Milk in California; Recommended Decision and Opportunity To File Written Exceptions on Proposal To Establish a Federal Milk Marketing Order, 10634-10688 [2017-02732]
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Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 29 / Tuesday, February 14, 2017 / Proposed Rules
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Agricultural Marketing Service
7 CFR Part 1051
[Doc. No. AO–15–0071; AMS–DA–14–0095]
Milk in California; Recommended
Decision and Opportunity To File
Written Exceptions on Proposal To
Establish a Federal Milk Marketing
Order
Agricultural Marketing Service,
USDA.
ACTION: Proposed rule and opportunity
to file exceptions.
AGENCY:
This Recommended Decision
proposes the issuance of a Federal Milk
Marketing Order (FMMO) regulating the
handling of milk in California. The
proposed FMMO incorporates the entire
state of California and would adopt the
same dairy product classification and
pricing provisions used throughout the
current FMMO system. The proposed
FMMO provides for the recognition of
producer quota as administered by the
California Department of Food and
Agriculture. This proposed rule also
announces the Agricultural Marketing
Service’s (AMS) intent to request
approval by the Office of Management
and Budget (OMB) of new information
collection requirements to implement
the order.
DATES: Written exceptions to this
proposed rule must be submitted on or
before May 15, 2017. Pursuant to the
Paperwork Reduction Act, comments on
the information collection burden must
be received by April 17, 2017.
AMS will conduct a public meeting
on February 22, 2017, to review the
rulemaking process, explain and answer
questions relating to how the proposed
California FMMO would operate, and
inform the public how they can submit
public comments for consideration.
ADDRESSES: Comments should be
submitted at the Federal eRulemaking
portal: https://www.regulations.gov.
Comments may also be filed with the
Hearing Clerk, U.S. Department of
Agriculture, Room 1031–S, Washington,
DC 20250–9200, Facsimile number (202)
720–9976. All comments should
reference the docket number and the
date and page number of this issue of
the Federal Register. All comments will
be made available for public inspection
in the Office of the Hearing Clerk during
regular business hours, or can be viewed
at: https://www.regulations.gov.
The public meeting will convene at
9:00 a.m. on Wednesday, February 22,
2017, at the Clovis Veterans Memorial
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SUMMARY:
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District Building, 808 Fourth Street,
Clovis, California 93612. Additional
meeting information can be found at
www.ams.usda.gov/caorder.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Erin
Taylor, Acting Director, Order
Formulation and Enforcement Division,
USDA/AMS/Dairy Program, STOP 0231,
Room 2969–S, 1400 Independence Ave.
SW., Washington, DC 20250–0231, (202)
720–7311, email address: erin.taylor@
ams.usda.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This
recommended decision finds that a
FMMO for California would provide
more orderly marketing conditions in
the marketing area, and therefore
promulgation of a California FMMO is
warranted. The record is replete with
discussion from most parties on
whether disorderly marketing
conditions exist, or are even needed, to
warrant promulgation of a California
FMMO. FMMOs are authorized by the
Agricultural Marketing Agreement Act
of 1937, as amended (7 U.S.C. 601–674
and 7253) (AMAA). The declared policy
of the AMAA makes no mention of
‘‘disorder,’’ and this recommended
decision finds that disorderly marketing
conditions are not a requirement for an
order to be promulgated. The standard
for FMMO promulgation is to ‘‘. . .
establish and maintain such orderly
marketing conditions . . .,’’ (7 U.S.C.
602(4) and this recommended decision
finds that the California FMMO
recommended decision meets that
standard.
AMS has considered all record
evidence presented at the hearing, as
well as the arguments and proposed
findings submitted in post-hearing
briefs, to formulate this Recommended
Decision. The package of provisions
recommended in this decision reflect
California marketing conditions, while
still adhering to fundamental FMMO
principles that have historically helped
to maintain orderly marketing
conditions, ensured a sufficient supply
of pure and wholesome milk, and been
in the public interest.
A FMMO is a regulation issued by the
Secretary of Agriculture that places
certain requirements on the handling of
milk in the area it covers. Each FMMO
is established under the authority of the
AMAA. A FMMO requires handlers of
milk for a marketing area pay minimum
class prices according to how the milk
is used. These prices are established
under each FMMO after a public
hearing where evidence is received on
the supply and demand conditions for
milk in the market. A FMMO requires
that payments for milk be pooled and
paid to individual farmers or
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cooperative associations of farmers on
the basis of a uniform or average price.
Thus, all eligible dairy farmers
(producers) share in the marketwide
use-values of milk by regulated
handlers.
This decision recommends the
establishment of a FMMO to regulate
the handling of milk in California.
Where appropriate, the recommended
California FMMO proposes adoption of
uniform provisions that are contained in
the 10 current FMMOs. These uniform
provisions include, but are not limited
to, product classification, end-product
price formulas, Class I differential
structure, and producer-handler
definition.1 This decision recognizes the
unique market structure of the
California dairy industry through
tailored performance-based standards to
determine eligibility for pool
participation.
As in all current FMMOs, California
handlers regulated by a California
FMMO would be responsible for
accurate reporting of all milk
movements and uses, and would be
required to make timely payments to
producers. The order would be
administered by the United States
Department of Agriculture (USDA)
through a Market Administrator, who
would provide essential marketing
services, such as laboratory testing,
account verification, information
collection and publication, and
producer payment enforcement.
A unique feature of the proposed
order is a provision for the recognition
of the California quota value specified
in the California quota program
currently administered by the California
Department of Food and Agriculture
(CDFA). This decision finds that the
California quota program should remain
a function of CDFA in whatever manner
CDFA deems appropriate. Should CDFA
continue to use producer monies to
fund the quota program, this decision
finds that the proper recognition of
quota values within a California FMMO,
as provided for in the Agriculture Act of
2014 (2014 Farm Bill) (Pub. L. 113–79,
sec. 1410(d)), is to permit an authorized
deduction from payment to producers,
in an amount determined and
announced by CDFA.
In conjunction with this
Recommended Decision, AMS
conducted a Regulatory Economic
Impact Analysis to determine the
potential impact of regulating California
milk handlers under a FMMO on the
milk supply, product demand and
1 References to Class I, Class II, Class III and Class
IV refer to products classified in those classes based
on uniform FMMO provisions.
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prices, and milk allocation in California
and throughout the United States. As
part of the analysis, a regional
econometric model was used to project
deviations from the USDA Agricultural
Baseline Projections to 2025 2 under the
provisions of the proposed order. The
full text of the Regulatory Economic
Impact Analysis Report and
accompanying documentation may be
accessed at www.regulations.gov or
www.ams.usda.gov/caorder.
Prior documents in this proceeding:
Notice of Hearing: Issued July 27,
2015; published August 6, 2015 (80 FR
47210);
Notice To Reconvene Hearing: Issued
September 25, 2015; published
September 30, 2015 (80 FR 58636).
This administrative action is governed
by the provisions of Sections 556 and
557 of Title 5 of the United States Code
and is therefore excluded from the
requirements of Executive Order 12866.
The provisions of the marketing
agreement and order proposed herein
have been reviewed under Executive
Order 12988, Civil Justice Reform. They
are not intended to have a retroactive
effect. If adopted, the proposed order
would not preempt any state or local
laws, regulations, or policies, unless
they present an irreconcilable conflict
with this rule.
AMS 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.
The AMAA provides that
administrative proceedings must be
exhausted before parties may file suit in
court. Under 7 U.S.C. 608c(15)(A) of the
AMAA, any handler subject to an order
may request modification or exemption
from such order by filing with USDA a
petition stating that the order, any
provision of the order, or any obligation
imposed in connection with the order is
not in accordance with the law. A
handler is afforded the opportunity for
a hearing on the petition. After a
hearing, USDA would rule on the
petition. The AMAA provides that the
district court of the United States in any
district in which the handler is an
inhabitant, or has its principal place of
business, has jurisdiction in equity to
review USDA’s ruling on the petition,
provided a bill in equity is filed not
later than 20 days after the date of the
entry of the ruling.
2 U.S. Department of Agriculture, Office of the
Chief Economist, World Agricultural Outlook
Board, Interagency Agricultural Projections
Committee, 2016. Long-term Projections Report
OCE–2016–1.
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Civil Rights Impact Analysis
AMS has reviewed this rule in
accordance with Departmental
Regulation 4300–4—Civil Rights Impact
Analysis, to identify and address
potential impacts the proposal might
have on any protected groups of people.
After a careful review of the rule’s intent
and provisions, AMS has determined
that this rule would not limit or reduce
the ability of individuals in any
protected classes to participate in the
proposed FMMO, or to enjoy the
anticipated benefits of the proposed
program. Any impacts on dairy farmers
and processors arising from
implementation of this proposed rule
are not expected to be disproportionate
for members of any protected group on
a prohibited basis.
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
Pursuant to the requirements set forth
in the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
(5 U.S.C. 601–612), AMS has considered
the economic impact of this action on
small entities. Accordingly, AMS has
prepared this initial regulatory
flexibility analysis.
The purpose of the RFA is to fit
regulatory actions to the scale of
business subject to such actions so that
small businesses will not be unduly or
disproportionately burdened. Small
dairy farm businesses have been defined
by the Small Business Administration
(SBA) (13 CFR 121.601) as those
businesses having annual gross receipts
of less than $750,000. SBA’s definition
of small agricultural service firms,
which includes handlers that would be
regulated under the proposed California
FMMO, varies depending on the
product manufactured. Small fluid milk
and ice cream manufacturers are
defined as having 1,000 or fewer
employees. Small butter and dry or
condensed dairy product manufacturers
are defined as having 750 or fewer
employees. Small cheese manufacturers
are defined as having 1,250 or fewer
employees.
For the purpose of determining which
California dairy farms are ‘‘small
businesses,’’ the $750,000 per year
criterion was used to establish a
production guideline that equates to
approximately 315,000 pounds of milk
per month. Although this guideline does
not factor in additional monies that may
be received by dairy farmers, it is a
standard encompassing most ‘‘small’’
dairy farms. For the purpose of
determining a handler’s size, if the plant
is part of a larger company operating
multiple plants that collectively exceed
the employee limit for that type of
manufacturing, the plant is considered a
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large business even if the local plant has
fewer than the defined number of
employees.
Interested persons were invited to
present evidence at the hearing on the
probable regulatory and informational
impact of the proposed California
FMMO on small businesses. Specific
evidence on the number of large and
small dairy farms in California (above
and below the threshold of $750,000 in
annual sales) was not presented at the
hearing. However, data compiled by
CDFA3 suggests that between 5 and 15
percent of California dairy farms would
be considered small business entities.
No comparable data for dairy product
manufacturers was available.
Record evidence indicates that
implementing the proposed California
FMMO would not impose a
disproportionate burden on small
businesses. Currently, the California
dairy industry is regulated by a
California State Order (CSO) that is
administered and enforced by CDFA.
While the CSO and FMMOs have
differences that will be discussed later
in this decision, they both maintain
similar classified pricing and
marketwide pooling functions.
Therefore, it is not expected that the
proposed regulatory change will have a
significant impact on California small
businesses.
The record evidence does indicate
that while the program is likely to
impose some costs on the regulated
parties, those costs would be
outweighed by the benefits expected to
accrue to the California dairy industry.
AMS prepared a Regulatory Economic
Impact Analysis to study the possible
impacts of the proposed California
FMMO. The analysis may be viewed in
conjunction with this recommended
decision (Docket No. AMS–DA–14–
0095) at www.regulations.gov.
California Dairy Market Background
The record shows that the California
dairy industry accounts for
approximately 20 percent of the nation’s
milk supply. While its 39 million
residents are concentrated in the state’s
coastal areas, the majority of California’s
dairy farms are located in the interior
valleys, frequently at some distance
from milk processing plants and
consumer population centers.
CDFA has defined and established
distinct regulations for Northern and
Southern California dairy regions.4
3 CDFA, California Dairy Review, Volume 19,
Issue 9, September 2015.
4 CDFA, Stabilization and Marketing Plan for
Market Milk, as Amended, for the Northern
California Marketing Area.
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According to data published by CDFA,5
well over 90 percent of the state’s
approximately 41 billion pounds of milk
for 2015 was produced in the Northern
California region. The five leading milk
production counties in 2015 were
Tulare, Merced, Kings, Stanislaus, and
Kern, together accounting for
approximately 73 percent of the state’s
milk.
According to CDFA, there were 1,438
dairy farms in California in 2015. Of
those, 1,338 were located in Northern
California, and 100 were in Southern
California. The statewide average
number of cows per dairy was 1,215; in
Northern California, the average herd
size was 1,235 cows, and in Southern
California, 952 cows. Average milk
production for the state’s 1.75 million
cows was 23,382 pounds in 2015.
According to record evidence, 132
handlers reported milk receipts to CDFA
for at least one month during 2015. A
CDFA February 2015 list of California
dairy product processing plants by type
of product produced 6 shows that 35
California plants processed Class 1
products; 75 plants processed Class 2
and 3 products; 18 plants processed
Class 4a products; and 64 plants
processed Class 4b products.7 Some
plants processed products in more than
one class.
CDFA reported 8 that approximately
99 percent of California’s 2015 milk
production was market grade (Grade A),
and the rest was manufacturing grade
(Grade B). Thirteen percent of the milk
pooled under the CSO was utilized by
California processors as Class 1 (fluid
milk). Nine percent was utilized for
Classes 2 and 3 (soft and frozen dairy
products), 32 percent was utilized for
Class 4a (butter and dried milk
powders), and 46 percent was utilized
for Class 4b (cheese).
According to CDFA, total Class 1 sales
in California were approximately 662
million gallons in 2015. Record
evidence shows that annual California
Class 1 sales outside the state averaged
22 million gallons for the five years
preceding 2015.
The record shows that for the fiveyear period from 2010 through 2014, an
average of 230 million pounds of
California bulk milk products were
transferred to out-of-state plants for
processing each year. During the same
period, an average of 633 million
5 CDFA,
California Dairy Statistics Annual 2015.
Milk and Dairy Food Safety Branch
(MDFS). https://www.cdfa.ca.gov/ahfss/Milk_and_
Dairy_Food_Safety/#Plants.
7 References to Class 1, Class 2, Class 3, Class 4a
and Class 4b refer to products classified in those
categories based on the CSO.
8 CDFA, California Dairy Statistics Annual 2015.
pounds of milk from outside the state
was received and reported by California
pool plants each year.
Impact on Small Businesses
This rule proposes to establish a
FMMO in California similar to the 10
existing FMMOs in the national system.
The California dairy industry is
currently regulated under the CSO,
which is similar to the recommended
FMMO in most respects. California
handlers currently report milk receipts
and utilization to CDFA, which
calculates handler prices based on
component values derived from finished
product sales surveys. Likewise, FMMO
handlers report milk receipts and
utilization to the Market Administrators,
who calculate handlers’ pool obligations
according to price formulas that
incorporate component prices based on
end product sales values. Under both
programs, the value of handlers’ milk is
pooled, and pool revenues are shared by
all the pooled producers. Thus,
transitioning to the FMMO is expected
to have only a minimal impact on the
reporting and regulatory responsibilities
for large or small handlers, who are
already complying with similar CSO
regulations.
Pricing
Under the recommended California
FMMO, uniform FMMO end-product
price formulas would replace the CDFA
price formulas currently used to
calculate handler milk prices. FMMO
end-product price formulas incorporate
component prices derived from national
end-product sales surveys conducted by
AMS. Use of price formulas based on
national product sales would permit
California farmers to receive prices for
pooled milk reflective of the national
market for commodity products for
which their milk is utilized. Consistent
with the current FMMOs, California
FMMO Class I prices would be
computed using the higher of the Class
III or IV advance prices announced the
previous month, and would be adjusted
by the Class I differential for the county
where the plant is located.9
Regulated minimum prices, especially
for milk used in cheese manufacturing,
are likely to be higher than what
handlers would pay under the CSO.
However, pooling regulations under the
proposed FMMO would allow handlers
to elect not to pool milk used in
manufacturing. This option would be
6 CDFA,
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9 FMMOs
have four classifications of milk: Class
I—fluid milk products; Class II—fluid cream
products, soft ‘‘spoonable’’ cheeses, ice cream, and
yogurt; Class III—hard cheeses and spreadable
cheese such as cream cheese; Class IV—butter and
dried milk products.
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available to both large and small
manufacturing handlers.
Dairy farmers whose milk is pooled
on the order would receive a pro rata
share of the pool revenues through the
California FMMO uniform blend price.
The FMMO would not provide for the
quota and non-quota milk pricing tiers
found under the CSO. Under the
recommended FMMO, regulated
handlers would be allowed to deduct
monies, in an amount determined and
announced by CDFA, from blend prices
paid to California dairy farmers for
pooled milk and send those monies to
CDFA to administer the quota program.
These changes are expected to affect
producers and handlers of all sizes, but
are not expected to be disproportionate
for small entities.
Producer-Handlers
The record shows that there are four
producer-handlers 10 in California
whose Class 1 milk production is all or
partially exempt from CSO pricing and
pooling by virtue of their ‘‘exempt
quota’’ holdings, representing
approximately 21 million pounds of
milk each month. It is likely that these
four entities would become fully
regulated under the recommended
FMMO and accountable to the
marketwide pool for all of their Class I
sales in the marketing area. By
accounting to the pool for all their Class
I sales in the marketing area, the value
of the marketwide pool is expected to
increase, benefiting most other large and
small producers. The recommended
California FMMO makes no provision
for exempting large producer-handlers
from pricing and pooling regulations
under the order.
The evidentiary record shows that
several smaller California producerhandlers, whose production volume
exceeds the threshold to receive an
exemption from the CSO’s pricing and
pooling regulations, would likely
qualify as producer-handlers under the
recommended FMMO.11
Interstate Commerce
The evidentiary record indicates that
milk in interstate commerce, which the
CSO does not have authority to regulate,
would be regulated under the FMMO.
Currently, California handlers who
purchase milk produced outside the
state do not account to the CSO
marketwide pool for that milk. Record
10 A producer-handler is a dairy farmer who
processes and distributes their own-farm milk into
dairy products.
11 The CSO exempts producer-handlers with sales
averaging less than 500 gallons of milk per day on
an annual basis and who distribute 95 percent of
their production to retail or wholesale outlets.
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evidence shows approximately 425
million pounds of milk from outside the
state was processed into Class 1
products at California processing plants
during 2014.
Under the recommended FMMO, all
Class I milk processed and distributed
in the marketing area would be subject
to FMMO pricing and pooling
regulations, regardless of its origin.
Revenues from Class 1 sales not
currently regulated would accrue to the
California FMMO pool and would be
shared with all producers who are
pooled on the California FMMO. If
California handlers elect to continue
processing out-of-state milk into Class I
products under the FMMO, they would
be required to pay the order’s classified
minimum price for that milk. Those
additional revenues would be pooled
and would benefit large and small
producers who participate in the pool.
Both large and small out-of-state
producers who ship milk to pool plants
in California would receive the
California FMMO uniform blend price
for their milk.
Classification and Fortification
Dairy product classification under the
CSO and the recommended FMMO is
similar, but not identical. The table
below compares CSO and FMMO
product classes.
CSO class
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Class
Class
Class
Class
1 ......................
2 and 3 ............
4b ....................
4a ....................
Equivalent FMMO
class
Class
Class
Class
Class
I.
II.
III.
IV.
Under the proposed California
FMMO, the classification of certain
California products would change to
align with standard FMMO
classifications:
• Reassigning buttermilk from CSO
Class 2 to FMMO Class I
• Reassigning half and half from CSO
Class 1 to FMMO Class II
• Reassigning eggnog from CSO Class 2
to FMMO Class I
• There are numerous instances where
the CSO classifies products based on
product type and location of where
the product is sold.12 The proposed
California FMMO would classify all
products based solely on product
type.
Under the recommended FMMO,
California handlers would no longer
receive credits for fluid milk
fortification. Instead, accounting for
fortification would be uniform with
12 CDFA, Classification of Dairy Products. https://
www.cdfa.ca.gov/dairy/pdf/PRDCLASS.pdf.
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other FMMOs, as the classification of
the fluid milk equivalent of the milk
solids used to fortify fluid milk products
would be classified as Class IV and the
increased volume of Class I product due
to fortification would be classified as
Class I. The FMMO system accounts for
fortification differently from the CSO,
but the record does not indicate the net
impact of this change. However, the
impact is not expected to
disproportionately affect small entities.
Transportation Credits
The recommended FMMO does not
contain a transportation credit program
to encourage shipments to Class 1, 2 and
3 plants as is currently provided for in
the CSO. This decision recommends
that producer payments be adjusted to
reflect the applicable producer location
adjustment for the handler location
where their milk is received, thus
providing the incentive to producers to
supply Class I plants. As producers are
responsible for finding a market for their
milk and consequently bear the cost of
transporting their milk to a plant, the
record of this proceeding does not
support reducing the producers’ value
of the marketwide pool through the
payment of transportation credits to
handlers. This change is not expected to
disproportionately impact small
business entities.
Summary
This decision finds that adoption of
the recommended California FMMO
would promote more orderly marketing
of milk in interstate commerce.
Classified milk prices under the
recommended order would reflect
national prices for manufactured
products and local prices for fluid milk
products, fostering greater equality for
California producers and handlers in the
markets where they compete. Under the
recommended order, handlers would be
assured a uniform cost for raw milk, and
producers would receive uniform
payments for raw milk, regardless of its
use. Small dairy farmers and handlers
are not expected to be
disproportionately impacted by the
transition from CSO to FMMO
regulations.
Paperwork Reduction Act
In accordance with the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C.
Chapter 35) (Act), this notice announces
AMS’ intention to request approval from
the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) for a new information collection
totaling 2138.35 hours for the initial setup and annual reporting and
recordkeeping requirements contained
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in this proposed rule for the
promulgation of a California FMMO.
OMB previously approved
information collection requirements
associated with all other FMMOs and
assigned OMB control number 0581–
0032. This proposed rule would change
certain aspects of the information
collection and recordkeeping
requirements previously approved.
Therefore, a NEW information
collection is required to carry out the
requirements of this proposed rule.
AMS intends to merge this new
information collection, upon OMB
approval, into the approved OMB No.
0581–0032 collection.
Below, AMS has described and
estimated the annual burden for entities
to prepare and maintain information
necessary to participate in this proposed
California FMMO. As with all
mandatory regulatory programs,
reporting and recordkeeping burdens
are periodically reviewed to reduce
information requirements and
duplication by industry and public
sector agencies. The Act, as amended,
provides authority for this action.
Title: Report Forms Under a California
Federal Milk Marketing Order (From
Milk Handlers and Milk Marketing
Cooperatives).
OMB Number: 0581–NEW.
Expiration Date of Approval: Three
years from date of approval.
Type of Request: This is a NEW
collection.
Abstract: FMMO regulations (7 CFR
parts 1000–1199) authorized under the
AMAA require milk handlers to report
in detail the receipts and utilization of
milk and milk products handled at each
of their plants that are regulated by a
Federal order. The data are needed to
administer the classified pricing system
and related requirements of each
Federal order.
A FMMO is a regulation issued by the
Secretary of Agriculture that places
certain requirements on the handling of
milk in the area it covers. Each FMMO
is established under the authority of the
AMAA. The FMMO requires handlers of
milk for a marketing area pay not less
than certain minimum class prices
according to how the milk is used.
These prices are established under each
FMMO after a public hearing where
evidence is received on the supply and
demand conditions for milk in the
market. A FMMO requires payments for
milk be pooled and paid to individual
farmers or cooperative associations of
farmers on the basis of a uniform or
average price. Thus, all eligible dairy
farmers (producers) share in the
marketwide use-values of milk by
regulated handlers.
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FMMOs help ensure adequate
supplies of milk and minimum returns
to producers. The FMMOs also provide
for the public dissemination of market
statistics and other information for the
benefit of producers, handlers, and
consumers.
Formal rulemaking amendments to
the FMMOs must be approved in
referenda conducted by the Secretary.
During 2015, 1,438 California dairy
farmers produced over 40.9 billion
pounds of milk. This volume represents
approximately 20 percent of all milk
marketed in the U.S. The value of this
milk delivered to CSO regulated
handlers at minimum CSO classified
prices was over $3 billion. Producer
deliveries of milk used in Class 1
products (mainly fluid milk products)
totaled 13 percent of the State’s market
utilization.
Under the proposed California
FMMO, an estimated 3.4 billion pounds
of milk would be pooled, making it the
largest FMMO pool. Class I volume
pooled would approximate 438 million
pounds each month, making it the third
largest.
Each FMMO is administered by a
Market Administrator. The Market
Administrator is authorized to levy
assessments on regulated handlers to
carry out their duties and
responsibilities under the FMMOs.
Additional duties of the Market
Administrator are to prescribe reports
required of each handler, to assure
handlers properly account for milk and
milk products, and to assure such
handlers pay producers and associations
of producers according to the provisions
of the FMMO. The Market
Administrator employs a staff that
verifies handlers’ reports by examining
their records to determine that required
payments are made to producers. Most
reports required from handlers are
submitted monthly to the Market
Administrator.
The forms used by the Market
Administrators are required by the
respective FMMOs authorized by the
AMAA. The forms are used to establish
the quantity of milk received by
handlers, the pooling status of the
handlers, the class use of milk by the
handler, and the butterfat content and
amounts of other components of the
milk.
The forms covered under this
information collection require the
minimum information necessary to
effectively carry out the requirements of
the proposed California FMMO, and
their use is necessary to fulfill the intent
of the AMAA as expressed in the
FMMO and in the rules and regulations
proposed under the FMMO. The
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information collected will only be used
by authorized employees of the Market
Administrator and authorized
representatives of the USDA, including
AMS Dairy Program staff.
Some of the established forms under
‘‘Report Forms under Federal Milk
Orders (From Milk Handlers and Milk
Marketing Cooperatives)’’ OMB No.
0581–0032 will be used and modified
for this proposed order. However, the
burden shown in this section is for this
collection only. Upon approval, USDA
will request to merge this burden into
the currently approved OMB No. 0581–
0032. All separate burdens will become
all inclusive.
Estimate of Burden: Public reporting
burden for this collection of information
is estimated to average 1.06 hours per
response.
Respondents: Milk handlers and milk
marketing cooperatives.
Estimated Number of Respondents:
55.
Estimated Total Annual Responses:
2,022.
Estimated Number of Responses per
Respondent: 36.76.
Estimated Total Annual Burden on
Respondents: 2138.35.
Comments are invited on: (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; (3)
ways to enhance the quality, utility, and
clarity of the information to be
collected; and (4) ways to minimize the
burden of the collection of information
on those who are to respond, including
the use of appropriate automated,
electronic, mechanical, or other
technological collection techniques or
other forms of information technology.
All responses to this notice will be
summarized and included in the request
for OMB approval. All comments will
become a matter of public record. A 60day period is provided to comment on
the information collection burden.
Preliminary Statement
Notice is hereby given of the filing
with the Hearing Clerk of this
Recommended Decision with respect to
the proposed marketing agreement and
order regulating the handling of milk in
California.
This Recommended Decision is
issued pursuant to the provisions of the
AMAA and the applicable rules of
practice and procedure governing the
formulation of marketing agreements
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and orders (7 CFR part 900). The
proposed marketing agreement and
order are authorized under 7 U.S.C.
608(c).
The proposed marketing agreement
and order are based on the record of a
public hearing held September 22
through November 18, 2015, in Clovis,
California. The hearing was held to
receive evidence on four proposals
submitted by dairy farmers, handlers,
and other interested parties. Notice of
this hearing was published in the
Federal Register on August 6, 2015.
Ninety-eight witnesses testified over
the course of the 40-day hearing.
Witnesses provided a broad overview of
the history and complexity of the
California dairy industry, and submitted
194 exhibits containing supporting data,
analyses, and historical information.
The material issues presented on the
record of hearing are as follows:
1. Whether the handling of milk in the
proposed marketing area is in the
current of interstate commerce, or
directly burdens, obstructs, or affects
interstate commerce in milk or its
products;
2. Whether economic and marketing
conditions in California show a need for
a Federal marketing order that would
tend to effectuate the declared policy of
the Act;
3. If an order is issued, what its
provisions should be with respect to:
a. Handlers to be regulated and milk
to be priced and pooled under the order;
b. Classification of milk, and
assignment of receipts to classes of
utilization;
c. Pricing of milk;
d. Distribution of proceeds to
producers; and
e. Administrative provisions.
Findings and Conclusions
The findings and conclusions on the
material issues are based on the record
of the hearing. Discussions are
organized by topic, recognizing
inevitable overlap in some areas. Topics
are addressed in the following order:
1. Regulatory Comparison
2. Overview of Proposals
3. Justification for a California FMMO
4. California Quota Program Recognition
5. Definitions and Uniform Provisions
6. Classification
7. Pricing
8. Pooling
9. Transportation Credits
10. Miscellaneous and Administrative
Provisions
1. Regulatory Comparison
The purpose of the following section
is to provide a general description and
comparison of the major features of the
California state dairy regulatory
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framework and the FMMO system as
provided in the evidentiary record. A
more detailed discussion of each issue
is provided in the appropriate section of
this decision.
California State Order
Currently, milk marketing in
California is regulated by the CDFA. The
CSO is codified in the Pooling Plan for
Market Milk, as amended, and in two
Stabilization and Marketing Plan(s) for
Market Milk, as amended, for the
Northern and Southern California
marketing areas.13
Quota
The California quota program is a
state-administered producer program
that entitles the quota holder to $0.195
per pound of solids-not-fat above the
CSO base and overbase price of milk.14
The quota premium is funded through
a deduction from the CSO marketwide
pool before the CSO overbase price is
calculated. The quota program requires
quota holders to deliver milk to a pool
plant at least once every 60 days. Quota
can be bought and sold, and according
to record evidence, approximately 58
percent of California dairy farms owned
some volume of quota in 2015.
Classification
The CSO provides for the pricing of
five classified use values of milk. In
general, Class 1 is milk used in fluid
milk products; Class 2 is milk used in
heavy cream, cottage cheese, yogurt, and
sterilized products; Class 3 is milk used
in ice cream and frozen products; Class
4a is milk used in butter and dry milk
products, such as nonfat dry milk; and
Class 4b is milk used in cheese—other
than cottage cheese—and whey
products.
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Pricing
The CSO utilizes an end-product
pricing system to determine classified
prices for raw milk produced and
manufactured in the State of California.
Class 1, 4a, and 4b prices are announced
monthly. Class 2 and 3 prices are
announced bi-monthly. Prices for all
five milk classes are component-based.
Three components of milk are used to
determine prices: Butterfat (fat); solidsnot-fat (SNF), which includes protein
and lactose; and a fluid carrier (used in
only the Class 1 price).
13 Chapter 2, Part 3, Division 21 and Chapter 3,
Part 3, Division 21 of the California Food and
Agriculture Code.
14 The hearing record reveals that the $0.195 per
pound solids-non-fat equates to a $1.70 per cwt of
milk quota premium. Additionally, under current
CSO provisions, base and overbase prices are equal.
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The CSO determines milk component
prices based on commodity market
prices obtained from the Chicago
Mercantile Exchange (CME), the AMS
Dairy Market News Western Dry
Whey—Mostly (WDW-Mostly) price
series, and the announced nonfat dry
milk (NFDM) California Weighted
Average Price (CWAP), which is
determined by CDFA through weekly
surveys of California manufacturing
plants.
The price for milk used in cheese
manufacturing (CSO Class 4b) is a
central issue in this proceeding. The
Class 4b price is announced monthly
and utilizes average commodity market
prices for block Cheddar cheese, butter,
and dry skim whey to determine the
Class 4b component values. The average
CME prices for butter and 40-pound
Cheddar blocks are adjusted by f.o.b.
price adjusters, which are designed to
represent the difference between the
CME price and the price California
manufacturers actually receive. The
CME butter price is also reduced by
$0.10 per pound to derive the value of
whey butter as it relates to cheese
processing. The value of dry skim whey
is determined through a sliding scale
that provides a ‘‘per hundredweight
(cwt)’’ value based on a series of
announced WDW-Mostly per pound
value ranges. The sliding scale
determines dry whey’s contribution to
the Class 4b price, with a floor of $0.25
per cwt and a ceiling of $0.75 per cwt
when the WDW-Mostly price equals or
exceeds $0.60 per pound.
The CSO pricing system has a number
of features worth highlighting. First,
under the CSO, handlers must pay at
least minimum classified prices for all
Grade A milk purchased from California
dairy farmers, regardless of whether the
milk is pooled on the CSO.
Additionally, Class 1 processors may
claim credits against their pool
obligations to offset the cost of fortifying
fluid milk to meet the State-mandated
solids content standards.
The classified use values of all the
milk pooled on the CSO are aggregated,
and producers are paid on the fat and
SNF component levels in their raw
milk. Producers are paid on the basis of
their allocated quota (if applicable),
base, and overbase production for the
month. While the CSO pricing formulas
have changed over time, in their current
form, the base and overbase prices are
the same. Generally, the quota price is
the overbase price plus the $1.70 per
cwt quota premium.
Pooling
Almost all California-produced milk
received by California pool plants is
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pooled on the CSO, with some
exceptions. Grade B milk is neither
pooled nor subject to minimum prices.
Manufacturing plants that do not make
any Class 1 or 2 products can opt out
of the pool, however, they are still
required to pay announced CSO
classified minimum prices for Grade A
milk received. The requirement that
quota holders must deliver milk to a
pool plant at least once every 60 days
tends to limit the amount of Grade A
milk not pooled on the CSO. The
decision not to pool milk in California
carries with it a stipulation that the
plant may not repool for 12 months after
opting not to pool, and after repooling,
a plant cannot opt out of pooling for 12
months.
Entities recognized as producerhandlers under the CSO may be exempt
from pooling some or all of their milk.
Producer-handlers are dairy farmers
who also process and distribute their
dairy products. Fully exempt (‘‘Option
66’’) producer-handlers have minimal
production volumes and are exempt
from the pricing and pooling provisions
of the CSO. Producer-handlers who own
exempt quota (‘‘Option 70’’) do not
account to the CSO marketwide pool for
the volume of Class 1 milk covered by
their exempt quota.
The State of California cannot regulate
interstate commerce, and therefore milk
from out-of-state producers cannot be
regulated by the CSO. While the record
reflects that California handlers
typically pay for out-of-state milk at a
price reflective of the receiving plant’s
utilization, those prices are not
regulated or enforced by the CSO.
Transportation Credits
The CSO provides transportation
credits to producers for farm-to-plant
Class 1, 2 and 3 milk movements
between designated supply zones and
plants with more than 50 percent Class
1, 2 and/or 3 utilization in designated
demand zones. The CSO also provides
for transportation allowances to
handlers for plant-to-plant milk
movements.
Classification
Whereas the CSO designates five
classes of milk utilization, FMMOs
provide for four classes of milk
utilization. FMMO Class I is milk used
in fluid milk products. Class II is milk
used to produce fluid cream products,
soft ‘‘spoonable’’ products like cottage
cheese, ice cream, sour cream, and
yogurt, and other products such as kefir,
baking mixes, infant formula and meal
replacements, certain prepared foods,
and ingredients in other prepared food
products. Class III is milk used to
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produce spreadable cheeses like cream
cheese, and hard cheeses, like Cheddar,
that can be crumbled, grated, or
shredded. Class IV is milk used to
produce butter, evaporated or
sweetened condensed milk in
consumer-style packages, and dry milk
products.
Federal Milk Marketing Orders
A FMMO is a regulation issued by the
Secretary of Agriculture (Secretary) that
places certain requirements on the
handling of milk in a defined
geographic marketing area. FMMOs are
authorized by the AMAA. The declared
policy of the AMAA is to ‘‘. . . establish
and maintain such orderly marketing
conditions for agricultural commodities
in interstate commerce . . .’’ (7 U.S.C.
602(1)) . The principle means of meeting
the objectives of the FMMO program are
through the use of classified pricing of
milk and the marketwide pooling of
returns.
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
Pricing
Like the CSO, the FMMO program
currently uses end-product price
formulas based on the wholesale prices
of finished products to determine the
minimum classified prices handlers pay
for raw milk in the four classes of
utilization. However, the FMMO pricing
system has some notable differences.
While the CSO announces some
classified prices on a bi-monthly basis,
FMMOs announce prices for all four
milk classes monthly. FMMOs use four
components of milk to determine prices:
Butterfat, protein, nonfat solids and
other solids.
Like the CSO, the FMMO determines
component prices based on commodity
prices. However, AMS administers the
Dairy Product Mandatory Reporting
Program (DPMRP) to survey weekly
wholesale prices of four manufactured
dairy products (cheese, butter, NFDM
and dry whey), and releases weekly
average survey prices in the National
Dairy Product Sales Report (NDPSR).15
The FMMO product-price formulas use
these surveyed prices to determine the
component values in raw milk.
As referenced previously, a main
feature of this proceeding is the pricing
of milk used for cheese manufacturing
(FMMO Class III). The FMMO pricing
system determines the Class III value
from DPMRP surveyed butter, cheese,
and dry whey prices. The FMMO does
not utilize a sliding scale to determine
15 Official Notice is taken of the Notice of
Equivalent Price Series: 77 FR 22282. The National
Dairy Product Sales Report was deemed as
equivalent to the price series previously released by
the National Agricultural Statistics Service.
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the value of whey that contributes to the
Class III price.
Unlike the CSO, FMMOs do not
provide for a tiered system of producer
payments. A uniform blend price is
computed for each FMMO reflecting the
use of all milk in each marketwide pool.
A blend price is paid for all milk that
is pooled on the FMMO, adjusted for
location. In six of the FMMOs,
producers are paid for the pounds of
butterfat, pounds of protein, pounds of
other solids, and cwt of milk pooled.
The cwt price is known as the producer
price differential (PPD) and reflects the
producer’s pro rata share of the value of
Class I, Class II, and Class IV uses in the
pool relative to Class III value. In the
other four FMMOs, producers are paid
on a butterfat and skim basis.
Pooling
Inclusion in the FMMO marketwide
pool carries with it an obligation to be
available to serve the fluid market with
necessary milk supplies throughout the
year. In the FMMO system, participation
in the pool is mandatory for distributing
plants that process Grade A milk into
Class I products sold in a FMMO
marketing area. Handlers of
manufacturing milk (Class II, III or IV)
have the option of pooling, and pool
eligibility is based on performance
standards specific to each FMMO.
FMMOs recognize the unique
business structures of producerhandlers, and exempt them from the
pricing and pooling regulations of the
orders based on size. Producer-handler
exemptions under FMMOs are limited
to those vertically-integrated entities
that produce and distribute no more
than three million pounds of packaged
fluid milk products each month.
Unlike the CSO, FMMOs are
authorized to regulate the interstate
commerce connected with milk
marketing. Thus, there is no
differentiated regulatory treatment for
milk produced outside of a FMMO
marketing area boundary. All eligible
milk is pooled and priced in the same
manner, regardless of its source.
Transportation Credits
The Appalachian and Southeast
FMMOs provide for transportation
credits to offset a handler’s cost of
hauling supplemental milk to Class I
markets. During deficit months,
handlers can apply for transportation
credits to offset the cost of supplemental
milk deliveries from outside the
marketing area to meet the Class I
demand of FMMO handlers. The most
significant difference from the CSO is
that the FMMO transportation credits
described are not paid from the
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marketwide pool. Instead, they are paid
from separate funds obtained through
monthly assessments on handlers’ Class
I producer milk. The exception is the
Upper Midwest FMMO, which provides
transportation credits on plant-to-plant
milk movements paid from the
marketwide pool.
2. Overview of Proposals
Four proposals were published in the
Hearing Notice of this proceeding. Dairy
Farmers of America, Inc., Land O’Lakes,
Inc., and California Dairies, Inc., jointly
submitted Proposal 1. Dairy Farmers of
America, Inc. (DFA), is a national dairyfarmer owned cooperative with
approximately 14,000 members and
several processing facilities located
throughout the United States, with
products marketed both nationally and
internationally. Within California, DFA
represents 260 members and operates
three processing facilities. Land O’Lakes
(LOL) is a national farmer-owned
cooperative with over 2,200 dairyfarmer members. LOL has processing
facilities in the Upper Midwest, the
eastern United States, and the State of
California, with products marketed
nationally and internationally. Within
California, LOL represents 200 dairyfarmer members and operates three
processing facilities. California Dairies,
Inc. (CDI), is a California based dairyfarmer owned cooperative with 390
dairy-farmer members, six processing
facilities in California, and national and
international product sales. Combined,
DFA, LOL, and CDI (Cooperatives)
market approximately 75 percent of the
milk produced in California.
