proposed regulations are
promulgated under the authority of section 407 of the P&S Act, and
complement those required by the Farm Bill to help ensure fair trade
and competition in the livestock and poultry industries.
In recent years, there has been an increased use of contracting in
the marketing and production of livestock and poultry by entities under
the jurisdiction of the P&S Act. This increased contracting coupled
with the market concentration has significantly changed the industry
and the rural economy as a whole, making proposed regulations
necessary, especially in those situations in which packers, live
poultry dealers or swine contractors use their market power to harm
producers or impair private property rights of growers and producers.
Transparency, competition and financial integrity of the marketplace
have also diminished.
Section 407 of the P&S Act (7 U.S.C. 228) provides that the
Secretary ``may make such rules, regulations, and orders as may be
necessary to carry out the provisions of this Act.'' Pursuant to this
[[Page 35339]]
authority, the Secretary has issued regulations, published as Part 201
of Title 9 of the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR). Sections 11005 and
11006 of the Farm Bill became effective June 18, 2008, and instruct the
Secretary to promulgate additional regulations as described in this
notice of proposed rulemaking. These regulations, if finalized, are
also proposed to be published in Part 201 of Title 9 of the CFR.
Section 202 of the P&S Act (7 U.S.C. 192) prohibits packers, swine
contractors and live poultry dealers from engaging in unfair and
deceptive practices, giving undue preferences to persons or localities,
apportioning supply among packers, swine contractors and live poultry
dealers in restraint of commerce, manipulating prices, creating a
monopoly, or conspiring to aid in unlawful acts. The Farm Bill requires
promulgation of regulations under the P&S Act dealing with various
industry behaviors. In addition, GIPSA has identified 11 terms
requiring definition and three areas of concern in which regulations
will be developed to address each of these behaviors. Definitions of
the terms, tournament system, principal part of performance, capital
investment, additional capital investment, suspension of delivery of
birds, forward contract, marketing agreement, production contract,
competitive injury, and likelihood of competitive injury would be added
to Sec. 201.2 of the regulations. The proposed regulations are grouped
under the general headings of (1) undue or unreasonable preference or
advantage, (2) unfair, unjustly discriminatory and deceptive practices,
and (3) arbitration.
In preparing to issue these proposed regulations, GIPSA held three
public meetings in October 2008, in Arkansas, Iowa, and Georgia to
gather comments, information, and recommendations from interested
parties. Attendees at these meetings were asked to give input on the
Farm Bill requirements for production contracts, arbitration, and the
four following topics included in Farm Bill section 11006: (1) Undue or
unreasonable preferences or advantages, (2) adequate notice to poultry
growers of suspension of delivery of birds, (3) criteria for
determining when requiring additional capital investment over the life
of a contract constitutes a violation, and (4) criteria for determining
when packers, swine contractors and live poultry dealers have provided
a reasonable period of time to remedy a breach of contract that could
lead to contract termination. Attendees provided comments on these
topics as well as other issues of concern under the P&S Act, including
packer livestock procurement practices believed to unjustly
discriminate against producers based on the volume of livestock they
sell.
GIPSA also gathered data concerning market participants. There are
roughly 30,000 swine producers and poultry growers operating under
production contracts. More than 85 percent of these producers and
growers will be contracted to one of the five largest slaughtering
firms. The average gross sales revenue of the three largest of these
slaughtering firms is 23,000 times that of a small grower or producer.
The proposed regulations are based on comments, information, and
recommendations received in those meetings along with GIPSA's
expertise, experience, and interactions in the livestock and poultry
industries.
The P&S Act
The P&S Act was enacted in 1921 ``to comprehensively regulate
packers, stockyards, marketing agents and dealers.'' \1\ The P&S Act
``was framed in language designed to permit the fullest control of
packers and stockyards which the Constitution permits, and its coverage
was to encompass the complete chain of commerce and give the Secretary
of Agriculture complete regulatory power over packers and all
activities connected therewith.'' \2\ It was hailed as a ``far-reaching
measure and extend[ing] further than any previous law into the
regulation of private business.'' \3\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Hays Livestock Comm'n Co. v. Maly Livestock Comm'n Co., 498
F.2d 925, 927 (10th Cir. 1974).
\2\ Bruhn's Freezer Meats of Chicago, Inc. v. USDA, 438 F.2d
1332, 1339 (8th Cir. 1971) (citing H.R. Rep. No. 67-324 (1921); H.R.
Rep. No. 67-77 (1921)).
\3\ 61 Cong. Rec. 1801 (1921) (statement of Rep. Haugen); see
also Wilson & Co. v. Benson, 286 F.2d 891, 895 (7th Cir. 1961)
(``The legislative history shows Congress understood the sections of
the [P&S Act] under consideration were broader in scope than the
antecedent legislation.'') (citing 61 Cong. Rec. 1805 (1921)).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The scope of the P&S Act is broad. Section 202 of the P&S Act
provides that ``[i]t shall be unlawful for any packer or swine
contractor with respect to livestock, meats, meat food products, or
livestock products in unmanufactured form, or for any live poultry
dealer with respect to live poultry, to:
Engage in or use any unfair, unjustly discriminatory, or
deceptive practice or device; or
Make or give any undue or unreasonable preference or
advantage to any particular person or locality in any respect, or
subject any particular person or locality to any undue or unreasonable
prejudice or disadvantage in any respect; or
Sell or otherwise transfer to or for any other packer,
swine contractor, or any live poultry dealer, or buy or otherwise
receive from or for any other packer, swine contractor, or any live
poultry dealer, any article for the purpose or with the effect of
apportioning the supply between any such persons, if such apportionment
has the tendency or effect of restraining commerce or of creating a
monopoly; or
Sell or otherwise transfer to or for any other person, or
buy or otherwise receive from or for any other person, any article for
the purpose or with the effect of manipulating or controlling prices,
or of creating a monopoly in the acquisition of, buying, selling, or
dealing in, any article, or of restraining commerce; or
Engage in any course of business or do any act for the
purpose or with the effect of manipulating or controlling prices, or of
creating a monopoly in the acquisition of, buying, selling, or dealing
in, any article, or of restraining commerce; or
Conspire, combine, agree, or arrange with any other person
(1) to apportion territory for carrying on business, or (2) to
apportion purchases or sales of any article, or (3) to manipulate or
control prices; or
Conspire, combine, agree, or arrange with any other person
to do, or aid or abet the doing of, any act made unlawful by
subdivisions (a), (b), (c), (d), or (e) of this section.'' \4\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ See also sections 2, 201 (defining the statutory terms).