Proposal 1 seeks to establish a
California FMMO that incorporates the
same dairy product classification and
pricing provisions as those used
throughout the FMMO system. Proposal
1 also includes unique pooling
provisions, described as ‘‘inclusive’’
throughout the proceeding that would
pool the majority of the milk produced
in California each month, while also
allowing for the pooling of milk
produced outside of the marketing area,
if it meets specific pooling provisions.
The proposal includes fortification and
transportation credits similar to those
currently provided by the CSO. Lastly,
Proposal 1 provides for payment of the
California quota program quota values
from the marketwide pool before the
FMMO blend price is computed each
month.
Proposal 2 was submitted on behalf of
the Dairy Institute of California
(Institute). The Institute is a California
trade association representing
proprietary fluid milk processors and
cheese manufacturers, and cultured and
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frozen dairy products manufacturers in
38 plants throughout California.
Institute plants process 70 percent of the
fluid milk products, 85 percent of the
cultured and frozen dairy products, and
90 percent of the cheese manufactured
in the state. The Institute’s first position
is that a California FMMO should not be
promulgated. However, should USDA
find justification for promulgation, the
Institute supports Proposal 2. Proposal 2
incorporates the same dairy product
classification provisions used
throughout the FMMO system, as well
as pooling provisions that are consistent
with those found in other FMMOs. The
Proposal 2 pooling provisions require
the pooling of Class I milk, but the
pooling of milk used in manufactured
products is optional. Proposal 2
includes fortification and transportation
credits similar to those currently
provided by the CSO. It also includes an
additional shrinkage allowance for
extended shelf life (ESL) products above
that provided in the FMMO system.
Lastly, Proposal 2 recognizes quota
value by allowing producers to opt out
of the quota program, thus receiving a
FMMO blend price reflective of the
market’s utilization. Under Proposal 2,
producers who remain in the quota
program would have their blend price
monies transferred to CDFA and
redistributed according to their quota
and non-quota holdings.
Proposal 3 was submitted on behalf of
the California Producer Handlers
Association (CPHA). CPHA is an
association of four producer-handlers:
Foster Farms Dairy, Inc. (Foster),
Hollandia Dairy, Inc., Producers Dairy
Foods, Inc. (Producers), and Rockview
Dairies, Inc. (Rockview). CPHA
members own their respective dairy
farms and process that farm milk, as
well as the milk of other dairy farms, for
delivery to consumers. CPHA members
own exempt quota, which entitles them
to exemption from CSO pricing and
pooling provisions for the volume of
Class 1 milk covered by their exempt
quota. Proposal 3 seeks recognition and
continuation of CPHA members’ exempt
quota status under a California FMMO.
Proposal 4 was submitted on behalf of
Ponderosa Dairy (Ponderosa). Ponderosa
is a Nevada dairy farm that supplies raw
milk to California fluid milk processing
plants. Ponderosa contends that
disorderly marketing conditions do not
exist in California that would warrant
promulgation of a FMMO. However, if
USDA finds justification for a California
FMMO, Proposal 4 seeks to allow
California handlers to elect partiallyregulated plant status with regard to
milk they receive from out-of-state
producers. Such allowance would
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enable handlers to not pool out-of-state
milk, as long as they could demonstrate
that they paid out-of-state producers an
amount equal to or higher than the
market blend price.
3. Justification For A California FMMO
This section reviews and highlights
the testimony and evidence received
regarding whether or not promulgation
of a California FMMO is justified. This
decision finds that the proposed
California FMMO would provide for
more orderly marketing conditions for
the handling of milk in the State of
California, as provided for and
authorized by the AMAA.
A Cooperative witness testified
regarding current California marketing
conditions and the need for establishing
a California FMMO. According to the
witness, California is the largest milkproducing state, producing more than
20 percent of the nation’s milk. The
witness stated that the pooled volume of
a California FMMO would be the largest
of all FMMOs, averaging slightly below
3.4 billion pounds per month; the Class
I volume would represent the third
largest, following the Northeast and
Mideast FMMOs.
The Cooperative witness testified that
the primary reason California farmers
are seeking the establishment of a
FMMO is to receive prices reflective of
the national commodity values for all
milk uses. The witness opined that
orderly marketing is no longer attainable
through the CSO because the prices
California dairy farmers receive do not
reflect the full value of their raw milk.
The witness estimated that this pricing
difference has reduced California dairy
farm income by $1.5 billion since 2010.
The witness maintained that Proposal 1
allows California dairy farms to receive
an equitable price for their milk, while
also tailoring FMMO provisions to the
California dairy industry. The
Cooperatives’ post-hearing brief
reflected this position.
The Cooperative witness testified that
there are significant differences in
prices, depending on whether a
producer’s milk is regulated by the CSO
or a FMMO. To illustrate this difference,
the witness compared California farm
milk prices to those received by
producers in the states that comprise the
Upper Midwest and Pacific Northwest
marketing areas.16 The witness selected
these areas for comparison due to the
similar milk utilization in the Upper
Midwest FMMO and the geographic
proximity of the Pacific Northwest
FMMO. The witness estimated that
16 Wisconsin, Minnesota, and Illinois; Oregon,
Washington and Northern Idaho, respectively.
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between August 2012 and May 2015,
California dairy farmers received on
average $1.85 per cwt less (ranging from
$0.43–$4.27 per cwt lower) than
producers pooled on the Upper Midwest
and Pacific Northwest FMMOs. The
witness used the data to emphasize a
wide difference in prices for farmers in
similarly situated areas. The witness
opined that a California FMMO, as
advanced in Proposal 1, would ensure
California dairy farmers receive
equitable prices, more in line with those
received by their FMMO counterparts.
The Cooperative witness emphasized
that while both the CSO and the
FMMOs use end-product pricing
formulas to determine class prices, the
two regulatory systems use different
commodity series, effective dates, yield
factors, and make allowances, which
result in substantially different prices,
as highlighted above. The witness
explained that while the two regulatory
systems have always had price
differences, historically CSO and
FMMO prices were relatively close.
According to the witness, prices began
to diverge significantly in 2007 when
the CSO established a fixed whey factor
in its formula for milk used to produce
cheese. From that point forward, the
witness said, price differences have
become significant and have led to
market disruptions both in the fluid and
manufacturing markets.
The Cooperative witness summarized
USDA’s justification from the FMMO
Order Reform decision for adopting a
national Class I price surface that
assigns a Class I differential for every
county in the country, including
counties in California. The witness said
that the separate CSO Class 1 price
surface undermines the integrity of the
nationally coordinated Class I price
surface and has become a source of
disorder in California. To demonstrate
the disorder, the witness compared
FMMO Class I and CSO Class 1 prices
for both in-state and out-of-state
purchases. The witness said that
because of the CSO and FMMO
differences in both classified price
formulas and Class I/1 price surfaces,
the Class 1 price paid by California
handlers is almost always lower than
what it otherwise would be if FMMO
Class I prices were applicable for those
same purchases.
The Cooperative witness presented a
similar comparison between CSO Class
1 prices and Class I prices in FMMO
areas that were likely competitors. The
witness said that under FMMO
regulations, the difference in Class I
prices between two FMMO areas is
attributed to the difference in the Class
I differential at the two locations. For
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example, the witness explained, the
Class I price difference between two
plants, one located in a $2.10 zone and
another in the $2.00 zone, would be
$0.10 per cwt. However, when the
witness compared Class 1 prices in
California and a competing FMMO area,
the price difference was always greater
than the difference in differentials. For
example, the FMMO differential in the
Los Angeles/San Diego market is $2.10,
while the differential in neighboring
Phoenix is $2.35, a difference of $0.25.
However, said the witness, when
comparing the actual CSO Class 1 price
in Los Angeles/San Diego with the
FMMO Class I price in Phoenix from
August 2012 to July 2015, the difference
averaged $0.62. The witness concluded
that these observed price differences
undermine a nationally-coordinated
pricing structure and contribute to
disorderly marketing where fluid milk
handlers pay different minimum prices
depending on where they are regulated.
The Cooperative witness also
provided testimony on the CSO and
FMMO price disparities for
manufacturing milk. The witness
testified that FMMO Class II, III, and IV
prices reflect national prices for
products manufactured in these classes.
If Proposal 1 is adopted, the witness
said, California handlers would pay the
same uniform prices as their FMMO
competitors in the national marketplace.
The witness noted past FMMO
decisions that discussed the national
supply and demand for manufactured
dairy products and the need for national
uniform manufacturing prices. The
witness stressed that California
producers should also receive these
national prices like their FMMO
counterparts.
The Cooperative witness elaborated
on the differences between CSO and
FMMO manufacturing class prices.
When comparing FMMO Class II to CSO
Class 2 and Class 3 prices, the witness
cited differences in the commodity
series used as price references, the time
periods of data used, and the length of
time prices are applicable to explain the
sometimes large differences in prices
under the two regulatory systems. As a
result, the witness said, Class 2 products
are sometimes sold on a spot basis to
exploit short-term price differences.
The Cooperative witness presented a
comparison of CSO Class 4a and FMMO
Class IV prices from January 2000 to
July 2015, revealing that over the entire
time period the Class 4a price averaged
$0.29 per cwt less than the Class IV
price. The witness added that over this
15-year period, the CSO Class 4a price
on an annual average basis was never
above the FMMO Class IV price.
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The Cooperative witness also
provided testimony on the price
disparity between CSO Class 4b and
FMMO Class III price formulas. Data
from January 2000 to July 2015 revealed
that the CSO Class 4b price was lower
than the Class III price in 161 of the 187
months examined. The witness
computed the difference over that 15year time period averaged $0.91 per cwt,
with the largest difference of $3.24 per
cwt occurring in November 2014. The
witness attributed the observed price
differences to differences in the
valuation of dry whey between the CSO
4b and the FMMO Class III formulas.
The witness said that in 2007, the whey
factor in the CSO Class 4b formula
became a tiered, bracketed system with
a floor of $0.25 and a ceiling of $0.75
which is reached when the WDWMostly price is greater than or equal to
$0.60 per pound. The witness added
that the whey value contained in the
FMMO Class III price comes from the
AMS NDPSR, and reflects the
mandatory reporting of dry whey sales
throughout the country. The witness
estimated that from August 2012
through July 2015, the DMN whey value
contributed $0.68 per cwt to the CSO 4b
price, while the NDPSR whey value
contributed $2.39 per cwt to the FMMO
Class III price. The witness concluded
that the whey cap contained in the CSO
4b price results in lower contributions
to the marketwide pool than what is
observed in the national marketplace
and reflected in FMMO prices.
The Cooperative witness reiterated
the consequences of two different
regulatory pricing schemes have led to
severe differences between the regulated
markets. The witness opined that the
regulatory differences allow California
handlers who purchase raw milk and
manufacture products for sale on the
national marketplace to pay
substantially different regulated
minimum prices than handlers
regulated by the FMMO system. The
witness estimated that because of the
regulatory price differences, from
August 2012 to July 2015, California
farms received, on average, $1.89 per
cwt less than similarly-situated FMMO
farms. The witness concluded that this
results in California farms being in a
worse competitive position than other
similarly situated FMMO farms. The
witness labeled this as disorderly and
said that this condition should be
remedied through the adoption of
Proposal 1.
The Cooperative witness also entered
data estimating the value of regulating
interstate commerce through the
establishment of a California FMMO.
The witness cited January 2009 through
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July 2015 CDFA data that indicated a
monthly average of 54.5 million pounds
of milk originating outside the state was
processed by California processing
plants and another monthly average 36
million pounds of milk was produced
inside California and sold to plants
located outside of the state. The witness
explained that this milk is able to evade
CSO minimum-price regulations
because of the state’s inability to
regulate interstate commerce.
Consequently, the witness said, out-ofstate farms delivering milk to California
plants can receive plant blend prices,
which can be higher than the market’s
overbase price received by in-state
producers delivering to the same plant.
The witness elaborated that the problem
is compounded because processors
receiving these unregulated supplies are
not required to pay minimum classified
prices and can instead pay a lower price
than their regulated competitors. By
regulating these transactions through
the establishment of a California
FMMO, the witness stressed, the
California market would be more
orderly.
The Cooperatives’ post-hearing brief
also highlighted the CSO’s inability to
regulate out-of-area milk as a market
dysfunction. The Cooperatives wrote
that out-of-area sales financially harm
California dairy farms because the Class
1 revenues from those sales does not
contribute to the CSO marketwide pool
that is shared with all the farms in the
market.
A consultant witness, appearing on
behalf of the Cooperatives, testified in
support of Proposal 1. The witness was
of the opinion that the primary purpose
of FMMOs is to enhance producer
prices, which is provided in the AMAA
through its flexibility to regulate milk
and/or milk products, not just fluid
milk. As evidence of this flexibility, the
witness discussed the Evaporated Milk
Marketing Agreement, in existence until
1947, under which manufacturing milk
was regulated. Therefore, the witness
said, it is reasonable to conclude from
this example that the regulation of all
California plants that purchase milk
from California farms, as contained in
Proposal 1, would fall within the scope
of the AMAA.
The consultant witness elaborated
that extending minimum price
regulation to all classes of milk in
California is necessary to avoid the
market-disrupting practice of handlers
opting to not pool eligible milk because
of price, often referred to as depooling.
The witness said that many FMMOs
have adopted provisions to reduce the
instances of depooling. Currently, under
the CSO, the witness said, while plants
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can choose to not participate in the
marketwide pool, there is no price
advantage, because they are still
required to pay minimum classified
prices. The witness was of the opinion
that the impact of depooling would be
greater in a California FMMO because of
how California quota premiums are
paid. The witness testified that uniform
prices calculated after deducting quota
premiums would be less than they
otherwise would be, if large volumes of
milk were not pooled. Additionally, the
witness addressed the issue of uniform
producer payments. The witness was of
the opinion that once quota premiums
were paid, as required by California law,
remaining pool revenues would be
distributed uniformly to producers for
non-quota milk, as required by the
AMAA.
The consultant witness addressed the
issue of whether Proposal 1 would
implement classified prices that were
too high. The witness opined that the
classified price formulas contained in
Proposal 1 would not establish
manufacturing milk prices that are too
high because FMMO regulated handlers
in other areas are already paying those
prices. The witness entered data
showing that cheese production has
increased in the western states (not
including California and Idaho) by 92
percent from 2000 to 2014, while
California cheese production has
increased only 64 percent. The witness
concluded that minimum FMMO prices
have not been detrimental to FMMOregulated plants, and offered the fact
that over-order premiums are currently
paid to FMMO producers to support
that claim. The witness stated that
provisions providing for orderly
marketing conditions should also
provide stability (regulations should not
alter market transactions) and efficiency
(regulations should stimulate a
competitive economic environment),
and concluded that both are embodied
in Proposal 1.
Twenty-seven California dairy farmers
testified in support of Proposal 1.
Sixteen belong to one of the three
proponent Cooperatives: Nine LOL
members, three DFA members, and four
CDI members. An additional 11 dairy
farmers not associated with the
Cooperatives provided testimony
supporting the adoption of Proposal 1.
Although each dairy farmer provided
unique testimony, several difficulties
challenging the California dairy
industry were addressed repeatedly.
Producer testimony described financial
hardships due to the CSO producer
prices they receive consistently being
below the amount needed to cover the
cost of production. One farmer witness
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cited CDFA cost of production data from
the first quarter of 2015 for the North
Valley of California, and estimated that
90 percent of surveyed farms had
negative net incomes. Farmer witnesses
stated that a FMMO would provide an
opportunity for dairy farms to cover
their cost of production and work
toward reducing debts incurred from
historically low mailbox prices.
A number of producers testified that
historically they had many competitive
advantages (low cost of land, grain, hay
and water) enabling them to produce
milk at a significantly lower cost than
farms located in the rest of the county.
All of the witnesses testified that the
hardships of high land, feed, and/or
water costs, as compared to those in
other dairy states, have eroded their
competitive advantage. Citing no
competitive advantage, coupled with
the difference between the FMMO and
CSO pricing formulas, dairy farmers
testified they are receiving a lower
mailbox price than their FMMO
counterparts. Testimony stressed that
these realities are forcing many
California dairy farms out of business.
Many producers were of the opinion
that their inability to cover the cost of
production is tied to how whey is
valued in the CSO Class 4b formula.
Thirteen of the 27 producers testified
regarding the impact of the whey
valuation on mailbox prices. The
witnesses stressed that the CSO
historically responded to producers’
needs by encouraging manufacturing
plant investment that would provide an
outlet for milk to be processed at a
regulated price considered fair.
According to the witnesses, this
regulatory balance shifted in 2007
because of a CDFA rulemaking that
adopted a sliding scale that capped the
value of the dry whey factor in the Class
4b formula. Testimony was provided
that stated that the 2007 hearing marked
the start of the widening discrepancy
between mailbox prices for California
dairy farmers and those received by
other dairy farmers across the nation.
Witnesses stated the reduced mailbox
prices continue to undervalue milk
throughout the State. The producers
were of the opinion that a California
FMMO would bring California’s
valuation of dry whey in line with the
rest of the country. With comparable
whey values, producers testified their
mailbox price would become more
representative of the true market value
of their milk.
Three testifying producers owned
farms in both California and FMMO
regulated areas. These producers
testified to the difference in production
costs and mailbox prices received by
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their farms over the last decade or more.
Their testimonies specifically
highlighted the industry differences
between California and Wisconsin. The
producers said the production
advantages California dairy farmers
enjoyed (inexpensive land, feed, and a
different regulatory environment) no
longer exist, and as a result, California
dairy farms are closing or moving out of
state at an increasing rate.
Seven producers testified that the use
of futures contracting and hedging as
risk management tools are hindered by
the differences in the CSO and FMMO
price formulas. They explained that
current risk management tools are based
on FMMO prices, and the fact that CSO
prices are different make those tools less
effective for California producers.
Eight producers provided evidence
about reductions in the California dairy
industry since 2007. According to the
witnesses, many farms have elected to
reduce their herd size or cease dairy
farming. A witness provided September
2014 to September 2015 data showing
that the Cooperatives have experienced
a 6.6 percent reduction in milk
production volume. The witness stated
that the reduction seen by the
Cooperatives is supported by CDFA data
showing a 3.5 percent reduction in
California milk production. The witness
noted that while milk production in
California is decreasing, it is increasing
in the rest of the country. The witnesses
believed the discrepancy between
California milk production and national
production is due to the inability of
California farms to compete on a levelplaying field with farms in the FMMO
system. Many also expressed concern
with the impact on related businesses
due to the closing of many California
dairy farms.
According to six producer witnesses,
many farms have opted to weather the
milk price volatility by diversifying
their operations and investing in treecrop production. Several witnesses
testified that lenders encourage treecrop production over dairy farming, due
to the reduction of risk and the large
margins attainable in tree-crop farming.
Producers expressed a belief that the
adoption of a California FMMO would
lead to a more stable dairy industry
supported by lenders.
Overall, California producer witnesses
stated they are currently subject to a
regulatory system that does not provide
producer milk prices representative of
the full value of their raw milk in the
market. The producers believe adoption
of a California FMMO represents an
opportunity to remedy this regulatory
disadvantage and to compete on a level-
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playing field with the rest of the
country.
A Western United Dairymen (WUD)
representative testified in support of
Proposal 1. WUD is a trade organization
representing approximately 50 percent
of California dairy farmers, whose farm
sizes range from 17 to 10,000 cows.
According to the WUD witness, the
difference between CSO Class 4b and
FMMO Class III prices demonstrates
that the CSO is not providing California
dairy farms with a milk price reflective
of the national marketplace for
manufactured dairy products. The
witness attributed the pricing
differences to how dry whey is
accounted for in the two price formulas.
The witness said the value difference
has become increasingly larger since the
CSO adopted a fixed whey factor in
2007, and then subsequently replaced it
with a sliding scale whey factor in 2011.
The witness said that from August 2014
to July 2015, the CSO Class 4b whey
value averaged $1.50 per cwt less than
the FMMO Class III whey value. As a
result, the witness said, there are
different regulated minimum milk
prices for the milk products that
compete in a national market. This milk
price difference, the witness stressed,
results in market decisions based on
government regulations instead of
market fundamentals. Furthermore, the
witness said, the resulting lower CSO
class prices put California dairy farmers
at a competitive disadvantage compared
to their FMMO counterparts. The
witness concluded that this situation is
disorderly and reiterated WUD’s
support for Proposal 1 as a more
appropriate method to determine the
value of whey.
A witness representing the California
Dairy Campaign (CDC) testified in
support of Proposal 1. CDC is a dairy
producer organization with members
located throughout California. The CDC
witness said that over the last 10 years,
more than 600 California dairy farms
have permanently closed or moved to
other states. The witness attributed this
to milk prices that have been
consistently lower than the cost of
producing milk in California, and noted
that water and feed availability due to
the ongoing drought is the primary
reason for increased production costs.
The witness highlighted the
consolidation and concentration of the
California dairy manufacturing sector
that causes dairy producers to be price
takers in the market, thus making
equitable minimum regulated prices
vital to the long-term viability of
California dairy farms.
The CDC witness testified that the
failure of the CSO to align with FMMO
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prices, particularly between CSO Class
4b and FMMO Class III, has resulted in
a more than $1.5 billion loss to
California producers since 2010. The
witness also said that risk-management
tools, particularly the USDA Margin
Production Program (MPP), are not as
effective for California dairy farms
because the national all-milk price used
to determine MPP payments is
significantly higher than California
producer mailbox prices under CSO
regulation.
The witness highlighted CDC’s
support of specific provisions contained
in Proposal 1, including the adoption of
FMMO end-product pricing formulas,
unique pooling provisions that address
the needs of the California market,
regulation of out-of-state milk, uniform
producer-handler provisions, fluid milk
fortification allowances, and the
continuation of the California quota
program. The witness was of the
opinion that Proposal 1 addresses
California’s unique market conditions
and is the only path to restoring
California producer price equity and the
health of the California dairy industry.
CDC’s post-hearing brief stated CDC
has supported adoption of a California
FMMO for over 20 years. The brief
highlighted 2015 CDFA data showing
California cost of production at $19.30
per cwt, while the average farm income
was $15.94 per cwt. The brief stated the
belief that minimum prices are put in
place to ensure dairy farmers are able to
share in some minimal level of
profitability. CDC estimated that in
2015, a 1,000-cow California dairy farm
was paid approximately $1.4 million
less than equal-sized farms whose milk
was pooled on a FMMO.
A witness representing Milk
Producers Council (MPC) testified in
support of Proposal 1. MPC is a
nonprofit trade association with 120
California dairy-farmer members,
accounting for approximately 10 percent
of the California milking herd. The
witness agreed with testimony given by
the Cooperatives outlining California’s
disorderly marketing conditions. The
witness said that California dairy
farmers have repeatedly, though
unsuccessfully, sought relief through
CDFA to bring CSO classified prices
more in line with FMMO classified
prices. This is why California dairy
farmers are now seeking to join the
FMMO system, the witness added.
The MPC witness testified that
Proposal 1 would establish orderly
marketing conditions in California,
resulting in a level-playing field for
producers and processors. The witness
stressed that not only would Proposal 1
provide price alignment between
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California and FMMOs, but a California
FMMO would regulate interstate
commerce—something the CSO cannot
do. Proposal 1 would also maintain the
current California quota program, a vital
financial tool for many California dairy
farmers, the witness stated. The witness
said that while the quota program has
no impact on the minimum prices
handlers pay, it does aid in providing a
local milk supply for some plants that
would otherwise have to source milk
from farther distances. The witness
explained that in some instances, quota
is an investment farms located in higher
cost areas of the state make to remain
financially viable and be able to provide
a local milk supply to plants that would
otherwise have to seek a supply from
farther distances.
A witness representing the National
Farmers Union (NFU) testified in
support of Proposal 1. NFU is a national
grassroots farmer organization with over
200,000 members across the nation,
including dairy farmers located in
California. The witness testified that
NFU supports the inclusion of
California in the FMMO system so
California dairy farms could receive
prices similar to those received by dairy
farms located throughout the country.
The witness testified that California’s
low-milk prices and high-feed costs
have resulted in strained margins and
ultimately the closure of over 400 dairy
farms in the last five years.
The NFU witness testified the pay
price differences between dairy farms
whose milk is pooled under the CSO
and FMMOs is primarily due to the
difference in the Class 4b and Class III
prices and has resulted in disorderly
marketing conditions and a revenue loss
to California dairy farms of more than
$1.5 billion since 2010. The witness
added that pay-price differences have
reduced the ability of California dairy
farms to utilize risk management tools,
and puts them at a competitive
disadvantage when competing for
resources such as feed, land, cattle and
labor.
A witness appearing on behalf of the
Institute testified that while the Institute
offered Proposal 2 as an alternative to
the Cooperatives’ proposal, their first
position is that disorderly marketing
conditions do not exist in California to
warrant the promulgation of a FMMO.
The witness stated that the California
dairy industry is currently regulated by
the CSO, whose purpose, much like a
FMMO, is to provide for orderly
marketing conditions. The witness
emphasized their opinion that orderly
marketing conditions are currently
achieved through CSO classified pricing
and marketwide pooling.
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The Institute witness reviewed CSO
history and regulatory evolution, and
highlighted regulatory changes
demonstrating how the CSO has
consistently adapted to changing market
conditions. Some, but not all, of these
regulatory changes are highlighted
below.
The Institute witness explained that
California sought state solutions to
disorderly marketing conditions through
the Young Act of 1935. When FMMOs
were authorized in 1937, California
opted to remain under the purview of
the CSO.
The Institute witness explained that
the CSO adopted marketwide pooling
through the Gonsalves Milk Pooling Act.
Before that time, handlers operated
individual handler pools, giving Class 1
handlers strong bargaining power as
producers sought Class 1 contracts.
According to the witness, this led to
handler practices that eroded producer
revenues. The witness testified that the
California quota program, also
authorized by the Gonsalves Milk
Pooling Act, was a way for Southern
California dairy farmers, who at the time
had a higher percentage of Class 1
contracts, to preserve some of the Class
1 earnings they would otherwise be
required to share with all producers
through marketwide pooling. At the
time, the witness said, producers were
assigned a production base, and
producer quota was allocated based on
historical Class 1 sales. Milk marketed
in excess of a producer’s base and quota
allocations was termed overbase milk.
The witness explained that, during this
time, the state’s population was
growing, and quota was deemed
necessary to ensure the market’s Class 1
needs would always be met.
The Institute witness said that when
the quota program was established,
there was a growing number of dairy
farmers who also owned fluid milk
bottling operations. They typically
processed all the milk they produced,
and were referred to as producerhandlers. These operations feared that
the income benefits they gained from
processing their own milk would
disappear with the establishment of
mandatory pooling. To relieve this
concern, the witness said smaller
producer-handlers were exempted from
pooling in return for not receiving a
quota allocation. The witness explained
larger producer-handlers had the option
of not receiving a quota premium, and
deducting those quota pounds from
their Class 1 obligations to the pool, an
amount referred to as exempt quota.
The Institute witness testified that the
CSO was modified numerous times in
the late 1970’s and early 1980’s to
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ensure that Class 1 needs of the market
would always be met. First, call
provisions were established requiring
manufacturing plants participating in
the pool to maintain a percentage of
quota milk available to Class 1 plants.
Second, a system of transportation
credits and allowances was established
to cover part of the cost of moving milk
from surplus areas to deficit areas for
Class 1 use. According to the witness,
CDFA regularly updates these milk
movement incentives to reflect current
costs.
In the early 1990’s, CDFA amended
how the quota premium was derived. At
the time, quota funds were derived from
Class 1, 2 and 3 prices, while overbase
prices were derived from Class 4a and
4b prices. Consequently, the witness
noted, the difference between quota and
overbase prices varied greatly by month.
The witness said the historic value of
quota, in comparison to the overbase
value, was evaluated to derive a fixed
quota price of $0.195 per pound of
quota solids nonfat.
The Institute witness also reviewed
several instances since 2000 where CSO
provisions were amended to reflect
changing market conditions and
changing FMMO regulations. These
instances included adopting the ‘‘higher
of’’’ concept for pricing Class 1 milk,
incorporating a dry whey factor in the
price formulas, and changing the make
allowances contained in the product
price formulas—all changes the witness
said were necessary to maintain orderly
marketing conditions in California.
The Institute witness maintained that
current California marketing conditions
are orderly, and therefore the
establishment of a FMMO is not
justified. The witness stated the CSO
program focuses on orderly marketing
conditions to ensure Class 1 needs are
met, while providing reasonable returns
to those dairy farms who supply the
Class 1 market. The witness stressed the
regulated price differences between CSO
Class 4a/4b prices and FMMO Class III/
IV prices do not amount to disorder, and
in fact, those differences are needed to
maintain orderly marketing in the state.
The Institute witness testified that in
the CSO-regulated environment, where
all milk is subject to minimum price
regulation, it is important that
manufacturing prices are not set above
market-clearing levels. The witness
elaborated that the largest market, and
therefore the highest value, for finished
dairy products is in the eastern United
States where most of the population
resides. Therefore, the witness said, in
order for California dairy products to be
transported and compete in the eastern
markets, they must have a lower value
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in the West. The witness was of the
opinion that FMMO Class III and Class
IV prices are not appropriate local,
market-clearing prices for California.
The Institute witness also was of the
opinion that current differences
between CSO Class 2 and 3 prices and
FMMO Class II prices are not disorderly.
The witness explained that Class 2 and
3 prices are set relative to the Class 4a
price, and it is important that these
prices are not set so high as to
encourage dairy ingredient substitution
with Class 4a products. The witness
argued the Cooperatives provided no
evidence that the class price differences
between the CSO and FMMO systems
are disorderly.
The Institute witness also testified
regarding the difference between CSO
Class 1 and FMMO Class I prices. While
CSO Class 1 prices are somewhat lower
than those in neighboring FMMO areas,
the witness said, they are not causing
disorderly marketing conditions. The
witness explained that if lower priced
California milk is sold into FMMO
areas, there are provisions for FMMO
partial regulation to ensure the
California Class 1 plants do not have a
regulatory price advantage over the
FMMO plants.
The Institute witness testified that
recent declines in California milk
production and increases in dairy farm
consolidation are not evidence of
disorderly marketing conditions. The
witness elaborated that dairy-farm
consolidation is a natural market
evolution resulting from differences in
producers’ cost structure, risk tolerance,
and access to capital. This is no
different than consolidation trends that
have happened in other regions of the
country, added the witness. The witness
also testified that, while dairy farmer
margins have been volatile in recent
years, California milk production costs
have remained below the United States
average. According to USDA Economic
Research Service data, the witness said
2010–2014 California milk production
costs were well below the national
average, by a yearly average of $4.19 per
cwt. Regardless of milk production and
consolidation trends, the witness stated
that California has adequate milk
supplies to meet fluid demand, and
milk movements to meet processing and
manufacturing demands are largely
efficient.
The Institute witness explained its
members represent approximately 65
percent of the fluid milk processing in
California, and none have expressed
difficulty obtaining milk supplies or any
type of disorderly marketing condition.
The witness expressed concern that any
changes in the regulatory environment
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would likely increase the cost of fluid
milk. This cost would be passed onto
consumers, thereby creating a barrier for
fluid milk sales, said the witness.
The Institute witness opined the CSO
has an effective pricing and pooling
system that has evolved over time to
address changing market conditions,
and disorderly marketing conditions do
not exist to warrant a California FMMO.
However, should USDA recommend a
California FMMO, the witness said the
provisions outlined in Proposal 2
should be adopted.
The post-hearing brief submitted on
behalf of the Institute reiterates its
opinion that USDA must find disorderly
marketing conditions to justify
intervention. Disorderly marketing
conditions under the AMAA, the
Institute wrote, refers to the fluid milk
supply and not the market for
manufactured milk. The brief stated that
California has, on average, an 11 to 12
percent Class 1 utilization and more
than enough reserve milk to meet fluid
demand.
The Institute’s brief outlined a sixpoint test that it argued needs to be met
in order to justify a California FMMO.
The Institute stated the current CSO
already meets all six of the requirements
and thus Federal intervention is not
justified.
The Institute’s brief also addressed
the 1996 and 2014 Farm Bills as they
pertain to the consideration of a
California FMMO. The Institute stressed
that in neither case did Congress amend
the AMAA, and therefore USDA is
authorized, but not required, to
incorporate the California quota
program. According to the Institute,
whatever decision USDA makes, it must
uphold the AMAA’s uniform payments
and trade barrier provisions. The
Institute stated that Proposal 1’s
incorporation of the California quota
program does not uphold either of these
provisions.
The Institute’s post-hearing brief
argued that the differences in Class III
and Class 4b prices, highlighted by the
Cooperatives, do not provide
justification for a California FMMO.
According to the brief, the AMAA
requires marketing orders to have
regional application that recognizes
differences in production and market
conditions.
A witness appearing on behalf of
Hilmar Cheese Company (Hilmar)
testified that USDA has consistently
found that evidence of disorderly
marketing conditions must exist in
order to justify Federal intervention
through the promulgation or
amendment of a FMMO. Hilmar is a
dairy manufacturer with facilities in
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California and Texas selling dairy
products both domestically and
internationally. According to the
witness, Hilmar’s California cheese and
whey manufacturing facility is the
largest cheese manufacturing facility in
the State, processing 12 percent of the
total California milk supply, which is
purchased from 200 dairy farms, most of
whom are not affiliated with any
cooperative.
The Hilmar witness cited previous
USDA decisions, including the 1981
Southwestern Idaho/Eastern Oregon and
the 1990 Carolina promulgations, as
examples of what market conditions
should be present in order for USDA to
act. The witness was of the opinion that
the Cooperatives did not provide
evidence of actual disorderly marketing
conditions in California warranting
Federal intervention.
In its post-hearing brief, Hilmar stated
that FMMOs are designed to be a
marketing tool to address problems
associated with the inherent instability
in milk marketing. Hilmar reiterated its
opposition to a California FMMO,
stating that USDA has consistently
denied proposals seeking price
enhancement, as they believe is the case
in this proceeding. Hilmar stated the
record does not support the notion that
there is an inadequate supply of milk for
fluid use in California, and therefore a
California FMMO is not justified.
A witness appearing on behalf of HP
Hood, LLC, a milk processor with
facilities in California and other states,
testified that disorderly marketing
conditions are not present in California
and therefore a FMMO is not warranted.
The witness said the CSO is an efficient
program that has been routinely
updated to reflect changing market
conditions. The witness stated that HP
Hood has not had any difficulty
securing an adequate supply of raw milk
for its California processing plants, nor
is HP Hood aware of instances where
raw milk had to be transported long
distances in order to meet California
demand.
The HP Hood witness suggested
USDA consider the potential adverse
impacts of recommending a California
FMMO on other FMMOs, as well as
potential increases in milk costs to
consumers that may stem from adoption
of the higher uniform minimum milk
prices included in Proposal 1. The
witness specifically opposed the
inclusive pooling portion of Proposal 1
and explained how the ability for milk
handlers to pool or not pool is how
orderly marketing has been maintained
in the existing FMMOs. The witness
urged the adoption of Proposal 2,
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should USDA find that a California
FMMO is warranted.
A witness appeared on behalf of
Saputo Cheese USA, Inc. (Saputo), a
proprietary international dairy and
grocery products manufacturer and
marketer with seven dairy productmanufacturing facilities in California.
Saputo opposes the promulgation of a
California FMMO, but should USDA
find a FMMO warranted, it supports
adoption of Proposal 2. The witness
testified that disorderly marketing
conditions are not present in California
to warrant FMMO promulgation. The
witness explained how CDFA has been
responsive to dairy industry concerns,
has held many hearings in the past, and
administers the CSO in a manner that
facilitates orderly marketing as well as,
or better than, the FMMO system.
The Saputo witness summarized
many of the similarities and differences
between the CSO and FMMO systems.
The witness was of the opinion that the
CSO mandatory pooling rules increased
milk production to surplus levels and
encouraged the construction of bulk,
storable dairy product manufacturing
facilities. In conjunction with these
rules, the witness explained, CSO
regulated minimum prices are set at
levels that are not too high to encourage
significant additional increases in
supply.
The Saputo witness described the
California cheese production landscape.
The witness, relying on CDFA data, said
that from January through March of
2015, 57 cheese plants processed 45
percent of California’s milk. The witness
noted that out of the 57 cheese plants,
3 of the plants processed more than 25
percent of the state’s entire milk supply.
The witness stated that if the increase in
the hypothetical California FMMO Class
III price included in the USDA
Preliminary Economic Analysis of $1.84
per cwt occurred, under a system of
mandatory pooling, the aforementioned
3 cheese plants would face combined
increased annual raw milk costs of
nearly $196.5 million. The witness
testified that such raw milk cost
increases would be disorderly and
threaten the viability of California
manufacturing facilities.
A witness appearing on behalf of
Farmdale Creamery (Farmdale) testified
in support of Proposal 2. Farmdale is a
proprietary dairy processing company
located in San Bernardino, CA, that
manufactures cheese, sour cream, dried
whey protein concentrate, and
buttermilk. The witness was of the
opinion that disorderly marketing
conditions are not present in California,
since there is no shortage of milk to
meet fluid milk needs. The Farmdale
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witness was of the opinion that the CSO
maintains an orderly market by
responding to changing market
conditions when warranted. Should
USDA find a California FMMO justified,
the witness supported adoption of
Proposal 2 and opposed the mandatory
pooling provisions contained in
Proposal 1.
The witness also testified about
financial losses incurred by Farmdale
since 2005, when the CSO whey value
was sometimes higher than what they
could obtain from the market. The
witness added that their on-again, offagain financial losses demonstrate the
inability of current regulatory pricing
systems to track and value the whey
markets.
A witness appeared on behalf of
Pacific Gold Creamery (Pacific Gold) in
opposition to the adoption of a
California FMMO, although the witness
supported the provisions contained in
Proposal 2 should a FMMO be
recommended. Pacific Gold operates a
dairy farmer owned specialty cheese
plant in California. The witness testified
that across existing FMMOs and
unregulated areas, dairy product
manufacturers regularly pay below
FMMO minimum prices. The witness
presented and explained USDAprepared FMMO data regarding volumes
of milk pooled and not pooled across
existing FMMOs.
The Pacific Gold witness explained
how their business produces ricotta
from the whey stream of their cheese
manufacturing, and how ricotta sales
supplement the income of the cheese
operation. The witness was of the
opinion that the FMMO Class III price,
and the accompanying higher whey
value contained in Proposal 1, would be
devastating to small and mid-size
facilities. The witness also testified how
an increase in California minimumregulated prices would jeopardize
exports, saying that U.S. domestic
cheese prices are already relatively
higher than global prices.
A post-hearing brief was submitted on
behalf of Trihope Dairy Farms
(Trihope). Trihope is a dairy farm
located in, and pooled on, the Southeast
FMMO. Trihope stated that disorderly
marketing conditions do not exist in
California to warrant promulgation of a
FMMO. Trihope was of the opinion that
California dairy farmers are seeking
higher prices through a new regulatory
body, which is not a justification for
USDA to proceed. According to
Trihope, the AMAA was designed to
solve marketing problems in
unregulated areas, not to address price
disparities between Federal and State
regulation.
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Trihope expressed concern about the
potential impact a California FMMO
would have on the entire system.
Trihope specifically noted the impacts
to the southeastern marketing areas
contained in the USDA Preliminary
Economic Impact Analysis. According
to their brief, Trihope estimates losses
from 2017 to 2024 of approximately
$313,091. Trihope wrote that
California’s marketing issues of high
California milk production and limited
plant capacity would not be solved by
a FMMO.
A post-hearing brief submitted by
Select Milk Producers, Inc. (Select),
expressed support for the adoption of a
California FMMO. Select is a national
dairy-farmer cooperative that markets
over 6.5 billion pounds of milk
annually, and whose members’ milk is
regularly pooled on the Appalachian,
Mideast, Southeast and Southwest
FMMOs. Select also supplies plants
located in many other FMMOs, but it
does not supply any California plants.
Select was of the opinion that having
California’s milk supply priced
similarly to the rest of the FMMOs
would remedy the competitive
disadvantages faced by companies
competing in the national marketplace,
and would allow for more efficient milk
movements. Select expressed support
for maintaining a uniform national
pricing system and opposed the
Institute’s alternative whey-pricing
proposal. Select expressed support for
the Cooperatives’ inclusive pooling
provisions on the basis that the
provisions would apply only to
California, due to its unique marketing
conditions. Select stated the California
quota program should be addressed
outside of this rulemaking proceeding.
Select was of the opinion that adoption
of a California FMMO would lead to
more orderly milk marketing throughout
the entire FMMO system, and thus
uphold the intent of the AMAA.
A post-hearing brief submitted on
behalf of the Northwest Dairy
Association (NDA) expressed support
for Proposal 1. NDA is a dairy farmerowned cooperative that markets the
milk of its 460 members and operates
numerous fluid milk and manufacturing
plants located in Washington, Oregon,
Idaho, and Montana. NDA was of the
opinion that adoption of Proposal 1
would create more orderly marketing
conditions and strengthen the entire
FMMO system. As California represents
the largest milk supply in the United
States, NDA wrote, it is important for
the integrity of the FMMO program to
include the additional 20 percent of
United States milk represented by
California. NDA stated that California
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producers should not be disadvantaged
with lower Class III and IV prices than
what their western FMMO producer
counterparts receive.
Findings
The record contains a voluminous
amount of testimony, evidence and
opinions as to whether or not a
California FMMO is justified. The
Cooperatives and their supporters argue
that a California FMMO was authorized
by Congress in the 2014 Farm Bill. They
contend that this proceeding is not
about whether or not a FMMO should
be established, but rather to determine
what the California FMMO provisions
should be. The Cooperatives are of the
opinion that the existence of disorderly
marketing conditions is not required by
the AMAA to justify order
promulgation. They stressed in their
post-hearing briefs that a FMMO needs
to establish and maintain orderly
marketing conditions, and that would be
accomplished through the adoption of
their proposal. However, should the
Department find that disorderly
marketing conditions must be present,
the Cooperatives provided evidence of
what they believe are ongoing
disorderly marketing conditions in
California.
In general, the record reflects that the
California producer community
supports joining the FMMO system.
Producers are of the opinion that the
prices they currently receive under the
CSO do not reflect the appropriate value
for their milk and its components.
Particularly, producers believe that the
price they receive for milk used for
cheese manufacturing does not value
the dry whey component at a level
commensurate with what manufacturers
receive for whey in the marketplace.
In contrast, the Institute and its
members consistently argued
throughout the hearing and in their
post-hearing briefs that the existence of
disorderly marketing conditions is
required by the AMAA, and that such
conditions do not exist in California.
They provided testimony explaining
how the CSO is a flexible system that is
routinely evaluated through the CDFA
hearing process and changes are made
as market conditions warrant. The
Institute and its members were united in
the opinion the Cooperatives are solely
seeking to receive higher prices for their
milk, and that such higher prices are not
justified for California.
As discussed earlier, the declared
policy of the AMAA is to ‘‘. . . establish
and maintain such orderly marketing
conditions for agricultural commodities
in interstate commerce . . .’’ FMMOs
accomplish this through the classified
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pricing of milk products and
marketwide pooling of those classified
use values. Through these mechanisms,
orderly marketing conditions are
provided so that handlers are assured
uniform minimum raw milk costs and
producers receive minimum uniform
payments for their raw milk, regardless
of its use.
While in recent history FMMOs have
been consolidated, amended and
expanded, it has been decades since a
new order has been promulgated. The
records of those promulgation
proceedings include descriptions of the
market conditions at the time, and how
a FMMO would provide order in the
market. However, those decisions did
not, nor does this decision find, that
disorderly marketing conditions must
exist to justify order promulgation.
Order promulgation and amendatory
proceedings have reiterated that a
FMMO must adhere to the declared
policy of the AMAA, where there is no
mention of disorderly marketing
conditions.
This decision finds that a FMMO for
California would provide more orderly
marketing conditions in the marketing
area, and therefore promulgation of a
California FMMO is warranted. The
record is replete with discussion from
most parties on whether disorderly
marketing conditions exist, or are even
needed, to warrant promulgation of a
California FMMO. The declared policy
of the AMAA makes no mention of
‘‘disorder,’’ and this decision finds that
disorderly marketing conditions are not
a requirement for an order to be
promulgated. The standard for FMMO
promulgation is to ‘‘. . . establish and
maintain such orderly marketing
conditions . . .,’’ and this decision
finds that the California FMMO
recommended meets that standard by
providing uniform minimum raw milk
costs to handlers and minimum uniform
payments to producers for their raw
milk, regardless of its use.
The record indicates that there are
both handler and producer price
differences between the CSO and the
FMMO systems. The record contains
data regarding the difference in
classified use values paid by handlers
regulated by the CSO and FMMOs. As
discussed later, this decision
recommends the adoption of the
classified price formulas that currently
exist in the FMMO system. A California
FMMO, under the provisions
recommended in this decision, will
ensure that the prices handlers pay to
purchase pooled California milk will be
similar to prices paid for milk pooled on
other FMMOs. As commodity dairy
products compete in the national
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market, current FMMOs uniformly price
the raw milk used in those products.
This pricing system ensures that
competing handlers have uniform
minimum raw milk costs, and
consequently none has a regulatory
price advantage. The record
demonstrates that California
manufactured dairy products compete
in the national market, however the
CSO regulated prices paid by California
manufacturers are different than those
priced by FMMOs. This decision finds
the proposed California FMMO would
provide classified milk prices that
would be more uniform with those paid
by competing handlers, and more
reflective of the national market for
manufactured milk products and the
local market for fluid milk products, as
is the policy for the 10 current FMMOs.
This decision finds that these prices
would provide more orderly market
conditions for California.
This decision also finds that the
classified prices proposed for a
California FMMO will provide
producers with a minimum producer
blend price more reflective of the
national market for manufactured
products and the utilization of the local
California market. Taken together,
handler and producer prices reflective
of the national market, for which
manufactured dairy products are sold,
will ensure orderly marketing
conditions in California.
While the current CSO provides
classified pricing and marketwide
pooling similar to a FMMO, the hearing
record reflects that California dairy
producers have been unsuccessful in
obtaining a minimum regulated price
they believe is reflective of the full
value of their raw milk. Some parties
argued on the record that because the
CSO already provides classified pricing
and marketwide pooling, disorderly
marketing conditions do not exist and
therefore there is no justification for
promulgating a California FMMO. As
discussed earlier, disorderly marketing
conditions are not a requirement for
order promulgation. Furthermore, this
decision finds that it is not the intent of
the AMAA to preclude a group of
producers from petitioning for a FMMO
because they are otherwise regulated by
a state that provides classified pricing
and marketwide pooling. Such a
requirement would place an undue
barrier on those producers as they
would not have the opportunity to
petition for FMMO regulation simply
because they are currently regulated by
a state.
Additionally, unlike the CSO, a
California FMMO would have the
authority to regulate interstate
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commerce. The record reveals that there
is milk, both raw and packaged, being
sold into and out of California over
which the CSO has no regulatory
jurisdiction. The revenues from those
Class I sales are not shared with all the
producers supplying the California
market. A FMMO would ensure that
those classified use values would be
shared with all producers who supply
the California market. The ability of a
California FMMO to regulate these
interstate sales, either through full or
partial regulation, protects the integrity
of the entire regulatory framework.
Furthermore, out-of-state producers
supplying that milk would be paid the
order’s blend price, which is reflective
of the market’s total classified use value.
In their post-hearing brief, the
Institute made reference to a ‘‘six-point
test’’ that must be met in order for a
FMMO to be promulgated. While the
Institute correctly lists various factors
that have been used in some order
promulgations, the articulated AMAA
standard that must be met for order
promulgation is that the order will ‘‘. . .
establish and maintain such orderly
marketing conditions. . . .’’
Other parties in post-hearing briefs
contend that the 2014 Farm Bill
mandated that a California FMMO be
promulgated. The Farm Bill authorized
a California FMMO that recognizes
quota value as determined appropriate
through a rulemaking proceeding. It is
important to note that California
producers could have petitioned for a
FMMO at any time. However, Congress
did not provide for the recognition of
quota before the 1996 Farm Bill, and
later, the 2014 Farm Bill. This decision
finds that a California FMMO is
justified, as it will meet the objective of
the AMAA to ‘‘. . . maintain such
orderly marketing conditions . . ..’’ The
provisions recommended are tailored to
the California market, adhere to the
uniform handler and producer pricing
provisions of the AMAA, and recognize
quota as authorized by the 2014 Farm
Bill and as deemed appropriate by an
analysis of this hearing record.
Additionally, some hearing
participants indicated that a goal of
FMMOs, and therefore of a California
FMMO, is to enhance producer prices.
Other participants from outside of
California, in testimony and posthearing briefs, expressed the opinion
that a California FMMO cannot be
promulgated if it would have adverse
impacts on other FMMOs, and that the
Department must act to negate those
adverse impacts before such
promulgation.
FMMOs are a marketing tool that,
among other things, establish a
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marketing framework and enforce
market-based minimum prices to
handlers and uniform payments to
producers reflective of all classified use
values in the market. The record reflects
that California represents over 20
percent of the United States milk
supply. If a California FMMO is
established, over 80 percent of the
United States milk supply would fall
under the same regulatory framework.
This decision finds that a California
FMMO will provide more orderly
marketing conditions in California.
Through inclusion of California in the
FMMO regulatory framework, the prices
received by all producers participating
in the FMMO system would be more
reflective of the national marketplace for
dairy products. This would send
uniform market signals to producers
that would allow them to make their
own individual business decisions.
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4. California Quota Program
Recognition
This section reviews and highlights
the testimony and evidence received
regarding the appropriate recognition of
the California quota program, including
exempt quota, in a California FMMO.
The California quota program is a stateadministered program that entitles the
quota holder to an additional $0.195 per
pound of SNF over the CSO overbase
price. The money to pay the quota
premium is deducted from the CSO
marketwide pool before the CSO
overbase price is calculated. This
decision finds that the quota program
should remain entirely within the
jurisdiction of CDFA, and that its proper
recognition under the proposed
California FMMO would be through an
authorized deduction from payments
due to producers.
Proposal 1
A Cooperative witness testified
regarding the development of the
California quota program and its
continued significance to California
dairy farmers. The witness explained
the California quota system is a tiered
pricing system, developed in the late
1960’s, that pays producers on three
price calculations referred to as quota,
base, and overbase. In its current form,
ownership of quota entitles producerowners to a higher price for milk
covered by quota, and a lower base/
overbase price on their nonquota milk
production. Approximately 58 percent
of all California farmers own quota at
varying levels, which in aggregate
represents approximately 2.2 million
pounds of SNF on a daily basis. The
witness testified that, currently, quota
premium payments are approximately
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$12.5 to $13 million per month, and this
money is taken out of the CSO
marketwide pool before the base/
overbase price is calculated. The
witness stressed that the quota program
is an important revenue source for
California dairy farms, and the value of
quota should not be diminished with
the adoption of a California FMMO.
The Cooperative witness reviewed the
authorization of the California milk
pooling and quota programs by the 1967
Gonsalves Milk Pooling Act (Gonsalves
Act). Originally, the witness explained,
producers were assigned quota holdings
as they related to the producers’
historical milk production and
individual deliveries to the Class 1
market. The witness said that in the
beginning, quota premiums were not a
set value, but instead were determined
by allocating quota holdings to the
highest value milk (Class 1), then base
and overbase production were allocated
to the remaining classes in descending
order of classified value. In essence, the
witness explained, quota holders were
paid the Class 1 price for their quota
holdings, and then a separate lower
value for their non-quota holdings.
According to the witness, when CDFA
sought to enhance producer prices,
typically additional revenue was
assigned to Class 1 and subsequently
quota holders, and overbase prices were
not impacted. As milk production grew
without corresponding increases in
quota holdings, the witness said that
producers were faced with lower milk
prices on their non-quota production.
Therefore, the Gonsalves Act was
amended, effective January 1, 1994, and
set a quota premium at $0.195 per
pound of SNF (equivalent to $1.70 per
cwt). The result, said the witness, was
that overbase production did not
subsidize quota milk, and quota holders
could receive a reasonable return on
their quota holdings.
The witness also discussed
adjustments made to the total CSO
marketwide pool value in conjunction
with the quota program. According to
the witness, when pooling was
originally established, the provisions
contained producer location
differentials designed to encourage
quota milk to be delivered to Class 1
plants. However, as overbase milk
production began to grow, location
differentials applicable to only quota
milk did not ensure that the market’s
Class 1 needs would always be met, the
witness stated. Consequently, in 1983
transportation allowances (on milk
movements from ranch-to-plants) were
established in lieu of location
differentials. At the same time, the
witness said, regional quota adjusters
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(RQAs), while providing no direct
incentive to move Class 1 milk, were
established to address producer equity
issues that arose with the elimination of
location differentials. The witness
described RQAs as reductions (ranging
from $0.00 to $0.27 per cwt) to the
producer’s quota premium, depending
on their farm location and plant of
receipt. In essence, the witness said,
quota premiums have a location value:
The farther the dairy farm is located
from the receiving plant, the lower the
quota premium.
The Cooperative witness stated that
quota can only be held on Grade A milk
produced in California, and a quota
holder must deliver milk to a pool
handler at least every 60 days. The
witness also noted the fact that quota is
bought and sold on a monthly basis,
which underscores its continued
importance to California dairy farms.
The witness estimated that at a price of
$525 per pound of SNF, the California
quota program has a value of $1.2
billion to California dairy farms.
The witness was of the opinion,
which was reiterated in the
Cooperatives’ post-hearing briefs, that
under current California and Federal
statutory authorities, a California
FMMO can be established and the
California quota program maintained.
The witness said that the main objective
of Proposal 1 is to preserve the quota
program to the maximum extent
possible, and proponents believe this is
consistent with the Congressional intent
of the Agricultural Act of 2014 (2014
Farm Bill), which authorized a
California FMMO that recognizes the
quota program.
The witness concluded by outlining
what the proponents believe is the
necessary framework of a proposed
working relationship between CDFA
and USDA, and that the provisions
contained in Proposal 1 are needed to
effectively maintain the quota program.
The witness explained that Proposal 1
allows the quota premium to be
removed from the marketwide pool
before a FMMO blend price is
computed. Producers would then
receive the blend price for their
nonquota holdings and the FMMO
blend price plus the quota premium
(adjusted for RQAs) for their quota
holdings. According to the witness,
USDA would enforce all producer
payments, including quota payments,
and jurisdiction over quota
administration, calculations, record
keeping and regulatory changes would
remain with CDFA.
In their post-hearing brief, the
Cooperatives asserted that their
proposal is the only one that properly
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recognizes the quota program as
intended by Congress. The Cooperatives
rebutted the Institute’s claim that
adoption of Proposal 1 would create a
trade barrier to milk produced outside
the state because that milk would be
ineligible for the quota program. The
Cooperatives offered a modification that
would create an out-of-state adjustor to
ensure out-of-state producers do not
receive a lower price due to California
quota premium payments.
The Cooperatives further argued that
Proposal 1 upholds the AMAA’s
uniform pricing provisions, as all quota
would be paid uniformly, all non-quota
milk would be paid uniformly, and all
milk located outside of the proposed
marketing area would be unaffected by
the quota program. The Cooperatives’
brief stated that the ability of a FMMO
to regulate interstate commerce would
provide a more level playing field
among all handlers with sales in
California.
A consultant witness, appearing on
behalf of the proponents of Proposal 1,
testified regarding the economic
importance of the California quota
program, and provided a brief history of
its evolution. At current market prices,
the witness estimated the value of the
California quota program at $1.164
billion—a significant economic asset for
dairy farms and the communities they
support, especially in counties where a
high percentage of milk production is
covered by quota. The witness noted
that not only is quota a solid financial
investment for dairy farms, but it is a
tangible asset used by dairy farms to
obtain additional financing from banks
and lenders.
The witness utilized an economic
impact analysis model to estimate the
total economic impact of the California
quota program. The witness estimated
that total annual economic value of
quota is associated with a $27.9 million
increase in California GDP, creation of
1,269 jobs, an $11 million increase in
local tax revenue, and a $16.7 million
increase in Federal tax revenue. The
witness clarified that the analysis did
not consider the economic impact of the
quota program on non-quota holders,
but stressed any change to the quota
program would create regulatory
uncertainty and diminish the economic
value of quota. The witness was of the
opinion that Proposal 2 does not
recognize the economic value of quota
and would result in the devaluation of
the asset, which would financially harm
California quota holders. The witness
concluded that Proposal 1 was the only
proposal that would preserve and
maintain the California quota program.
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Twelve dairy farmers testified that a
California FMMO must provide for the
continuation of the California quota
program. The farmers stressed the
importance of the California quota
program as an asset for dairy farms
throughout the state. The witnesses
explained that farms utilize quota not
only for the monthly quota premium
they receive, but also as an asset on farm
balance sheets for lending purposes.
The witnesses expressed concern that
any devaluation of their quota asset
would be financially harmful to their
businesses. Of the 27 dairy farmers who
testified, 8 said they owned quota, and
both quota and non-quota holders
expressed support for the quota
program.
A witness testifying on behalf of WUD
also elaborated on the importance of
maintaining the quota program and the
need for strict pooling provisions to
ensure the quota premium could
continue being paid. The witness said
quota is considered an asset and if its
value is diminished, it could create cash
flow and lending difficulties for dairy
farms. The witness was of the opinion
that if a California order was adopted
with pooling provisions similar to those
found in other FMMOs, the quota value
would likely be diminished, which
would violate the California statute.
Proposal 2
A witness appearing on behalf of the
Institute testified regarding Proposal 2’s
recognition of the California quota
program. Like the Cooperative witness,
the Institute witness provided a
historical overview of the quota
program’s authorization and evolution.
The witness stated that the quota
program served as a way to compensate
producers who shipped most of their
milk to Class 1 plants through the
contract system in place prior to
marketwide pooling. At the time, the
witness said, the industry believed
prices to producers would become more
uniform and quota allocation would be
equalized among producers as Class 1
utilization grew.
The Institute witness outlined the
problems they believe arise from
Proposal 1’s method for quota
recognition. The witness was of the
opinion, which also was stressed in the
Institute’s post-hearing briefs, that the
Cooperatives have rendered an overly
broad interpretation of the 2014 Farm
Bill, and in doing so, proposed
provisions that violate the AMAA. The
witness said that before quota can be
recognized, a California FMMO must
first determine and pay a traditional
FMMO blend price to out-of-state dairy
farms who cannot own quota. The
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witness said that subtracting the quota
value from the marketwide pool first,
before computing a non-quota blend
price, as suggested in Proposal 1, would
result in non-uniform payments to
producers and violate the AMAA.
The Institute witness explained the
mechanics of quota recognition in
Proposal 2, which were modeled after
the former Oregon-Washington FMMO.
The witness said that out-of-state
producers would receive a traditional
FMMO blend price for their milk pooled
on the California FMMO. In-state
producers would have the option to
receive the CDFA calculated quota and
non-quota prices, or they could
irrevocably opt out of the quota program
and receive the traditional FMMO blend
price. The witness explained that
producers opting to be paid on a quota/
non quota basis would have their
aggregate FMMO blend price monies
transferred to CDFA for reblending and
distribution to that producer subset. The
witness was of the opinion that by
giving in-state producers the payment
choice, the uniform payment provision
of the AMAA would be satisfied. The
Institute witness said that Proposal 2
sought to recognize quota value as
authorized by the 2014 Farm Bill while
simultaneously upholding the purpose
and provisions of the AMAA. These
opinions were reiterated in the
Institute’s post-hearing brief.
The Institute witness highlighted
California producer support for the
quota program, and was of the opinion
that USDA’s Preliminary Economic
Impact Analysis prediction that the
program would quickly erode under
Proposal 2 was overstated.
Proposal 3
Proposal 3, submitted by the CPHA,
seeks to have exempt quota—as part of
the California quota program—be
recognized and preserved, should a
California FMMO be recommended.
CPHA also proposed that the terms of
consanguinity, as currently applied to
producer-handlers under CDFA
regulations, be removed to allow
indefinite perpetuation of exempt quota.
CPHA withdrew the second part of their
proposal at the hearing.
A consultant witness for CPHA
provided testimony regarding the
history of the Gonsalves Act and
detailed how exempt quota was
included as part of the State’s milk
marketing program from its inception.
According to the witness, the CSO
marketwide pooling system and quota
program was developed as an
alternative to a FMMO. The witness said
the quota program was originally
designed so that farmers who
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historically served fluid milk processors
would continue to receive a higher price
for the portion of their milk that had
previously been under Class 1 contract;
under the CSO marketwide pooling
system, all of the Class 1 revenue would
be shared with the market’s producers.
Over time, the witness said, it was
thought that quota holdings would be
equalized among dairy farmers. Those
who had not previously held contracts
with fluid milk processors were
expected to be assigned rights to new
quota created as the fluid milk market
expanded.
The consultant witness explained that
dairy farmers who processed their own
milk into fluid milk products were
issued exempt quota, rather than regular
quota, under the new CSO system. The
exempt quota was allotted to these
vertically integrated entities, known as
producer-handlers, in recognition of
how their milk was marketed. The
witness said that there were originally
49 exempt quota holders, but only 4
remain. The witness said that the
amount of exempt quota was
legislatively capped in 1995.
The consultant witness clarified that
exempt quota was issued as certificates
of ownership to the producer entity. The
witness explained that the handler side
of the business is still required to report
all its milk receipts to the CSO, and in
turn, the handler entity receives a credit
against its financial obligation to the
pool for the volume of exempt quota
owned by the producer entity. The
handler entity then accounts to the CSO
marketwide pool for Class 1 sales in
excess of the exempt quota volume, said
the witness. The producer entity side
receives the Class 1 price from the
handler side for the exempt quota
volume of milk they produce, and then
they receive a combination of the quota
and overbase prices from the
marketwide pool, depending on their
regular quota holdings.
A witness from Producers, testifying
on behalf of CPHA, said that all four
members of CPHA own exempt quota,
are referred to as ‘‘Option 70’’ producerhandlers, are fully regulated, and report
to the CSO marketwide pool for all their
Class 1 sales. The witness contrasted
this to ‘‘Option 66’’ producer-handlers,
who are fully exempt from the CSO and
do not participate in the quota program.
Of the original 49 ‘‘Option 70’’
producer-handlers, the witness said
only the 4 CPHA members remain, and
all have maintained essentially the same
business structures since the quota
program was established.
According to the Producers witness,
CPHA members hold both exempt quota
and regular quota, but most of the milk
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produced by CPHA members is
accounted for as overbase production.
Using 2015 CDFA data, the Producers
witness calculated that ‘‘Option 70’’
producer-handler milk represents
approximately 0.6 percent of all
California production. The witness
estimated that exempt quota represents
17.4 percent of ‘‘Option 70’’ producerhandler production and 4.6 percent of
all California Class 1 sales. The witness
said that all of the milk produced and
sold by CPHA members, including
volumes covered by exempt quota, is
reported to the CSO marketwide pool.
The Producers witness said that the
Gonsalves Act primarily addressed
industry problems that did not impact
producer-handlers because all the milk
from their dairy operations flowed to
their own Class 1 plants and the markets
they had developed. The witness was of
the opinion that the exempt quota
feature was included as part of the quota
program to recognize the vertically
integrated producer-handler’s unique
business structure.
Additional CPHA witnesses
representing Foster and Rockview
joined the Producers witness in
describing their acquisition and
maintenance of exempt quota over the
years. Each mentioned they had to make
strategic business decisions or sacrifices
in order to preserve their exempt quota
status.
The CPHA witnesses attempted to
quantify the value of exempt quota,
explaining that exempt quota is carried
as an asset on their farms’ books and can
be sold as or converted to regular quota.
The CPHA witnesses measured the
value of exempt quota as the difference
between the CSO Class 1 and the quota
prices. Using historical CDFA data, the
Producers and Rockview witnesses
calculated the average exempt quota
value over the previous 20 years to be
approximately $1.14 and $1.20 per cwt,
respectively.
Using CDFA data for the preceding
five years, a second Foster witness
calculated the value of exempt quota in
terms of regular quota for both northern
and southern California. The witness
estimated that every pound of exempt
quota in northern California and
southern California is worth 1.96
pounds and 2.12 pounds of regular
quota, respectively. Valuing regular
quota at $525 per pound of SNF, but not
adjusting for RQAs, the witness
estimated the value of exempt quota as
$1,029 per pound of SNF in northern
California, and $1,113 per pound of SNF
in southern California. Citing CDFA
production data, the witness calculated
the value of the collective 40,244.51
pounds of SNF exempt quota in
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northern California as $41,411,600 and
the 17,669.59 pounds of SNF exempt
quota in southern California as
$19,666,253.
The Rockview witness added that
converting exempt quota to regular
quota would make those volumes
eligible for CSO transportation credits
that are not currently available for
exempt quota milk.
A Cooperative witness also testified
with regard to the evolution of exempt
quota for ‘‘Option 70’’ producerhandlers. The witness estimated that the
four CPHA members market
approximately five percent of all
California Class 1 sales. The witness
explained that exempt quota entitles the
producer-handler to waive any pool
obligation on those holdings. The
witness described the value of exempt
quota as the difference between the
Class 1 and quota prices. The witness
estimated that from 1970 through 2014,
the additional value of exempt quota
was approximately $0.58 per cwt in
southern California. The witness
estimated the monthly impact to the
marketwide pool of recognizing exempt
quota in this manner at less than onehalf of one cent per cwt. The witness
testified that the Cooperatives did not
oppose adoption of Proposal 3.
A witness representing the Institute
was of the opinion that exempt quota
was offered to large producer-handlers
for political expediency. According to
the witness, as the Gonsalves Act and
the particulars of marketwide pooling
were being developed in the 1960s,
larger producer-handlers worried they
would lose advantages enjoyed under
the then-prevailing system. To head off
producer-handler opposition to
marketwide pooling, the witness
contended concessions were made to
smaller producer-handlers who were
exempted entirely from pooling and
received no quota allocation. Larger
entities were given the option to forgo
the quota premium and instead exempt
those pounds from their Class 1 pool
obligations.
The Institute witness testified that
exempt quota holds no real market
value, as it cannot be bought and sold.
The witness acknowledged that
determining an equivalency between
exempt quota and regular quota might
be one method to assign a value to
exempt quota. The Institute witness was
of the opinion that exempt quota
holders have already recovered the cost
of their exempt quota, which they were
last able to purchase 20 years ago.
A witness from Dean Foods testified
that the competitive advantage
producer-handlers gain from their
exempt quota can be spread out over
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their total volume of Class 1 sales. The
witness argued that CPHA witnesses
diluted the impact of exempt quota on
Class 1 sales by comparing exempt
quota volumes to total California milk
production. The witness contended that
it was more accurate to compare total
‘‘Option 70’’ producer-handler Class 1
production to total California Class 1
sales. The witness calculated that the
total volume of the 4 producer-handlers,
including their exempt quota volumes,
accounted for 24 percent of total
California Class 1 volume, including
milk from out of state. The witness
testified that 31 handlers process the
other 76 percent of California Class 1
milk.
Additional fluid milk processor
witnesses representing Clover Stornetta
Farms and Farmdale Creamery, along
with another Dean Foods witness, all
testified that their companies face
significant disadvantages compared to
producer-handlers with exempt quota
because, unlike exempt quota holders,
their companies must account to the
CSO pool at classified prices every
month for all the milk they utilize.
Some witnesses claimed they have lost
sales to ‘‘Option 70’’ producer-handlers
due to these regulatory disadvantages.
The Producers witness countered
opposition testimony that exempt quota
provides a competitive advantage
enabling them to bid customers away
from fully-regulated handlers. The
witness said that Producers pays the
Class 1 price to the farm side of the
business for the exempt quota milk they
use, and pays the quota or overbase
price for the rest of the farm’s milk it
processes.
In its post-hearing brief, the Institute
argued against recognition of exempt
quota under a California FMMO.
According to the Institute’s brief, the
recognition of exempt quota in a
California FMMO would violate the
AMAA’s uniform pricing provisions.
The Institute explained that by
recognizing exempt quota, exemptquota-holding-producer entities would
not share the value of all their Class 1
sales with their fellow dairy farmers,
and handler entities would not be
required to pay uniform minimum
prices for their raw milk supplies.
The Institute brief further argued that
the 2014 Farm Bill language authorizing
a California FMMO that recognizes
quota value does not mean California’s
entire quota system should be preserved
and maintained, nor that certain Class 1
handlers should be permitted to have a
regulatory competitive advantage over
other Class 1 handlers. The Institute
brief also argued that permitting a
differentiated status for only those few
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entities who currently own exempt
quota would be inequitable to new
market entrants.
In response, CPHA’s reply brief
asserted that CPHA handler entities
currently pay Class 1 prices for all their
raw milk, exempt quota provides no
financial advantage over other fullyregulated handlers, and there are no
market disruptions attributable to
exempt quota. The reply brief stressed
that CPHA producer entities, not their
handler counterparts, hold exempt
quota. Their reply brief also asserted the
record contains no evidence that exempt
quota holders enjoy raw milk price
advantages. CPHA contended that all
handlers pay the same classified price
for raw milk in California despite
misperceptions to the contrary. CPHA
pointed out that competitors have won
and lost accounts for milk sales for a
variety of reasons not necessarily
attributed to exempt quota ownership.
According to CPHA’s reply brief,
Congress’s use of the term ‘‘quota
system,’’ and its omission of specific
reference to exempt quota in the 2014
Farm Bill language is consistent with its
directive that the Secretary should hold
a hearing to consider, and is authorized
to recognize, all aspects of California’s
quota program under a California
FMMO.
CPHA’s reply brief clarified the intent
of Proposal 3 to allow for the
preservation of exempt quota status for
those few producer-handlers who own
it. CPHA argued its members are not
seeking exemption from all pricing and
pooling obligations under a California
FMMO, but merely recognition of their
ownership of exempt quota and the
related volumes of production it
represents.
A post hearing brief submitted by
Trihope expressed concerns regarding
the recognition of the California quota
program within the FMMO framework.
Trihope was of the opinion that any
recognition of quota would violate the
AMAA’s uniform payments provision.
Trihope also wrote that authorizing
quota payments would give a revenue
advantage to California dairy farms and
create a trade barrier for out-of-state
farms seeking to be pooled on the
California FMMO.
Findings
The record contains detailed
information about the establishment and
evolution of the quota program
administered by the State of California.
The record reflects that the Gonsalves
Act legislatively authorized both the
California quota program and
marketwide pooling within the structure
of the CSO. Until that point, dairy farms
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were paid through individual handler
pools that reflected a plant’s use values
for their milk—there was no marketwide
pooling function that allowed all
producers to share in the benefits from
Class 1 sales and the burden of
balancing the market to ensure an
adequate supply of milk to meet Class
1 demand. Many witnesses spoke to the
political compromise reached to
compensate dairy farmers who held
Class 1 supply contracts from the
financial loss they would incur by
pooling and sharing their Class 1
revenue with all dairy farmers in
California. While the original quota
allotment was based on existing Class 1
contracts, it was thought at the time that
quota would equalize among producers
as Class 1 utilization increased and
future quota allotments were issued;
however, this did not occur.
Many witnesses spoke of the
importance they believe the California
quota program has for the state’s dairy
industry. Producers spoke of the
investments they made in purchasing
quota allotments, and the continued
financial benefit it provides through the
monthly quota premium they receive.
Even producers who own little or no
quota spoke of the importance of
continuing the program for their fellow
dairy farmers.
The 2014 Farm Bill authorized the
promulgation of a California FMMO,
and specified that the order ‘‘shall have
the right to reblend and distribute order
receipts to recognize quota value.’’ The
hearing record is replete with testimony
on the proper interpretation of those
final three words, ‘‘recognize quota
value.’’ The Cooperatives conveyed, and
stressed in their post-hearing brief
submissions, that the 2014 Farm Bill
mandates the quota program must be
recognized, and only the method of
recognition is to be decided through this
rulemaking proceeding. The
Cooperatives are of the opinion that the
proper recognition of quota value is
through the deduction of quota monies
from the marketwide pool before a
California blend price is calculated, as
is current practice for the CSO.17 The
Cooperatives stressed repeatedly that
should any conflict be found between
the provisions of the 2014 Farm Bill and
the AMAA, the 2014 Farm Bill language
should be given more credence, as it is
the most recent Congressional action.
Institute witnesses and post-hearing
briefs stressed that quota recognition
must be harmonized with the AMAA, in
17 This position was slightly modified in their
post-hearing brief to also adjust prices for out-ofstate producers so that their price was not impacted
by quota payments.
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particular its uniform payments and
trade-barrier provisions. Should any
conflict arise, the Institute contends that
because the Farm Bill did not amend the
AMAA, the AMAA as the authorizing
legislation should take precedent. The
Institute’s approach to recognizing
quota value is to first allow producers
the one-time decision to opt out of the
quota program. Those producers who
opt out of the quota program would be
paid a FMMO blend price calculated
without a deduction for quota. Those
producers who remain in the quota
program would have their FMMO blend
price monies sent, in aggregate, to CDFA
for reblending and redistribution
according to their quota and nonquota
milk marketings. The Institute is of the
opinion that because dairy producers
opting out of the quota program would
not have their payments affected by
quota, recognizing quota under a
California FMMO would not violate the
uniform pricing and trade-barrier
provisions of the AMAA.
As discussed earlier, when
promulgating or amending any FMMO,
the Department must always evaluate
whether the proposed action is
authorized by the AMAA. The AMAA
not only clearly defines its policy goal,
which this decision has already
discussed, but it also defines specific
provisions that must be contained in the
FMMO framework. The two most
relevant to the discussion on quota
recognition are the provision for
uniform payments handlers make to
producers, and the provision to prevent
trade barriers. The uniform payment
provisions require all handlers regulated
by a FMMO to pay the same classified
use value for their raw milk, and all
producers whose milk is pooled on a
FMMO to receive the same price for
their milk regardless of how it is
utilized. In this respect, similarly
situated handlers are assured that they
are paying the same raw milk costs as
their competitors, and producers are
indifferent as to where or how their
milk is utilized, as they receive the same
price regardless.
The trade barrier provision specifies
that no FMMO may, in any manner,
limit the marketing of milk or milk
products within the marketing area. In
this regard, FMMOs cannot adopt
provisions that would create any
economic barrier limiting the marketing
of milk within marketing area
boundaries.
To determine how to properly
recognize quota value, Congress
provided additional guidance to the
2014 Farm Bill language through the
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2014 Conference Report.18 In the report,
Congress specified that the Department
has discretion to determine how best to
recognize quota value in whatever
manner is appropriate on the basis of a
rulemaking proceeding. Consistent with
the Conference Report, this decision
evaluated record evidence pertaining to
how the current California quota
program operates, how it can best be
recognized within FMMO provisions
tailored to the California market, and
how all the FMMO provisions work in
conjunction with each other to adhere to
all AMAA provisions.
The California quota program, like the
CSO, is administered by CDFA. The
record reflects that 58 percent of
California dairy farmers own quota. In
its current form, the quota program
entitles a quota holder to an additional
$0.195 per pound SNF (equivalent to
$1.70 per cwt) over the market’s
overbase price on the quota milk they
market each month. Similar to their
FMMO counterparts, California
handlers pay classified use values for
their milk, and those values make up
the CSO marketwide pool. Each month,
CDFA deducts quota monies from the
CSO marketwide pool before a
marketwide blend price, otherwise
known as the overbase price, is
calculated. CDFA then announces the
quota and overbase prices 19 to be paid
to California dairy farmers. As a result,
in general, nonquota milk receives the
market’s overbase price, and quota milk
receives the overbase price plus an
additional $1.70 per cwt. CDFA enforces
payments of both quota and overbase
prices. Record data shows that the
deduction from the CSO marketwide
pool to pay quota premiums is
approximately $12.5 to $13 million per
month. Numerous witnesses estimated,
at current quota market prices, the asset
value of quota at $1.2 billion.
The record reflects that the California
quota program is funded by California
producers. All handlers regulated
through the CSO pay minimum
classified use values, and it is only once
those values have been pooled that the
quota value is deducted from the pool.
Data on the record reflects all California
dairy farmers, including quota holders,
receive $0.37 per cwt less, on average,
for all of their milk marketings in order
to fund the $0.195 per pound of quota
SNF payment to quota holders.
18 Official Notice is taken of the Agricultural
Agreement of 2014 Conference Report. https://
www.congress.gov/congressional-report/113thcongress/house-report/333/1.
19 The record reflects that CDFA also announces
a base price which is equal to the overbase price.
For simplicity, this decision will refer only to the
overbase price.
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This decision finds the California
quota program could be maintained,
administered, and enforced by CDFA
and that a California FMMO should
operate as a stand-alone program. As is
currently done in all FMMOs, handlers
would pay classified use values into the
pool, and all producers, both in state
and out of state, would receive a FMMO
blend price reflective of the market’s use
values. It is through this structure that
a California FMMO could ensure the
uniform payment and trade barrier
provisions of the AMAA are upheld.
Should CDFA determine it can
continue to operate the California quota
program through the use of producer
monies, as is the current practice, the
proposed California FMMO could
recognize quota values through an
authorized deduction by handlers from
the payments due to producers for those
dairy farmers determined by CDFA to be
participants in the state-administered
California quota program. The amount
of the deduction would be determined
and announced by CDFA.
Currently, FMMOs allow for
authorized deductions, such as the
Dairy Promotion and Research Program
assessment, from a producer’s milk
check. The California FMMO similarly
would authorize a deduction for the
state-administered California quota
program. The California FMMO would
allow regulated handlers to deduct
monies, in an amount determined and
announced by CDFA, from blend prices
paid to California dairy farmers for
pooled milk, and send those monies to
CDFA to administer the quota program.
CDFA would in turn enforce quota
payments to quota holders.
In essence, this decision proposes that
the California quota program could
continue to operate in essentially the
same manner as it currently does. The
record reflects that the California quota
program already assesses California
producers to pay quota values to quota
holders. While producers may not see
this as an itemized deduction on their
milk checks, their overbase price is
lower than it otherwise would be. This
is a result of deducting the quota value
from the pool prior to calculating the
overbase price.
The California FMMO would
authorize deductions from those
California producers whose milk is
pooled on the order. As this decision
will later explain, the proposed
California FMMO would have
performance-based pooling standards
that allow for milk to not be pooled.
CDFA would be responsible for the
collection of California producer monies
for milk not pooled, because a California
FMMO would only apply to producer
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milk as defined by the order. USDA and
CDFA could cooperate by sharing data
through a memorandum of
understanding to ensure that, between
the two regulatory bodies, all
appropriate California producers are
assessed an amount necessary to
administer the quota program.
In regard to the treatment of exempt
quota as addressed in Proposal 3, this
decision finds that exempt quota is part
of the California quota program and
therefore its proper recognition should
be determined by CDFA. The record
demonstrates that exempt quota was
initially granted when the California
quota program was established, and like
regular quota, the provisions have been
adjusted numerous times through both
California legislative and rulemaking
actions. This decision finds the
continuation of exempt quota, in
whatever manner appropriate, should be
determined by CDFA.
The record reflects that under the
proposed FMMO, the four California
producer-handlers who own exempt
quota would likely become fullyregulated handlers because their sales
exceed three-million pounds per month.
These fully-regulated handlers would be
required to account to the marketwide
pool for all of their Class I utilization
and pay uniform FMMO minimum
classified prices for all milk they pool.
The CPHA witnesses testified that
exempt quota is held on the producer
side of their businesses. CDFA could
best determine how those producers
holding exempt quota should be
compensated. Such compensation
cannot be made from reducing the
minimum Class I obligation of FMMO
fully-regulated handlers without
undermining the uniform handler
payment provision of the AMAA.
Throughout the hearing and in posthearing briefs, dairy farmers and their
Cooperative representatives stressed
that while a California FMMO would
provide them a more equitable price for
their milk, entry into the FMMO system
must not diminish or disturb, in any
form, California quota values. This
decision finds that the package of
FMMO provisions recommended in this
decision would create more orderly
marketing of milk in California, adhere
to all the provisions of the AMAA, and
allow the California quota program to
operate independently of the FMMO. In
doing so, the California quota program
will not be diminished or disturbed in
any form by California’s entry into the
FMMO system.
describe the persons and dairy plants
affected by the FMMO and specify the
regulation of those entities.
The Cooperatives and the Institute
both proposed regulatory language for
an entire FMMO, including definitions
and regulations specific to a California
FMMO, as well as adoption of several of
the uniform provisions common to other
FMMOs. In many cases, hearing
witnesses simply provided the list of
uniform provisions for which they
supported adoption, and in most cases,
proponents for Proposals 1 and 2 agreed
on the inclusion of these provisions.