Section 202 originally applied only to the livestock and meat
packing industries. Live poultry dealers were added in 1935, see
Pub. L. No. 74-272, 49 Stat. 648 (1935), and swine contractors were
added in 2002, Pub. L. 107-171, Sec. 10502(b)(1), 116 Stat. 134,
509 (2002).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The P&S Act sets forth similar prohibitions on stockyard owners,
market agencies, and dealers. Section 312 provides that ``[i]t shall be
unlawful for any stockyard owner, market agency, or dealer to engage in
or use any unfair, unjustly discriminatory, or deceptive practice or
device in connection with determining whether persons should be
authorized to operate at the stockyards, or with the receiving,
marketing, buying, or selling on a commission basis or otherwise,
feeding, watering, holding, delivery, shipment, weighing, or handling
of livestock.'' \5\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ See also section 301, 302 (providing additional
definitions); section 304 (providing that ``[a]ll stockyard services
furnished pursuant to reasonable request made to a stockyard owner
or market agency at such stockyard shall be reasonable and
nondiscriminatory and stockyard services which are furnished shall
not be refused on any basis that is unreasonable or unjustly
discriminatory''); section 305 (providing that ``[a]ll rates or
charges made for any stockyard services furnished at a stockyard by
a stockyard owner or market agency shall be just, reasonable, and
nondiscriminatory, and any unjust, unreasonable, or discriminatory
rate or charge is prohibited and declared to be unlawful''); section
307 (``It shall be the duty of every stockyard owner and market
agency to establish, observe, and enforce just, reasonable, and
nondiscriminatory regulations and practices in respect to the
furnishing of stockyard services, and every unjust, unreasonable, or
discriminatory regulation or practice is prohibited and declared to
be unlawful.'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 35340]]
In addition, the P&S Act imposes a variety of more specific
limitations and requirements. In particular, it specifies procedures
for a poultry grower or swine production contract grower seeking to
cancel a poultry growing arrangement or swine production contract; \6\
requires disclosure of additional capital investments in production
contracts; \7\ establish procedures for the use of arbitration; \8\
imposes record-retention requirements; \9\ and requires that certain
contracts and rates to be available to the Secretary and the public
(without confidential information).\10\ The P&S Act further declares
that ``[a]ny delay or attempt to delay by a market agency, dealer, or
packer purchasing livestock, the collection of funds as herein
provided, or otherwise for the purpose of or resulting in extending the
normal period of payment for such livestock'' or ``[a]ny delay or
attempt to delay, by a live poultry dealer which is a party to any such
transaction, the collection of funds as herein provided, or otherwise
for the purpose of or resulting in extending the normal period of
payment for poultry obtained by poultry growing arrangement or
purchased in a cash sale,'' is ``an `unfair practice' in violation of
this chapter.'' \11\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ Id. section 208.
\7\ Id. section 208.
\8\ Id. section 210.
\9\ Id. section 401.
\10\ Id. sections 222, 306.
\11\ Id. sections 409, 410.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The P&S Act provides that ``[t]he Secretary may make such rules,
regulations, and orders as may be necessary to carry out the provisions
of this chapter.'' \12\ The P&S Act also sets forth procedures for
enforcement actions before the Secretary \13\ and private
litigation.\14\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\12\ Id. section 408.
\13\ Id. section 408. The [S]ecretary cannot proceed against
section 202 violations by live poultry dealers by adjudications
under this section. Payment and trust violations that would
constitute unfair practices under section 202 may be
administratively adjudicated under section 411 only as violations of
sections 410 and 207. Id. sections 410, 411.
\14\ Id. sections 308, 404.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Supreme Court upheld the constitutionality of the P&S Act
shortly after its enactment in Stafford v. Wallace. \15\ The Court
concluded that the P&S Act reflected a permissible exercise of
Congress' powers under the Commerce Clause because of the interstate
nature of the livestock industry.\16\ The Supreme Court emphasized that
the P&S Act was ``remedial legislation,'' whose ``object [was] the free
and unburdened flow of live stock from the ranges and farms of the West
and the Southwest through the great stockyards and slaughtering centers
on the borders of that region, and thence in the form of meat products
to the consuming cities of the country in the Middle West and East, or,
still, as live stock, to the feeding places and fattening farms in the
Middle West or East for further preparation for the market.'' \17\ The
Court explained that there were multiple ``evils'' that the P&S Act
sought to remedy:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\15\ 258 U.S. 495 (1922).
\16\ Id. at 516.
\17\ Id. at 513, 514, 521.