The FMMO system currently provides
for uniform definitions and provisions,
which are found in Part 1000 under the
General Provisions of Federal Milk
Marketing Orders. Where applicable,
those provisions are incorporated by
reference into each FMMO. The uniform
provisions were developed as part of
FMMO Order Reform to prescribe
certain provisions that needed to be
contained in each FMMO to describe
and define those entities affected by
FMMO regulatory plans.
As outlined in the Order Reform
Proposed Rule 20 and as implemented in
the Final Rule,21 the establishment of a
set of uniform provisions provides for
regulatory simplification and defines
common terms used in the
administration of all FMMOs, resulting
in the uniform application of basic
program principles throughout the
system. Application of standardized
terminology and administrative
procedures enhances communication
among regulated entities and supports
effective administration of the
individual FMMOs.
This decision finds that a set of
uniform provisions should continue to
be maintained throughout the FMMO
system to ensure consistency between
uses of terms. Therefore, this decision
finds that a California FMMO should
contain provisions consistent with those
in the 10 current FMMOs.
Marketing conditions in each
regulated marketing area do not lend
themselves to completely identical
provisions. Consequently, some
provisions are tailored to the marketing
conditions of the individual order, and
provisions recommended for a
California FMMO in this decision are
similarly tailored to the California
market where appropriate. This section
provides a brief description of the
uniform definitions and provisions
recommended for a California FMMO.
5. Definitions and Uniform Provisions
This section outlines definitions and
provisions of a California FMMO that
20 Official Notice is taken of Federal Order Reform
Proposed Rule: 63 FR 4802.
21 Official Notice is taken of Federal Order Reform
Final Rule: 64 FR 47898.
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Where a definition or provision does not
lend itself to uniform application, it is
discussed in greater detail here or in
other sections of this document.
This decision recommends the
following definitions for a California
FMMO:
Marketing Area. The Marketing Area
refers to the geographic area where
handlers who have fluid milk sales
would be regulated. In this case, the
marketing area should include the entire
state of California. The marketing area
encompasses any wharves, piers, and
docks connected to California and any
craft moored there. It also includes all
territory within California occupied by
government reservations, installations,
institutions, or other similar
establishments.
Route Disposition. A Route
Disposition should be a measure of fluid
milk (Class I) sales in commercial
channels. It should be defined as the
amount of fluid milk products in
consumer-type packages or dispenser
units delivered by a distributing plant to
a retail or wholesale outlet, either
directly or through any distribution
facility.
Plant. A Plant should be defined as
what constitutes an operating entity for
pricing and regulatory purposes. Plant
should include the land, buildings,
facilities, and equipment constituting a
single operating unit or establishment
where milk or milk products are
received, processed, or packaged. The
definition should include all
departments, including where milk
products are stored such as coolers, but
not separate buildings used as reload
points for milk transfers or used only as
distribution points for storing fluid milk
products in transit. On-farm facilities
operated as part of a single dairy farm
entity for cream separation or
concentration should not be considered
plants.
Distributing Plant. A Distributing
Plant should be defined as a plant
approved by a duly constituted
regulatory agency to handle Grade A
milk that processes or packages fluid
milk products from which there is route
disposition.
Supply Plant. A Supply Plant should
mean a regular or reserve supplier of
bulk milk for the fluid market that helps
coordinate the market’s milk supply and
demand. A supply plant should be a
plant, other than a distributing plant,
that is approved to handle Grade A milk
as defined by a duly constituted
regulatory agency, and at which fluid
milk products are received or from
which fluid milk products are
transferred or diverted.
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Pool Plant. A Pool Plant should mean
a plant serving the market to a degree
that warrants their producers sharing in
the added value that derived from the
classified pricing of milk. The pool
plant definition provides for pooling
standards that are unique to each
FMMO. The specifics of the pooling
standards recommended for a California
FMMO are discussed in detail in the
Pooling section of this decision.
Nonpool Plant. A Nonpool Plant
should be defined as plants that receive,
process, or package milk, but do not
satisfy the standards for being a pool
plant. This provision provides
additional clarity to define the extent of
regulation applicable to plants. Nonpool
plants should be further defined to
include: A Plant Fully Regulated under
Another Federal Order, which means a
plant that is fully subject to the pricing
and pooling provisions of another order;
a Producer-Handler Plant, which means
a plant operated by a producer-handler
as defined under any Federal order; a
Partially Regulated Distributing Plant,
which means a plant from which there
is route disposition in the marketing
area during the month, but does not
meet the provisions for full regulation;
and an Unregulated Supply Plant,
which is a supply plant that does not
qualify as a pool supply plant.
Exempt Plant. An Exempt Plant also
is a nonpool plant, and should be
defined as a plant exempt from the
pricing and pooling provisions of any
order, although the exempt plant
operator would still need to comply
with certain reporting requirements
regarding its route disposition and
exempt status. Exempt plants should
include plants operated by a
governmental agency with no route
disposition in commercial market
channels, plants operated by duly
accredited colleges or universities
disposing of fluid milk products only
through their own facilities and having
no commercial route disposition, plants
from which the total route disposition is
for individuals or institutions for
charitable purposes and without
remuneration, and plants that have
route disposition and sales of packaged
fluid milk products to other plants of no
more than 150,000 pounds during the
month.
The exempt plant definition was
standardized as part of Order Reform to
provide a uniform definition of
distributing plants which, because of
their size, did not significantly impact
competitive relationships among
handlers in the market. The 150,000
pound limit on route disposition and
sales of packaged fluid milk products
was deemed appropriate because at the
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time it was the maximum amount of
fluid milk products allowed by an
exempt plant in any FMMO. Therefore,
the uniform provisions ensured that
exempt plants remained exempt from
pricing and pooling provisions as part of
Order Reform. This decision finds that
to provide for regulatory consistency,
the exempt plant definition in a
California FMMO should be uniform
with the 10 current FMMOs. This
provision would allow for smaller
California distributing plants that do not
significantly impact the competitive
relationship among handlers to be
exempt from the pricing and pooling
provisions of a California FMMO.
Both the Cooperatives and the
Institute proposed adoption of the
standard FMMO definition of exempt
plants, and hearing witnesses were
supportive of the proposals. However,
in their post-hearing brief, the
Cooperatives proposed two additional
exempt plant categories to provide
regulatory relief to small handlers under
Proposal 1. The two additional exempt
plant categories proposed include: (1)
Plants that process 300,000 pounds or
less of milk during the month into Class
II, III, and IV products, and have no
Class I production or distribution; and
(2) plants that process, in total, 300,000
pounds or less of milk during the
month, from which no more than
150,000 pounds is disposed of as route
disposition or sales of packaged fluid
milk products to other plants. Proposal
1, as originally drafted, would have
fully regulated all handlers that received
California milk, except for plants with
150,000 pounds or less of route
disposition. Through the proposed
modification, the Cooperatives sought to
extend exempt plant status to smaller
plants regardless of their use of milk. In
essence, it would allow smaller plants
with primarily manufacturing uses to be
exempt from the pricing and pooling
provisions. This decision finds the
recommended performance-based
pooling provisions make such
additional exemptions unnecessary, as
plants with manufacturing uses will
have the option to elect not to pool their
milk supply.
Handler. A Handler should be defined
as a person who buys milk from dairy
farmers. Handlers have a financial
responsibility for payments to dairy
farmers for milk in accordance with its
classified use. Handlers must file
reports with the Market Administrator
detailing their receipts and utilization of
milk.
The handler definition for a California
FMMO should include the operator of a
pool plant, a cooperative association
that diverts milk to nonpool plants or
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delivers milk to pool plants for its
account, and the operator of a nonpool
plant.
The handler definition should also
include intermediaries, such as brokers
and wholesalers, who provide a service
to the dairy industry, but are not
required by the FMMO to make
minimum payments to producers.
The Cooperatives proposed adoption
of the uniform FMMO handler
definition for a California FMMO. The
Institute proposed adopting the uniform
handler definition, modified to include
proprietary bulk tank handlers (PBTH).
A witness representing the Institute and
Hilmar testified regarding the PBTH
provision. The witness said a PBTH
provision had been included in some
former FMMOs to allow proprietary
handlers to pool milk in a fashion
similar to cooperative handlers, without
needing to first deliver milk to a pool
supply plant to meet the performance
standards of the order. The witness
explained that under Proposal 2, a
PBTH would have to operate a plant—
located in the marketing area—that does
not process Class I milk and further, the
PBTH would have to be recognized as
the responsible handler for all milk
pooled under that provision. The
witness was of the opinion that the
PBTH provision would promote
efficient milk movements, reduce
transportation costs, and eliminate
unnecessary milk loading and
unloading simply to meet the order’s
performance standards.
The witness said the flexibilities of a
PBTH provision would offer operational
efficiencies to Hilmar and allow them to
meet criteria similar to the pool supply
plant qualifications advanced in
Proposal 2. The witness explained that
Hilmar would be able to ship milk
directly from a farm to a distributing
plant, rather than shipping milk first to
a pool supply plant and then on to a
distributing plant.
In their post-hearing briefs, the
Cooperatives opposed the PBTH
provision, citing disorderly marketing
conditions with its use in earlier
marketing orders, and stating that the
provision is unnecessary, prone to
create disorder, and, as proposed,
administratively unworkable.
The record supports adoption of the
standard FMMO handler definition
without the additional PBTH provision
prescribed in Proposal 2. The
Department has found in the past that
PBTH provisions led to the pooling of
milk that was not part of the legitimate
reserve supply for distributing plants in
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the marketing area.22 In California, with
a relatively low Class I utilization, such
a provision is unnecessary to ensure an
adequate supply of milk for Class I use.
Therefore, this decision finds that the
uniform handler definition, without the
inclusion of a PBTH provision, is
appropriate for a California FMMO.
Producer-Handler. Under the 10
existing FMMOs, Producer-Handlers are
defined as persons who operate, as their
own enterprise and at their sole risk,
both a dairy farm and a distributing
plant from which there is route
disposition within the marketing area,
and have total Class I fluid milk sales of
no more than three million pounds per
month. Seven of the existing orders also
allow producer-handlers to receive up
to 150,000 pounds of fluid milk
products per month from fully-regulated
handlers in any order. Producerhandlers are exempt from the pricing
and pooling provisions under each of
the existing orders.
As a result of their exemption from
the pricing and pooling provisions,
producer-handlers, in their capacity as
handlers, are not required to pay the
minimum class prices established under
the orders, nor are they, in their
capacity as producers, granted
minimum price protection for disposal
of their surplus milk. Producerhandlers, in their capacity as handlers,
are not obligated to equalize their usevalue of milk through payment of the
difference between their use-value of
milk and the respective order’s blend
price into the producer-settlement fund.
Thus, producer-handlers retain the full
value of milk processed and disposed of
as fluid milk products by their
operation.
Entities defined as FMMO producerhandlers must adhere to strict criteria
that limit certain business practices,
including the purchase of supplemental
milk. Given these limitations, producerhandlers bear the full burden of
balancing their milk production
between fluid and other uses. Milk
production in excess of their Class I
route disposition does not enjoy
minimum price protection under the
orders and may be sold at whatever
price is obtainable in the market.
Producer-handlers are required to
submit reports and provide access to
their books, records and any other
documentation as deemed necessary by
the Market Administrator to ensure
compliance with the requirements for
their regulatory status as producerhandlers. Therefore, producer-handlers
22 Official Notice is taken of Pacific Northwest
and Western Marketing Areas Tentative Final
Decision: 68 FR 49375.
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are regulated under the orders, but are
not ‘‘fully regulated’’ like other handlers
who are subject to an order’s pricing
and pooling provisions.
Under the CSO, two categories of
producer-handlers are recognized.
‘‘Option 66’’ producer-handlers may
request exemption from the CSO’s
pooling regulations if both their farm
production and their sales average less
than 500 gallons of milk per day on an
annual basis, and if they ship 95 percent
of their production to retail or wholesale
outlets. ‘‘Option 66’’ producer-handlers
are fully exempt from the pool for their
entire production and may not own
quota or production base. The record
reflects that there were two ‘‘Option 66’’
producer-handlers in California at the
time of the hearing. No production data
was submitted at the hearing to quantify
the volume of ‘‘Option 66’’ producerhandler milk exempt from the CSO
pool.
The CSO’s second producer-handler
category pertains to ‘‘Option 70’’
producer-handlers—large scale entities
that own exempt quota, which exempts
them from pooling a portion of their
Class 1 milk. The exempt quota held by
‘‘Option 70’’ producer-handlers was
discussed earlier in this decision.
Proposals 1 and 2 both include
definitions and provisions for producerhandlers consistent with the 10 FMMOs
that currently exempt persons who
operate both dairy farms and
distributing plants, and process and
distribute no more than three million
pounds of fluid milk per month. The
producer-handler regulations under
Proposal 2 more closely resemble those
in the Pacific Northwest and Arizona
FMMOs in that they contain additional
specificity about producer-handler
qualifications.
A Cooperative witness supported
adoption of the standard FMMO
producer-handler definition for a
California FMMO as contained in
Proposal 1. Under the standard
definition, producer-handlers who sell
or deliver up to three million pounds of
Class I milk or packaged fluid milk
products monthly would be exempt
from the pricing and pooling provisions.
The witness added that under Proposal
1, producer-handlers could own regular
quota and qualify for transportation
credits.
Two producer witnesses who also
operate processing facilities in
California described their individual
experiences related to running small
dairy farms and fluid milk processing
operations. Both witnesses testified that
they supported Proposal 1 because,
among other things, they thought the
proposed FMMO producer-handler
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definition could provide them
exemptions from the pooling
requirements for their Class I
production and sales, something that
they do not currently enjoy from the
CSO.
A witness from Organic Pastures
Dairy Company, LLC (Organic Pastures)
testified on behalf of Organic Pastures
and three other small San Joaquin
Valley ‘‘producer-distributor’’ entities.
According to the witness, these entities
produce and bottle their own Class 1
milk, but do not qualify as ‘‘Option 66’’
producer-handlers, and must therefore
account to the CSO pool. The witness
explained that these businesses have
taken risks to develop their own brands
and customer bases, but struggle to
survive financially. The witness said
that Organic Pastures’ monthly pool
obligation for December 2014 was
$50,000 for the milk they bottled and
sold in California. The witness
contended that because they produce,
process, and distribute their own
products, they should be exempt from
regulation.
The entities represented by the
witness supported a California FMMO
because they believe they would meet
the FMMO producer-handler definition
and thus be exempt from the pricing
and pooling provisions. The witness
testified that the standard three-million
pound limit would allow them to grow
their businesses, but remain exempt
from pricing and pooling provisions.
A witness from Dean Foods testified
in support of the producer-handler
provision contained in Proposal 2. The
witness described similarities and
differences between the producerhandler definitions in Proposals 1 and
2. The witness added that proponents of
Proposal 2 recommended adoption of
the additional ownership requirements,
which mirror the standards in the
Pacific Northwest and Arizona FMMOs.
The witness explained that the
additional requirements would ensure
that larger-size operations typical of the
western Federal orders that meet the
producer-handler definition would not
be able to undermine the intent of the
provision.
The witness testified that Dean Foods
fully supported the Institute’s proposal
to cap producer-handler exemptions at
three million pounds of monthly Class
I route disposition. The witness cited
USDA decisions that found producerhandlers with greater than three million
pounds of route disposition per month
impacted the market, and thus their
exemption from pricing and pooling
provisions was disorderly.
Support for the producer-handler
provisions contained in Proposal 2 was
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also expressed by two small California
processors and by the Cooperatives in
their post-hearing brief.
The FMMO system has historically
exempted producer-handlers from the
pricing and pooling provisions of
FMMOs on the premise that the burden
of disposal of their surplus milk was
borne by them alone. Until 2005, there
was no limit on the amount of Class I
route disposition producer-handlers
were allowed before they would be fully
regulated. A Pacific Northwest and
Arizona FMMO rulemaking established
a three-million pound per month limit
on Class I route disposition.23 The
record of that proceeding revealed large
producer-handlers were able to market
fluid milk at prices below those that
could be offered by fully regulated
handlers in such volumes that the
practice was undermining the order’s
ability to establish uniform prices to
handlers and producers. That
proceeding found that producerhandlers with more than three million
pounds of Class I route disposition
significantly affected the blend prices
received by producers and should
therefore be fully regulated. The
producer-handler provisions in all
FMMOs were later amended in 2010.24
In that proceeding, USDA found a threemillion pound monthly limit on
producer-handler total Class I route
dispositions was appropriate to
maintain orderly marketing conditions
throughout the FMMO system.
This decision finds the regulatory
treatment of producer-handlers should
continue to be uniform throughout the
FMMO system. The monthly threemillion pound limit on Class I route
disposition would ensure that California
FMMO producer-handlers could not use
their pricing and pooling exemption to
undermine orderly marketing
conditions. Therefore, the proposed
California FMMO should contain the
uniform FMMO producer-handler
provision that limits monthly Class I
route disposition to three million
pounds.
The adoption of the standard FMMO
producer-handler definition was
supported by proponents of Proposals 1
and 2, as well as by entities that could
meet the proposed producer-handler
definition. The record does not contain
data to indicate how many California
entities would meet the proposed
FMMO producer-handler definition, but
it does indicate that only a small
number would be impacted.
23 Official Notice is taken of Pacific Northwest
and Arizona Proposed Rule: 70 FR 19636.
24 Official Notice is taken of FMMO ProducerHandler Final Rule: 75 FR 21157.
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The additional qualification standards
contained in the Pacific Northwest and
Arizona FMMOs were explained in the
Order Reform Proposed Rule.25 The
decision explained the larger than
average herd size of dairy farms in the
western United States lent itself to the
existence of producer-handlers that
were a significant factor in the market.
Therefore, the Pacific Northwest and
Arizona FMMOs adopted producerhandler provisions with additional
qualification standards tailored to the
larger dairy farm size typical of the
western region of the United States.
The record reveals that herd sizes in
California tend to be typical of the larger
herd sizes found in the western
FMMOs. According to CDFA data, in
2015 California’s average herd size was
1,215. This decision finds it appropriate
that the producer-handler provision in a
California FMMO should include the
additional qualification standards
similar to those in the nearby Pacific
Northwest and Arizona FMMOs.
In their post-hearing brief, the
Cooperatives proposed modifying
Proposal 1 to broaden the producerhandler definition to include utilization
other than Class I. The modification
would allow producer-handlers with
Class II, Class III, or Class IV
manufacturing, in conjunction with
their Class I processing, to be granted
producer-handler status, as long as their
total production remained under the
three million pound processing limit.
The Cooperatives contend this would
provide regulatory relief to smaller
producer-handlers, who would
otherwise become regulated under the
inclusive pooling provisions of Proposal
1. This decision finds that extending the
producer-handler definition to include
manufacturing uses is not necessary
because the package of pooling
provisions recommended in this
decision allows for optional pooling of
milk used in manufacturing.
California Quota Program. The
California Quota Program should be
defined as the program outlined by the
applicable provisions of the California
Food and Agriculture Code and related
provisions of the pooling plan
administered by CDFA. Details about
the proposals, hearing record, and this
decision’s findings regarding
appropriate recognition of the California
quota program were discussed earlier in
this decision.
Producer. A Producer should be
defined as a dairy farmer that supplies
the market with Grade A milk for fluid
use or who is at least capable of doing
so if necessary. Producers would be
25 See
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eligible to share in the revenue that
accrues from marketwide milk pooling.
The producer definition in each FMMO
order typically differs with respect to
the degree of association that dairy
farmers must demonstrate within a
marketing area, as provided in the
producer milk definition. The details of
the proposals, hearing evidence, and
this decision’s findings regarding the
producer milk definition are described
later in the Pooling section of this
decision.
Producer Milk. Producer Milk should
be defined to identify the milk of
producers that is eligible for inclusion
in the marketwide pool. This definition
is specific to the proposed California
FMMO marketing order, reflecting
California marketing conditions, and
provides the parameters for the efficient
movement of milk between dairy farms
and processing plants. The details of the
proposals, hearing evidence, and this
decision’s findings regarding the
producer milk definition are described
later in the Pooling section of this
decision.
Other Source Milk. The order should
include the uniform FMMO definition
of Other Source Milk to include all the
skim milk and butterfat in receipts of
fluid milk products and bulk fluid
cream products from sources other than
producers, cooperative handlers, or pool
plants. Other source milk should also
include certain products from any
source that are used to make other
products and products for which a
handler fails to make a disposition.
Fluid Milk Product. A California
FMMO should include the standard
FMMO definition of a Fluid Milk
Product, which sets out the criteria for
determining whether the use of
producer milk and milk-derived
ingredients in those products should be
priced at the Class I price. Under the
definition, Fluid Milk Product includes
any milk products in fluid or frozen
form that are intended to be used as
beverages containing less than 9 percent
butterfat, and containing 6.5 percent or
more nonfat solids or 2.25 percent or
more true milk protein. Fluid milk
products would include, but not be
limited to: Milk, eggnog, and cultured
buttermilk; and those products could be
flavored, cultured, modified with added
or reduced nonfat solids, sterilized,
concentrated, or reconstituted. Nonfat
solid and protein sources include, but
are not limited to, casein, whey protein
concentrate, dry whey, and lactose,
among others.
Products such as whey, evaporated
milk, sweetened condensed milk, yogurt
beverages containing 20 or more percent
yogurt by weight, kefir, and certain
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packaged infant formula and meal
replacements, would not be considered
fluid milk products for pricing
purposes.
Fluid Cream Product. The order
should include the standard FMMO
definition of Fluid Cream Product. Fluid
cream product includes cream or milk
and cream mixtures containing at least
9 percent butterfat. Plastic cream and
frozen cream would not be considered
fluid cream products.
Cooperative Association. The order
should include the uniform FMMO
definition of Cooperative Association to
facilitate administration of the order as
it applies to dairy farmer cooperative
associations. Under the uniform
definition, a cooperative association
means any cooperative marketing
association of producers that the
Secretary determines is qualified to be
so recognized under the CapperVolstead Act. Cooperative associations
have full authority to engage in the sales
and marketing of their members’ milk
and milk products. The definition also
provides the recognition of cooperative
association federations that function as
cooperative associations for the
purposes of determining milk payments
and pooling.
Commercial Food Processing
Establishment. The uniform FMMO
definition for Commercial Food
Processing Establishment should be
included in a California FMMO to
describe those facilities that use fluid
milk and cream as ingredients in other
food products. The definition helps
identify, for classification purposes,
whether disposition to such a facility
should be considered anything but Class
I, and clarifies that packaged fluid milk
products could not be further disposed
of by the facility other than those
received in consumer-type containers of
one gallon or smaller. Producer milk
may be diverted to commercial food
processing establishments, subject to the
diversion and pricing provisions of a
California FMMO.
Market Administrator. The record
supports a provision for the
administration of the order by a Market
Administrator, who is selected by the
Secretary and responsible for the
oversight of FMMO activities. The
market administrator receives and
reviews handler reports, allocates
handlers’ milk receipts to their proper
utilization and classification, publicizes
monthly milk prices, provides monthly
written account statements to handlers,
and manages the producer settlement
fund which serves as a clearing house
for marketwide pool revenues. The
market administrator is authorized to
make adjustments to the order’s
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shipping and diversion provisions,
where justified, and to investigate
noncompliance with the order. The
market administrator manages the
marketwide pool, conducts handler
audits, provides laboratory testing of
milk samples, and performs many other
functions that support the regulation of
milk marketing in the area. Market
administrator activities are funded
through an administrative assessment
on handlers.
Continuity and Separability of
Provisions. Each FMMO prescribes
uniform rules governing the
implementation and maintenance of the
marketing order itself, and a California
FMMO should likewise include these
provisions. These rules state that the
Secretary determines when the FMMO
becomes effective and whether and
when it should be terminated. The rules
also provide for the fulfillment of any
outstanding obligations arising under
the order and liquidating any assets
held by the Market Administrator, if the
order is terminated or suspended.
Finally, the rules provide that if, for
some reason, one provision of the
order—or its applicability to a person or
circumstance—were to be held invalid,
the applicability of that provision to
other persons or circumstances and the
remaining order provisions would
otherwise continue in force.
Handler Responsibility for Records
and Facilities. Provision should be
made for the maintenance and retention
by handlers of the records pertaining to
their operations under a California
FMMO. Records of the handler’s milk
purchases, sales, processing, packaging,
and disposition should be included,
along with records of the handler’s milk
utilization, producer payments, and
other records required by the market
administrator to verify the handler’s
compliance with order provisions. The
market administrator should be able to
review and audit each handler’s records,
and should have access to the handler’s
facilities, equipment and operations, as
needed to verify the handler’s obligation
under the order. Handlers should be
required to retain all pertinent records
for three years, or longer if part of a
compliance enforcement action, or as
directed by the market administrator.
Termination of Obligations. Provision
should be made under a California
FMMO for notification to any handler
who fails to meet financial obligations
under the order, including payments to
producers, other handlers, and to the
market administrator. Such provision is
contained in the uniform provisions of
all FMMOs, and specifies that the
market administrator has two years after
the receipt of the handler’s report of
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receipts and utilization to notify the
handler of any unmet financial
obligation. Provisions are included for
the enforcement of the handler’s
payment requirement and for the
handler’s opportunity to file a petition
for relief as provided under the AMAA.
6. Classification
The AMAA authorizes FMMOs to
regulate milk in interstate commerce,
and its provisions require that milk be
classified according to the form in
which or purpose for which it is used.
Therefore, the classification of milk is
uniform in all FMMOs to maintain
orderly marketing conditions within
and between FMMOs and to ensure that
handlers competing in the national
market for manufactured products have
similar raw milk costs.
This decision finds that because
California would be joining the FMMO
system it should contain the uniform
classification provisions included in the
10 existing FMMOs. Adoption of
standard FMMO product classification
provisions in the proposed California
FMMO is appropriate to maintain
uniform pricing for similar products
both within the California FMMO and
throughout the FMMO system. This
section provides a summary of the
hearing evidence and post-hearing
arguments regarding milk classification
under a California FMMO.
Proposals 1 and 2 both offer standard
FMMO product classifications for their
respective California FMMO provisions.
Proposal 2 also provides an additional
shrinkage allowance for ESL production
at qualified ESL pool distributing
plants.
A Cooperative witness testified
regarding the proposed classification
provisions contained in Proposal 1. The
witness reviewed the evolution of the
FMMO classification provisions and
noted that the CSO uses a similar
classification system, with limited
differences. The witness was of the
opinion that the FMMO classification
provisions should be adopted in a
California FMMO to ensure uniform
classification of milk and milk products
throughout the entire FMMO system.
A Cooperative witness contended that
ESL products are value-added products
and should not be granted additional
shrinkage allowances under a California
FMMO. The Cooperatives further argued
that ESL shrinkage allowances should
be evaluated at a national hearing
because ESL products are manufactured
in other FMMO marketing areas, as well
as in California.
A consultant witness, appearing on
behalf of the Institute, testified in
support of the portion of Proposal 2 that
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establishes an additional shrinkage
allowance for the manufacture of ESL
and ultra-high temperature (UHT) milk
products. The witness explained that
the shrinkage allowance recognizes the
inherent loss of milk from farm to plant
and within the plant. The FMMO
system currently allows for up to a 2
percent shrinkage allowance for pool
distributing plants, depending on how
the milk was received at the plant. The
witness contended that the standard 2
percent allowance was developed before
extensive use of ESL technology became
common-place, and was based on
typical shrinkage experienced in
traditional high temperature, short time
pasteurization (HTST) processing. The
witness explained that under current
FMMO classification provisions, a
portion of the milk accounted for as
shrinkage is classified at the lowest
priced class for the month and
shrinkage losses beyond 2 percent are
considered excess shrinkage and
classified as Class I.
The consultant witness testified that
Proposal 2 provides an additional
shrinkage allowance of 3 percent on ESL
production at plants qualified as ESL
pool distributing plants. Under the
proposed provisions, the plants eligible
for the additional shrinkage allowance
would be distributing plants located in
the marketing area that process 15
percent of the respective plant’s total
receipts of fluid milk products
physically received at the plant into
ultra-pasteurized or asepticallyprocessed fluid milk products.
The intent of Proposal 2, explained
the witness, is for an eligible plant to
have a maximum shrinkage allowance
of up to 5 percent on milk used in its
ESL production, not on all milk used in
the plant. Data from the witness’ ESL
processing clients, all located outside of
California, showed their total product
pound shrinkage averaged above 5
percent. The witness also estimated
based on 2013 to 2014 USDA record
data, excess shrink in ESL and UHT
plants throughout the country averaged
2.09 percent.
Another Institute consultant witness
testified regarding a 19-plant shrinkage
study of ESL plants; three of the plants
in the study were located in California.
The study showed a weighted average
product pound shrinkage of 2.73
percent.
Two additional Institute consultant
witnesses and a witness from HP Hood
testified in support of the ESL shrinkage
allowance provided in Proposal 2. The
witnesses presented historical shrinkage
data for ESL and UHT manufacturing
facilities and offered extensive technical
explanations for why shrinkage levels
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are higher in those systems than in
HTST systems. The witnesses explained
that shrinkage refers to milk lost in the
manufacturing process due primarily to
the fact it sticks to the equipment pipes
and is lost in the cleaning process. The
witnesses stressed that ESL equipment
has longer piping, and noted numerous
operational differences which
inherently lead to higher losses of milk
when compared to HTST processing.
The HP Hood witness provided a
similar explanation of ESL processing
and why it lends itself to higher product
losses. The witness said that even
though fluid milk sales across the
United States are declining, HP Hood
ESL product sales have grown. The
witness was of the opinion that because
increases in ESL fluid milk sales benefit
the entire dairy industry, dairy
producers should share the burden of
producing these products through
greater shrinkage allowances, as
reflected in the classification provisions
provided in Proposal 2.
HP Hood, in its post-hearing brief,
reiterated its position that the heavy
investment in the development of ESL
technology and market expansion for
those products should be shared by
dairy farmers. The Institute, in its posthearing brief, concurred with HP Hood’s
brief and argued the shrinkage
allowances provided in Proposal 2
would assure ESL processors, like
conventional fluid milk processors,
would only be charged Class I prices for
milk contained in fluid milk products
and not for milk lost during processing.
The Institute also stated that a
promulgation proceeding for a new
FMMO was an appropriate place to
consider ESL shrinkage allowances.
The Cooperatives’ reply brief
reiterated that ESL products are valueadded products and handlers already
receive a premium in the market. As
well, the Cooperatives claimed that the
manufacturing costs cited by HP Hood
in its brief were not significant enough
to warrant the proposed change to the
uniform classification rules.
Findings
As discussed earlier in this decision,
the primary objective of FMMOs is to
establish and maintain orderly
marketing conditions. FMMOs achieve
this goal through the classified pricing
and the marketwide pooling of the
proceeds of milk associated with a
marketing area. To that end, the AMAA
specifies that a FMMO should classify
milk ‘‘in accordance with the form in
which or the purpose for which it is
used.’’ The classification of milk
ensures competing handlers have the
same minimum regulated price for milk
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used in a particular product category.
Thus, FMMOs have found it is
reasonable and appropriate that milk
used in identical or nearly identical
products should be placed in the same
class of use. This reduces the incidence
of disorderly marketing that could arise
from regulated price differences
between competing handlers.
Currently, the provisions providing
the classification of milk pooled on the
existing FMMOs are identical.26
Uniform classification provisions are
particularly important in assuring
orderly marketing because markets are
no longer isolated, and handlers often
sell products outside of their local
marketing area. The current FMMO
classification provisions provide four
classes of milk use, and specify
provisions for the classification of milk
transfers and diversions, plant
shrinkages and overages, allocation of
handler receipts to handler utilization,
and Market Administrator reporting and
announcements concerning
classification.
Under the current FMMO uniform
provisions, Class I consists of milk used
to produce fluid milk products (whole
milk, lowfat milk, skim milk, flavored
milk such as chocolate milk). Class II
milk includes milk used to make a
variety of soft products, including
cottage cheese, ice cream, yogurt and
yogurt beverages, sour cream, baking
mixes, puddings, meal replacements,
and prepared foods. Class III includes
milk used to make hard cheeses that
may be sliced, grated, shredded, or
crumbled, cream cheese, and other
spreadable cheeses. Class IV milk
includes milk used to produce butter,
evaporated or condensed milk in
consumer-type packages, and dried milk
products. Other milk dispositions,
including milk that is dumped, fed to
animals, or accidentally lost or
destroyed, is generally assigned to the
lowest priced class for the month.
The record reflects that current
product classification provisions under
the CSO are comparable to those under
FMMOs. While the CSO has five classes
of milk (1, 2, 3, 4a and 4b), the record
reflects that under the uniform FMMO
classification provisions, products
currently classified by the CSO as Class
2 and 3 would be classified by the
California FMMO as Class II; CSO Class
4b products would be classified as
California FMMO Class III; and CSO
Class 4a products would be classified as
California FMMO Class IV products.
Both the Cooperatives and the
Institute supported the product
classification provisions already
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provided in the current FMMOs.
Neither group was of the opinion that
the proposed FMMO classification
provisions would disadvantage any
handler currently regulated by the CSO.
This decision finds that a California
FMMO should contain, to the maximum
extent possible, provisions that are
uniform with the FMMO system
California producers are seeking to
enter. To that end, the proposed
California FMMO should include the
same classification provisions as
currently provided in existing FMMOs
to allow for consistency of regulation
between FMMOs. Adoption of these
provisions would ensure that milk
pooled on the California FMMO is
classified uniformly with the rest of the
FMMO system, and consequently,
competing handlers will incur the same
regulated minimum prices.
Therefore, this decision finds a
California FMMO should provide the
following product classifications used
in existing FMMOs: Class I milk should
be defined as milk used to produce fluid
milk products; Class II milk should be
defined as milk used to make a variety
of soft products, including cream
products, high-moisture cheeses like
cottage cheese, ice cream, yogurt and
yogurt beverages, sour cream, baking
mixes, puddings, meal replacements,
and prepared foods; Class III milk
should be defined as milk used to make
spreadable cheeses like cream cheese,
and hard cheeses that may be sliced,
grated, shredded, or crumbled; Class IV
milk should be defined as milk used to
make butter, evaporated or condensed
milk in consumer-type packages, and
dried milk products. Other uses for
milk, including milk that is dumped,
fed to animals, or accidentally lost or
destroyed, should be assigned to the
lowest-priced class for the month.
This decision also finds that the
California FMMO should adopt the
same provisions as the existing FMMOs
regarding the classification of milk
transfers and diversions, plant shrinkage
and overages, and allocation of handler
receipts to handler utilization.
The existing FMMOs also contain
uniform provisions recognizing that
some milk loss is inevitable in milk
processing. This is referred to as
shrinkage and is calculated as the
difference between the plant’s total
receipts and total utilization. Pool
handlers must account for all receipts
and all utilization. Shrinkage provisions
assign a value to milk losses at a plant.
There is, however, a limit on the
quantity of shrinkage that may be
allocated to the lowest priced class. The
limit depends on how the milk is
received. For instance, milk physically
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received at the plant directly from
producers based on farm weights and
tests is limited to 2 percent, whereas,
milk received directly from producers
on a basis other than farm weights and
tests is limited to 1.5 percent. Similar
limits are placed on other types of bulk
receipts. Quantities of milk in excess of
the shrinkage limit are considered
‘‘excess shrinkage.’’ Excess shrinkage is
assigned to the highest class of
utilization at the plant to arrive at gross
utilization, from which the allocation
process begins.
The CSO provides a shrinkage
allowance of up to 3 percent of the
plant’s total receipts, which is allocated
on the basis of the plant’s utilization.
Similar to the FMMOs, excess shrinkage
in the CSO is assigned as Class 1.
This decision does not find
justification for an additional shrinkage
allowance for ESL production at ESL
pool distributing plants. While the
record contains some ESL plant
shrinkage data, data pertaining to ESL
production at California plants is
limited. The record does indicate that
ESL production occurs throughout the
country. Therefore, amending
provisions that are uniform throughout
the FMMO system to allow an
additional shrinkage allowance on ESL
production should be evaluated on the
basis of a separate national rulemaking
proceeding.
7. Pricing
The two main proposals in this
proceeding offered end-product price
formulas as the appropriate method for
pricing producer milk pooled on a
California FMMO, although the factors
in the formulas differed. This section
reviews arguments presented in
testimony and post-hearing briefs
regarding the appropriate way to value
producer milk. This section further
explains the finding that the
recommended California FMMO should
adopt the same end-product price
formulas as contained in the 10 existing
FMMOs.
Summary of Testimony
A LOL witness, appearing on behalf of
the Cooperatives, testified in support of
the classified price provisions contained
in Proposal 1. The witness testified that
under Proposal 1, California would
adopt the classified prices (including
the commodity price series, product
yields, and make allowances), the
component prices, and the advanced
pricing factors presently used in the
FMMO system. The witness stated that
65 percent of the United States milk
production is currently priced under
these common provisions, and the same
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should apply to the 20 percent of the
national milk supply produced in
California.
The witness provided testimony
regarding the evolution of a national
manufacturing price, starting with the
Minnesota-Wisconsin price series in the
1960’s, and ending with the national
classified end-product price formulas
adopted in 2000. The witness discussed
the national pricing system that resulted
from FMMO Order Reform (Order
Reform), including the multiple
component pricing (MCP) system used
in 6 of the 10 current FMMOs. The
witness explained that the MCP system
met the criteria set forth by Congress to
make pricing simple, transparent, and
based on sound economic theory. Under
the MCP system, the witness said, prices
are derived from actual, observed
market transactions for wholesale
commodity milk products, and utilize
yield factors and make allowances to
determine the value of raw milk in each
class. The witness explained that
through the Dairy Product Mandatory
Reporting Program (DPMRP),
manufacturers of the four commodity
dairy products (cheese, butter, NFDM,
and dry whey) are required to submit
sales information on current market
transactions. The witness said that
information is aggregated, released in
the National Dairy Product Sales Report
(NDPSR), and utilized in the FMMO
price formulas. The witness stated that
because many large-scale California
dairy plants are part of the DPMRP,
California commodity prices are
reflected in the prices paid by FMMO
handlers and received by producers in
the rest of the country, and the same
prices should be applicable to milk
pooled under a California FMMO.
The witness also testified regarding
the influence of California dairy
manufacturing costs on the current
FMMO make allowances. The witness
noted that a USDA Rural Cooperative
Business Service (RCBS) study, a
Cornell University study of processing
costs, and a CDFA cost-of-processing
survey were relied upon by USDA to
determine appropriate make allowance
levels for cheese, butter, NFDM, and dry
whey. In the witness’s opinion, the
inclusion of CDFA manufacturing cost
data in the formulation of FMMO
manufacturing allowances would justify
the use of the same manufacturing
allowances (butter: $0.1715 per pound;
NFDM: $0.1678 per pound; cheese:
$0.2003 per pound; and dry whey:
$0.1991 per pound) in a California
FMMO. The witness also reviewed the
rulemaking history on the derivation of
the product yields contained in the
current FMMO price formulas, and was
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of the opinion they are similar to
product yields attainable by California
manufacturing plants. The witness
stated that the FMMO make allowances
and product yields remained relevant,
as they had been reaffirmed by USDA
through a 2013 Final Rule.27
The witness also testified regarding
the FMMO national Class I price
surface. The witness said that Order
Reform resulted in the adoption of a
national pricing surface, which assigned
a value to milk for every county in the
United States based on milk supply and
demand at those locations. The witness
was of the opinion that since California
was factored into USDA’s Order Reform
analysis to derive the price surface, it
would be appropriate for the price
surface to be adopted in a California
FMMO. The witness noted the price
surface identifies five pricing zones
covering California, ranging from $1.60
to $2.10 per cwt. The witness explained
that in the FMMO system, the Class I
differential is added to the higher of the
Class III or Class IV price to determine
the Class I price for a distributing plant
at its location. The witness elaborated
that since Class I processors compete
with Class III and IV manufacturers for
a milk supply, Class I prices are linked
to manufacturing prices in the FMMO
system, and this concept should
likewise apply to a California FMMO.
The witness also explained how the
base Class I differential, $1.60 per cwt,
was derived during Order Reform. The
witness said that the $1.60 base
differential assumes a cost per cwt of
$0.40 to maintain a Grade A facility,
$0.60 for marketing, and $0.60 for
securing a milk supply in competition
with manufacturers. The witness noted
these values were established in 2000,
and although still relevant, the actual
costs are higher in the current
marketplace. The Cooperatives provided
additional information in their posthearing brief, contending that current
costs support a base Class I differential
of $2.40, a 50 percent increase over the
base listed above.
The witness concluded by saying that
California dairy farmers should receive
prices reflecting the current national
market and that are comparable to what
producers receive from FMMO
regulated plants in the rest of the
country. This position was reiterated in
the Cooperatives’ post-hearing brief.
Another Cooperative witness
provided testimony on the handler’s
value of milk and related provisions.
The witness proposed that handlers
regulated by a California FMMO pay
27 Official Notice is taken of FMMO Class III and
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classified prices based on the
components in the raw milk they
receive (otherwise known as ‘‘multiple
component pricing’’): Butterfat, protein,
and other solids. Under Proposal 1, the
witness said, regulated handlers would
pay for milk on the following
components:
• Class I: Butterfat and skim
• Class II: Butterfat and solids nonfat
• Class III: Butterfat, protein and other
solids
• Class IV: Butterfat and solids nonfat
The witness reiterated the Federal
Order Reform Recommended Decision
justification for implementing a national
pricing structure and contended the
same reasons apply to extending
national pricing to a California FMMO.
The witness added that while California
handlers would be paying the same
national prices for milk components,
there would be no need to adjust price
formulas for regional product yields
because handlers only pay for the
components they receive. The witness
also explained that Proposal 1 did not
prescribe location adjustments in the
price formulas because California plants
are included in the price surveys that
determine the national commodity
prices used in the FMMO formulas.
The witness also testified that
Proposal 1 provides for a fortification
allowance on milk solids used to fortify
Class I products to meet California’s
fluid milk standards, as is currently
provided in the CSO. The witness noted
that Proposal 1 does not propose a
somatic cell adjustment or producer
location differentials since both features
are not currently contained in the CSO.
The witness said Proposal 1 seeks to
have producers paid on the basis of
butterfat, protein and other solids, and
does not include a producer price
differential (PPD) adjustment per se.
The witness said that the PPD is
typically viewed as the benefit to
FMMO producers for participating in
the marketwide pool since the PPD
reflects the additional revenue shared
from the higher value class utilizations.
Instead, the witness explained that
under Proposal 1, the California FMMO
would calculate a monthly PPD, but the
value of the PPD would be paid to
producers according to each
component’s annual contribution to the
Class III price. For example, said the
witness, if on an annual basis butterfat
accounted for 32 percent of the total
value of the Class III price, then 32
percent of the monthly PPD value
would be paid out through an
adjustment to the butterfat price. This
same adjustment, the witness said,
would apply to the producer protein
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and other solids prices. The witness
explained that FMMO producers
typically find the monthly PPD concept
confusing and complicated, especially
in months when it is a negative value.
The witness said that California
producers, who do not receive a PPD
adjustment under the CSO, might find
Proposal 1’s method of distributing the
PPD value simpler to understand.
The witness also clarified that the
Cooperatives were amending the
proposal regarding announcement of
producer prices contained in Proposal 1
from ‘‘on or before the 11th’’ to ‘‘on or
before the 14th day after the end of the
month.’’
Support for a national uniform pricing
system was reiterated in the
Cooperatives’ post-hearing brief. The
Cooperatives argued that the hearing
record demonstrates California cheese
competes in the national market. Having
California milk priced uniformly in the
FMMO system would not disadvantage
California processors, reiterated the
Cooperatives, but it would diminish the
current pricing advantage they have
under the CSO. The brief noted record
evidence that many FMMO cheese
processors paid higher than FMMO
minimum prices for milk as proof that
FMMO minimum prices are not too
high.
The Cooperatives’ brief also discussed
California whey processing. The brief
stated that 85.8 percent of cheese
manufactured nationally is produced in
plants that also process whey. In
California, the Cooperatives wrote, the
percentage is closer to 90 percent. Based
on these comparable percentages, the
Cooperatives stated whey pricing in
California should be no different from
the rest of the country.
The Cooperatives also stressed
opposition to any adjustment to the
price formulas to reflect a lower location
value in California. The Cooperatives
stated milk prices should not be
California centric because manufactured
products are sold nationally. If
California classified prices were to be
based solely on California product sales,
the Cooperatives were of the opinion
that California handlers would receive a
raw milk cost advantage over other
FMMO regulated handlers. The brief
noted that the Cooperatives manufacture
a majority of the butter and NFDM
produced in California, and they did not
believe the proposed California FMMO
prices associated with those Class IV
products would be too high. The
Cooperatives stressed that any changes
to the FMMO pricing system should be
considered at a national hearing and not
in this single-market proceeding.
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An Institute witness testified
regarding the pricing provisions
included in Proposal 2. The witness
explained that Class I products have the
highest use value in order to encourage
adequate milk production to meet Class
I needs, and to attract milk to Class I
rather than manufacturing uses. As
manufacturing class uses balance the
supply and demand needs of the
marketing area, the witness said it
would be important that those classified
use values not be set above marketclearing levels.
The Institute witness testified that
historically, as milk began to travel
greater distances for processing, FMMO
pricing policy became more coordinated
to promote orderly marketing conditions
both within and between FMMOs. The
witness said that the MinnesotaWisconsin price series served as the
basis for FMMO pricing because the
area surveyed represented the largest
reserve supply of milk in the country,
and therefore generated an appropriate
market-clearing price for manufacturing
milk. The witness stated that California
is now the region with the largest
reserve supply and because California
products must compete for sales in the
East, the value of raw milk in California
is lower than in eastern parts of the
country. Therefore, emphasized the
witness, minimum prices for a
California FMMO should not be set
above market-clearing levels in
California. This opinion was reiterated
in the Institute’s post-hearing brief.
The Institute witness cautioned
against setting minimum prices too high
because it could lead to the inability of
dairy farmers to find a willing buyer for
their milk. Alternatively, the witness
said, if minimum prices are set too low,
dairy farmers could be compensated by
the market through over-order
premiums. The witness said Class III
and IV prices for a California FMMO
need to be reflective of commodity
prices received by California plants, and
reflective of current California
manufacturing costs. The witness was of
the opinion that the national values
used in the current FMMO Class III and
IV formulas are not appropriate for
California.
The Institute witness explained their
preference would be to use western
commodity prices in the Class III and IV
formulas. However, the witness said
that, due to data confidentiality issues,
USDA is unable to report these prices.
As an alternative, the witness said,
Proposal 2 contains default commodity
values that would adjust the NDPSR
prices based on the historical difference
between the NDPSR prices and
California or western based prices as
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reported by either CDFA or Dairy
Market News. This western adjustment,
the witness said, would result in
commodity prices in the price formulas
more representative of the prices
received by California handlers. The
witness noted the only exception to how
the adjustors are calculated is the
default adjustor proposed for the Class
III protein price. The Class III protein
price adjustor utilized CME 40-pound
block Cheddar cheese prices, because
CDFA stopped reporting California 40pound block Cheddar prices after
August 2011.
The Institute witness also reviewed
the manufacturing allowances contained
in Proposal 2. Except for the dry whey
manufacturing allowance, explained the
witness, all are based on the most recent
CDFA manufacturing cost survey for
2013.28 The witness explained that
CDFA no longer reports the dry whey
cost data. Therefore, Proposal 2
provides for a dry whey manufacturing
allowance that adds the difference
between the FMMO manufacturing
allowances for nonfat dry milk and dry
whey to the most recent CDFA weighted
average manufacturing cost for nonfat
dry milk. The witness was of the
opinion that the yields contained in the
FMMO price formulas would be
appropriate for California, and are
therefore also prescribed in Proposal 2.
The Institute witness testified that
many California cheese plants
manufacture products other than dry
whey that often do not generate
revenues to match the dry whey value
in the regulated formulas. Other plants,
according to the witness, do not have
the capability to process the whey byproduct from their cheese making
operations. Therefore, the witness
offered an alternative Class III other
solids price formula that would be
based on whey protein concentrate
(WPC), and would cap the whey value
to recognize that not all plants are able
to capture value from their whey stream.
The witness testified that a more
appropriate reference commodity for
whey products, one that would be more
applicable to most California
cheesemakers’ operations, would be
WPC. The witness explained that over
the previous eight years, the production
of dry whey declined 3.3 percent, while
the production of various WPC and
Whey Protein Isolate (WPI) products has
seen increases ranging from 1.1 percent
to 9.5 percent.
The Institute witness testified that
cheese and whey markets are vastly
different, and not all cheese plants find
28 Proposed manufacturing allowances were later
amended to incorporate a marketing cost.
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it profitable to invest in whey
processing. According to the witness,
when cheese plants do invest, it is
usually in the limited processing of
whey into concentrate solids for
transportation savings. The witness said
that only one plant in California
consistently dries whey, and of the 57
California cheese plants, only 13
process whey in any fashion. The
witness explained that the alternative
other solids price formula offered by the
Institute incorporates the value of liquid
WPC–34 sold to a plant that would then
process the product further into a dry
product. While there are a variety of
liquid whey products marketed, the
witness said using WPC–34 prices as a
reference price for other solids would be
most appropriate because WPC–34 is
the predominant form of liquid whey
sold. The witness explained how
Proposal 2 would convert the WPC–34
reference price to a dry whey equivalent
basis so that the other parts of the other
solids price formula could be retained.
The witness added that the dry whey
make allowance would need to be
increased to include the cost of cooling
and delivering the liquid whey to a
processing facility. To provide some
protection to small cheesemakers when
the price is very high, and to dairy
producers when the price is very low,
the witness proposed another solids
price floor of $0.25 per pound and a
ceiling of $1.50 per pound.
The Institute’s post-hearing brief
discussed several of the unique aspects
of the California dairy industry. The
brief stated that from 1995 to 2014,
while the state’s population grew 23
percent, California milk production
increased 82 percent, which in turn
fueled the expansion of cheese
processing in the state. The brief stated
that three processing facilities account
for 25 percent of California’s cheese
manufacturing, and much of that
production is marketed east of the
Mississippi River. The brief cautioned
that increasing minimum prices would
create an economic trade barrier where
California processors would no longer
have the ability to compete in eastern
markets due to higher minimum
regulated prices.
The Institute’s post-hearing brief also
addressed the need for a national
FMMO pricing hearing. The Institute
reiterated hearing testimony that current
pricing formulas are based on data from
the 1990s, making the prices out of
alignment with current market realities.
The brief stated that pricing formulas
need to be updated in order to be
representative of current marketing
conditions. The FMMO pricing system,
the Institute stressed, needs all pricing
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formulas to be set at market clearing
levels that enable over-order premiums
to be paid when appropriate.
A witness appearing on behalf of
Leprino Foods, a mozzarella cheese and
whey products manufacturer in Denver,
Colorado, testified regarding the Class
III price formula contained in Proposal
2. Leprino operates nine plants in the
U.S., three of which are based in
California. Leprino is a member of the
Institute and supports adoption of
Proposal 2 if USDA recommends a
California FMMO.
The Leprino witness stressed the
importance of minimizing the impacts
of minimum regulated pricing on the
dairy marketplace. The witness testified
that the United States dairy industry is
increasingly integrated with global dairy
markets since more than 15 percent of
United States milk solids are exported,
and that many manufacturers, including
Leprino, have made significant
investments in developing export
markets to increase demand for United
States dairy products. The witness said
it is important that any future California
FMMO facilitate rather than inhibit the
dairy industry’s ability to leverage this
export opportunity.
The Leprino witness testified about
the importance of setting minimum
regulated milk prices at market clearing
levels that would allow for reasonable
returns achievable under good
management practices by California
manufacturers. The witness testified
that 80 percent of California milk
production is utilized in Class III and IV
products, a large percentage of which
are marketed outside of California.
Therefore, the witness said, California
FMMO minimum prices should reflect
values of California-manufactured
products, f.o.b. the manufacturing plant.
The witness added that because price
formulas could only be changed through
a hearing process, it would be important
to set the regulated price formulas at
minimum levels that allow market
forces to function outside of the
regulated system. The witness said
regulated prices that are too high would
lead to over-production of milk and
disorderly marketing conditions. This
concept was reiterated in the posthearing briefs submitted by the Institute
and Leprino.
The Leprino witness summarized
findings from the Order Reform Final
Decision that explained how
manufacturing plant operators who find
make-allowances inadequate to cover
their actual costs are free to not
participate in the order. The witness
noted this option would not be available
under Proposal 1, which underscores
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the importance of setting appropriate
market clearing prices.
The Leprino witness testified that a
California FMMO would require a Class
III formula that is set in relation to
achievable returns in California using
the most recent data. The witness
explained Leprino’s preference that
USDA suspend the California FMMO
hearing to defer implementation until
after a national hearing could be held to
review and revise the existing Class III
formula. The witness added that USDA
should hold a national Class III and IV
price formula hearing after this
rulemaking to utilize more current data
and account for the impacts of a
California FMMO, if necessary.
The Leprino witness testified in
support of establishing a DPMRP
western price survey to determine
minimum milk prices under a California
FMMO. The witness explained how
USDA might rely on surveyed
commodity prices from other western
states, if necessary, to overcome any
data confidentiality issues. In brief,
Leprino encouraged USDA to establish
a definition for the Western Area, and
recommended it include California,
Oregon and Washington. In addition to
these three states, the witness said that
other areas should be considered in
order to eliminate confidentiality
constraints. However, the witness said
that in the event confidentiality
concerns continue to arise, Proposal 2
contained alternative default equations.
The Leprino witness discussed the
justification for pricing western
produced products differently than
those in the rest of the country. The
witness stressed that the location value
of California manufactured products is
lower because of the additional
transportation costs required to deliver
products to the population centers in
the East. This opinion was reiterated in
Leprino’s post-hearing brief. The
witness noted that nearly half of
Leprino’s cheese production sold
domestically is shipped to markets east
of the Mississippi, and they incur
transportation costs ranging from $0.10
to $0.15 per pound.
The Leprino witness was of the
opinion that bulk Cheddar cheese
remains the most appropriate product
from which to derive the FMMO Class
III price, but California Class III price
formulas should rely on 40-pound block
Cheddar prices because all California
Cheddar production is in blocks. The
adoption of 40-pound block cheddar
prices was reiterated in Leprino’s posthearing brief.
The witness testified in support of
modifying the make allowances in
Proposal 2 to incorporate a sales and
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administrative cost of $0.0015 per
pound. Therefore, the new proposed
make allowances per pound of product
would be as follows: $0.2306 for cheese,
$0.1739 for butter, $0.2310 for whey,
and $0.2012 for NFDM.
The Leprino witness provided
extensive testimony on the appropriate
valuation of whey in FMMO Class III
minimum pricing. The witness
explained how the explicit whey factor
had been a problem for cheesemakers
and led the Institute to propose an
alternative valuation. Proposal 2 would
value the whey portion of the Class III
price formula relative to its
concentrated liquid whey value, which
the witness said was the most generic
whey product produced. The witness
stated that the WPC–34 price index is
the most common reference used for the
sale of liquid whey by cheese plants
selling concentrated whey in California.
The witness added that the prices
received for liquid whey are discounted
to reflect additional processing required
to produce a full-value whey product.
Accordingly, said the witness,
California FMMO minimum prices
should rely on WPC–34 survey prices to
approximate a whey value in the Class
III price.
The Leprino witness testified in
opposition to the Class III and IV
formulas contained in Proposal 1. The
formulas, the witness said, do not reflect
California market conditions. The
witness warned that higher regulated
prices in California would lead to
disorderly marketing conditions. In its
post-hearing brief, Leprino stated the
pricing formulas in Proposal 1 used old
manufacturing cost data and the
national weighted average prices for the
four products exceeded the prices
received in California. Leprino noted
that there was no evidence provided by
the Cooperatives related to the relevance
of the Proposal 1 formulas to California.
A witness testifying on behalf of
Hilmar spoke to how the current FMMO
Class III and IV pricing formulas, if
applied to a California FMMO
incorporating inclusive pooling, would
lead to disorderly marketing conditions.
In its brief, Hilmar stated that disorderly
marketing conditions would negate the
competitive equilibrium present
between eastern and western markets
and lead to a trade barrier that would
hinder the California dairy industry.
The witness testified that Hilmar had
not experienced difficulties in sourcing
raw milk supplies, and that there was
currently no disorder in California to
warrant promulgation of a California
FMMO. The witness described several
scenarios in the past where CSO whey
pricing methodology over valued whey
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and led to disorderly marketing
conditions for Hilmar, its independent
producer suppliers, and other California
dairy farmers, which CDFA was able to
remedy through an adjustment to the
whey factor.
The Hilmar witness testified that if
milk used in California cheese
production was subject to the whey
factor used in the current FMMO Class
III price, the whey product stream in
California would be overvalued. Use of
that whey factor, along with the
inclusive pooling provisions in Proposal
1, would give rise to disorderly
marketing conditions.
The Hilmar witness was of the
opinion that 2015 California milk
production decreased for reasons not
relevant to the differences in CSO 4b
versus FMMO Class III pricing. Instead,
the witness said, production was
influenced by low milk powder prices
related to global oversupply of milk
powder, as well as drought,
environmental regulations, and
competition for land from other crops.
The Hilmar witness testified that CSO
milk prices are minimums, and
cooperatives have the ability to
negotiate for higher milk prices from
their proprietary plant customers. The
witness said that Hilmar paid premiums
of approximately $120 million for milk
above the CSO 4b price over the last
several years. The witness explained
that these premiums were paid for milk
characteristics such as component
content and other market-based factors.
The witness added that when CSO 4b
prices were temporarily increased
through CDFA’s adjustment to the
sliding scale whey factor, the premiums
Hilmar paid for milk decreased.
The Hilmar witness testified that the
make-allowances in the FMMO Class III
and IV formulas are outdated, and new
manufacturing cost studies are
necessary. The witness stated that
Hilmar’s manufacturing costs for cheese
and milk powders are higher than those
provided for in the FMMO Class III and
IV formulas. The witness said that if a
California FMMO was adopted with
inclusive pooling, it would be
impossible for Hilmar to clear the
market, unlike in existing FMMOs
where manufacturing milk is not
required to be pooled.
The Hilmar witness explained that
California FMMO minimum milk prices
need to reflect local supply and demand
conditions. The witness entered Hilmar
data showing that prices received for the
sale of Hilmar cheese averaged $0.04 per
pound lower than the announced
NDPSR weighted average cheese price
from 2010 to 2013. This price
difference, the witness explained, is a
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function of the additional transportation
cost incurred by Hilmar to transport
product to eastern markets. The witness
made similar price comparisons for
NFDM and butter.
The Hilmar witness stressed that if
California FMMO prices are not
reflective of the California market, the
California dairy industry will be less
competitive in the global marketplace.
The witness noted that in 2014, Hilmar
exported 10 percent of its cheese, 50
percent of its WPC, and 95 percent of its
lactose; and they planned to export all
of the skim milk powder to be produced
at a manufacturing facility nearing
completion in Turlock, California.
Inclusive pooling and U.S.-centric milk
pricing in California, said the witness,
would lead to competitive
disadvantages for California
manufacturers in international and
domestic markets.
The Hilmar witness testified that they
produce several types of whey products,
but not dry whey. The witness was of
the opinion that dry whey is a poor
indicator of the value of Hilmar’s WPC
products. The witness said the potential
minimum regulated cost under
inclusive pooling provisions in a
California FMMO would make
production of Hilmar’s whey products
unprofitable.
In the post-hearing brief submitted by
Hilmar, concerns regarding an adequate
return on investment were raised.
Hilmar was of the opinion that Proposal
1 does not provide an adequate level of
return on investment to allow for
processors to remain viable. The brief
stated that adoption of provisions
allowing for handlers to opt not to pool
manufacturing milk could alleviate
those concerns.
In its post-hearing brief, Hilmar
sought to counter the Cooperatives’
claim that California manufacturers
have a competitive advantage over their
FMMO counterparts and thus should be
able to pay FMMO minimum prices.
Hilmar countered that California
handlers have a long-term competitive
disadvantage when compared to their
FMMO counterparts because of the
CSO’s mandatory pricing and pooling
provisions. Hilmar maintained that the
value of milk in California is lower than
in the eastern part of the country, and
California FMMO price formulas should
reflect this reality.
A witness testified in support of
Proposal 2 on behalf of Marquez
Brothers International (Marquez), a
Hispanic cheese manufacturer located
in Hanford, California. The witness
explained how their company invested
in a processing facility in 2004 to
address challenges with whey disposal.
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The witness explained that of the total
milk solids they receive, approximately
48 percent is used in cheese, and 52
percent ends up in the whey stream.
The formulation of Marquez’s whey
stream, the witness noted, is
approximately 5.11 percent whey
cream, 9.45 percent WPC–80, and 85.44
percent lactose permeate.
The Marquez witness testified that out
of 57 California cheese plants, 49 plants
(19.1 percent of California cheese
production) have limited or no ability to
process whey. The witness testified that
whey disposal had been a burden for
their business in the past, costing $1.5
million per year with no revenue offset
and no recognition in the CSO 4b price
of whey disposal costs. The witness
added that the same problems existed in
the FMMO Class III formula price
contained in Proposal 1. The witness
testified that the reliance on dry whey
to price the other solids component of
the FMMO Class III price would be
inappropriate since cheesemakers must
pay producers for the value of whey that
can be generated from their milk,
regardless of whether that price is
actually obtained from the market.
The Marquez witness testified that
adoption of Proposal 1 would
discourage investment in cheese
processing technologies. The witness
said that a system of inclusive pooling
coupled with other increases in
operating costs would lead to
competitive difficulties for California
cheese plants.
A witness appeared on behalf of
BESTWHEY, LLC (BESTWHEY), in
opposition to adoption of Proposal 1.
BESTWHEY provides consulting
services to cheese manufacturing
facilities, with a focus on specialty
cheeses and whey handling and
disposal. According to the witness,
Proposal 1 would restrict the growth of
California’s cheese industry and
eliminate most of the small cheese
businesses in the state, and Proposal 1’s
inclusive pricing and pooling would
lead to an over-supply of California
milk. The witness highlighted the
limited number of California plants with
whey processing capabilities. The
witness supported adoption of Proposal
2 because, according to the witness, it
would provide a more realistic value for
whey in the other solids price
calculation, based on the actual value of
liquid whey sold by cheese plants.
A witness appeared on behalf of
Klondike Cheese (Klondike), a
Wisconsin-based cheese manufacturer.
The witness said that Klondike cools its
liquid whey by-product and sells it to a
larger whey processing facility. The
witness provided detailed descriptions
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of whey processing methodology and
the associated costs. The witness
testified that basing the other solids
price on dry whey markets is
inappropriate and does not accurately
reflect the revenues from whey at their
operation. The witness entered
Klondike 2014 data showing an average
loss on its whey production of $0.6516
per cwt of milk.
A witness testified on behalf of
Decatur Dairy (Decatur), a cooperativeowned, Wisconsin-based cheese
manufacturer, in regards to using dry
whey as the basis for the other solids
price. The witness provided detailed
descriptions of whey processing
methodology and the associated costs.
The witness said that Decatur sells
warm wet whey to a nearby plant for
further processing. The witness said that
dry whey prices contained in the
FMMO product-price formulas did not
reflect the revenue they receive from
their liquid whey sales, and it is not
feasible for them to invest in drying
equipment. The witness entered Decatur
data for 2012 to 2015 showing average
annual losses on its whey production
ranging from $0.0627 to $0.7114 per cwt
of milk.
A consultant witness appeared on
behalf Joseph Gallo Farms (Gallo
Farms). The witness explained that
Gallo Farms owns two dairy farms, as
well as cheese and whey processing
facilities in California, and supports
adoption of Proposal 2. Gallo Farms
processes WPC from their own cheese
operation and from other cheese
facilities.
The Gallo Farms witness testified that
if they had been required to pay the
FMMO Class III price for milk, they
would not have been able to make
updates or improvements to their
facilities. The witness estimated their
cheese costs would have increased by
$0.2237 per pound if Proposal 1 had
been in effect from January 2014
through September 2015. The witness
was of the opinion that California dairy
farmers should not compare the prices
received in California to prices received
in the Midwest or East Coast, where
significant population centers are
serviced. The witness characterized the
California market as significantly
different from eastern markets, as it
includes not only the West Coast
population centers, but also Mexico and
other export markets. The witness was
of the opinion that a California FMMO,
as provided for in Proposal 1, could lead
to the closure of small and medium
sized manufacturing plants.
The Gallo Farms witness supported
the portion of Proposal 2 that relies on
WPC to determine the other solids price,
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as most whey pricing is related to the
WPC market rather than dry whey.
An Institute witness testified
regarding Class I pricing. The witness
was of the opinion that the policy of
assigning Class I milk the highest
classified value should be reevaluated,
given current market realities. The
witness said that Proposal 1 relied on
the current Class I price surface and
fluid milk pricing system incorporated
in the existing FMMOs, while other
potential fluid milk pricing options
have not been thoroughly investigated.
The witness argued that although the
‘‘higher of’’ pricing mechanisms
dampens Class I sales and limits the
ability of fluid milk processors to hedge
their Class I milk volumes, the Institute
still supported the Class I milk pricing
mechanism advanced in Proposal 2.
The Institute witness also testified
regarding a technical modification to
Proposal 2 that would affect how
handlers pay for the milk components
used in Class I products and how
handler credits for fortifying fluid milk
products would be determined. The
witness explained that milk standards
set by the State of California require a
higher nonfat solids content than the
Food and Drug Administration standard
used elsewhere in the country.
California fluid milk processors fortify
raw milk with either condensed or
nonfat dry milk to meet these higher
standards.
The Institute witness described the
differences between CSO and FMMO
accounting for fluid milk fortification.
Under FMMOs, the witness said,
handlers account to the pool at the Class
IV price for the solids used to fortify
milk, but then are charged the twofactor (butterfat and skim) Class I price
for the volumetric increase in fluid milk
realized through fortification. Under the
CSO, handlers account to the pool using
a three-factor (butterfat, nonfat solids,
and fluid carrier) Class 1 price for all
solids used in Class 1 products, but then
receive a credit for the solids used to
fortify milk to meet the state standards.
The Institute witness was of the opinion
that the CSO three-factor system,
coupled with its fortification credits, is
superior to the FMMO system because
it encourages orderly milk movements
by making fluid milk handlers
indifferent to the solids content of milk
they receive, and it ensures that Class 1
handlers do not have a regulated milk
price advantage over one another. The
witness explained that plants receiving
milk with a higher solids content might
pay a higher Class 1 price for the raw
milk, but less for fortification, while
plants receiving milk with a lower
solids content might pay a lower Class
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1 price for the milk, but more for
fortification, making both plants
competitive with each other. The
witness emphasized that in the absence
of a fortification credit for meeting the
California milk solids requirement,
handlers under a California FMMO
might make milk sourcing decisions
solely to take advantage of a two-factor
Class I price formula.
A witness appeared on behalf of
Hilmar to outline the history of FMMO
surplus milk pricing policies. The
witness, referring to decisions from
previous FMMO rulemakings and
reports, stated that FMMO minimum
pricing should be set at levels aligning
with net revenues received by
manufacturers in the local marketing
area in order for milk to ‘‘clear’’ the
market. Therefore, the witness
concluded, USDA must examine the
local California market situation when
determining appropriate minimum
prices in a California FMMO.
A Cooperative witness addressed the
alternative Other Solids price formula
that was offered by the Institute. The
witness stressed that there was not then
available a verifiable price series for
WPC–34, nor had the Institute presented
any third-party WPC–34 manufacturing
cost studies. The witness estimated that
86 percent of the Class 4b milk was
processed at plants that had whey
drying capabilities. In addition, the
witness said that the Cooperatives’
modified exempt plant provision would
exempt as many as 25 of the 57 cheese
plants from FMMO minimum price
regulation.
Findings
Handler’s Value of Milk
The FMMO program currently uses
product price formulas relying on the
wholesale price of finished products to
determine the minimum classified
prices handlers pay for raw milk in the
four classes of products. Class III and
Class IV prices are announced on or
before the 5th day of the month
following the month to which they
apply. The Class III and Class IV price
formulas form the base from which
Class I and Class II prices are
determined. The Class I price is
announced in advance of the applicable
month. It is determined by adding a
Class I differential assigned to the
plant’s location to the higher of an
advanced Class III or Class IV price
computed by using the most recent two
weeks’ DPMRP data released on or
before the 23rd of the preceding month.
The Class II skim milk price is
announced at the same time as the Class
I price, and is determined by adding
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$0.70 to the advanced Class IV skim
milk price. The Class II butterfat price
is announced at the end of the month,
at the same time as the Class III and
Class IV prices, by adding $0.70 to the
Class IV butterfat price.
AMS administers the DPMRP to
survey weekly wholesale prices of four
manufactured dairy products (cheese,
butter, NFDM and dry whey), and
releases weekly average survey prices in
the NDPSR. The FMMO product price
formulas use these surveyed products to
determine the component values in raw
milk. The pricing system determines
butterfat prices for milk used in
products in each of the four classes from
surveyed butter prices; protein and
other solids prices for milk used in
Class III products from surveyed cheese
and dry whey prices, respectively; and
a nonfat solids price for milk used in
Class II and Class IV products from
surveyed NFDM product prices. The
skim milk portion of the Class I price is
the higher of either the protein and
other solids prices of the advanced Class
III skim milk price or the NFDM price
of the advanced Class IV skim milk
price.
The butterfat, protein, other solids,
and nonfat solids prices are derived
through the average monthly NDPSR
survey price, minus a manufacturing
(make) allowance, multiplied by a yield
factor. The make allowance factor
represents the cost manufacturers incur
in making raw milk into one pound of
product. The yield factor is an
approximation of the product quantity
that can be made from a hundredweight
of milk received at the plant. The milk
received at the plant is adjusted to
reflect farm-to-plant shrinkage when
using farm weights and tests. This endproduct pricing system was
implemented as a part of Order Reform
on January 1, 2000,29 and last amended
on July 1, 2013.30
The pricing methodology described
above were proposed by the
Cooperatives to apply in a California
FMMO and are contained in Proposal 1.
The Cooperatives maintain USDA has
for many years held that the market for
manufactured dairy products is national
in scope and that the price of milk used
to manufacture those products should
therefore be the same across the nation.
Proponents of Proposal 1 explained that
the commodity prices used in the
formulas are based on a survey of prices
for manufactured dairy products from
plants across the country, including
California. They went on to point out
that the surveyed manufacturing costs
29 See
infra.
30 See infra.
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were from plants in California, as well
as in other states. These surveyed costs
have been used to determine FMMO
make allowances in the product-price
formulas since their inception.
The Cooperatives, through witness
testimony and post-hearing briefs,
stressed that prices used to determine
California handlers’ value of milk
should be based on the same national
average factors as those used in the
FMMOs. They repeatedly stressed that
manufactured products compete in a
national market, and therefore
California dairy farmers should receive
a milk price reflective of those
commodity values. The Cooperatives’
primary justification for a California
FMMO is that the CSO does not provide
dairy farmers a milk price reflective of
these national values, and they are now
seeking to be included in the FMMO
system so California dairy farmers can
receive prices similar to their
counterparts in the rest of the country.
The Institute, through witness
testimony and post-hearing briefs,
argued that classified prices in a
California FMMO must be reflective of
the current market conditions in
California. They were of the opinion
that not only has data used in the
formulas become outdated, but that the
value of California milk is inherently
lower because of California’s geographic
location in the West and the additional
cost of transporting finished product to
population centers in the East. They
argued that these conditions make it
hard for the Institute’s dairy
manufacturing member companies to
remain competitive in the market.
In Proposal 2, the Institute proposed
several changes to the current FMMO
pricing formulas that would be
applicable in California. First, the
Institute proposed a western states price
series for each commodity surveyed by
the DPMRP. If a western price could not
be used because of data confidentiality
issues, the Institute proposed that a
fixed value for each commodity be
subtracted from the current NDPSR
prices to represent the lower value of
products in the West. Second, the
Institute suggested that a Western states
manufacturing cost survey be conducted
to determine relevant California make
allowances for each commodity, and if
this was not feasible, they proposed
specific make allowance levels that they
asserted are representative of
manufacturing costs in California.
Third, they proposed that the NDPSR
Cheddar cheese price used in the
FMMO protein price formula for
California only consider 40-pound block
prices. They proposed that 500-pound
barrel Cheddar cheese prices should not
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be included as they are in current
FMMOs.
Class III and Class IV Pricing. This
decision recommends that the classified
and component price formulas used in
the 10 current FMMOs 31 be utilized
without change in the proposed
California FMMO. These formulas were
adopted nationally as part of Federal
Order Reform and were described at the
beginning of this section. The Order
Reform Final Decision 32 found that
because commodity dairy products
compete in the national market, it was
appropriate that the raw milk used in
those products be priced uniformly
across the FMMO system. This hearing
record contains testimony explaining
the FMMO evolution toward national
uniform pricing for manufactured
products. Such explanation was also
outlined in the Order Reform Final
Decision.
In the early 1960s, FMMOs used a
Minnesota-Wisconsin (M–W)
manufacturing grade milk price series to
determine a price for milk used in
manufactured products based on the
supply and demand for Grade B milk.
As Grade B milk production and the
number of plants purchasing Grade B
milk declined, FMMOs moved to a
Basic Formula Price (BFP). The BFP
price incorporated an updating formula
with the base M–W price to account for
the month-to-month changes in the
prices paid for butter, NFDM, and
cheese. The Order Reform decision
recognized that Grade B milk would
only continue to decline and that the
FMMO system needed a new way of
determining the value of producer milk.
As outlined in the Order Reform Final
Decision, the goals for replacing the BFP
price were: (1) To meet the supply and
demand criteria set forth in the AMAA;
(2) not to deviate greatly from the
general level of the current BFP; and (3)
to demonstrate the ability to change in
reaction to changes in supply and
demand. The product-price and
component formulas currently used in
the FMMO system were found to be the
appropriate market-oriented alternative
to the BFP. Additionally, that final
decision specifically addressed the
national market for commodity dairy
products:
‘‘. . . the current BFP may have a
greater tendency to reflect supply and
demand conditions in Minnesota and
Wisconsin rather than national supply/
demand conditions. The formulas in
this decision use national commodity
price series, thereby reflecting the
31 7
CFR 1000.50 and 1000.52.
Notice is taken of FMMO Reform Final
Decision: 64 FR 16026.
32 Official
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national supply and demand for dairy
products and the national demand for
milk.’’ 33
The Department subsequently
reiterated the necessity for FMMO
classified prices to reflect national
markets in a later final decision on Class
III and IV pricing when it specifically
addressed public comments pertaining
to the relationship of the CSO and
FMMOs:
‘‘Class III and Class IV dairy products
compete in a national market. Because
of this, Class III and Class IV milk prices
established for all Federal milk
marketing order areas are the same.’’ 34
This decision finds the prices used in
the California FMMO should also reflect
the national marketplace for cheese,
butter, NFDM and dry whey. The record
reflects that commodity products
produced in California compete in the
same national market as products
produced throughout the country.
Uniform FMMO price formulas ensure
similarly situated handlers have equal
minimum raw milk costs regardless of
where the handler is regulated. As
California is seeking to join the FMMO
system, it is appropriate that the milk
pooled on the California FMMO be
priced under the same uniform price
provisions found in all current FMMOs.
Additionally, this decision finds that by
pricing California milk under these
uniform pricing provisions, prices
received by farmers whose milk is
pooled on the California FMMO would
be more reflective of the national market
for commodity products for which their
milk is utilized. Therefore, adopting a
western adjusted price series, a 40pound only Cheddar cheese price, and
California-specific make allowances is
not appropriate. As explained below,
FMMO price formulas already account
for California market conditions;
therefore, it is reasonable to use these
price formulas in a California FMMO.
This decision finds that the national
FMMO pricing policy continues to
reflect the marketing conditions of the
entire FMMO system and is appropriate
for adoption in California.
FMMO product-price formulas
generally consist of three factors:
Commodity price, manufacturing
allowance, and yield factor. Product
yields contained in the formulas reflect
standard industry norms. The yields
were last updated in 2013,35 and the
record shows that these values continue
to reflect current market conditions, as
33 See
infra.
Notice is taken of FMMO Class III and
IV Final Decision: 67 FR 67937.
35 See infra.
there was no dispute as to their
continued relevancy.
Commodity prices used in the FMMO
formulas are announced by AMS in the
NDPSR every month and reflect current
commodity prices received for products
over the previous four or five weeks.
While surveyed plant names and
locations are not released by USDA,
several witnesses testified that
California dairy product sales meeting
the reporting specifications 36 are
included in the NDPSR. These
California sales are part of the NDPSR
prices used by the FMMOs in the same
way that sales from plants located in
other areas of the United States are
currently included.
FMMO pricing formulas currently
contain the following per-pound make
allowances: Cheese—$0.2003, butter—
$0.1715, NFDM—$0.1678, and dry
whey—$0.1991. These make allowances
were last updated in 2013.37 They were
determined on the basis of a 2006 CDFA
survey (plants located inside of
California) and a 2006 Cornell Program
on Dairy Markets and Policy (CPDMP)
survey (plants located outside of
California) of manufacturing costs. The
butter and NDFM make allowances were
computed by taking a weighted average
of the CDFA and CPDMP surveys,
weighted by national commodity
production volumes, and adjusting for
marketing costs. The cheese make
allowance was computed by relying
solely on the CDFA survey and
adjusting for marketing costs. The dry
whey make allowance was computed by
relying solely on the CPDMP survey and
adjusting for marketing costs. California
dry whey data was not considered
because at the time, it was restricted and
therefore not available.
As the record demonstrates, most of
the manufacturing allowances already
account for California manufacturing
costs. In regard to the Institute’s
position that data used to determine
make allowance levels is not current,
this decision recognizes 2006 data was
used to determine current make
allowance levels. Since that time, USDA
has not received a hearing request to
amend the levels. It may be appropriate
to amend these levels in the future, and
USDA would evaluate any changes to
those levels on the basis of a formal
rulemaking record.
Institute witnesses stressed that
California manufacturers would be
competitively harmed should California
FMMO minimum classified prices not
reflect a solely western location value.
This decision finds that California
34 Official
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CFR 1170.8.
infra.
37 See
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manufacturers would not face
competitive harm with the adoption of
the uniform FMMO prices. Western
manufacturing handlers who purchase
milk pooled on the Pacific Northwest
and Arizona FMMOs already routinely
pay these prices. The record reflects that
the Institute’s primary concern was the
adoption of the current FMMO price
formulas for California, coupled with
the adoption of the inclusive pooling
provisions contained in Proposal 1. The
provisions recommended by this
decision allow handlers to elect not to
pool milk used in manufacturing as
determined appropriate for their
individual business operations. The
proposed California FMMO provisions
would not prohibit handlers and
producers from utilizing the Dairy
Forward Pricing Program 38 to forward
contract for pooled manufacturing milk.
Other Solids Price. Currently, the
FMMO system determines the other
solids price using the same basic
formula used to determine the other
component prices: (Commodity price
less make allowance) times yield, using
dry whey as the NDPSR-referenced
commodity price. As the market price
for dry whey moves and is reflected in
the NDPSR price, it moves the other
solids price accordingly.
At the hearing, the Institute proposed
an alternative method for computing the
whey value in the other solids formula.
The Institute argued, in testimony and
post-hearing brief, that dry whey is not
an appropriate reference commodity for
California because little dry whey is
produced in the state. Instead, they
testified that prices from the more
commonly produced WPC–34 should be
used. The Institute provided evidence
regarding WPC–34 production in
California. The record contains
testimony explaining how WPC–34 and
dry whey production practices and
manufacturing costs differ.
This decision finds that prices
adopted in the California FMMO should
be uniform with all current FMMOs and
be reflective of the dry whey market.
Therefore, it is not appropriate on the
basis of this hearing record to adopt a
change in other solids pricing for only
one FMMO. The data and testimony
presented by the Institute could warrant
further consideration, but to consider
such a change for only one FMMO is
inappropriate. While an academic
expert did provide testimony on the
record about a WPC–34 manufacturing
cost survey, results of the survey, which
would be of interest if such a proposal
was being evaluated, were not available.
38 See
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Class II Pricing. The FMMO system
currently prices milk used in Class II
products uniformly. The Class II skim
milk price is computed as the advanced
Class IV skim price plus $0.70 per cwt.
The Class II butterfat price is the Class
III butterfat price for the month, plus
$0.007 cents per pound. The $0.70
differential between the Class IV and
Class II skim milk prices adopted in the
Order Reform Final Decision was an
estimate of the cost of drying condensed
milk and re-wetting the solids for use in
Class II products.
The record reflects—and this decision
finds—that milk pricing in the FMMO
system should be as uniform as
possible. Therefore, this decision finds
that Class II pricing in the California
FMMO should be the same as in current
FMMOs. Class II pricing in the
California FMMO would result in
forward pricing the skim portion of
Class II while pricing butterfat on a
current basis. Butterfat used in Class II
products competes on a current-month
basis with butterfat used in cheese and
butter, and its price should be
determined on the basis of the same
month’s value.