The chief evil feared is the monopoly of the packers, enabling
them unduly and arbitrarily to lower prices to the shipper, who
sells, and unduly and arbitrarily to increase the price to the
consumer, who buys. Congress thought that the power to maintain this
monopoly was aided by control of the stockyards. Another evil, which
it sought to provide against by the act, was exorbitant charges,
duplication of commissions, deceptive practices in respect of
prices, in the passage of the live stock through the stockyards, all
made possible by collusion between the stockyards management and the
commission men, on the one hand, and the packers and dealers, on the
other.\18\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\18\ Id. at 514-15.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sections 202(a) and (b) of the P&S Act
Section 202(a) of the P&S Act prohibits ``any unfair, unjustly
discriminatory, or deceptive practice.'' Section 202(b) prohibits ``any
undue or unreasonable preference or advantage [or] prejudice or
disadvantage.'' USDA has consistently taken the position that, in some
cases, a violation of section 202(a) or (b) can be proven without proof
of predatory intent, competitive injury, or likelihood of injury.\19\
At the same time, USDA has always understood that an act or practice's
effect on competition can be relevant \20\ and, in certain
circumstances, even dispositive \21\ with respect to whether that act
or practice violates section 202(a) and/or (b).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\19\ In re Ozark county Cattle Co., 49 Agric. Dec. 336, 365
(1990); 1 John H. Davidson et al., Agricultural Law section 3.47, at
244 (1981).
\20\ See In re Sterling Colo. Beef Co., 39 Agric. Dec. 184, 235
(1980) (considering and rejecting respondent packer's business
justification for challenged conduct).
\21\ See Armour & Co. v. United States, 402 F.2d 712, 717 (7th
Cir. 1968) (a coupon promotion plan (here coupons for fifty cents
off specified packages of bacon) is not per se unfair and violates
section 202(a) if it is implemented with some predatory intent or
carries some likelihood of competitive injury); In re IBP, Inc., 57
Agric. Dec. 1353, 1356 (1998) (contractual right of first refusal at
issue violated section 202 ``because it has the effect or potential
of reducing competition'').
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The longstanding agency position that, in some cases, a violation
of section 202(a) or (b) can be proven without proof of likelihood of
competitive injury is consistent with the language and structure of the
P&S Act, as well as its legislative history and purposes. Neither
section 202(a) nor section 202(b) contains any language limiting its
application to acts or practices that have an adverse effect on
competition, such as acts ``restraining commerce.'' Instead, these
provisions use terms including ``deceptive,'' ``unfair,'' ``unjust,''
``undue,'' and ``unreasonable''--which are commonly understood to
encompass more than anticompetitive conduct.\22\ This is in direct
contrast to sections (c)-(e), which expressly prohibit only those acts
that have the effect of ``restraining commerce,'' ``creating a
monopoly,'' or producing another type of antitrust injury. The fact
that Congress expressly included these limitations in sections (c)-(e)
but not in sections (a) and (b) is a strong indication that Congress
did not intend sections (a) and (b) to be limited to harm to
competition. And Congress confirmed the agency's position by amending
the P&S Act to specify specific instances of conduct prohibited as
unfair that do not involve any inherent likelihood of competitive
injury.\23\
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\22\ When the P&S Act was enacted, Webster's New International
Dictionary defined ``deceptive'' as ``[t]ending to deceive; having
power to mislead, or impress with false opinions''; ``unfair'' as
``[n]ot fair in act or character; disingenuous; using or involving
trick or artifice; dishonest; unjust; inequitable'' (2d.
definition); ``unjust'' as ``[c]haracterized by injustice; contrary
to justice and right; wrongful''; ``undue'' as ``[n]ot right; not
lawful or legal; violating legal or equitable rights; improper''
(2d. definition); and ``unreasonable'' as ``[n]ot conformable to
reason; irrational'' or ``immoderate; exorbitant.'' Webster's New
International Dictionary 578, 2237, 2238, 2245, 2248 (1st ed. 1917).
This is the same understanding of the terms today.
\23\ See sections 409, 410.
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USDA's interpretation of sections 202(a) and (b) is also consistent
with the interpretation of other sections of the P&S Act using similar
language--sections 307 and 312. Courts have recognized that the proper
analysis under these provisions depends on ``the
[[Page 35341]]
facts of each case,'' \24\ and that these sections may apply in the
absence of harm to competition or competitors.\25\
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\24\ Capitol Packing Company v. United States, 350 F.2d 67, 76
(10th Cir. 1965); see also Spencer Livestock Comm'n Co. v USDA, 841
F.2d 1451, 1454 (9th Cir. 1988).
\25\ See, e.g., Spencer, 841 F.2d at 1455 (Section 312 covers
``a deceptive practice, whether or not it harmed consumers or
competitors.'').
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Although proof of harm to competition is not necessary to satisfy
the statutory language, it is sufficient to do so. Any act that harms
competition is necessarily also ``unfair'' and therefore violates
section 202(a).
The legislative history and purposes of the P&S Act also support
USDA's position. The Act ``is a most comprehensive measure and extends
farther than any previous law in the regulation of private business, in
time of peace, except possibly the interstate commerce act.'' \26\
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\26\ H.R. Rep. 67-77, at 2 (1921); see also Swift & Co. v.
United States, 308 F.2d 849, 853 (7th Cir. 1962) (``The legislative
history showed Congress understood the sections of the [P&S Act]
under consideration were broader in scope than antecedent
legislation such as the Sherman Antitrust Act, sec. 2 of the Clayton
Act, 15 U.S.C. 13, sec. 5 of the Federal Trade Commission Act, 15
U.S.C. 45 and sec. 3 of the Interstate Commerce Act, 49 U.S.C.
3.'').
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In amending the P&S Act, Congress made clear that its goals for the
statute extended beyond the protection of competition. In 1935, for
instance, when Congress first subjected live poultry dealers to
sections 202(a) and (b), Congress explained in the statute itself that
``[t]he handling of the great volume of live poultry * * * is attendant
with various unfair, deceptive, and fraudulent practices and devices,
resulting in the producers sustaining sundry losses and receiving
prices far below the reasonable value of their live poultry. * * * ''
\27\ Similarly, the House Committee Report regarding 1958 amendments
stated that ``[t]he primary purpose of [the P&S Act] is to assure fair
competition and fair trade practices'' and ``to safeguard farmers * * *
against receiving less than the true market value of their livestock.''