Class I Pricing. Currently, FMMOs
determine Class I prices as the higher of
the advanced Class III or Class IV price,
plus a location-specific differential
referred to as a Class I differential. Class
I differentials have been determined for
every county in the continental United
States, including California.39 Class I
prices paid in all current FMMO’s are
on a skim/butterfat basis. Handlers who
fortify their Class I products have the
NFDM or condensed skim used to
fortify classified as a Class IV use, and
pay the Class I price for the volumetric
increase attributed to fortification.
The Cooperatives have proposed that
the California FMMO adopt the same
Class I pricing structure: The higher of
the advanced Class III or Class IV price
plus a Class I differential based on the
plant location. They argued that the
Class I price surface was designed as a
nationally coordinated structure and
already includes differential levels for
all California counties. According to the
Cooperatives, any change to the Class I
differential surface should be done
through a national rulemaking hearing
where all interested parties can
participate.
The Institute argued, in testimony and
post-hearing brief, that the Class I
differential surface adopted as part of
Order Reform did not consider
California in its inception, and is
inappropriate for adoption here. The
Institute did not offer an alternative.
39 7
CFR 1000.52.
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This decision finds that the Class I
price formula contained in Proposal 1,
and as currently used in all current
FMMOs, is appropriate for the proposed
California FMMO. This decision finds
that prices for milk pooled on the
California FMMO and used in Class I
products should be location-specific,
since Class I products generally compete
on a more local market. Therefore, the
Class I differential surface that applies
in all current FMMOs is recommended
for the California FMMO. As such, Class
I prices for milk pooled on the
California FMMO would be determined
by the higher of the advanced Class III
or Class IV milk price announced on or
before the 23rd day of the preceding
month, plus the Class I differential at a
plant’s location.
This decision recommends for a
California FMMO the same Class I
differential surface used in the current
FMMOs. Contrary to Institute testimony,
this differential surface was determined
through a United States Dairy Sector
Simulator (USDSS) model that included
California supply and demand factors.
An academic expert testifying in this
proceeding was one of the lead authors
of the model and stated that California
was included when the model was
constructed. This price surface was
designed to facilitate the movement of
milk to Class I markets without causing
disorderly marketing conditions within
or across markets. Therefore, it is
inappropriate on the basis of this
hearing record to make a change to this
nationally coordinated Class I price
surface.
The Institute repeatedly argued that
the Department did not consider
California when determining the
nationally coordinated Class I price
surface. Prior to January 1, 2000, there
were 31 FMMOs. As part of the 1996
Farm Bill, the Department was
instructed by Congress to consolidate
the existing orders into as few as 10, and
no more than 14, FMMOs, reserving one
place for California. Since California
stakeholders did not express a desire to
enter the FMMO system at that time, the
Order Reform process only considered
the FMMO marketing areas in existence
at the time for consolidation. In the
Order Reform Final Decision, the
reference to ‘‘not including the State of
California’’ 40 pertained to determining
appropriate consolidated marketing
areas, not the analysis pertaining to
Class I pricing, which included
California.
Three-Factor FMMO Class I Pricing
and Fortification. The Institute
proposed that California Class I prices
40 See
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be paid on a 3-factor basis: Butterfat,
nonfat solids and fluid carrier, as well
as incorporate a fortification credit
similar to what is currently provided for
in the CSO. The fortification credit
offered in Proposal 2 provides a credit
to a Class I handler’s pool obligation for
the NFDM or condensed skim milk a
handler uses to fortify Class I products
to meet the State’s higher nonfat solids
content requirement. The proposed
fortification credit would be paid out of
the California FMMO marketwide pool
funds.
The Institute explained these two
features are currently provided for in
the CSO and work together to
financially assist Class 1 handlers in
meeting the State-mandated higher
nonfat solids content for Class 1
products. The Institute explained that
handlers receiving high solids milk pay
a higher Class 1 price, but use less
solids to fortify Class 1 products, and
thus incur less cost to meet the state’s
nonfat solids standards for fluid milk
products. Conversely, handlers
purchasing low solids content milk pay
a lower Class 1 price, but then incur a
higher cost to fortify their Class 1
products. The Cooperatives supported
this concept in their post-hearing brief.
The current FMMO system prices all
Class I skim milk at the same price
regardless of the solids content. The
record does not contain enough
justification to deviate from the uniform
treatment of Class I pricing. Therefore
Class I milk pooled on the California
FMMO will be paid on a skim and
butterfat basis. This uniform treatment
will avoid disorderly marketing with
adjacent or other Federal orders, as
handlers could seek to engage in
inefficient milk movements solely for
the purpose of seeking a Class I price
advantage.
Current FMMOs do not provide
credits to a handler’s pool obligation for
fortification of Class I products. Instead,
NFDM or condensed skim used to
fortify Class I products is classified as a
Class IV product on a skim equivalent
basis. The volumetric increase due to
fortification is classified and priced as
Class I. Proposal 2 contains this same
system of credits to a handler’s pool
obligation for fortification.
The record reflects that the CSO
fortification credit system is also
included in Proposal 2. The record
indicates the CSO fortification credit
system was designed in response to
California’s legislatively mandated
higher nonfat solids standard for Class
1 products. The record does not address
how incorporation of the CSO
fortification credit system would
operate in the context of the existing
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FMMO fortification classification
provisions without resulting in a double
credit for fortification.
This decision does not find
justification for incorporating into the
California FMMO a modification to how
the FMMO system uniformly addresses
fortification of Class I products. As
described above, and as contained in the
proposed classification structure in both
Proposals 1 and 2, the California FMMO
would provide a lower classification for
products used to fortify Class I products.
Handlers would only be charged the
Class I price on the volumetric increase
in Class I products resulting from
fortification.
In its post-hearing brief, the Institute
filed a Negative Inference Motion
asserting that because the Cooperatives
did not enter into the record of this
proceeding a study they commissioned
evaluating their proposed milk pricing
provisions, USDA should conclude that
the study results contradict the
Cooperatives’ justification for adopting
the price formulas contained in
Proposal 1.
It is left to the discretion of the trier
of fact to determine whether or not a
negative inference will be drawn from
the failure to present any specific piece
of evidence under one party’s exclusive
control. The USDA finds that the
recommended pricing provisions are
properly based on testimony of those
witnesses who appeared and the
evidence that has been presented by all
parties on the record.
Producer’s Value of Milk
Currently, 6 of the 10 FMMOs utilize
multiple component pricing to
determine both the handler’s and
producer’s value of milk. In the six
orders, producers are paid for the
pounds of butterfat, pounds of protein,
pounds of other solids of milk pooled,
as well as a per hundredweight (cwt)
price known as the producer price
differential (PPD). The PPD reflects the
producer’s pro rata share of the value of
Class I, Class II, and Class IV use in the
market relative to Class III use. The
Class III butterfat, protein, and other
solids prices are the same component
prices charged to handlers based on the
value of the use of milk in Class III. In
four of these six FMMOs, there is an
adjustment to the producer’s payment
for the somatic cell count (SCC) of the
producers’ milk.
Proposal 1 and Proposal 2 seek to pay
producers on a multiple component
basis for the milk they produce. As will
be discussed below, the proposals differ
on how they would apply a PPD to
producer payments. Unlike Proposal 2,
Proposal 1 does not specify a somatic
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cell adjustment to the producer’s value
of milk.
The record reflects that milk use in
California is concentrated in
manufactured dairy products. In 2015,
California Class 1 utilization was 13
percent, Class 2 and Class 3 utilization
combined was 8.6 percent, while 78.4
percent was used in Class 4a and Class
4b products (cheese, butter and dried
milk powders). As California is clearly
a manufacturing market, it is
appropriate for producers to be paid for
the components they produce that are
valued by the manufacturers. Therefore,
this decision recommends producer
payments on a multiple component
basis. Producers would be paid for the
butterfat, protein, and other solids
components in their producer milk and
for the cwt of milk pooled.
This decision recommends that
producers be paid a PPD calculated in
the same manner as six current FMMOs.
The PPD represents to the producer the
value from the Class I, Class II, and
Class IV uses in the pool that they are
entitled to share because they
participate in the FMMO pool. In
general, the PPD is computed by
deducting the Class III component
values from the total value of milk in
the pool, and then dividing the result by
the total pounds of producer milk in the
pool. The PPD paid to producers
participating in the California FMMO
pool would be adjusted to reflect the
applicable producer location adjustment
for the handler location where their
milk is received.
Therefore, under the proposed
California FMMO, the minimum
payment to producers would be
determined by summing the result of:
Multiplying the hundredweight of a
producer’s milk pooled by the PPD
adjusted for handler location;
multiplying the pounds of butterfat in
the producer’s milk by the butterfat
price; multiplying the pounds of protein
in a producer’s milk by the protein
price; and multiplying the pounds of
other solids in a producer’s milk by the
other solids price.
Proponents of Proposal 1 proposed
distributing the PPD value across the
butterfat, protein and other solids
components, based on the average value
each component contributed to the
Class III price during the previous year.
The Cooperatives purported that the
PPD is confusing to producers,
particularly when it is negative, and
spreading the value of the PPD across
the components would be a simpler
method of distribution.
The PPD is the difference between
value associated with all the milk
pooled during the month and the
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producers’ value for the butterfat,
protein, and other solids priced at the
Class III component prices for the
month. In general, if the marketwide
utilization value of all milk in the pool,
on a per cwt basis, is greater than the
marketwide utilization value of the
producer’s components priced at Class
III component values, dairy farmers
receive a positive PPD.
A negative PPD occurs when the
value of the priced producer
components in the pool exceeds the
total value generated by all classes of
milk. This is possible since all producer
components are priced at the Class III
components values, but pooled milk is
utilized in all four classes, each with its
own separately derived value.
Specifically, negative PPDs can
happen when large increases occur in
NDPSR survey prices from one month to
the next resulting in the Class III price
(announced at the close of the month)
exceeding, or in a close relationship to,
the Class I price (announced in advance
of the month). Negative PPDs can also
occur in markets with a large Class IV
use when the Class IV price is
significantly lower than the Class III
price. A negative PPD does not mean
that there is less total revenue available
to producers. It often means the Class III
component values are high relative to
Class I prices. Because component
values are the biggest portion of a
producer’s total revenue, high
component prices coupled with
negative PPDs often result in higher
overall revenue to producers than when
component prices are lower and PPDs
are large and positive.
This decision does not find
justification for distributing the PPD
through the component prices as offered
in Proposal 1. Current FMMO producers
receive and understand that the PPD
represents the additional value from the
higher classified markets that they are
able to share because they participate in
the FMMO. This includes times when
the PPD is negative.
While the proponents claim a
negative PPD is confusing, this decision
finds that distributing the PPD through
the component prices would distort
market signals to producers. As in the
current FMMOs, a negative PPD in the
California FMMO would inform
producers that component values are
rising rapidly. Regulated FMMO prices
should not block those market signals.
Producers in other FMMOs have been
able to adapt to a multiple component
pricing system that incorporates an
announced PPD. This decision finds
that California producers can do the
same.
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Four of the current FMMOs provide
for a SCC adjustment on producer milk
values. The CSO does not include any
such adjustment. Proposal 1 did not
include a provision for a SCC adjuster,
and a Cooperative witness specifically
testified against its inclusion. Proposal 2
included a SCC adjuster, but no
Proposal 2 witnesses testified regarding
this aspect of their proposal. This
decision does not recommend a SCC
adjuster for the California FMMO, as the
record does not contain evidence to
support its inclusion.
This decision proposes that handlers
regulated by the California FMMO
should be allowed to make various
deductions from a producer’s milk
check, identical to what is allowed in
the current FMMOs. These deductions
include such things as hauling expenses
and National Dairy Promotion charges,
as well as other authorized deductions
such as insurance payments, feed bills,
equipment expenses, and other dairy
related expenses. Authorized
deductions from the producer’s check
must be authorized in writing by the
producer. For the California FMMO,
authorized deductions would include
any assessment identified by CDFA for
the payment of California quota values.
A quota assessment would be
authorized upon announcement by
CDFA; it would not have to be
authorized in writing by the producer.
Some hearing witnesses suggested
that changes to the FMMO pricing
system need to be considered in a
separate rulemaking proceeding before
California producers vote on a FMMO.
This decision finds no justification for
California producers to wait for a
decision on a California FMMO until
after what would most likely be a
lengthy proceeding on national FMMO
pricing. California producers should
have the opportunity to vote on whether
to join the FMMO system and adopt the
provisions recommended in this
decision with the full awareness that
prices can be re-evaluated at a future
hearing.
8. Pooling
This section addresses the pooling
provisions of the recommended
California FMMO. A summary of
testimony for the pooling provisions
contained in Proposals 1 and 2 is
provided below. Additionally, Proposal
4 is addressed in this section as it seeks
to allow handlers the ability to elect
partially regulated distributing plant
status with respect to milk received
from farmers located outside of the
marketing area. Proposal 4 would
continue the practice of handlers paying
the plant blend price for milk produced
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from outside of the state, instead of the
market’s blend price, since such
interstate transactions cannot be
regulated by the State. Essentially,
Proposal 4 pertains to whether or not
out-of-state milk would be incorporated
into the proposed California FMMO
marketwide pool and therefore it is
addressed in this section.
This decision recommends pooling
provisions for a California FMMO that
are conceptually similar to the current
10 FMMOs, but tailored for the
California market. The recommended
pooling provisions are performance
based and designed to determine those
producers who consistently supply the
Class I market, and therefore should
share in the revenues from the market.
There would be no regulatory producer
payment difference given to milk based
on the location of the dairy farm where
it was produced.
Summary of Proposals
A Cooperative witness testified
regarding the pooling provisions
contained in Proposal 1. The witness
said the Proposal 1 pooling provisions
are designed to address the wide
disparity in producer and handlers
prices that currently exists in California
when compared to the FMMO system.
The witness stated that in order to
design adequate California pooling
standards, the Cooperatives evaluated
historical producer blend prices using
both CSO classified prices and the
proposed California FMMO classified
prices, from January 2000 through July
2015. The witness estimated that
producer blend prices would have
averaged $14.65 per cwt using CSO
classified prices and $15.22 per cwt
using the proposed California FMMO
classified prices, an average difference
of $0.57 per cwt. The witness’ analysis
showed that in every month, the
estimated CSO blend price was less than
the FMMO blend price, and that in
using the most recent data (January 2015
through July 2015) the average
difference was $0.86 per cwt. The
witness stressed that to bring California
producer blend prices in closer
alignment with FMMO producer blend
prices, the pooling provisions of a
California FMMO must require the
pooling of all classified use values.
The witness was of the opinion that
California’s combination of low
utilization in the higher valued classes
(Class 1, 2, and 3) and a stateadministered quota program requires
strict pooling provisions to prevent
handlers from electing not to pool a
significant portion of California milk
each month. The witness was of the
opinion that when the California
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overbase price is below Class 4a or 4b
prices, there is an incentive to not pool
milk in those classes because the
handler can avoid a payment into the
marketwide pool. The witness stated
that from January 2000 through July
2015, the California overbase price was
below either the Class 4a or 4b price 91
percent of the time. Thus, in those
months, if not all milk was pooled,
producers would receive different
minimum prices—those producers
whose milk was pooled would receive
the minimum FMMO blend price, and
those producers whose milk was not
pooled had the potential to receive a
higher price because the handler
avoided sharing the additional revenue
with all the producers in the market
through the marketwide pool. This
concern regarding producer price
disparity was reiterated in the
Cooperatives’ post-hearing brief.
The Cooperative witness added that
even after adjusting producer blend
prices to account for quota payments
(¥$0.37), transportation credits
(¥$0.09), and RQAs ($0.03), there
would be a financial incentive to not
pool a significant portion of California
milk in most months. Using the pricing
provisions contained in Proposal 1, the
witness estimated that from August
2012 through July 2015, handlers would
have chosen not to pool Class III or
Class IV milk 94 percent of the time.
The consequence, the witness
emphasized, would not only be unstable
producer prices, but the inability of the
FMMO to achieve uniform producer
prices. The witness stressed that to
accumulate the revenue needed to
provide adequate, uniform producer
blend prices and facilitate orderly
marketing, all the milk delivered to
California plants must be pooled. While
provisions requiring all milk to be
pooled cannot be found in another
FMMO, the witness explained that
FMMO pooling provisions have always
been tailored to the market and the
pooling provisions contained in
Proposal 1 are no different. The
Cooperatives’ post-hearing brief stressed
California’s need to have tailored
pooling provisions that are different
from other FMMOs. The Cooperatives’
brief reiterated that allowing for milk to
not be pooled would inhibit a California
producer’s ability to receive the national
FMMO prices they are seeking.
The witness proceeded to describe the
proposed pooling provisions contained
in Proposal 1. The witness explained
that under Proposal 1, any California
plant receiving milk from California
farms would be qualified as a pool
plant, and all California milk delivered
to that plant would be qualified as
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producer milk. The witness said
Proposal 1 also contains provisions for
plants located outside of the marketing
area that demonstrate adequate service
to the California Class I market to
qualify as pool plants on the order. The
witness highlighted an additional
provision that would regulate all plants
located in Churchill County, Nevada,
and receiving milk from farms located
in Churchill County or California.
According to the witness, producers in
the Churchill County milkshed have
historically supplied milk to the
California Class 1 market and this
provision would ensure they could
remain affiliated. The witness proposed
the partially regulated distributing plant
(PRDP) provision should be the same as
in other FMMOs; a plant qualifies as a
PRDP if the plant does not have more
than 25 percent of the plant’s total
disposition within the marketing area.
The Cooperative witness defined a
producer as any dairy farmer producing
Grade A milk received by a pool plant
or a cooperative handler. This provision
allows for dairy farmers located inside
or outside of the marketing area to
qualify as producers under the order,
the witness added. The witness said a
majority of the producer milk pooled on
a California FMMO would be milk
received by a pool plant directly from
qualified producers or cooperative
handlers. Proposal 1 also contains a
provision to allow producer milk to be
pooled in the order if it was received by
a cooperative handler, the witness
noted.
The Cooperative witness explained
that Proposal 1 prohibits milk from
being diverted to nonpool plants outside
of the marketing area and remaining
qualified for pooling on a California
FMMO until five days’ production is
delivered to a pool plant, and
subsequently diversions are limited by
the amount the plant delivers to
distributing plants. The witness said the
California market appears to have an
adequate reserve supply of Class I milk,
so strict diversion limit standards are
needed to ensure that additional milk
being pooled is needed in the market.
The Cooperative witness provided
examples of previous FMMO changes
that the witness described as significant
policy shifts, including the elimination
of individual handler pools in favor of
marketwide pools, the regulation of
large producer-handlers, adoption of
multiple component pricing, and the
establishment of transportation credit
programs. The witness said that in these
examples the Department found it
appropriate to significantly deviate from
historical precedent because market
conditions justified such changes. The
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witness stated that Federal Order
Reform provided a FMMO foundation
that was national in scope, while also
allowing for some provisions to be
tailored to meet the marketing
conditions of individual orders. The
witness concluded that the AMAA
provides the Department the flexibility
to tailor pooling provisions, and
Proposal 1 recognizes the unique needs
of the California market.
Another Cooperative witness offered
testimony modifying Proposal 1 to
include call provisions. The witness
explained that call provisions are
currently contained in the CSO, and
while not often utilized, their existence
alone encourages milk to be supplied to
fluid processing plants when needed.
As proposed, the witness said, call
provisions should only be used on a
temporary basis when the market’s milk
supply cannot meet distributing plant
demand, not when an individual
distributing plant is short on milk.
The Cooperatives’ post-hearing brief
reiterated the justification for the
inclusive pooling provisions contained
in Proposal 1. The brief stressed that the
AMAA authorizes the pooling of milk,
irrespective of use.
The Cooperatives’ post-hearing brief
also offered a modification to extend
exempt plant status to small plants that
process products other than, or in
addition to, fluid milk products. The
modification would increase the exempt
plant production limit from route sales
under 150,000 pounds of fluid milk
product to sales under 300,000 pounds
of milk in Class I, II, III or IV products
during the month. The brief explained
that this would allow for small fluid and
manufacturing plants to be exempt from
the pricing and pooling provisions of
the order that would otherwise be
required to participate in the
marketwide pool.
A witness testifying on behalf of
Western United Dairymen said that
without inclusive pooling provisions, as
outlined in Proposal 1, handlers could
opt not to pool large amounts of milk.
The witness said this would have a
substantial impact on the pool value
and consequently lower blend prices to
those producers who remain pooled.
An Institute witness testified
regarding the pooling provisions
contained in Proposal 2. The witness
explained how current FMMO
provisions work together to assure an
adequate milk supply for fluid use.
First, said the witness, higher Class I
revenues attract producers and producer
milk to participate in the pool, then
pooling provisions direct the producer
milk to fluid plants. Class I plants,
which by regulation are required to be
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pooled and pay the higher Class I price,
receive in exchange the assurance that
the regulations provide them an
adequate supply of milk, the witness
explained. The witness summarized a
previous USDA decision finding that
performance-based pooling provisions
are the appropriate method for
determining those producers who are
eligible to share in the marketwide pool.
The witness stressed that performancebased pooling provisions are essential in
maintaining orderly milk movements to
Class I.
The Institute witness objected to the
Cooperatives’ assertion that Class I
premiums would be sufficient to move
milk to Class I use. The witness was of
the opinion that Class I plants already
pay a high regulated Class I price and
they should not have to pay additional
over-order Class I premiums to attract
milk to their plant. The witness
questioned the purpose of Class I
differentials if the use of premiums
would be the primary way to attract
milk for fluid uses in a California
FMMO.
The Institute witness also spoke to
Proposal 1’s dependence on
transportation credits to ensure that the
Class I market is served. The witness
was of the opinion that transportation
credits are not an appropriate substitute
for performance-based pooling
standards.
The Institute witness testified that
Proposal 1 provides no incentive for
plants to serve the Class I market in
order to qualify its producers to share in
the market’s Class I revenues. Instead,
said the witness, Proposal 1 would
allow plants to gain access to Class I
revenues for their producers without
bearing any burden in servicing the
Class I market, thus making pooling
provisions ineffective.
Another issue the Institute witness
highlighted was inclusive pooling
provisions in combination with
regulated classified prices that are not
market-clearing. If regulated classified
prices are set above what a plant can
pay for that milk, the witness stressed
that many of those plants would exit the
industry and available market plant
capacity would shrink. According to the
witness, this would lead to uneconomic
milk movements as excess milk would
need to find willing processing capacity.
The Institute witness opposed
Proposal 1’s provision to automatically
grant pooling status to any dairy
manufacturing plant located in
Churchill County, Nevada. The witness
said that all plants, whether located in
state or out of state should qualify for
pooling by meeting appropriate
performance-based pooling standards.
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The Institute witness concluded that
pooling standards play a pivotal role in
ensuring consumers an adequate supply
of fluid milk. Inclusive pooling
challenges the usefulness of pooling
standards by allowing producers and
handlers to benefit from the pool
without actually being required to serve
the Class I market, the witness said. The
witness urged the Department to adopt
the performance-based pooling
standards contained in Proposal 2.
The Institute’s post-hearing brief
reiterated its position that the
Department’s policy has consistently
ensured marketwide pool proceeds are
distributed to those that demonstrate
service to the Class I market. The brief
maintained this standard should be
upheld through performance-based
pooling standards in a California
FMMO. The Institute stressed that the
inclusion of provisions to recognize the
California quota program is not an
adequate justification to exclude
performance-based pooling standards.
The Institute also raised the issue in
its post-hearing brief that adoption of
mandatory pooling in California would
result in trade barriers that are
prohibited by the AMAA. With no way
to avoid minimum regulatory pricing,
the brief stressed that California
handlers would be at a disadvantage
since handlers regulated by other
FMMOs can elect not to pool milk and
avoid minimum regulated prices. With
the inability to elect not to pool, the
Institute was of the opinion that
California plants would be discouraged
from expanding plant capacity to handle
surplus milk because they would be
required to pay prices above marketclearing values.
Lastly, as it pertains to the proposed
pooling provisions, the Institute
expressed the opinion that inclusive
pooling would de facto regulate farmers,
something that is expressly prohibited
by the AMAA.
A Dean Foods witness, on behalf of
the Institute, testified regarding specific
pooling provisions contained in
Proposal 2. The witness revised
Proposal 2 and expressed support for
the distributing plant in-area route
disposition standard of 25 percent
offered by the Cooperatives. The witness
explained the Class I route disposition
levels that determine a plant’s pool
status is set by each of the individual
orders, depending on the Class I
utilization of the market, among other
factors. The witness was of the opinion
that a 25 percent in-area route
disposition standard is appropriate for a
California FMMO with a low Class I
utilization.
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The Dean Foods witness also
supported the unit pooling provision
provided in Proposal 2. The witness
testified that the unit pooling provision
allows two or more plants, operated by
the same handler and located in the
marketing area, to qualify for pooling as
a unit by meeting the total and in-area
route disposition standards as an
individual distributing plant. Proposal 2
requires one of the plants to qualify as
a distributing plant and other plant(s) in
the unit to process at least 50 percent or
more of the total milk processed or
diverted by the plant into Class I or II
products.
The witness expressed concern that
the pooling provisions contained in
Proposal 1 would not ensure Dean
Foods an adequate milk supply to meet
their needs because it provides no
incentive to supply Class I plants.
A Hilmar consultant testified on
behalf of the Institute regarding the pool
supply plant performance standards
contained in Proposal 2. The witness
explained that the proposed supply
plant performance standards and
diversion limits would establish the
volume of milk that could be associated
with the California marketwide pool.
The witness said that 10 percent is an
appropriate base shipping standard for
supply plants seeking to be pooled on
a California FMMO. The witness
explained this standard is similar to that
in the Upper Midwest FMMO, which
has a similar Class I utilization. The
witness described Proposal 2’s sliding
scale system that would automatically
change the supply plant shipping
standard based on market Class I
utilization over the previous three
months. The witness was of the opinion
that the sliding scale system would
ensure the Class I market is adequately
served by automatically adjusting
should there be a change in the market’s
Class I utilization.
The Hilmar consultant witness also
described different performance
standards proposed for pool supply
plants that receive quota milk. Proposal
2 would require 60 percent, or a volume
equivalent, of a pool supply plant’s
quota receipts to be delivered to pool
distributing plants, the witness said.
The witness was of the opinion this
additional requirement on quota milk
would ensure that Class I needs would
always be met. However, if additional
milk is needed, that responsibility
would fall first on quota milk as the
Market Administrator would have the
ability to adjust the quota milk shipping
standard up to 85 percent if warranted.
The witness added that this additional
standard on quota milk is similar to
provisions in the CSO.
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The Hilmar consultant witness also
testified that servicing the fluid milk
needs of the market, the responsibility
of quota milk to service the fluid
market, and flexibility and supply chain
efficiency should guide the Department
in its decision making. The witness
highlighted additional proposed
provisions that would provide
regulatory flexibility such as allowing
for split-plants, the pooling of supply
plant systems, and a provision to allow
the Market Administrator to investigate
market conditions and adjust shipping
percentages if warranted by current
market conditions.
The Hilmar consultant witness also
addressed what Hilmar believes are
appropriate producer milk provisions
for a California FMMO, namely
provisions modeled after the Upper
Midwest FMMO. The witness was of the
opinion that an appropriate producer
touch-base standard would be the lesser
of one-day’s production or 48,000
pounds of milk, delivered to a pool
plant during the first month the dairy
farmer is a producer. In the following
months, explained the witness, the
producer’s milk would be eligible for
diversion to nonpool plants and still be
pooled and priced under the terms of a
California FMMO. The witness testified
that handlers should not be allowed to
pool more than 125 percent of the
volume they pooled during the previous
month, except during March when the
appropriate limit should be 135 percent,
due to the fewer number of days in
February. The witness testified that the
Institute relied on justification and
methodology provided in Upper
Midwest FMMO rulemaking decisions
to determine appropriate repooling
standards for a California FMMO.
In addition, the Hilmar consultant
witness said that a California FMMO
should not allow milk to be
simultaneously pooled on a FMMO and
a State order with marketwide pooling.
Handlers, or a group of handlers, should
be penalized if they attempt to not pool
large volumes of Class III or Class IV
milk to avoid pooling standards, the
witness added.
A Leprino witness expressed
opposition to mandatory-regulated
minimum prices as advanced in
Proposal 1. The witness characterized
the inclusive pooling provisions of
Proposal 1 as actually being mandatory
minimum pricing provisions because
they would cause all California milk to
be pooled and priced under the terms of
the FMMO. The witness explained how
the CSO has applied minimum
regulated pricing to all Grade A milk
produced and processed in the state for
decades, which the witness believed has
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led to negative market impacts. For
example, the witness described how
mandatory pricing and pooling has
reduced competition across
manufactured product classes and
lessened incentives for milk to move to
higher-valued uses.
The Leprino witness did not
characterize the CSO as disorderly, but
rather explained how there had been
periods of dysfunction when CDFA set
minimum-regulated prices that
exceeded market-clearing levels, leading
to overproduction of milk. The witness
added that when there have been
periods of large milk surpluses, milk has
been shipped and sold outside of the
state at discounted rates. The witness
said this led to losses for California
producers that could have been reduced
under a more flexible regulatory
scheme.
The Leprino witness stressed that a
California FMMO should have
voluntary pricing and pooling for
manufactured milk, as is the case in all
other FMMOs. The witness was of the
opinion this promotes market efficiency,
allowing milk to move to its highest
valued use. In its brief, Leprino stated
that the inclusive pooling provisions are
over-reaching by regulating all milk and
are inconsistent with the goals of the
AMAA. Leprino stated that inclusive
pooling standards combined with
overvalued pricing formulas would
result in a disorderly California market.
Another witness appeared on behalf
of HP Hood in support of adoption of
Proposal 2. HP Hood operates fluid milk
processing facilities in California and in
existing FMMOs, and is a member of the
Institute. The witness testified that if a
California FMMO were adopted that
included inclusive pooling, there would
be an oversupply of California milk,
leading to decreased investment in dairy
product manufacturing facilities. The
witness supported a California FMMO
that allows for optional milk pooling for
non-fluid milk uses.
A Gallo Farms consultant witness
testified that unlike other FMMOs,
Proposal 1 would not allow handlers to
elect not to pool manufacturing milk,
which would lead to disorderly
marketing conditions and increased
operational costs for cheese plants. The
witness supported the ability of cheese
plants to elect not to pool milk as
provided in Proposal 2.
A witness spoke on behalf of Nestle
S.A. (Nestle) in support of Proposal 2.
Nestle is the world’s largest food
company, headquartered in
Switzerland. Its U.S. operations include
Nestle USA, Nestle Nutrition, Nestle
Purina Pet Care Company, and Nestle
Waters North America.
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The Nestle witness was of the opinion
that milk marketing in California is
orderly. However, if a California FMMO
is adopted, Nestle supports Proposal 2
that would allow for optional pooling of
manufactured milk. The witness stated
that in all current FMMOs, handlers
have the option to pool manufacturing
milk. Inclusive pooling as contained in
Proposal 1, according to the witness,
would place Nestle at a competitive
disadvantage with competitors in other
FMMOs that can avoid minimumregulated prices. Should mandatory
pooling standards, in conjunction with
the higher-regulated prices contained in
Proposal 1 be adopted, the witness
asserted that Nestle would seek to move
more of its manufacturing outside of the
state.
The Nestle witness added that the
vast majority of its purchased California
manufactured dairy powder products is
utilized in its international plants. If
California regulated prices increase and
pooling becomes mandatory, the
witness said that Nestle would look
elsewhere globally to replace those
products. The witness concluded that
Nestle would like to see a consistent
approach to regulations in all FMMOs
so that its business continues to be
competitive and grow.
Proposal 4 was submitted by
Ponderosa Dairy (Ponderosa) in
response to the Cooperatives’ original
Proposal 1. Proposal 4 would amend the
provisions that regulate payments by a
handler operating a partially-regulated
distributing plant—under either
Proposal 1 or 2—to allow handlers to
elect partially regulated distributing
plant status with respect to milk
received from out-of-state farms.
A consultant witness on behalf of
Ponderosa testified in support of
Proposal 4. The witness described past
judicial decisions regarding the
treatment of out-of-state milk delivered
to California handlers. According to the
witness, out-of-state producers cannot
currently obtain quota, are not eligible
for transportation benefits under the
CSO, and do not participate in the CSO
marketwide pool. Instead, the witness
said, they negotiate separate prices with
the California handlers who buy their
milk. The witness speculated that outof-state producers receive the plant’s
blend price, although that is not
enforced or verified by CDFA.
The Ponderosa consultant witness
outlined the provisions of Proposal 4,
which would modify the standard
payment provisions for partiallyregulated plants under a California
FMMO. Proposal 4 would allow
California handlers to elect partiallyregulated status with respect to milk
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from out-of-state producers, and out-ofstate milk would be classified according
to the plant’s overall utilization and
receive the plant blend price. Since the
milk would not be pooled under the
FMMO, it would not receive the
marketwide blend price. The witness
clarified that although the out-of-state
milk would be isolated for payment
purposes, the handler’s status as a fully
regulated pool plant should not be lost
if it otherwise meets the definition of a
pool plant.
The Ponderosa consultant witness
said that features of Proposal 4 are
similar to those of individual handler
pools that are no longer provided in the
FMMO system. Such accommodation is
needed, the witness said, to counter the
inherent inequalities of California’s
unique quota system, which would
otherwise disadvantage out-of-state
producers. In the witness’s opinion, the
provisions of Proposal 4 should be
contained in any California FMMO
recommended by the Department, as it
would establish a regulated and audited
pricing mechanism to ensure out-ofstate producers receive at least the price
they would have if they shipped to an
otherwise fully-regulated plant—
something that is not provided in the
CSO.
A witness representing Ponderosa
explained that Ponderosa Dairy was
founded in southern Nevada to supply
raw milk to the Rockview plant in
southern California with the expectation
of receiving the plant blend price
reflective of Rockview’s plant utilization
even though the plant was regulated by
the CSO. With a Class 1 utilization of
approximately 85 percent, the witness
said that the plant blend price
compensates Ponderosa for its inability
to participate in the California quota
program and for its higher
transportation expenses to haul its milk
280 miles to Rockview.
Another Nevada producer,
representing Desert Hills Dairy (Desert
Hills), a dairy farm with 4,000 cows that
delivers 50 percent of its production to
California processing plants, testified in
opposition to any California FMMO.
However, the witness said that should a
FMMO be adopted, Proposal 4 should
be included as it most closely resembles
the current CSO provisions for out-ofstate milk. The witness testified that
Desert Hills receives the plant blend
price for the milk shipped to California,
and that the dairy farm pays all
transportation costs. The Desert Hills
witness said that should Proposal 4 not
be adopted, it would be financially
harmful because Desert Hills would be
pooled on a California FMMO and
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receive more than $1.00 per cwt less for
the milk they ship to California.
Without addressing Ponderosa’s
concern that out-of-state producers are
unable to own quota, the Cooperatives
modified Proposal 1 in their posthearing brief. Modified Proposal 1
would provide for the payment of a
blend price adjuster to out-of-state
producers so that those producers’ total
receipts would not be diminished by the
deduction of quota premium payments
from the marketwide pool.
The Cooperatives’ brief argued that
out-of-state producers have taken
advantage of the fact that the CSO
cannot regulate out-of-state milk and
have sold milk to California Class 1
handlers for prices higher than the CSO
regulated blend price but lower than the
CSO classified use value. According to
the Cooperatives, modified Proposal 1
does not erect trade barriers as it
provides for uniform payment to
California producers in similar
circumstances by establishing uniform
quota premium payments for milk
covered by quota, and establishing a
uniform blend price for production not
covered by quota.
An Institute witness explained that
under Proposal 2, out-of-state producers
would receive the traditional FMMO
blend price for their milk pooled on a
California FMMO. That blend price, the
witness said, would be determined
before the value of quota is deducted
from total marketwide pool revenues.
According to the witness, out-of-state
producers, who could never own quota
under California’s current laws, and instate producers should be paid
uniformly through a traditional FMMO
blend price calculation.
The Institute witness explained they
originally considered proposing the
establishment of two marketwide pools
or blend price calculations. The first
would pay out-of-state producers, and
then the second would recalculate and
apportion all the remaining funds to
California producers in the pool, on the
basis of quota/non-quota prices and
whether handlers elected to pool their
milk. But the witness said that upon
further consideration they realized that
this solution would present additional
problems.
The Institute witness provided
examples where two producers shipping
into the same California plant received
different prices by virtue of their farms’
locations. The witness was of the
opinion that this treatment erects a trade
barrier, provides non-uniform payments
to producers, and violates the AMAA.
The Institute witness said Proposal 2
addresses these issues by providing that
out-of-state producers receive the
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traditional FMMO blend price for their
milk pooled on a California FMMO.
According to the witness, by paying the
traditional blend to out-of-state
producers, rather than the non-quota
price, no trade barrier is erected with
respect to out-of-state milk.
A consultant witness representing
Hilmar supported the Institute’s
position regarding the treatment of outof-state milk.
Ponderosa’s reply brief argued that
the Cooperatives’ proposed remedy—the
out-of-state adjustment rate—would not
resolve the discriminatory trade barrier
issue raised in Ponderosa’s initial brief.
Ponderosa asserted the mechanics of the
Cooperatives’ proposal are unclear, but
they seemed to add complication to the
pooling process without fairly
compensating out-of-state producers for
their inability to participate in the quota
program. According to Ponderosa, outof-state producers can never realize the
historic and ongoing benefits of quota
ownership and can only avoid
discriminatory treatment by being
allowed to receive the plant blend price.
Findings
Two fundamentally different pooling
philosophies have been proposed in this
proceeding. The first, contained in
Proposal 1, has been termed ‘‘inclusive
pooling’’ and would automatically pool
all California produced milk delivered
to California plants, similar to how milk
currently becomes pooled by the CSO.
The Cooperatives are of the opinion that
any change that would allow handlers
to opt not to pool milk would be
disorderly in an industry where all of
the milk has historically been regulated.
The Cooperatives testified that because
California has a high percentage of both
Class III and Class IV milk, in any given
month handlers would elect to not pool
one of those classes of milk because of
price. The Cooperatives estimated the
incentive to not pool one or both classes
of manufacturing milk could occur 94
percent of the time. The resulting
fluctuation in uniform producer prices,
they claim, would be disorderly.
The second pooling philosophy,
offered by the Institute, is performancebased pooling standards that are more
typical of what exists in the current 10
FMMOs. These standards require the
pooling of plants with predominantly
Class I milk sales. Handlers have the
option of pooling Class II, III and IV
milk diverted to nonpool plants. The
provisions set out standards for what
plants, producers, and producer milk
are eligible to be pooled and priced by
the FMMO. The Institute testified that
the inclusive pooling standards offered
in Proposal 1 are not authorized by the
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AMAA, and performance-based pooling
standards are the only means to ensure
that Class I demand is always met.
The pooling standards of all current
FMMOs are contained in the Pool Plant,
Producer and Producer Milk provisions
of an order. Taken together, these
provisions are intended to ensure an
adequate supply of milk is available to
meet the Class I needs of the market,
and provide the criteria for determining
the producers that have demonstrated a
reasonable measure of service to the
Class I market, and thereby should share
in the marketwide distribution of pool
proceeds.
While the Cooperatives have put forth
the argument that inclusive pooling is
authorized by the AMAA, the analysis
of the record of this proceeding finds
that performance-based pooling
standards remain the appropriate
method for identifying the producers
and producer milk that serves the Class
I market. Therefore, performance-based
pooling provisions, tailored to the local
market, are recommended for the
proposed California FMMO.
Pooling standards that are
performance based provide a viable
method for determining those eligible to
share in the marketwide pool. It is
primarily the additional revenue
generated from the higher-valued Class
I use of milk that adds additional
revenue, and it is reasonable to expect
that only producers who consistently
bear the costs of supplying the market’s
fluid needs should be the ones to share
in the returns arising from highervalued Class I sales. Therefore, FMMOs
require the pooling of milk received at
pool distributing plants, which is
predominately Class I milk. Handlers of
Class II, III and IV uses of milk qualify
their milk to be pooled by meeting the
pooling and performance standards of
an order. Pooling of Class II, III and IV
milk is optional. By delivering a portion
of their milk receipts to Class I
distributing plants, handlers benefit
from the marketwide pool by receiving
the difference between their use-value
of milk and the order’s blend price in
order to pay their producer suppliers
the uniform producer blend price. This
decision finds that the following
performance-based pooling provisions
are appropriate for the proposed
California FMMO.