\28\ The Report further observed that protection extends to ``unfair,
deceptive, unjustly discriminatory'' practices by ``small'' companies
in addition to ``monopolistic practices.'' \29\ In accordance with this
legislative history, courts and commentators have, over a span
exceeding 70 years, recognized that the purposes of the P&S Act are not
limited to protecting competition.\30\
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\27\ Pub. L. 74-272, 49 Stat. 648, 648 (1935).
\28\ H.R. Rep. No. 85-1048 (1957), reprinted in 1958
U.S.C.C.A.N. 5212, 5213 (emphasis added).
\29\ Id. at 5213.
\30\ See, e.g., Stafford, 258 U.S. at 513-14; Spencer Livestock
Comm'n Co. v. USDA, 841 F.2d 1451, 1455 (9th Cir. 1988); United
States v. Perdue Farms, Inc., 680 F.2d 277, 280 (2d Cir. 1982);
Bruhn's Freezer Meats, 438 F.2d at 1336-37; Bowman v. USDA, 363 F.2d
81, 85 (5th Cir. 1966); United States v. Donahue Bros., 59 F.2d
1019, 1023 (8th Cir. 1932).
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Recently, three courts of appeals have disagreed with the USDA's
interpretation of the P&S Act and have concluded (in cases to which the
United States was not a party) that plaintiffs could not prove their
claims under section 202(a) and/or (b) without proving harm to
competition or likely harm to competition.\31\ After carefully
considering the analysis in these opinions, USDA continues to believe
that its longstanding interpretation of the P&S Act is correct. These
court of appeals opinions (two of which were issued over vigorous
dissents) \32\ are inconsistent with the plain language of the statute;
they incorrectly assume that harm to competition was the only evil
Congress sought to prevent by enacting the P&S Act; and they fail to
defer to the Secretary of Agriculture's longstanding and consistent
interpretation of a statute administered by the Secretary. To the
extent that these courts failed to defer to the USDA's interpretation
of the statute because that interpretation had not previously been
enshrined in a regulation,\33\ the new regulations constitute a
material change in circumstances that warrants judicial reexamination
of the issue.\34\
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\31\ Wheeler, ------ F.3d ------, 2009 WL 4823002, No. 07-40651
(5th Cir. 2009) (en banc) (no violation of section 202(a) or (b)
without a likely effect on competition); Been v. O.K. Indus., Inc.,
495 F.3d 1217 (10th Cir. 2007) (``unfair practice'' is one that
injures or is likely to injure competition); London v. Fieldale
Farms Corp., 410 F.3d 1295 (11th Cir. 2005) (P&S Act prohibits only
those unfair, discriminatory, or deceptive practices that adversely
affect or are likely to adversely affect competition). The issue is
currently pending before one other court of appeals. Terry v. Tyson
Farms, Inc., No. 08-5577 (6th Cir., argued March 3, 2009).
\32\ Wheeler, 2009 WL 4823002, at 14-28 (Garza, J., dissenting);
Been, 495 F.3d at 1238-43 (Hartz, J., concurring in part and
dissenting in part).
\33\ See London, 410 F.3d at 1226-27.
\34\ See National Cable & Telecomm. Ass'n v. Brand X Internet
Servs., 545 U.S. 967, 982-84 (2005).
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Competitive Injury
Although it is not necessary in every case to demonstrate
competitive injury in order to show a violation of section 202(a) and/
or (b), any act that harms competition or is likely to harm competition
necessarily violates the statute. Accordingly, proposed new Sec.
201.2(t) defines competitive injury and proposed new Sec. 201.2(u)
defines likelihood of competitive injury. Competitive injury occurs
when an act or practice distorts competition in the market channel or
marketplace. How a competitive injury manifests itself depends
critically on whether the target of the act or practice is a competitor
(e.g., a packer harms other packers), or operates at a different level
of the livestock or poultry production process (e.g., a packer harms a
producer). The likelihood of competitive injury occurs when an act or
practice raises rivals' costs, improperly forecloses competition in a
large share of the market through exclusive dealing, restrains
competition among packers, live poultry dealers or swine contractors or
otherwise represents a misuse of market power to distort
competition.\35\ The likelihood of competitive injury also occurs when
a packer, swine contractor, or live poultry dealer wrongfully depresses
prices paid to a producer or grower below market value or impairs the
producer or grower's ability to compete with other producers or growers
or to impair a producer's or grower's ability to receive the reasonable
expected full economic value from a transaction in the market channel
or marketplace.
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\35\ See, e.g., Thomas G. Krattenmaker & Steven C. Salop,
Anticompetitive Exclusion: Raising Rivals' Costs to Achieve Power
over Price, 96 Yale L.J. 209 (1986); 11 Philip E. Areeda & Herbert
Hovenkamp, Antitrust Law 1821 (2d ed. 2005).
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To establish an actual or likely competitive injury, it is not
necessary to show that a challenged act or practice had a likely effect
on resale price levels. Even the antitrust laws do not require such a
showing. Because the P&S Act is broader than the antitrust laws, such a
requirement of showing effect on resale price levels is not necessary
to establish competitive injury under section 202 of the P&S Act either
(though such a showing would suffice).
Unfair, Unjustly Discriminatory and Deceptive Practices
GIPSA is proposing to add to the regulations a new Sec. 201.210(c)
that reiterates the Secretary's position that the appropriate analysis
under section 202(a) depends on the nature and circumstances of the
challenged conduct. A finding of harm or likely harm to competition is
always sufficient, but not always necessary, to establish a violation
of sections 202(a) and/or (b) of the P&S Act.
In the Farm Bill, Congress required criteria to be established to
determine: (1) Whether a live poultry dealer has provided reasonable
notice to poultry growers of any suspension of the delivery of birds
under a poultry growing arrangement; (2) when a requirement of
additional capital investments over the life of a poultry growing
arrangement or swine production contract constitutes a
[[Page 35342]]
violation of the P&S Act; and (3) if a packer, swine contractor, or
live poultry dealer has provided a reasonable period of time for a
poultry grower or swine production contract grower to remedy a breach
of contract that could lead to termination of the growing arrangement
or production contract. Regulation in these areas (and other areas in
which GIPSA is proposing regulation) is important to preserve the
rights of poultry growers, swine production contract growers and
livestock producers and maintain trust and integrity in the
marketplace. GIPSA has been informed by growers and producers,
particularly where contracts for the production or sale of livestock or
poultry are involved, that poultry growers, swine production contract
growers and livestock producers are sometimes at a distinct
disadvantage in negotiating the terms of an agreement. These reports
indicate that packers, swine contractors and live poultry dealers have
exhibited a tendency to exert their disproportionate positions of power
by misleading or retaliating against poultry growers, swine production
contract growers or livestock producers, and that some growers or
producers may have no choice but to acquiesce to the packer's, swine
contractor's, or live poultry dealer's terms for entering into a
contract or growing arrangement, or acquiesce to unfair conduct in
order to continue in business.
Proposed new Sec. 201.210(a) would first provide a statement of
the broad coverage of section 202(a). It would then provide the
following eight specific examples of conduct deemed unfair:
An unjustified material breach of a contractual duty,
express or implied, or an action or omission that a reasonable person
would consider unscrupulous, deceitful or in bad faith in connection
with any transaction in or contract involving the production,
maintenance, marketing or sale of livestock or poultry.
A retaliatory action or omission by a packer, swine
contractor, or live poultry dealer in response to the lawful
expression, spoken or written, association, or action of a poultry
grower, livestock producer or swine production contract grower; a
retaliatory action includes but is not limited to coercion,
intimidation, or disadvantage to any producer or grower in an
execution, termination, extension or renewal of a contract involving
livestock or poultry;
A refusal to provide to a contract poultry grower or swine
production contract grower, upon request, the statistical information
and data used to determine compensation paid to the contract grower or
producer under a production contract, including, but not limited to,
feed conversion rates, feed analysis, origination and breeder history;
An action or attempt to limit by contract a poultry grower's, swine
production contract grower's, or livestock producer's legal rights and
remedies afforded by law, including, but not limited to the following:
i. The right of a trial by jury (except when arbitration has been
voluntarily agreed to);
ii. The right to all damages available under the law;
iii. Rights available under bankruptcy law;
iv. The authority of the judge or jury to award attorney fees to
the appropriate party; or
v. A requirement that a trial or arbitration be held in a location
other than the location where the principal part of the performance of
the arrangement or contract occurs;
Paying a premium or applying a discount on the swine
production contract grower's payment or the purchase price received by
the livestock producer from the sale of livestock without documenting
the reason(s) and substantiating the revenue and cost justification
associated with the premium or discount;
Termination of a poultry growing arrangement or swine
production contract with no basis other than the allegation by the
packer, swine contractor, live poultry dealer or other person that the
poultry grower or swine production contract grower failed to comply
with an applicable law, rule or regulation. If the live poultry dealer
or swine contractor believes that a poultry grower or swine producer is
in violation, the live poultry dealer or swine contractor must
immediately report the alleged violation to the relevant law
enforcement authorities if they wish to use this alleged violation as
grounds for termination.
A representation, omission, or practice that is fraudulent
or likely to mislead a reasonable poultry grower, swine production
contract grower, swine contract producer or livestock producer
regarding a material condition or a term in a contract or business
transaction. Any act that causes competitive injury or creates a
likelihood of competitive injury.
Proposed new Sec. 201.212 would not be part of the definition of
``unfair,'' but rather a separate and distinct regulation. It proposes
to address various situations where a packer (or group of packers) is
able to manipulate prices paid for livestock, such as where a packer-
to-packer sale signals the price that packers will pay producers or
where a packer purchases cattle through exclusive arrangements with
dealers and is able to depress the price paid to producers through that
conduct.\36\ Proposed new Sec. 201.212(c) would prohibit bonded
packers from purchasing livestock from other packers or other packer-
affiliated companies, but allows waivers in emergency situations such
as a catastrophe or natural disaster that may severely impact
operations at a particular packing company or plant. The proposed
regulation is intended to limit the ability of packers to manipulate
prices.
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\36\ Chapter 6 ``Dynamic Price Competition and Tacit Collusion''
in Jean Tirole's The Theory of Industrial Organization (1988)
provides a general discussion of price signaling and competition.
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Congress recognized, and GIPSA has been informed by poultry growers
and industry organizations, that the disproportionate negotiating power
of a live poultry dealer may sometimes infringe on poultry grower's
rights. Under a poultry growing arrangement, a live poultry dealer has
discretion on whether it will perform under the agreement; i.e.,
whether it will place poultry on a poultry grower's farm. The poultry
grower does not have the same discretion and must raise and care for
poultry placed on his or her farm by the live poultry dealer. There
have been instances in which a live poultry dealer has failed to place
poultry on a poultry grower's farm for an extended period of time
without notifying the poultry grower of the reasons for or the
anticipated length of delay in placing additional poultry. Without
sufficient information, a poultry grower is unable to protect his or
her financial interests and make informed business decisions. GIPSA is
proposing to add a new Sec. 201.215 that would require a live poultry
dealer to give adequate notice of any suspension of delivery of
poultry. In proposed new Sec. 201.215, live poultry dealers would be
required to provide notice of any suspension of delivery of birds at
least 90 days prior to the suspension taking effect. This 90-day period
would allow the poultry grower time to consider options for utilizing
his or her poultry houses and for keeping up with any loan payments,
some of which are government guaranteed loans. Live poultry dealers may
request a waiver from the GIPSA Administrator of the 90-day notice
requirement in emergency situations such as a catastrophic or natural
disaster where the dealer could not have foreseen the reduction in
delivery of poultry.