Pool Plant. The Pool Plant definition
of each order provides the standards to
identify plants engaged in serving the
fluid needs of the marketing area and
that receive milk eligible to share in the
marketwide pool. The Pool Plant
provisions recommended in this
decision are a combination of those
offered in both Proposal 1 and Proposal
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2. Both proposals recommend similar
distributing plant and supply plant
provisions. However, Proposal 1 would
automatically regulate any plant located
in California that receives milk from a
producer located in the marketing area,
and the remaining proposed pool plant
provisions (both distributing plant and
supply plant provisions) would apply to
only plants located outside of the
marketing area. As discussed earlier,
this decision finds that pooling
provisions should be performance
based, and therefore it is not appropriate
to recommend provisions that would
regulate plants based solely on location.
There are two performance standards
applicable to distributing plants. First,
this decision finds that a pool
distributing plant should have a
minimum of 25 percent of the total
quantity of fluid milk products
physically received at the plant
(excluding concentrated milk received
from another plant by agreement for
other than Class I use) that are disposed
of as route disposition or are transferred
in the form of packaged fluid milk
products to other distributing plants.
This decision finds that a 25 percent
route disposition standard for the
proposed California FMMO is adequate
to determine those plants that are
sufficiently associated with the fluid
market. The second criteria is an ‘‘inarea’’ standard and is designed to
recognize plants that have an adequate
association with the fluid market in the
California marketing area. The record
supports the adoption of the same inarea standard of 25 percent of total route
disposition that is found in the current
10 FMMOs.
The Pool Plant provision also
provides for regulation of distributing
plants that distribute ultra-pasteurized
or aseptically-processed fluid milk
products. The record evidence shows
that plants specializing in these types of
products tend to have irregular
distribution patterns that could cause
the plant to shift its regulatory status.
This shifting can be considered
disorderly to the producers and
cooperatives who supply those plants.
Therefore regulating those plants based
on location, as is done in other FMMOs,
provides regulatory stability. Current
FMMOs allow these plants to be
regulated in the marketing area where
they are located, as long as they process
a minimum percent of their milk
receipts into ultra-pasteurized or
aseptically-processed fluid milk
products during the month.
The record reveals that both the
Cooperatives and the Institute used the
Upper Midwest FMMO, which contains
a 15 percent standard for distributing
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plants producing ultra-pasteurized or
aseptically-processed products, as a
template for pooling provisions.
However, as explained in the Federal
Order Reform Final Decision,41 this
standard was set equal to the total route
disposition standard required for pool
distributing plants in the respective
FMMO. In this decision, the pool
distributing plant standard is proposed
to be 25 percent. Accordingly, this
decision recommends that plants
located in the marketing area that
process at least 25 percent of their total
quantity of fluid milk products into
ultra-pasteurized or asepticallyprocessed fluid milk products would be
fully regulated by the proposed
California FMMO.
Performance standards for pool
supply plants are designed to attract an
adequate supply of milk to meet the
demands of the fluid milk market by
encouraging pool supply plants to move
milk to pool distributing plants that
service the marketing area. The record
reveals that California has significant
volumes of manufacturing milk, and the
California Class 1 utilization in 2015
was only 13 percent. This decision
recommends that a pool supply plant
should deliver at least 10 percent of the
plant’s total milk receipts from
producers, including milk diverted by
the handler, to plants (qualified as pool
distributing plants, plants in a
distributing plant unit, producerhandlers, partially regulated distributing
plants, or distributing plants fully
regulated by another order) each month
in order to qualify all of the milk
associated with the supply plant for
pricing and pooling under a California
FMMO. This shipping provision is
reasonable given that it mirrors the
approximate Class I utilization of the
market and is low enough to avoid
uneconomic shipments of milk.
To prevent uneconomic shipments of
milk solely for the purpose of pool
qualification, this decision finds it
appropriate to recommend two
additional pooling provisions. First, this
decision recommends a unit pooling
provision that allows for two or more
plants located in the marketing area and
operated by the same handler to qualify
for pooling as one unit. This applies as
long as one or more of the plants in the
unit qualifies as a pool distributing
plant and the other plant(s) processes at
least 50 percent of its bulk fluid milk
products into Class I or II products. This
unit pooling provision is designed to
provide regulatory flexibility and avoid
uneconomic milk movements in
41 See
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10675
markets, like California, where there is
often specialization in plant operations.
Second, this decision recommends a
system pooling provision that allows for
two or more supply plants, located in
the marketing area and operated by one
or more handlers, to qualify for pooling
as a system by meeting the supply plant
shipping requirements as a single plant.
This system pooling provision
recognizes the benefits supply plants
provide by balancing the market’s fluid
needs, while ensuring that the plant is
a consistent supplier to the market and
therefore eligible to benefit from
participation in the marketwide pool.
Both unit and system pooling provisions
are provided in other FMMOs.
The Cooperative and Institute
witnesses testified in support of
authorizing the Market Administrator to
adjust shipping percentages if warranted
by changing market conditions. This
decision finds it appropriate to adopt
such provisions should the Market
Administrator conclude, after
conducting an investigation, that
justification for adjusting shipping
standards for supply plants, and
systems of supply plants to encourage
shipments of milk to meet Class I
demand, or to prevent uneconomic
shipments of milk is warranted. This
provision will ensure that California
FMMO provisions can quickly respond
to changing market conditions and that
orderly marketing can be maintained.
This provision negates the need to add
call provisions, as advanced by the
Cooperatives, to ensure that fluid milk
demand is always met.
Like other FMMOs, the proposed
California FMMO allows a plant,
qualifying as a pool plant in the
immediately preceding three months, to
be granted relief from performance
standards for no more than two
consecutive months if it is determined
by the market administrator that it
cannot meet the performance standards
because of circumstances beyond the
control of the handler operating the
plant. Examples of such circumstances
include natural disaster, breakdown of
equipment, or work stoppage.
In their post-hearing brief, the
Cooperatives offered a modification to
the exempt plant definition that would
expand exempt plant status to plants
with less than 150,000 pounds of Class
I route disposition, and less than
300,000 pounds of total Class I, II, III or
IV milk usage during the month. This
modification was offered to exempt
smaller plants that would otherwise be
regulated under the inclusive pooling
provisions of Proposal 1. This decision
puts forth a package of performancebased pooling provisions; therefore,
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there is no need to alter the standard
exempt plant definition, as plants with
manufacturing uses can elect to not
participate in a California FMMO.
Proposal 2 offered a sliding scale
supply plant shipping standard that
would automatically adjust if the
average Class I utilization percentage
over the prior three months changed.
Justification provided for this provision
centered on administrative ease and
flexibility of the regulations to change in
order to reflect market conditions,
without necessitating a formal
rulemaking hearing. This decision
recommends provisions allowing the
market administrator to adjust supply
plant shipping standards if warranted
by changing market conditions.
Therefore, it is not necessary to
incorporate automatic adjustments to
the standards, as that is provided with
the flexibilities granted to the market
administrator.
This decision does not recommend
separate pooling standards for plants
receiving California quota milk, as
offered in Proposal 2. As discussed
previously, this decision finds that
proper recognition of the California
quota program could be through an
authorized deduction to payments to
producers if deemed appropriate by
CDFA. Therefore, it is not appropriate
for the supply plant shipping standards
to differ on the basis of whether or not
they receive quota milk.
Proposal 1 contained a provision that
would regulate a plant located in
Churchill County, Nevada, receiving
milk from producers within the county
or in the California marketing area. The
Cooperatives argued that currently a
plant located in Churchill County has a
long standing association with the
California market, and this provision
would ensure the plant would remain
associated within the FMMO
framework. This decision does not find
it appropriate to regulate a supply plant
based on its location and not in
combination with some form of
performance standard. If the Churchill
County plant meets the pool plant
provisions of the recommended
California FMMO, and thus
demonstrates an adequate association to
the market, then that plant would
become regulated and enjoy the benefits
of participating in a California FMMO
marketwide pool.
Lastly, this decision incorporates
provisions contained in all other
FMMOs implementing the provisions of
the Milk Regulatory Equity Act of 2005
(MREA). The MREA amended the
AMAA to ensure regulatory equity
between and among dairy farmers and
handlers for sales of packaged fluid milk
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in FMMO areas and into certain nonFederally regulated milk marketing
areas from Federal milk marketing areas.
Incorporation of these provisions is
required to ensure that the proposed
California FMMO does not violate the
MREA.
Producer. The Producer definition
identifies those dairy farmers supplying
the market with milk for fluid use, or
who are at least capable of doing so if
necessary. Producers are eligible to
share in the revenue that accrues from
the marketwide pooling of milk. The
Producer provisions proposed in
Proposals 1 and 2 were virtually
identical. This decision finds that the
proposed California FMMO will
recognize producers as any person who
produces Grade A milk that is received
at a pool plant directly from the
producer or diverted from the plant, or
received by a cooperative in its capacity
as a handler. A dairy farmer would not
be considered a producer under more
than one FMMO with respect to the
same milk. Additionally, the proposed
California FMMO exempts producerhandlers and exempt plants from the
pricing provisions, so the term producer
would not apply to a producer-handler,
or any dairy farmer whose milk is
delivered to an exempt plant, excluding
producer milk diverted to such exempt
plant. Finally, the term producer would
not apply to a dairy farmer whose milk
is received at a nonpool plant as other
than producer milk. Such a provision is
commonly referred to as a dairy farmer
for other markets provision.
The Cooperatives proposed an
additional provision that would identify
those dairy farmers who had lost their
Grade A permit for more than 30
consecutive days as dairy farmers for
other markets, and therefore would lose
their ability to qualify as a producer on
a California FMMO for 12 consecutive
months. The Cooperatives explained
that this provision was part of the
inclusive pooling provisions and was
designed to prevent producers from
voluntarily giving up their Grade A
status to avoid regulation. This decision
is recommending a package of pooling
provisions that are performance based
and only those dairy farmers who meet
the producer definition would be
entitled to share in the marketwide
pool. Therefore, any dairy farmer who
delivers Grade A milk to a pool plant
will be considered a producer.
Producer milk. The Producer Milk
definition identifies the milk of
producers that is eligible for inclusion
in the marketwide pool. The
recommended provisions are a
combination of the provisions contained
in Proposals 1 and 2, and uphold the
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performance-based pooling philosophy
advanced in this decision.
This decision finds that for the
proposed California FMMO, producer
milk is defined as the milk of a producer
that is received at a pool plant, or
received by a cooperative association in
its capacity as a handler.
The proposed California FMMO must
also provide for the diversion of
producer milk to facilitate its orderly
and efficient disposition when not
needed for fluid use. Diversion
provisions are needed to ensure that
milk pooled on the order but not used
for Class I purposes is part of the
legitimate reserve supply of Class I
handlers. Providing for the diversion of
milk is a desirable and needed feature
of a FMMO because it facilitates the
orderly and efficient disposition of milk
when not needed for fluid use.
Accordingly, the recommended
California FMMO would allow a pool
plant to divert milk to another pool
plant, and pool plants and cooperatives
in their capacity as handlers could also
divert milk to nonpool plants located in
California, or in the surrounding states
of Arizona, Nevada and Oregon. Milk
would not be eligible to be diverted to
a nonpool plant and remain priced and
pooled under the terms of a California
FMMO, unless at least one day of the
dairy farmer’s production is physically
received as producer milk at a pool
plant during the first month the dairy
farmer is qualifying as a producer on the
order. Given the large supply of milk for
manufactured use in California, the
record supports that a one-day ‘‘touch
base’’ provision during the first month
would be adequate to define the
producer milk that should be included
in a California marketwide pool.
Proposal 2 offered an alternative touch
base standard of the lesser of one-day’s
production or 48,000 pounds. This
decision finds that a one-day touch base
standard is an adequate demonstration
of a dairy farmer’s ability to service the
market. Conversely, a higher standard,
such as the five-day standard contained
in Proposal 1, could lead to uneconomic
milk movements for the sole purpose of
meeting regulatory standards.
It is equally appropriate to safeguard
against excessive milk supplies
becoming associated with the market as
the recommended California FMMO
one-day touch base standard could lead
to milk from far distances associating
with a California marketwide pool
without actually being available to
service the market’s fluid needs.
Therefore, this decision recommends
diversions be limited to 100 percent
minus the supply plant shipping
percentage (or 90 percent of all milk
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being pooled by the handler). Diversions
would further be limited to nonpool
plants within California and its
surrounding states. This limit should
allow the economic movement of milk
to balance the fluid needs of the market,
while simultaneously preventing the
milk of producers located in areas
distant from the marketing area from
being delivered to a pool plant once,
and then all the milk of that producer
being diverted to a distant plant and
still pooled on and receiving the
recommended California FMMO blend
price.
The recommended California FMMO
also contains repooling standards of 125
percent for the months of April through
February, and 135 percent for the month
of March of the producer milk receipts
pooled by the handler in the previous
month. The record contains evidence
that other FMMOs have experienced
large swings in the volume of milk
pooled on the order. This volatility was
attributed to manufacturing handlers
having opted to not pool all their
eligible milk received in a month in
order to avoid payment to the
marketwide pool. The unrestricted
ability of manufacturing handlers and
cooperatives to elect not to pool milk
and avoid payment into the marketwide
pool is inequitable and contrary to the
intent of the FMMO system.42 Repooling
standards have been found to be an
appropriate remedy to safeguard
marketwide pooling and deter the
disorderly conditions that occur when
milk is not pooled. These standards
would not prevent manufacturing
handlers or cooperatives from electing
to not pool milk. However, they should
serve to maintain and enhance orderly
marketing by encouraging participation
in the marketwide pooling of all
classified uses of milk.
Therefore, this decision finds that
repooling standards are justified for the
proposed California FMMO to avoid
known disorderly marketing conditions
that have occurred in numerous
FMMOs. As California is currently
regulated by the CSO, there is no data
on the record from which to discern
how much milk plants that will qualify
as pool plants on the recommended
California FMMO will seek to pool.
Therefore, the 125 and 135 percent
repooling standards serve as a
reasonable starting point for
determining a handler’s consistent
supply of milk available to service the
market’s fluid needs. Any milk
42 Official Notice is taken of Upper Midwest Final
Decision (71 FR 54136), Central Final Decision (71
FR 54152), and Mideast Final Decision (71 FR
54172).
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delivered to a pool distributing plant in
excess of the previous month’s pooled
volume would not be subject to the
repooling standards. The recommended
California FMMO also contains a
provision that allows the market
administrator to waive these provisions
for new handlers, or existing handlers
with a significant change in their milk
supply due to unusual circumstances.
Lastly, milk that is subject to
inclusion and participation in a Stateauthorized marketwide equalization
pool and classification system would
not be considered producer milk.
Without such exclusion, milk could be
simultaneously pooled on a California
FMMO and on a marketwide
equalization pool administered by
another government entity, resulting in
a double payment on the same milk and
giving rise to competitive equity issues
between producers.
The record reflects that under the
CSO, milk serving the California Class I
market but produced from outside the
state is not priced and pooled, and outof-state producers commonly receive the
plant blend price. Proposal 4 seeks to
allow plants that otherwise qualify as
fully regulated distributing plants to
elect partially regulated distributing
plant status with respect to milk
received from out-of-state farms. If
Proposal 4 were adopted, the
recommended California FMMO would
enforce payment to out-of-state
producers of at least the plant blend
price on the out-of-state milk and thus
the out-of-state producers would receive
the same price as they currently do by
being exempt from CSO regulation.
Throughout the hearing, California
producers extolled the virtues of joining
the FMMO system and enjoying systemwide uniform product classification and
pricing, which they believed would put
them on a level-playing field with their
producer counterparts across the
country. In an effort to fairly
compensate out-of-state producers while
accommodating the California quota
program under the proposed FMMO,
proponents offered various payment
alternatives. Under the modified
provisions of Proposal 1, out-of-state
producers would be entitled to a
uniform blend price adjusted for quota.
Under Proposal 2, out-of-state producers
would be entitled to the traditional
FMMO blend price calculated before
quota premiums are paid.
Proponents of Proposal 4 argued that
out-of-state producers should be
allowed to continue receiving the plant
blend price for milk shipped to plants
regulated under a California FMMO to
compensate for the fact that they have
not historically been entitled to own
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and benefit from California quota and
cannot expect to in the future. Under
Proposal 4, otherwise fully regulated
handlers could elect partially regulated
distributing plant status with respect to
out-of-state milk, for which they would
pay the plant’s blend price, based on
classified use.
The record reflects that out-of-state
milk is not priced and pooled by the
CSO because the State of California is
prohibited from regulating interstate
commerce. One benefit of Federal
regulation is the ability to regulate the
interstate marketing of milk, something
that states are expressly prohibited from
doing. FMMO provisions ensure that all
milk servicing a market’s Class I needs
is appropriately classified and priced,
and the producers who supply that milk
share in the marketwide revenues from
all Class I sales in the market.
A key feature of FMMOs is that
producer milk is classified and priced at
the plant where it is utilized, regardless
of its source. Similarly situated handlers
pay at least the class prices under each
order, and producers are paid at least
the order’s minimum uniform blend
price, determined through marketwide
pooling. This allows producers to share
equally in the classified use value of
milk in the market, while minimizing
uneconomic milk movements.
As explained earlier, this decision
recommends that a California FMMO
operate independent of the State’s quota
program. Under the recommended
provisions, no quota premium would be
subtracted from the FMMO pool, and all
producers delivering to regulated pool
plants under the order would be paid at
least the same minimum producer blend
price, less authorized deductions.
Therefore, all producers are paid
uniformly, as is allowed by the uniform
payments provision of the AMAA.
Accordingly, this decision finds no
justification for differential producer
treatment for milk servicing California’s
Class I needs and produced outside the
marketing area. If an out-of-state dairy
farmer qualifies as a producer on the
recommended California FMMO, then
their milk will be priced and pooled
uniformly with all other producers
serving the Class I market.
9. Transportation Credits
Transportation credits were contained
in both Proposals 1 and 2 to reimburse
handlers for part of the cost of
transporting milk to Class I and/or Class
II use. This decision does not
recommend transportation credit
provisions for a California FMMO.
A witness appearing on behalf of the
Cooperatives testified in support of the
transportation credit provisions
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contained in Proposal 1. The witness
said that transportation credits are
needed because Class I differentials are
not high enough to cover the cost of
moving milk from the Central Valley
where most of the milk is produced, to
Class I distributing plants which are
primarily located on the coast where
most of the population resides.
The Cooperative witness utilized
April 2013 to October 2014 CDFA
hauling cost data of milk deliveries to
plants with Class 1, 2 and/or 3
utilization, and compared it to the
proposed California FMMO Class I
differentials that would be applicable
for comparable hauls. The witness said
the average cost to haul a load of milk
from a supply region to a demand region
was $0.75 per cwt, with a range of $0.35
to $1.82 per cwt. According to the
witness, in all instances, the difference
in FMMO Class I differentials between
the two locations was much less than
the actual haul cost, therefore an
additional cost recovery mechanism is
needed to assure orderly movements of
milk to Class I plants.
The witness explained that Proposal 1
contains transportation credit
provisions similar to the current CSO
where marketwide pool monies are used
to provide a credit for farm-to-plant
milk movements within designated
transportation zones to handlers with
greater than 50 percent Class 1, 2 and/
or 3 utilization. The witness said that
the transportation credit zones represent
current market procurement patterns
where transportation credit assistance is
necessary, and a similar credit system
should be incorporated into a California
FMMO. The witness stressed that the
proposed credits would be mileage and
transaction based, with a reimbursement
rate cap of 175 miles,43 and a fuel cost
adjustor. The witness noted that the
transportation credit rate would be
calculated on a per-farm basis. So one
haul route could have more than one
farm stop and each farm stop would be
eligible individually for a transportation
credit. In their post-hearing brief, the
Cooperatives modified their proposal to
allow for milk outside the marketing
area to be eligible for transportation
credits.
The Cooperative witness explained
that their proposed reimbursement
equations were a result of Cooperative
members’ transportation cost data
analyzed by the Pacific Northwest
FMMO office. The Cooperatives
requested that the FMMO office analyze
the data and determine cost equations
based on actual observed costs, minus
43 The mileage rate cap was modified at the
hearing to 175 miles.
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$0.30 per cwt which represents the a
producer’s responsibility for a local
haul. The witness said that the resulting
equations are valid because they
calculated a $5.205 million payment
which was close to the actual observed
costs of $5.261 million. The witness
explained that because diesel prices are
a key variable cost to transportation, a
monthly fuel cost adjustor is needed to
ensure that the transportation credit
provisions maintain an accurate
reflection of costs. The witness noted
that Proposal 1 does not contain
transportation credit reimbursement for
plant-to-plant milk movements.
The Cooperative witness elaborated
that Proposal 1 seeks to pay all
producers the same FMMO blend price,
unadjusted for location. Therefore the
incentive to supply milk to Class I
plants is borne solely through their
proposed transportation credit
provisions. The witness said that
because all producers share in the
higher valued class uses, it is
appropriate that they share in the cost
of supplying and balancing those
markets by using marketwide pool
monies to provide a handler credit on
those milk movements.
The Institute, in its post-hearing brief,
expressed support for the transportation
credit provisions contained in Proposal
1, subject to the transportation credits
being adjusted for the difference in
location differentials.
A witness representing Ponderosa
testified that any proposed California
FMMO should allow for transportation
credits of out-of-state milk that serves
the California Class I and/or Class II
market. The witness explained that
Ponderosa experiences hightransportation costs because they haul
their milk approximately 280 miles to a
southern California Class I plant. The
witness was of the opinion that this
milk should be eligible for
transportation credits if it is serving the
California fluid market.
Findings
The record of this proceeding reflects
that the California fluid market is
structured such that some handlers and
cooperative associations rely on the
current CSO transportation credit
system to assist them in making an
adequate milk supply available for fluid
use. The record reveals that Los
Angeles, San Francisco, San Diego and
Sacramento metropolitan areas contain
an overwhelming majority of the state’s
population as well as the Class I plants
that service those areas. However, these
plants must often source milk from milk
production regions of the state located
farther away. The record reveals that
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this supply/demand imbalance, coupled
with flat producer pricing necessitated
the development of the CSO
transportation credits for milk deliveries
from designated supply regions to Class
1, 2 and/or 3 handlers located in
demand regions where a majority of the
population resides. The Cooperatives
designed their transportation credit
proposal to replicate the transportation
credits currently paid by the CSO on
farm-to-plant milk shipments, but
attempted to make the proposed system
more transaction based.
As previously discussed, this decision
does not recommend flat producer
pricing. The record of this proceeding
supports the finding that producer
payments should be adjusted to reflect
the applicable producer location
adjustment for the handler location
where their milk is received. Therefore,
the incentive to producers to supply
Class I plants is embodied within the
proposed producer payment provisions.
As in all FMMOs, producers are
responsible for finding a market for their
milk, and consequently bear the cost of
transporting their milk to a plant.
Therefore the record of this proceeding
does not support reducing the
producers’ value of the marketwide pool
through the payment of transportation
credits to handlers. The proposed Class
I differential structure provides for
higher differentials in the major
metropolitan areas of Los Angeles, San
Diego, San Francisco, and Sacramento
to incentivize movements of Class I
milk. If additional monies are needed
above minimum classified prices to
supply Class I plants, marketplace
principles should dictate the source and
amount of those additional funds.
10. Miscellaneous and Administrative
Provisions
This section discusses the various
miscellaneous and administrative
provisions that would be necessary to
administer the proposed California
FMMO. All current FMMOs contain
administrative provisions that provide
for the handler reporting dates,
announcements by the Market
Administrator, and payment dates that
are necessary to administer the
provisions of the FMMOs. A California
FMMO likewise needs similar
administrative provisions to ensure its
proper administration. The provisions
outlined below generally conform to
provisions contained in the 10 current
FMMOs with reporting and payment
dates tailored to the California dairy
market.
Handler Reports. Handlers subject to
a California FMMO would be required
to submit monthly reports detailing the
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sources and uses of milk and milk
products so that market average use
values, or uniform prices, could be
determined and administered. Under a
California FMMO, handler reports of
receipts and utilization would be due by
the 9th day following the end of the
month. To ensure the minimum
payments to producers are made in
accordance with the terms of a
California FMMO, handlers would need
to report producer payroll by the 20th
day following the end of the month to
the Market Administrator.
Announcements by the Market
Administrator. In the course of
administering a California FMMO, the
Market Administrator would be
required to make several
announcements each month with
respect to classification, class prices and
component prices, an ‘‘equivalent
price’’ when necessary, and various
producer prices. Under a California
FMMO, the Market Administrator
would make these announcements on or
before the 14th day following the end of
the month.
Producer-Settlement Fund. Handlers
regulated by a California FMMO would
be required to pay minimum class
prices for the milk received from
producers. These minimum values
would be aggregated in a California
FMMO marketwide pool so that
producers could receive a uniform
price, or blend price for their milk. The
equalization of a handler’s use value of
milk and the uniform value would occur
through the producer-settlement fund
that would be established and
administered by the Market
Administrator.
The producer-settlement fund ensures
that all handlers would be able to return
the market blend price to producers
whose milk was pooled under the order.
Payments into the producer-settlement
fund would be made each month by
handlers whose total classified use
value of milk exceeds the values of such
milk calculated at the announced
producer prices. In a California FMMO,
handlers would be required to pay into
the producer-settlement fund by the
16th day following the end of the
month.
Payments out of the producersettlement fund would be made each
month to any handler whose use value
is below the value of their milk at
producer prices. Under a California
FMMO, the Market Administrator
would distribute payments from the
producer-settlement fund by the 18th
day following the end of the month.
This transfer of funds would enable
handlers with a classified use value of
milk below the average for the market to
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pay their producers the same uniform
price as handlers whose classified use
value of milk exceeds the market
average.
In view of the need to make timely
payments to handlers from the
producer-settlement fund, it is essential
that money due to the fund is received
by the due date. Accordingly, payment
to the producer-settlement fund is
considered made upon receipt of funds
by the Market Administrator. Payment
cannot be received on a non-business
day. Therefore, if the due date for a
payment, including a payment to or
from the producer-settlement fund, falls
on a Saturday, Sunday, or national
holiday, the payment would not be due
until the next business day.
Payments to Producers and
Cooperative Associations. The AMAA
states that handlers must pay the
uniform price to all producers and
producer associations. As under other
FMMOs, a California FMMO would
provide for proper deductions
authorized by the producer in writing.
Such authorized deductions would be
those that are unrelated to the minimum
value of milk in the transaction between
the producer and handler. The proposed
California FMMO would also allow a
deduction for any assessment
announced by CDFA for the
administration of the California quota
program. The producer would not need
to authorize this deduction in writing.
As in other FMMOs, producer
associations would be allowed to
‘‘reblend’’ their payments to their
producer members. The Capper
Volstead Act and the AMAA make it
clear that cooperative associations are
unique in this regard.
A California FMMO would require
handlers to make at least one partial
payment to producers in advance of the
announcement of the applicable
uniform prices. The partial payment rate
for milk received during the first 15
days of the month could not be less than
the lowest announced class price for the
preceding month, and would be paid to
producers by the last day of the month.
The final payment for milk under a
California FMMO would be required to
be made so that it is received by
producers no later than the 19th day
after the end of the month.
Handlers would pay Cooperatives for
bulk milk and skim milk, and for bulk
milk received by transfer from a
cooperative’s pool plant, on the terms
described for individual producers, with
the exception that payment would be
due one day earlier. An earlier payment
date for cooperative associations is
warranted because it would then give
cooperative associations the time they
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need to distribute payments to
individual producer members.
All payment dates specified in the
proposed California FMMO are receipt
dates. Since payment cannot be received
on a non-business day, payment dates
that fall on a Saturday, Sunday, or
national holiday would be delayed until
the next business day. While this has
the effect of delaying payments to
cooperatives and producers, the delay is
offset by the shift from ‘‘date of
payment’’ to ‘‘date of payment receipt.’’
Payment Obligation of a Partially
Regulated Distributing Plant. All
FMMOs provide a method for
determining the payment obligations
due to producers by handlers that
operate plants not fully regulated under
any Federal order. These unregulated
handlers are not required to account to
dairy farmers for their milk at classified
prices or to return a minimum uniform
price to producers who have supplied
the handler with milk. However, such
handlers may sell fluid milk products
on routes in a regulated area in
competition with handlers who are fully
regulated. To address this, FMMOs
provide a minimum degree of regulation
to all handlers who have route sales in
a regulated marketing area. Partial
regulation preserves the integrity of the
FMMO classified pricing and pooling
provisions and assures that orderly
marketing conditions can be
maintained. Without these provisions,
milk prices under an order would not be
uniform among handlers competing for
sales in the marketing area, a milk
pricing requirement of the AMAA. Like
the other FMMOs, a California FMMO
would partially regulate handlers who
have route sales into the marketing area,
but do not meet the threshold to be fully
regulated.
The proposed California FMMO
would provide regulatory options for a
partially regulated plant handler. All
partially regulated plant handlers would
account to the California FMMO
producer-settlement fund on the volume
of packaged Class I sales in the
California marketing area that exceeds
receipts previously priced as Class I
under a FMMO. Under the first option,
a payment could be made by the
partially regulated plant handler into
the producer-settlement fund of the
California FMMO at a rate equal to the
difference between the Class I price and
the California FMMO uniform price.
Under the second option, the operator of
a partially regulated plant handler could
pay any positive difference between the
gross obligation of the plant, had it been
fully regulated, and the actual payments
made for its milk supply. This is
commonly referred to as the Wichita
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Option. The third option applies to a
partially regulated plant handler that is
subject to a marketwide pool operated
under the authority of a State. In this
last case, the partially regulated plant
handler would account to the producer
settlement fund at the difference
between the Federal order Class I value
and the value at which the handler
accounts to the State order pool on such
route sales, but not less than zero.
Adjustment of Accounts. Current
FMMOs provide for the audit of handler
reports by the Market Administrator.
The Market Administrator may adjust,
based on verification of handler records,
any amount due to or from the Market
Administrator, or to a producer or
cooperative association. Adjustments
can affect the Producer-Settlement
Fund, the Administrative Fund, and/or
the Marketing Service Fund. A
California FMMO would likewise
provide for the adjustment of handler
accounts based on audits of handler
reports and records. The Market
Administrator would promptly notify
the handler of any necessary
adjustments so that payments could be
made on or before the next date for the
payment related to the adjustment.
Charges for Overdue Accounts. The
proposed California FMMO provisions
require handlers to make payments to
producers and cooperatives by the dates
described earlier in this section.
Payments not made by the specified due
dates would be subject to a late payment
charge of 1 percent per month by the
Market Administrator and would accrue
to the administrative fund. Additional
late payment charges would accrue on
any amounts that continue to be late on
the corresponding due dates each
succeeding month.
Assessment of Order Administration.
The AMAA provides that the cost of
order administration be financed by an
assessment on handlers. Under the
proposed California FMMO, a maximum
rate of $0.08 per cwt would apply to all
of a handler’s receipts pooled under the
order. The specific rate would be
announced by the Market
Administrator. Partially-regulated
handlers would be assessed the same
administrative rate on their volume of
Class I route disposition inside of the
marketing area. The money paid to the
administrative fund is each handler’s
proportionate share of the cost of
administering the FMMO.
Deduction for Marketing Services. The
proposed California FMMO would
provide marketing services to producers
for whom cooperative associations do
not perform services. Such services
include providing market information
and establishing or verifying weights,
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samples, and tests of milk received from
such producers. In accordance with the
AMAA, these marketing services are
intended to benefit all nonmember
producers under a California FMMO.
Accordingly, as is uniform in the
current FMMOs, each handler regulated
by a California FMMO would be
allowed to deduct a maximum of $0.07
per cwt from amounts due each
producer for whom a cooperative
association does not provide such
services. The specific allowable rate
would be announced by the Market
Administrator and would be subtracted
from the handler’s obligation.
Rulings on Proposed Findings and
Conclusions. In accordance with the
Administrative Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C.
557(c), USDA has analyzed and reached
a conclusion on all material issues of
facts, law, and discretion presented on
the record. Briefs, proposed findings
and conclusions, and the evidence in
the record were considered in making
the findings and conclusions set forth in
this recommended decision. To the
extent that the suggested findings and
conclusions filed by interested persons
are inconsistent with the findings and
conclusions of this recommended
decision, the requests to make such
findings or reach such conclusions are
denied for the reasons stated in this
decision.
General Findings
(a) The proposed marketing agreement
and order, and all of the terms and
conditions thereof, will tend to
effectuate the declared policy of the Act;
(b) The parity prices of milk, as
determined pursuant to Section 2 of the
Act, are not reasonable in view of the
price of feeds, available supplies of
feeds, and other economic conditions
that affect market supply and demand
for the milk in the marketing area, and
the minimum prices specified in the
proposed marketing agreement and
order are such prices as will reflect the
aforesaid factors, insure a sufficient
quantity of pure and wholesome milk,
and be in the public interest; and
(c) The proposed marketing agreement
and order will regulate the handling of
milk in the same manner as, and will be
applicable only to, persons in the
respective classes of industrial and
commercial activity specified in the
marketing agreement and order upon
which a hearing has been held.
(d) All milk and milk products
handled by handlers covered by the
proposed marketing agreement and
order are in the current of interstate
commerce or directly burden, obstruct,
or affect interstate commerce in milk or
its products; and
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(e) It is hereby found that the
necessary expense of the market
administrator for the maintenance and
functioning of such agency will require
the payment by each handler, as their
pro rata share of such expense, 8 cents
per hundredweight or such lesser
amount as the Secretary may prescribe
with respect to the milk specified in
§ 1051.85 of the aforesaid tentative
marketing agreement and the order.
Recommended Marketing Agreement
and Order
The recommended marketing
agreement is not included in this
decision because the regulatory
provisions thereof would be the same as
those contained in the order, as hereby
proposed to be established. The
following order regulating the handling
of milk in California marketing area is
recommended as the detailed and
appropriate means by which the
foregoing conclusions maybe carried
out.
List of Subjects in 7 CFR Part 1051
Milk marketing orders.
The Agricultural Marketing Service
proposes to add 7 CFR part 1051 to read
as follows:
PART 1051—MILK IN THE CALIFORNIA
MARKETING AREA
Subpart A—Order Regulating Handling
General Provisions
Sec.
1051.1
General provisions.
Definitions
1051.2 California marketing area.
1051.3 Route disposition.
1051.4 Plant.
1051.5 Distributing plant.
1051.6 Supply plant.
1051.7 Pool plant.
1051.8 Nonpool plant.
1051.9 Handler.
1051.10 Producer-handler.
1051.11 California quota program.
1051.12 Producer.
1051.13 Producer milk.
1051.14 Other source milk.
1051.15 Fluid milk product.
1051.16 Fluid cream product.
1051.17 [Reserved]
1051.18 Cooperative association.
1051.19 Commercial food processing
establishment.
Market Administrator, Continuing
Obligations, and Handler Responsibilities
1051.25 Market administrator.
1051.26 Continuity and separability of
provisions.
1051.27 Handler responsibility for records
and facilities.
1051.28 Termination of obligations.
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Handler Reports
1051.30
1051.31
1051.32
Definitions
Reports of receipts and utilization.
Payroll reports.
Other reports.
Subpart B—Milk Pricing
Classification of Milk
1051.40 Classes of utilization.
1051.41 [Reserved]
1051.42 Classification of transfers and
diversions.
1051.43 General classification rules.
1051.44 Classification of producer milk.
1051.45 Market administrator’s reports and
announcements concerning
classification.
Class Prices
1051.50 Class prices, component prices,
and advanced pricing factors.
1051.51 Class I differential and price.
1051.52 Adjusted Class I differentials.
1051.53 Announcement of class prices,
component prices, and advanced pricing
factors.
1051.54 Equivalent price.
Producer Price Differential
Subpart C—Payments for Milk
Producer Payments
1051.70 Producer-settlement fund.
1051.71 Payments to the producersettlement fund.
1051.72 Payments from the producersettlement fund.
1051.73 Payments to producers and to
cooperative associations.
1051.74 [Reserved]
1051.75 Plant location adjustments for
producer milk and nonpool milk.
1051.76 Payments by a handler operating a
partially regulated distributing plant.
1051.77 Adjustment of accounts.
1051.78 Charges on overdue accounts.
Administrative Assessment and Marketing
Service Deduction
1051.85 Assessment for order
administration.
1051.86 Deduction for marketing services.
Subpart D—Miscellaneous Provisions
Dates.
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Authority: 7 U.S.C. 601–608.
Subpart A—Order Regulating Handling
General Provisions
§ 1051.1
General provisions.
The terms, definitions, and provisions
in part 1000 of this chapter apply to this
part unless otherwise specified. In this
part, all references to sections in part
1000 refer to part 1000 of this chapter.
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California marketing area.
The marketing area means all territory
within the bounds of the following
states and political subdivisions,
including all piers, docks, and wharves
connected therewith and all craft
moored thereat, and all territory
occupied by government (municipal,
State, or Federal) reservations,
installations, institutions, or other
similar establishments if any part
thereof is within any of the listed states
or political subdivisions:
California
All of the State of California.
§ 1051.3
Route disposition.
See § 1000.3.
§ 1051.4
Plant.
See § 1000.4.
§ 1051.5
Distributing plant.
See § 1000.5.
§ 1051.6
1051.60 Handler’s value of milk.
1051.61 Computation of producer price
differential.
1051.62 Announcement of producer prices.
1051.90
§ 1051.2
Supply plant.
See § 1000.6.
§ 1051.7
Pool plant.
Pool plant means a plant, unit of
plants, or system of plants as specified
in paragraphs (a) through (f) of this
section, but excluding a plant specified
in paragraph (h) of this section. The
pooling standards described in
paragraphs (c) and (f) of this section are
subject to modification pursuant to
paragraph (g) of this section:
(a) A distributing plant, other than a
plant qualified as a pool plant pursuant
to paragraph (b) of this section or
§ lll.7(b) of any other Federal milk
order, from which during the month 25
percent or more of the total quantity of
fluid milk products physically received
at the plant (excluding concentrated
milk received from another plant by
agreement for other than Class I use) are
disposed of as route disposition or are
transferred in the form of packaged fluid
milk products to other distributing
plants. At least 25 percent of such route
disposition and transfers must be to
outlets in the marketing area.
(b) Any distributing plant located in
the marketing area which during the
month processed at least 25 percent of
the total quantity of fluid milk products
physically received at the plant
(excluding concentrated milk received
from another plant by agreement for
other than Class I use) into ultrapasteurized or aseptically-processed
fluid milk products.
(c) A supply plant from which the
quantity of bulk fluid milk products
shipped to (and physically unloaded
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10681
into) plants described in paragraph
(c)(1) of this section is not less than 10
percent of the Grade A milk received
from dairy farmers (except dairy farmers
described in § 1051.12(b)) and handlers
described in § 1000.9(c), including milk
diverted pursuant to § 1051.13, subject
to the following conditions:
(1) Qualifying shipments may be
made to plants described in paragraphs
(c)(1)(i) through (iv) of this section,
except that whenever shipping
requirements are increased pursuant to
paragraph (g) of this section, only
shipments to pool plants described in
paragraphs (a), (b), and (d) of this
section shall count as qualifying
shipments for the purpose of meeting
the increased shipments:
(i) Pool plants described in
§ 1051.7(a), (b), and (d);
(ii) Plants of producer-handlers;
(iii) Partially regulated distributing
plants, except that credit for such
shipments shall be limited to the
amount of such milk classified as Class
I at the transferee plant; and
(iv) Distributing plants fully regulated
under other Federal orders, except that
credit for shipments to such plants shall
be limited to the quantity shipped to
(and physically unloaded into) pool
distributing plants during the month
and credits for shipments to other order
plants shall not include any such
shipments made on the basis of agreedupon Class II, Class III, or Class IV
utilization.
(2) Concentrated milk transferred
from the supply plant to a distributing
plant for an agreed-upon use other than
Class I shall be excluded from the
supply plant’s shipments in computing
the supply plant’s shipping percentage.