[[Page 35343]]
Capital investments required by a packer, swine contractor, or live
poultry dealer during the life of a growing arrangement or production
contract may violate the P&S Act. Congress required the Secretary to
develop criteria to consider when determining if such a requirement is
a violation of the P&S Act. Proposed new Sec. Sec. 201.216 and 201.217
would provide several requirements designed to preserve trust between
the parties and limit the risk incurred by poultry growers or swine
production contract growers. Some contracts are multiyear and provide
long-term security while others are short term and could terminate at
the end of a single growing period. Among the proposed requirements is
that a contract be of sufficient length to allow the poultry growers or
swine production contract growers to recoup 80 percent of investment
costs related to the capital investment. For example, in situations
where a poultry grower or swine production contract grower is required
to make capital investments as a condition to enter into or continue a
contract, that requirement may be considered unfair if the packer,
swine contractor, or live poultry dealer did not offer a contract
duration that would allow the poultry grower or swine production
contract grower to recover 80 percent of its investment cost, at a
repayment rate based on a percentage of the grower's yearly
compensation. The term ``investment cost'' includes any balance due on
the initial capital investment and any additional capital investments,
plus accrued loan interest, if any, at the legal rate of interest where
the principal part of the performance takes place under the contract.
We are proposing that 80 percent of the investment costs represent the
portion of the overall value of the poultry grower's or swine
production contract grower's property that the growing or raising
facilities represent with a poultry growing arrangement or swine
production contract in place.
Proposed new Sec. 201.216 that would establish criteria the
Secretary may consider when determining whether a requirement that a
poultry grower or swine production contract grower make additional
capital investments over the life of a swine production contract or
poultry growing arrangement constitutes an unfair practice in violation
of the P&S Act. Establishing these criteria is expected to deter or
reduce unfair conduct and help preserve the value of the poultry
grower's or swine production contract grower's property rights and
protect against financial loss by the grower. Allowing for grower
discretion to accept or reject proposed capital investments made by the
live poultry dealer provides for increased flexibility to accommodate
mutually advantageous investment opportunities.
Congress recognized the need for poultry growers or swine
production contract growers to have reasonable time to remedy a breach
of contract that could lead to termination of that contract. GIPSA's
proposed new Sec. 201.218 would include criteria that the Secretary
will consider when determining whether a poultry grower or swine
production contract grower has been given sufficient time to remedy a
breach of contract. Proposed new Sec. 201.218 would set forth
procedures that a packer, swine contractor, or live poultry dealer must
follow before it can terminate a contract or poultry growing
arrangement based on a breach by the poultry grower or swine production
contract grower.
Undue or Unreasonable Preference or Advantage
In enacting the 2008 Farm Bill, Congress required the Secretary to
establish criteria to be considered in determining whether conduct
constitutes an undue or unreasonable preference or advantage in
violation of the P&S Act. Through telephone calls received from
producers and poultry growers, complaints received by its field agents,
and comments made at meetings, conferences and conventions, GIPSA has
learned that packers, swine contractors and live poultry dealers
sometimes treat similarly situated poultry growers and livestock
producers differently. Disparate treatment of similarly situated
growers and producers can be a violation of the P&S Act when that
disparate treatment is undue or unreasonable. According to producer
comments made at public meetings, as well as comments and complaints
from individual producers, a packer may offer better price terms to
producers that can provide larger volumes of livestock than the packer
offers to a group of producers that collectively can provide the same
volume of livestock of equal quality, without a legitimate
justification for the disparity. In one case, a Midwestern packer was
offering a higher price to an individual producer who could deliver
full truck loads of cattle. A group of producers approached the same
packer and offered collectively to provide a full truck load of like
cattle, but the packer refused to offer the same price terms to the
group of producers. GIPSA is therefore proposing a new Sec. 201.211 to
address undue or unreasonably preferential treatment of poultry
growers, swine production contract growers or livestock producers.
New proposed Sec. 201.211 establishes criteria that the Secretary
may consider in determining if differential treatment constitutes an
undue or unreasonable preference or advantage, or an undue or
unreasonable prejudice or disadvantage, under the P&S Act. The criteria
include whether contract terms are offered to all producers that can
provide the required volume, kind and quality of livestock, either
individually or collectively. Other considerations include whether any
price premium based on a producer's or a group of producers' ability to
deliver livestock meeting specified conditions is offered to other
producers or groups of producers that can meet that condition. (For
example, producers have reported to GIPSA that some packers will offer
price premiums for early delivery to one producer that it does not
offer to other producers or groups of producers that are willing and
able to meet the same early morning delivery conditions at equal
convenience to the packer). Finally, the Secretary may consider whether
differences in price paid for livestock, based on the cost of acquiring
or handling the livestock, are disclosed equally to all producers.
GIPSA would consider the particular circumstances of any pricing
disparity in determining whether to initiate an enforcement action
alleging a violation of the P&S Act, including whether there is a
legitimate justification for the disparity. This provision would not
require packers to purchase livestock if their needs are already
satisfied or impose a public utility duty to deal with all sellers.
In the course of its enforcement of the P&S Act, GIPSA has reviewed
the records of many live poultry dealers and numerous poultry growing
settlement documents. GIPSA has also received complaints from poultry
growers regarding how settlements occur. These complaints indicate that
some live poultry dealers have established pay schedules under which
poultry growers that raise and care for the same type and kind of
poultry receive different rates of pay; improperly grouped together
those poultry growers who raise and care for live poultry in different
types of poultry housing for settlement purposes; and, under a
tournament system, paid some poultry growers less than the base pay
amount in the poultry growing arrangement. These complaints also
indicate that some poultry growers are not given the production
information that is used in the compensation formula to determine their
ranking in the tournament system. These practices, if not corrected,
create a reasonable
[[Page 35344]]
likelihood of competitive injury. GIPSA is proposing a new Sec.
201.214 that would require live poultry dealers that pay poultry
growers on a tournament system to pay all poultry growers raising and
caring for the same type of poultry the same base pay, and that would
prohibit paying poultry growers less than the base pay amount. New
proposed Sec. 201.214 would also require that poultry growers be
ranked in settlement groups with other poultry growers that raise and
care for poultry in the same type of houses.
If a packer, swine contractor, or live poultry dealer believes it
can justify disparate treatment of poultry growers, swine production
contract growers or livestock producers, it must have a legitimate
business reason for that differential treatment. GIPSA is proposing to
add a new paragraph (b) to Sec. 201.94 that would require packers,
swine contractors or live poultry dealers to maintain records that
justify their treatment of poultry growers, swine production contract
growers, or livestock producers. This justification need not be
extensive but should be enough to identify the benefit-cost basis of
any pricing differentials received or paid, and may include increased
or lower trucking costs; market price for meat; volume; labor, energy,
or maintenance costs, etc. For example, a packer's participation in a
branded program for a particular type of beef that returns a premium to
the packer could be used to justify a higher price paid to producers
that sell the type of cattle that meets the specifications of the
branded program. In general, the data needed to justify a different
treatment would identify those pecuniary costs and benefits associated
with the treatment that demonstrate its decreased costs or increased
revenues from a standard business practice. Therefore, GIPSA would
consider the particular circumstances of any pricing disparity in
determining whether a violation of the P&S Act occurred, including
whether there is a legitimate justification for the disparity.
One of the common complaints that GIPSA has received regarding
undue and unreasonable preferences or advantages is that packers, swine
contractors and live poultry dealers offer considerably better contract
terms to select sellers/growers, which impedes other sellers/growers'
ability to compete. GIPSA is proposing to add a new Sec. 201.212(a)
that would prohibit dealers operating as packer buyers from purchasing
livestock for any packer other than the packer identifying that dealer
as its packer buyer. A dealer is defined in the P&S Act as ``any
person, not a market agency, engaged in the business of buying or
selling in commerce livestock, either on his own account or as the
employee or agent of the vendor or purchaser.'' \37\ This section is
proposed under the authority of section 303 of the P&S Act, requiring
market agencies and dealers to register in such manner as the Secretary
may prescribe. A packer buyer is any person regularly employed on
salary, or other comparable method of compensation, by a packer to buy
livestock for such packer. Proposed new Sec. 201.212(b) would also
prohibit packers from entering into exclusive purchase agreements with
any dealer except those dealers the packer has identified as its packer
buyers. This provision does not eliminate exclusive arrangements, but
provides transparency by identifying the dealer as a packer buyer for a
specific packer. Proposed new Sec. 201.212(a) and (b) would work in
conjunction to prevent apportioning territory by independent dealers
and packers. This would open the market to other buyers, increasing
participation in the cow and bull slaughter market and prevent
collusion between multiple packers using one dealer as an exclusive
agent to manipulate prices.
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\37\ Section 301(d).
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GIPSA has also been informed through discussion with livestock
producers that most livestock sellers lack sufficient information on
available contract terms. To increase the amount of information
available that would allow sellers to make informed business decisions,
GIPSA is proposing to add a new Sec. 201.213, which would require
packers, swine contractors, and live poultry dealers to submit copies
of sample types of contracts to GIPSA and GIPSA to make those samples
available for public viewing on its Web site.
Arbitration
With the Farm Bill, Congress amended the P&S Act to add section
210, which addresses arbitration. The Farm Bill requires that livestock
contracts and poultry growing arrangements contain an option for
poultry growers and livestock producers to accept or reject arbitration
to settle disputes. Many of these contracts unilaterally drafted by
packers, swine contractors, or live poultry dealers contain provisions
limiting the legal rights and remedies afforded by law to poultry
growers, swine production contract growers, or livestock producers.
Section 210 of the P&S Act requires that poultry growers, swine
production contract growers, or livestock producers have the
opportunity, prior to entering a contract or poultry growing
arrangement, to decline to use arbitration to resolve disputes arising
out of the contract or growing arrangement. In accordance with section
210 of the P&S Act, under the proposed regulation, the poultry grower,
swine production contract grower, or livestock producer may decide
later, after a dispute arises, to resolve the dispute using arbitration
only if both parties voluntarily agree to the use of arbitration at
that later time. Congress directed the Secretary to promulgate
regulations to carry out section 210 of the P&S Act, and to establish
criteria to consider when determining if the arbitration process
provided in a contract provides a meaningful opportunity for the
poultry growers, swine production contract growers, or livestock
producers to participate fully in the arbitration process.
GIPSA has been informed by poultry growers, swine production
contract growers, and livestock producers that often the cost of the
arbitration process is prohibitive to resolving disputes between a
packer, swine contractor, or live poultry dealer and a producer or
grower. For example, fees for arbitration may need to be paid up front
and can be substantial. A poultry grower, swine production contract
grower, or livestock producer may not have sufficient resources
available to pay the fees for arbitration. Prior to enactment of the
Farm Bill, producers and growers with contracts that required mandatory
and binding arbitration were often left with no means available to
resolve disputes if they lacked sufficient resources to pay arbitration
fees. In proposing this new rule, GIPSA relied on established fee
structures in employment arbitration rules to determine appropriate
fees to be assessed to a producer or grower.
GIPSA also examined numerous contracts offered, modified, amended,
renewed or extended after the effective date of the Farm Bill to see
how the requirements of new section 210 of the P&S Act were being
implemented by packers, swine contractors, or live poultry dealers.
GIPSA found little consistency among the contracts. Some contracts were
very clear and allowed the poultry growers, swine production contract
growers, or livestock producers to easily recognize the choice
regarding arbitration. Other contracts created a burdensome procedure
for poultry growers, swine production contract growers, or livestock
producers to make the choice.
GIPSA is proposing to add a new Sec. 201.219(b) to the regulations
under the P&S Act that would establish a uniform means by which poultry
growers, swine
[[Page 35345]]
production contract growers, or livestock producers are offered the
option to decline use of arbitration to resolve disputes arising out of
a contract. Proposed new Sec. 201.219(a) would ensure that the poultry
grower, swine production contract grower, or livestock producer has a
meaningful opportunity to participate in the arbitration process.
Proposed new Sec. 201.219(a) would also provide criteria the Secretary
may consider in evaluating the fairness of the arbitration process.
Among these criteria are: Overall fairness in the procedures, limits on
costs to poultry growers, swine production contract growers, or
livestock producers, reasonable time limits for completion of the
process, reasonable access to discovery of information by the growers
or producers, and a requirement that a reasoned written opinion be
issued by the arbitrator.
Options Considered
The Farm Bill explicitly directs the Secretary to promulgate
certain regulations. GIPSA also has exercised its discretion and
proposed other regulations to further clarify the types of conduct that
violate the P&S Act. With regard to both the mandatory and
discretionary regulatory provisions, GIPSA considered alternative
options.
Some of the alternatives considered may have been less restrictive
on the regulated entity. For example, we considered not requiring that
regulated entities maintain records that support differential pricing
or any deviation from standard price or contract terms for actions
taken by packers, swine contractors or live poultry dealers involving
poultry growers, swine production contract growers, or livestock
producers. We also considered requiring shorter notice periods for live
poultry dealers that suspend the delivery of birds to poultry growers.
We determined, however, that these alternatives would not improve
fairness and transparency in the marketplace, nor would they foster
trust and integrity among buyers and sellers in the livestock and
poultry markets.
We considered proposing more restrictive options. For instance, we
considered proposing prohibiting the use of arbitration to resolve
disputes. That option, however, goes against a popular method of
dispute resolution in other industries and is not in line with the
spirit of the Farm Bill.
GIPSA believes that these proposed regulations best implement the
purposes of the P&S Act and the Farm Bill, and will help protect
producers and consumers. GIPSA welcomes and will consider comments with
regard to all aspects of this proposed rulemaking.
Executive Order 12866 and Regulatory Flexibility Act
This proposed rule has been determined to be significant for the
purposes of Executive Order 12866 and, therefore, has been reviewed by
the Office of Management and Budget. As required by the Farm Bill,
GIPSA is proposing these regulations under the P&S Act. Also, we have
prepared an economic analysis for this proposed rule. The cost-benefit
analysis of the proposed regulations is initially conducted on a
section-by-section analysis. Section 201.212, ``Livestock Purchasing
Practices,'' is subdivided into two sub-section analyses. After the
section-by-section analyses and the review of the Regulatory
Flexibility Act (RFA), a summary cost-benefit analysis is presented.
Within the analysis, costs are aggregated into three major types:
(1) Administrative costs, which include items such as office work,
postage, filing, and copying; (2) costs of analysis, such as a business
conducting a financial review; and (3) adjustment costs, such as costs
related to changing business behavior to achieve compliance with the
proposed regulation. Where applicable, GIPSA also considered whether
the regulations would prohibit or deter efficient conduct or
significantly raise the costs of production for packers, swine
contractors, live poultry dealers, producers, or growers. Potential
benefits include gains from having market prices for commodities or
grower services more accurately reflect supply-demand conditions; from
making decisions based on more accurate price signals; and from
remedying anticompetitive conduct and minimizing associated dead weight
losses and other inefficiencies.
Proposed new Sec. 201.2(l) through (t), ``Terms Defined,'' would
contain definitions for eight terms used in the proposed regulations.
These definitions are of commonly used terms in the industry and enter
into the cost-benefit analysis through the proposed regulations.
Proposed new Sec. 201.3(a) through (c), ``Applicability of
regulations in this part,'' would indicate that the proposed
regulations serve the intent of Congress and similar to the previous
section enter into the cost-benefit analysis through the proposed
actionable regulations.
Proposed new Sec. 201.94(b), would require a regulated entity to
maintain records that support differential pricing or any deviation
from standard price or contract terms by an entity subject to section
202 of the P&S Act and reflects the routine record requirements of
section 401 of the P&S Act. The proposed specifications amount to prior
indication of those circumstances in which a regulated entity may
expect to maintain and make available specific documentation. Document
maintenance and inspection would be required for GIPSA's regulatory and
investigative responsibilities and protected as confidential documents
under the P&S Act. These business documents would not be available to
the public, consistent with other current document maintenance
requirements of section 401 of the P&S Act. Increased industry costs
depend in part on the existing level of record keeping a firm currently
maintains and the manner in which those documents are maintained. Most
additional documents required under the proposed regulation would be
related to the data used to complete standardized financial statements,
such as income statements or balance sheet statements, which are used
for yearly assessments of firm financial or managerial performance.
Generally, the costs are of an administrative or of a financial review
nature. For example, records supporting differential pricing or any
deviation from standard price or contract terms may include projecting
anticipated incomes or losses, and maintaining the documents presenting
those results. GIPSA believes that potential benefits include ensuring
that decisions and actions are made based on prices determined by
supply-demand conditions. An additional benefit is that increased
information transparency reduces decision-making costs of such
transactions in the marketplace and identifies who would best conduct
these transactions. GIPSA invites specific comments on additional
categories of cost and benefit items as well as their magnitudes.
Proposed new Sec. 201.210(a) through (c), ``Unfair, unjustly
discriminatory and deceptive practices or devices,'' would list
specific conduct, acts, or practices that the agency believes to be
unfair, or constitutes an unjustly discriminatory, or deceptive
practice. The list is consistent with GIPSA's past interpretations of
section 202(a) of the P&S Act.
To the extent that firms are engaged in activity that GIPSA's
proposed regulations would identify as a violation of the P&S Act,
firms will have adjustment costs in ceasing the activity. GIPSA,
howe