(d) Two or more plants operated by
the same handler and located in the
marketing area may qualify for pool
status as a unit by meeting the total and
in-area route disposition requirements
of a pool distributing plant specified in
paragraph (a) of this section and subject
to the following additional
requirements:
(1) At least one of the plants in the
unit must qualify as a pool plant
pursuant to paragraph (a) of this section;
(2) Other plants in the unit must
process Class I or Class II products,
using 50 percent or more of the total
Grade A fluid milk products received in
bulk form at such plant or diverted
therefrom by the plant operator in Class
I or Class II products; and
(3) The operator of the unit has filed
a written request with the market
administrator prior to the first day of the
month for which such status is desired
to be effective. The unit shall continue
from month-to-month thereafter without
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further notification. The handler shall
notify the market administrator in
writing prior to the first day of any
month for which termination or any
change of the unit is desired.
(e) A system of two or more supply
plants operated by one or more handlers
may qualify for pooling by meeting the
shipping requirements of paragraph (c)
of this section in the same manner as a
single plant subject to the following
additional requirements:
(1) Each plant in the system is located
within the marketing area. Cooperative
associations or other handlers may not
use shipments pursuant to § 1000.9(c) to
qualify supply plants located outside
the marketing area;
(2) The handler(s) establishing the
system submits a written request to the
market administrator on or before July
15 requesting that such plants qualify as
a system for the period of August
through July of the following year. Such
request will contain a list of the plants
participating in the system in the order,
beginning with the last plant, in which
the plants will be dropped from the
system if the system fails to qualify.
Each plant that qualifies as a pool plant
within a system shall continue each
month as a plant in the system through
the following July unless the handler(s)
establishing the system submits a
written request to the market
administrator that the plant be deleted
from the system or that the system be
discontinued. Any plant that has been
so deleted from a system, or that has
failed to qualify in any month, will not
be part of any system for the remaining
months through July. The handler(s)
that have established a system may add
a plant operated by such handler(s) to
a system if such plant has been a pool
plant each of the 6 prior months and
would otherwise be eligible to be in a
system, upon written request to the
market administrator no later than the
15th day of the prior month. In the
event of an ownership change or the
business failure of a handler who is a
participant in a system, the system may
be reorganized to reflect such changes if
a written request to file a new marketing
agreement is submitted to the market
administrator; and
(3) If a system fails to qualify under
the requirements of this paragraph (e),
the handler responsible for qualifying
the system shall notify the market
administrator which plant or plants will
be deleted from the system so that the
remaining plants may be pooled as a
system. If the handler fails to do so, the
market administrator shall exclude one
or more plants, beginning at the bottom
of the list of plants in the system and
continuing up the list as necessary until
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the deliveries are sufficient to qualify
the remaining plants in the system.
(f) Any distributing plant, located
within the marketing area as described
in § 1051.2:
(1) From which there is route
disposition and/or transfers of packaged
fluid milk products in any non-federally
regulated marketing area(s) located
within one or more States that require
handlers to pay minimum prices for raw
milk, provided that 25 percent or more
of the total quantity of fluid milk
products physically received at such
plant (excluding concentrated milk
received from another plant by
agreement for other than Class 1 use) is
disposed of as route disposition and/or
is transferred in the form of packaged
fluid milk products to other plants. At
least 25 percent of such route
disposition and/or transfers, in
aggregate, are in any non-federally
regulated marketing area(s) located
within one or more States that require
handlers to pay minimum prices for raw
milk. Subject to the following
exclusions:
(i) The plant is described in
§ 1051.7(a), (b), or (e);
(ii) The plant is subject to the pricing
provisions of a State-operated milk
pricing plan which provides for the
payment of minimum class prices for
raw milk;
(iii) The plant is described in
§ 1000.8(a) or (e); or
(iv) A producer-handler described in
§ 1051.10 with less than three million
pounds during the month of route
disposition and/or transfers of packaged
fluid milk products to other plants.
(2) [Reserved]
(g) The applicable shipping
percentages of paragraphs (c) and (e) of
this section and § 1051.13(d)(2) and (3)
may be increased or decreased, for all or
part of the marketing area, by the market
administrator if the market
administrator finds that such
adjustment is necessary to encourage
needed shipments or to prevent
uneconomic shipments. Before making
such a finding, the market administrator
shall investigate the need for adjustment
either on the market administrator’s
own initiative or at the request of
interested parties if the request is made
in writing at least 15 days prior to the
month for which the requested revision
is desired effective. If the investigation
shows that an adjustment of the
shipping percentages might be
appropriate, the market administrator
shall issue a notice stating that an
adjustment is being considered and
invite data, views, and arguments. Any
decision to revise an applicable
shipping or diversion percentage must
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be issued in writing at least one day
before the effective date.
(h) The term pool plant shall not
apply to the following plants:
(1) A producer-handler as defined
under any Federal order;
(2) An exempt plant as defined in
§ 1000.8(e);
(3) A plant located within the
marketing area and qualified pursuant
to paragraph (a) of this section which
meets the pooling requirements of
another Federal order, and from which
more than 50 percent of its route
disposition has been in the other
Federal order marketing area for 3
consecutive months;
(4) A plant located outside any
Federal order marketing area and
qualified pursuant to paragraph (a) of
this section that meets the pooling
requirements of another Federal order
and has had greater route disposition in
such other Federal order’s marketing
area for 3 consecutive months;
(5) A plant located in another Federal
order marketing area and qualified
pursuant to paragraph (a) of this section
that meets the pooling requirements of
such other Federal order and does not
have a majority of its route disposition
in this marketing area for 3 consecutive
months, or if the plant is required to be
regulated under such other Federal
order without regard to its route
disposition in any other Federal order
marketing area;
(6) A plant qualified pursuant to
paragraph (c) of this section which also
meets the pooling requirements of
another Federal order and from which
greater qualifying shipments are made
to plants regulated under the other
Federal order than are made to plants
regulated under the order in this part, or
the plant has automatic pooling status
under the other Federal order; and
(7) That portion of a regulated plant
designated as a nonpool plant that is
physically separate and operated
separately from the pool portion of such
plant. The designation of a portion of a
regulated plant as a nonpool plant must
be requested in advance and in writing
by the handler and must be approved by
the market administrator.
(i) Any plant that qualifies as a pool
plant in each of the immediately
preceding 3 months pursuant to
paragraph (a) of this section or the
shipping percentages in paragraph (c) of
this section that is unable to meet such
performance standards for the current
month because of unavoidable
circumstances determined by the market
administrator to be beyond the control
of the handler operating the plant, such
as a natural disaster (ice storm, wind
storm, flood, fire, earthquake,
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breakdown of equipment, or work
stoppage, shall be considered to have
met the minimum performance
standards during the period of such
unavoidable circumstances, but such
relief shall not be granted for more than
2 consecutive months.
§ 1051.8
Nonpool plant.
See § 1000.8.
§ 1051.9
Handler.
See § 1000.9.
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§ 1051.10
Producer-handler.
Producer-handler means a person
who operates a dairy farm and a
distributing plant from which there is
route disposition in the marketing area,
from which total route disposition and
packaged sales of fluid milk products to
other plants during the month does not
exceed 3 million pounds, and who the
market administrator has designated a
producer-handler after determining that
all of the requirements of this section
have been met.
(a) Requirements for designation.
Designation of any person as a
producer-handler by the market
administrator shall be contingent upon
meeting the conditions set forth in
paragraphs (a)(1) through (5) of this
section. Following the cancellation of a
previous producer-handler designation,
a person seeking to have their producerhandler designation reinstated must
demonstrate that these conditions have
been met for the preceding month:
(1) The care and management of the
dairy animals and the other resources
and facilities designated in paragraph
(b)(1) of this section necessary to
produce all Class I milk handled
(excluding receipts from handlers fully
regulated under any Federal order) are
under the complete and exclusive
control, ownership, and management of
the producer-handler and are operated
as the producer-handler’s own
enterprise and at its sole risk.
(2) The plant operation designated in
paragraph (b)(2) of this section at which
the producer-handler processes and
packages, and from which it distributes,
its own milk production is under the
complete and exclusive control,
ownership, and management of the
producer-handler and is operated as the
producer-handler’s own enterprise and
at its sole risk.
(3) The producer-handler neither
receives at its designated milk
production resources and facilities nor
receives, handles, processes, or
distributes at or through any of its
designated milk handling, processing, or
distributing resources and facilities
other source milk products for
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reconstitution into fluid milk products
or fluid milk products derived from any
source other than:
(i) Its designated milk production
resources and facilities (own farm
production);
(ii) Pool handlers and plants regulated
under any Federal order within the
limitation specified in paragraph (c)(2)
of this section; or
(iii) Nonfat milk solids which are
used to fortify fluid milk products.
(4) The producer-handler is neither
directly nor indirectly associated with
the business control or management of,
nor has a financial interest in, another
handler’s operation; nor is any other
handler so associated with the
producer-handler’s operation.
(5) No milk produced by the herd(s)
or on the farm(s) that supplies milk to
the producer-handler’s plant operation
is:
(i) Subject to inclusion and
participation in a marketwide
equalization pool under a milk
classification and pricing program
under the authority of a State
government maintaining marketwide
pooling of returns; or
(ii) Marketed in any part as Class I
milk to the non-pool distributing plant
of any other handler.
(b) Designation of resources and
facilities. Designation of a person as a
producer-handler shall include the
determination of what shall constitute
milk production, handling, processing,
and distribution resources and facilities,
all of which shall be considered an
integrated operation, under the sole and
exclusive ownership of the producerhandler.
(1) Milk production resources and
facilities shall include all resources and
facilities (milking herd(s), buildings
housing such herd(s), and the land on
which such buildings are located) used
for the production of milk which are
solely owned, operated, and which the
producer-handler has designated as a
source of milk supply for the producerhandler’s plant operation. However, for
purposes of this paragraph (b)(1), any
such milk production resources and
facilities which do not constitute an
actual or potential source of milk supply
for the producer-handler’s operation
shall not be considered a part of the
producer-handler’s milk production
resources and facilities.
(2) Milk handling, processing, and
distribution resources and facilities
shall include all resources and facilities
(including store outlets) used for
handling, processing, and distributing
fluid milk products which are solely
owned by, and directly operated or
controlled by the producer-handler or in
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which the producer-handler in any way
has an interest, including any
contractual arrangement, or over which
the producer-handler directly or
indirectly exercises any degree of
management control.
(3) All designations shall remain in
effect until canceled pursuant to
paragraph (c) of this section.
(c) Cancellation. The designation as a
producer-handler shall be canceled
upon determination by the market
administrator that any of the
requirements of paragraph (a)(1) through
(5) of this section are not continuing to
be met, or under any of the conditions
described in paragraph (c)(1), (2), or (3)
of this section. Cancellation of a
producer-handler’s status pursuant to
this paragraph (c) shall be effective on
the first day of the month following the
month in which the requirements were
not met or the conditions for
cancellation occurred.
(1) Milk from the milk production
resources and facilities of the producerhandler, designated in paragraph (b)(1)
of this section, is delivered in the name
of another person as producer milk to
another handler.
(2) The producer-handler handles
fluid milk products derived from
sources other than the milk production
facilities and resources designated in
paragraph (b)(1) of this section, except
that it may receive at its plant, or
acquire for route disposition, fluid milk
products from fully regulated plants and
handlers under any Federal order if
such receipts do not exceed 150,000
pounds monthly. This limitation shall
not apply if the producer-handler’s
own-farm production is less than
150,000 pounds during the month.
(3) Milk from the milk production
resources and facilities of the producerhandler is subject to inclusion and
participation in a marketwide
equalization pool under a milk
classification and pricing plan operating
under the authority of a State
government.
(d) Public announcement. The market
administrator shall publicly announce:
(1) The name, plant location(s), and
farm location(s) of persons designated as
producer-handlers;
(2) The names of those persons whose
designations have been cancelled; and
(3) The effective dates of producerhandler status or loss of producerhandler status for each. Such
announcements shall be controlling
with respect to the accounting at plants
of other handlers for fluid milk products
received from any producer-handler.
(e) Burden of establishing and
maintaining producer-handler status.
The burden rests upon the handler who
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is designated as a producer-handler to
establish through records required
pursuant to § 1000.27 that the
requirements set forth in paragraph (a)
of this section have been and are
continuing to be met, and that the
conditions set forth in paragraph (c) of
this section for cancellation of the
designation do not exist.
(f) Any producer-handler with Class I
route dispositions and/or transfers of
packaged fluid milk products in the
marketing area described in § 1131.2 of
this chapter shall be subject to payments
into the Order 1131 producer settlement
fund on such dispositions pursuant to
§ 1000.76(a) and payments into the
Order 1131 administrative fund,
provided such dispositions are less than
three million pounds in the current
month and such producer-handler had
total Class I route dispositions and/or
transfers of packaged fluid milk
products from own farm production of
three million pounds or more the
previous month. If the producer-handler
has Class I route dispositions and/or
transfers of packaged fluid milk
products into the marketing area
described in § 1131.2 of this chapter of
three million pounds or more during the
current month, such producer-handler
shall be subject to the provisions
described in § 1131.7 of this chapter or
§ 1000.76(a).
§ 1051.11
California quota program.
California Quota Program means the
applicable provisions of the California
Food and Agriculture Code, and related
provisions of the pooling plan
administered by the California
Department of Food and Agriculture
(CDFA).
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
§ 1051.12
Producer.
(a) Except as provided in paragraph
(b) of this section, producer means any
person who produces milk approved by
a duly constituted regulatory agency for
fluid consumption as Grade A milk and
whose milk is:
(1) Received at a pool plant directly
from the producer or diverted by the
plant operator in accordance with
§ 1051.13; or
(2) Received by a handler described in
§ 1000.9(c).
(b) Producer shall not include:
(1) A producer-handler as defined in
any Federal order;
(2) A dairy farmer whose milk is
received at an exempt plant, excluding
producer milk diverted to the exempt
plant pursuant to § 1051.13(d);
(3) A dairy farmer whose milk is
received by diversion at a pool plant
from a handler regulated under another
Federal order if the other Federal order
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designates the dairy farmer as a
producer under that order and that milk
is allocated by request to a utilization
other than Class I; and
(4) A dairy farmer whose milk is
reported as diverted to a plant fully
regulated under another Federal order
with respect to that portion of the milk
so diverted that is assigned to Class I
under the provisions of such other
order.
§ 1051.13
Producer milk.
Except as provided for in paragraph
(e) of this section, producer milk means
the skim milk (or the skim equivalent of
components of skim milk), including
nonfat components, and butterfat in
milk of a producer that is:
(a) Received by the operator of a pool
plant directly from a producer or a
handler described in § 1000.9(c). All
milk received pursuant to this
paragraph (a) shall be priced at the
location of the plant where it is first
physically received;
(b) Received by a handler described in
§ 1000.9(c) in excess of the quantity
delivered to pool plants;
(c) Diverted by a pool plant operator
to another pool plant. Milk so diverted
shall be priced at the location of the
plant to which diverted; or
(d) Diverted by the operator of a pool
plant or a cooperative association
described in § 1000.9(c) to a nonpool
plant located in the States of California,
Arizona, Nevada, or Oregon, subject to
the following conditions:
(1) Milk of a dairy farmer shall not be
eligible for diversion unless at least one
day’s production of such dairy farmer is
physically received as producer milk at
a pool plant during the first month the
dairy farmer is a producer. If a dairy
farmer loses producer status under the
order in this part (except as a result of
a temporary loss of Grade A approval or
as a result of the handler of the dairy
farmer’s milk failing to pool the milk
under any order), the dairy farmer’s
milk shall not be eligible for diversion
unless at least one day’s production of
the dairy farmer has been physically
received as producer milk at a pool
plant during the first month the dairy
farmer is re-associated with the market;
(2) The quantity of milk diverted by
a handler described in § 1000.9(c) may
not exceed 90 percent of the producer
milk receipts reported by the handler
pursuant to § 1051.30(c) provided that
not less than 10 percent of such receipts
are delivered to plants described in
§ 1051.7(c)(1)(i) through (iii). These
percentages are subject to any
adjustments that may be made pursuant
to § 1051.7(g); and
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(3) The quantity of milk diverted to
nonpool plants by the operator of a pool
plant described in § 1051.7(a), (b) or (d)
may not exceed 90 percent of the Grade
A milk received from dairy farmers
(except dairy farmers described in
§ 1051.12(b)) including milk diverted
pursuant to this section. These
percentages are subject to any
adjustments that may be made pursuant
to § 1051.7(g).
(4) Diverted milk shall be priced at
the location of the plant to which
diverted.
(e) Producer milk shall not include
milk of a producer that is subject to
inclusion and participation in a
marketwide equalization pool under a
milk classification and pricing program
imposed under the authority of a State
government maintaining marketwide
pooling of returns.
(f) The quantity of milk reported by a
handler pursuant to either
§ 1051.30(a)(1) or (c)(1) for April
through February may not exceed 125
percent, and for March may not exceed
135 percent, of the producer milk
receipts pooled by the handler during
the prior month. Milk diverted to
nonpool plants reported in excess of
this limit shall be removed from the
pool. Milk in excess of this limit
received at pool plants, other than pool
distributing plants, shall be classified
pursuant to § 1000.44(a)(3)(v) and (b).
The handler must designate, by
producer pick-up, which milk is to be
removed from the pool. If the handler
fails to provide this information, the
market administrator will make the
determination. The following provisions
apply:
(1) Milk shipped to and physically
received at pool distributing plants in
excess of the previous month’s pooled
volume shall not be subject to the 125
or 135 percent limitation;
(2) Producer milk qualified pursuant
to § lll.13 of any other Federal
Order and continuously pooled in any
Federal Order for the previous six
months shall not be included in the
computation of the 125 or 135 percent
limitation;
(3) The market administrator may
waive the 125 or 135 percent limitation:
(i) For a new handler on the order,
subject to the provisions of paragraph
(f)(4) of this section; or
(ii) For an existing handler with
significantly changed milk supply
conditions due to unusual
circumstances; and
(4) A bloc of milk may be considered
ineligible for pooling if the market
administrator determines that handlers
altered the reporting of such milk for the
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(3) The utilization or disposition of all
milk and milk products required to be
reported pursuant to this paragraph (a);
and
(4) Such other information with
respect to the receipts and utilization of
skim milk, butterfat, milk protein, and
other nonfat solids as the market
administrator may prescribe.
(b) Each handler operating a partially
regulated distributing plant shall report
with respect to such plant in the same
manner as prescribed for reports
required by paragraph (a) of this section.
Receipts of milk that would have been
producer milk if the plant had been
fully regulated shall be reported in lieu
of producer milk. The report shall show
also the quantity of any reconstituted
skim milk in route disposition in the
marketing area.
(c) Each handler described in
§ 1000.9(c) shall report:
(1) The product pounds, pounds of
butterfat, pounds of protein, pounds of
solids-not-fat other than protein (other
solids) contained in receipts of milk
from producers; and
(2) The utilization or disposition of
such receipts.
(d) Each handler not specified in
paragraphs (a) through (c) of this section
shall report with respect to its receipts
and utilization of milk and milk
products in such manner as the market
administrator may prescribe.
purpose of evading the provisions of
this paragraph (f).
§ 1051.14
Other source milk.
See § 1000.14.
§ 1051.15
Fluid milk products.
See § 1000.15.
§ 1051.16
Fluid cream product.
See § 1000.16.
§ 1051.17
[Reserved]
§ 1051.18
Cooperative association.
See § 1000.18.
§ 1051.19 Commercial food processing
establishment.
See § 1000.19.
Market Administrator, Continuing
Obligations, and Handler
Responsibilities
§ 1051.25
Market administrator.
See § 1000.25.
§ 1051.26 Continuity and separability of
provisions.
See § 1000.26.
§ 1051.27 Handler responsibility for
records and facilities.
See § 1000.27.
§ 1051.28
Termination of obligations.
See § 1000.28.
Handler Reports
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
§ 1051.30 Reports of receipts and
utilization.
§ 1051.31
Each handler shall report monthly so
that the market administrator’s office
receives the report on or before the 9th
day after the end of the month, in the
detail and on the prescribed forms, as
follows:
(a) Each handler that operates a pool
plant shall report for each of its
operations the following information:
(1) Product pounds, pounds of
butterfat, pounds of protein, pounds of
solids-not-fat other than protein (other
solids) contained in or represented by:
(i) Receipts of producer milk,
including producer milk diverted by the
reporting handler, from sources other
than handlers described in § 1000.9(c);
and
(ii) Receipts of milk from handlers
described in § 1000.9(c);
(2) Product pounds and pounds of
butterfat contained in:
(i) Receipts of fluid milk products and
bulk fluid cream products from other
pool plants;
(ii) Receipts of other source milk; and
(iii) Inventories at the beginning and
end of the month of fluid milk products
and bulk fluid cream products;
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Payroll reports.
(a) On or before the 20th day after the
end of each month, each handler that
operates a pool plant pursuant to
§ 1051.7 and each handler described in
§ 1000.9(c) shall report to the market
administrator its producer payroll for
the month, in the detail prescribed by
the market administrator, showing for
each producer the information
described in § 1051.73(f).
(b) Each handler operating a partially
regulated distributing plant who elects
to make payment pursuant to
§ 1000.76(b) shall report for each dairy
farmer who would have been a producer
if the plant had been fully regulated in
the same manner as prescribed for
reports required by paragraph (a) of this
section.
§ 1051.32
Other reports.
In addition to the reports required
pursuant to §§ 1051.30 and 1051.31,
each handler shall report any
information the market administrator
deems necessary to verify or establish
each handler’s obligation under the
order.
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10685
Subpart B—Milk Pricing
Classification of Milk
§ 1051.40
Classes of utilization.
See § 1000.40.
§ 1051.41
[Reserved]
§ 1051.42 Classification of transfers and
diversions.
See § 1000.42.
§ 1051.43
General classification rules.
See § 1000.43.
§ 1051.44
Classification of producer milk.
See § 1000.44.
§ 1051.45 Market administrator’s reports
and announcements concerning
classification.
See § 1000.45.
Class Prices
§ 1051.50 Class prices, component prices,
and advanced pricing factors.
See § 1000.50.
§ 1051.51
Class I differential and price.
The Class I differential shall be the
differential established for Los Angeles
County, California, which is reported in
§ 1000.52. The Class I price shall be the
price computed pursuant to § 1000.50(a)
for Los Angeles County, California.
§ 1051.52
Adjusted Class I differentials.
See § 1000.52.
§ 1051.53 Announcement of class prices,
component prices, and advanced pricing
factors.
See § 1000.53.
§ 1051.54
Equivalent price.
See § 1000.54.
Producer Price Differential
§ 1051.60
Handler’s value of milk.
For the purpose of computing a
handler’s obligation for producer milk,
the market administrator shall
determine for each month the value of
milk of each handler with respect to
each of the handler’s pool plants and of
each handler described in § 1000.9(c)
with respect to milk that was not
received at a pool plant by adding the
amounts computed in paragraphs (a)
through (h) of this section and
subtracting from that total amount the
values computed in paragraphs (i) and
(j) of this section. Unless otherwise
specified, the skim milk, butterfat, and
the combined pounds of skim milk and
butterfat referred to in this section shall
result from the steps set forth in
§ 1000.44(a), (b), and (c), respectively,
and the nonfat components of producer
milk in each class shall be based upon
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the proportion of such components in
producer skim milk. Receipts of
nonfluid milk products that are
distributed as labeled reconstituted milk
for which payments are made to the
producer-settlement fund of another
Federal order under § 1000.76(a)(4) or
(d) shall be excluded from pricing under
this section.
(a) Class I value.
(1) Multiply the hundredweight of
skim milk in Class I by the Class I skim
milk price; and
(2) Add an amount obtained by
multiplying the pounds of butterfat in
Class I by the Class I butterfat price; and
(b) Class II value.
(1) Multiply the pounds of nonfat
solids in Class II skim milk by the Class
II nonfat solids price; and
(2) Add an amount obtained by
multiplying the pounds of butterfat in
Class II times the Class II butterfat price.
(c) Class III value.
(1) Multiply the pounds of protein in
Class III skim milk by the protein price;
(2) Add an amount obtained by
multiplying the pounds of other solids
in Class III skim milk by the other solids
price; and
(3) Add an amount obtained by
multiplying the pounds of butterfat in
Class III by the butterfat price.
(d) Class IV value.
(1) Multiply the pounds of nonfat
solids in Class IV skim milk by the
nonfat solids price; and
(2) Add an amount obtained by
multiplying the pounds of butterfat in
Class IV by the butterfat price.
(e) Multiply the pounds of skim milk
and butterfat overage assigned to each
class pursuant to § 1000.44(a)(11) and
the corresponding step of § 1000.44(b)
by the skim milk prices and butterfat
prices applicable to each class.
(f) Multiply the difference between
the current month’s Class I, II, or III
price, as the case may be, and the Class
IV price for the preceding month and by
the hundredweight of skim milk and
butterfat subtracted from Class I, II, or
III, respectively, pursuant to
§ 1000.44(a)(7) and the corresponding
step of § 1000.44(b).
(g) Multiply the difference between
the Class I price applicable at the
location of the pool plant and the Class
IV price by the hundredweight of skim
milk and butterfat assigned to Class I
pursuant to § 1000.43(d) and the
hundredweight of skim milk and
butterfat subtracted from Class I
pursuant to § 1000.44(a)(3)(i) through
(vi) and the corresponding step of
§ 1000.44(b), excluding receipts of bulk
fluid cream products from plants
regulated under other Federal orders
and bulk concentrated fluid milk
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products from pool plants, plants
regulated under other Federal orders,
and unregulated supply plants.
(h) Multiply the difference between
the Class I price applicable at the
location of the nearest unregulated
supply plants from which an equivalent
volume was received and the Class III
price by the pounds of skim milk and
butterfat in receipts of concentrated
fluid milk products assigned to Class I
pursuant to §§ 1000.43(d) and
1000.44(a)(3)(i) and the corresponding
step of § 1000.44(b) and the pounds of
skim milk and butterfat subtracted from
Class I pursuant to § 1000.44(a)(8) and
the corresponding step of § 1000.44(b),
excluding such skim milk and butterfat
in receipts of fluid milk products from
an unregulated supply plant to the
extent that an equivalent amount of
skim milk or butterfat disposed of to
such plant by handlers fully regulated
under any Federal milk order is
classified and priced as Class I milk and
is not used as an offset for any other
payment obligation under any order.
(i) For reconstituted milk made from
receipts of nonfluid milk products,
multiply $1.00 (but not more than the
difference between the Class I price
applicable at the location of the pool
plant and the Class IV price) by the
hundredweight of skim milk and
butterfat contained in receipts of
nonfluid milk products that are
allocated to Class I use pursuant to
§ 1000.43(d).
§ 1051.61 Computation of producer price
differential.
For each month the market
administrator shall compute a producer
price differential per hundredweight.
The report of any handler who has not
made payments required pursuant to
§ 1051.71 for the preceding month shall
not be included in the computation of
the producer price differential, and such
handler’s report shall not be included in
the computation for succeeding months
until the handler has made full payment
of outstanding monthly obligations.
Subject to the conditions of this
introductory paragraph, the market
administrator shall compute the
producer price differential in the
following manner:
(a) Combine into one total the values
computed pursuant to § 1051.60 for all
handlers required to file reports
prescribed in § 1051.30;
(b) Subtract the total values obtained
by multiplying each handler’s total
pounds of protein, other solids, and
butterfat contained in the milk for
which an obligation was computed
pursuant to § 1051.60 by the protein
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price, other solids price, and the
butterfat price, respectively;
(c) Add an amount equal to the minus
location adjustments and subtract an
amount equal to the plus location
adjustments computed pursuant to
§ 1051.75;
(d) Add an amount equal to not less
than one-half of the unobligated balance
in the producer-settlement fund;
(e) Divide the resulting amount by the
sum of the following for all handlers
included in these computations:
(1) The total hundredweight of
producer milk; and
(2) The total hundredweight for which
a value is computed pursuant to
§ 1051.60(i); and
(f) Subtract not less than 4 cents nor
more than 5 cents from the price
computed pursuant to paragraph (e) of
this section. The result shall be known
as the producer price differential for the
month.
§ 1051.62
prices.
Announcement of producer
On or before the 14th day after the
end of each month, the market
administrator shall announce publicly
the following prices and information:
(a) The producer price differential;
(b) The protein price;
(c) The nonfat solids price;
(d) The other solids price;
(e) The butterfat price;
(f) The average butterfat, nonfat
solids, protein and other solids content
of producer milk; and
(g) The statistical uniform price for
milk containing 3.5 percent butterfat,
computed by combining the Class III
price and the producer price
differential.
Subpart C—Payments for Milk
Producer Payments
§ 1051.70
Producer-settlement fund.
See § 1000.70.
§ 1051.71 Payments to the producersettlement fund.
Each handler shall make payment to
the producer-settlement fund in a
manner that provides receipt of the
funds by the market administrator no
later than the 16th day after the end of
the month (except as provided in
§ 1000.90). Payment shall be the
amount, if any, by which the amount
specified in paragraph (a) of this section
exceeds the amount specified in
paragraph (b) of this section:
(a) The total value of milk to the
handler for the month as determined
pursuant to § 1051.60.
(b) The sum of:
(1) An amount obtained by
multiplying the total hundredweight of
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producer milk as determined pursuant
to § 1000.44(c) by the producer price
differential as adjusted pursuant to
§ 1051.75;
(2) An amount obtained by
multiplying the total pounds of protein,
other solids, and butterfat contained in
producer milk by the protein, other
solids, and butterfat prices respectively;
and
(3) An amount obtained by
multiplying the pounds of skim milk
and butterfat for which a value was
computed pursuant to § 1051.60(i) by
the producer price differential as
adjusted pursuant to § 1051.75 for the
location of the plant from which
received.
§ 1051.72 Payments from the producersettlement fund.
No later than the 18th day after the
end of each month (except as provided
in § 1000.90), the market administrator
shall pay to each handler the amount, if
any, by which the amount computed
pursuant to § 1051.71(b) exceeds the
amount computed pursuant to
§ 1051.71(a). If, at such time, the balance
in the producer-settlement fund is
insufficient to make all payments
pursuant to this section, the market
administrator shall reduce uniformly
such payments and shall complete the
payments as soon as the funds are
available.
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
§ 1051.73 Payments to producers and to
cooperative associations.
(a) Each handler shall pay each
producer for producer milk for which
payment is not made to a cooperative
association pursuant to paragraph (b) of
this section, as follows:
(1) Partial payment. For each
producer who has not discontinued
shipments as of the date of this partial
payment, payment shall be made so that
it is received by each producer on or
before the last day of the month (except
as provided in § 1000.90) for milk
received during the first 15 days of the
month from the producer at not less
than the lowest announced class price
for the preceding month, less proper
deductions authorized in writing by the
producer.
(2) Final payment. For milk received
during the month, payment shall be
made so that it is received by each
producer no later than the 19th day after
the end of the month (except as
provided in § 1000.90) in an amount not
less than the sum of:
(i) The hundredweight of producer
milk received times the producer price
differential for the month as adjusted
pursuant to § 1051.75;
(ii) The pounds of butterfat received
times the butterfat price for the month;
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(iii) The pounds of protein received
times the protein price for the month;
(iv) The pounds of other solids
received times the other solids price for
the month;
(v) Less any payment made pursuant
to paragraph (a)(1) of this section;
(vi) Less proper deductions
authorized in writing by such producer,
and plus or minus adjustments for
errors in previous payments to such
producer subject to approval by the
market administrator;
(vii) Less deductions for marketing
services pursuant to § 1000.86; and
(viii) Less deductions authorized by
CDFA for the California Quota Program
pursuant to § 1051.11.
(b) Payments for milk received from
cooperative association members. On or
before the day prior to the dates
specified in paragraphs (a)(1) and (2) of
this section (except as provided in
§ 1000.90), each handler shall pay to a
cooperative association for milk from
producers who market their milk
through the cooperative association and
who have authorized the cooperative to
collect such payments on their behalf an
amount equal to the sum of the
individual payments otherwise payable
for such producer milk pursuant to
paragraphs (a)(1) and (2) of this section.
(c) Payment for milk received from
cooperative association pool plants or
from cooperatives as handlers pursuant
to § 1000.9(c). On or before the day prior
to the dates specified in paragraphs
(a)(1) and (2) of this section (except as
provided in § 1000.90), each handler
who receives fluid milk products at its
plant from a cooperative association in
its capacity as the operator of a pool
plant or who receives milk from a
cooperative association in its capacity as
a handler pursuant to § 1000.9(c),
including the milk of producers who are
not members of such association and
who the market administrator
determines have authorized the
cooperative association to collect
payment for their milk, shall pay the
cooperative for such milk as follows:
(1) For bulk fluid milk products and
bulk fluid cream products received from
a cooperative association in its capacity
as the operator of a pool plant and for
milk received from a cooperative
association in its capacity as a handler
pursuant to § 1000.9(c) during the first
15 days of the month, at not less than
the lowest announced class prices per
hundredweight for the preceding
month;
(2) For the total quantity of bulk fluid
milk products and bulk fluid cream
products received from a cooperative
association in its capacity as the
operator of a pool plant, at not less than
PO 00000
Frm 00055
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
10687
the total value of such products received
from the association’s pool plants, as
determined by multiplying the
respective quantities assigned to each
class under § 1000.44, as follows:
(i) The hundredweight of Class I skim
milk times the Class I skim milk price
for the month plus the pounds of Class
I butterfat times the Class I butterfat
price for the month. The Class I price to
be used shall be that price effective at
the location of the receiving plant;
(ii) The pounds of nonfat solids in
Class II skim milk by the Class II nonfat
solids price;
(iii) The pounds of butterfat in Class
II times the Class II butterfat price;
(iv) The pounds of nonfat solids in
Class IV times the nonfat solids price;
(v) The pounds of butterfat in Class III
and Class IV milk times the butterfat
price;
(vi) The pounds of protein in Class III
milk times the protein price;
(vii) The pounds of other solids in
Class III milk times the other solids
price; and
(vii) Add together the amounts
computed in paragraphs (c)(2)(i)
through (vii) of this section and from
that sum deduct any payment made
pursuant to paragraph (c)(1) of this
section; and
(3) For the total quantity of milk
received during the month from a
cooperative association in its capacity as
a handler under § 1000.9(c) as follows:
(i) The hundredweight of producer
milk received times the producer price
differential as adjusted pursuant to
§ 1051.75;
(ii) The pounds of butterfat received
times the butterfat price for the month;
(iii) The pounds of protein received
times the protein price for the month;
(iv) The pounds of other solids
received times the other solids price for
the month; and
(v) Add together the amounts
computed in paragraphs (c)(3)(i)
through (v) of this section and from that
sum deduct any payment made
pursuant to paragraph (c)(1) of this
section.
(d) If a handler has not received full
payment from the market administrator
pursuant to § 1051.72 by the payment
date specified in paragraph (a), (b), or (c)
of this section, the handler may reduce
pro rata its payments to producers or to
the cooperative association (with
respect to receipts described in
paragraph (b) of this section, prorating
the underpayment to the volume of milk
received from the cooperative
association in proportion to the total
milk received from producers by the
handler), but not by more than the
amount of the underpayment. The
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14FEP2
10688
Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 29 / Tuesday, February 14, 2017 / Proposed Rules
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with PROPOSALS2
payments shall be completed on the
next scheduled payment date after
receipt of the balance due from the
market administrator.
(e) If a handler claims that a required
payment to a producer cannot be made
because the producer is deceased or
cannot be located, or because the
cooperative association or its lawful
successor or assignee is no longer in
existence, the payment shall be made to
the producer-settlement fund, and in the
event that the handler subsequently
locates and pays the producer or a
lawful claimant, or in the event that the
handler no longer exists and a lawful
claim is later established, the market
administrator shall make the required
payment from the producer-settlement
fund to the handler or to the lawful
claimant, as the case may be.
(f) In making payments to producers
pursuant to this section, each handler
shall furnish each producer, except a
producer whose milk was received from
a cooperative association handler
described in § 1000.9(a) or (c), a
supporting statement in a form that may
be retained by the recipient which shall
show:
(1) The name, address, Grade A
identifier assigned by a duly constituted
regulatory agency, and payroll number
of the producer;
(2) The daily and total pounds, and
the month and dates such milk was
received from that producer;
(3) The total pounds of butterfat,
protein, and other solids contained in
the producer’s milk;
(4) The minimum rate or rates at
which payment to the producer is
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:32 Feb 13, 2017
Jkt 241001
required pursuant to the order in this
part;
(5) The rate used in making payment
if the rate is other than the applicable
minimum rate;
(6) The amount, or rate per
hundredweight, or rate per pound of
component, and the nature of each
deduction claimed by the handler; and
(7) The net amount of payment to the
producer or cooperative association.
§ 1051.74
[Reserved]
§ 1051.75 Plant location adjustments for
producer milk and nonpool milk.
For purposes of making payments for
producer milk and nonpool milk, a
plant location adjustment shall be
determined by subtracting the Class I
price specified in § 1051.51 from the
Class I price at the plant’s location. The
difference, plus or minus as the case
may be, shall be used to adjust the
payments required pursuant to
§§ 1051.73 and 1000.76.
§ 1051.76 Payments by a handler
operating a partially regulated distributing
plant.
See § 1000.76.
§ 1051.77
Adjustment of accounts.
See § 1000.77.
§ 1051.78
Administrative Assessment and
Marketing Service Deduction
§ 1051.85 Assessment for order
administration.
On or before the payment receipt date
specified under § 1051.71, each handler
shall pay to the market administrator its
Frm 00056
Fmt 4701
§ 1051.86
services.
Deduction for marketing
See § 1000.86.
Charges on overdue accounts.
See § 1000.78.
PO 00000
pro rata share of the expense of
administration of the order at a rate
specified by the market administrator
that is no more than 8 cents per
hundredweight with respect to:
(a) Receipts of producer milk
(including the handler’s own
production) other than such receipts by
a handler described in § 1000.9(c) that
were delivered to pool plants of other
handlers;
(b) Receipts from a handler described
in § 1000.9(c);
(c) Receipts of concentrated fluid milk
products from unregulated supply
plants and receipts of nonfluid milk
products assigned to Class I use
pursuant to § 1000.43(d) and other
source milk allocated to Class I pursuant
to § 1000.44(a)(3) and (8) and the
corresponding steps of § 1000.44(b),
except other source milk that is
excluded from the computations
pursuant to § 1051.60 (h) and (i); and
(d) Route disposition in the marketing
area from a partially regulated
distributing plant that exceeds the skim
milk and butterfat subtracted pursuant
to § 1000.76(a)(1)(i) and (ii).
Sfmt 9990
Subpart D—Miscellaneous Provisions
§ 1051.90
Dates.
See § 1000.90.
Dated: February 6, 2017.
Bruce Summers,
Acting Administrator.
[FR Doc. 2017–02732 Filed 2–9–17; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 3410–02–P
E:\FR\FM\14FEP2.SGM
14FEP2
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 82, Number 29 (Tuesday, February 14, 2017)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 10634-10688]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2017-02732]
[[Page 10633]]
Vol. 82
Tuesday,
No. 29
February 14, 2017
Part II
Department of Agriculture
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Agricultural Marketing Service
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7 CFR Part 1051
Milk in California; Recommended Decision and Opportunity To File
Written Exceptions on Proposal To Establish a Federal Milk Marketing
Order; Proposed Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 82 , No. 29 / Tuesday, February 14, 2017 /
Proposed Rules
[[Page 10634]]
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DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Agricultural Marketing Service
7 CFR Part 1051
[Doc. No. AO-15-0071; AMS-DA-14-0095]
Milk in California; Recommended Decision and Opportunity To File
Written Exceptions on Proposal To Establish a Federal Milk Marketing
Order
AGENCY: Agricultural Marketing Service, USDA.
ACTION: Proposed rule and opportunity to file exceptions.
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SUMMARY: This Recommended Decision proposes the issuance of a Federal
Milk Marketing Order (FMMO) regulating the handling of milk in
California. The proposed FMMO incorporates the entire state of
California and would adopt the same dairy product classification and
pricing provisions used throughout the current FMMO system. The
proposed FMMO provides for the recognition of producer quota as
administered by the California Department of Food and Agriculture. This
proposed rule also announces the Agricultural Marketing Service's (AMS)
intent to request approval by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB)
of new information collection requirements to implement the order.
DATES: Written exceptions to this proposed rule must be submitted on or
before May 15, 2017. Pursuant to the Paperwork Reduction Act, comments
on the information collection burden must be received by April 17,
2017.
AMS will conduct a public meeting on February 22, 2017, to review
the rulemaking process, explain and answer questions relating to how
the proposed California FMMO would operate, and inform the public how
they can submit public comments for consideration.
ADDRESSES: Comments should be submitted at the Federal eRulemaking
portal: https://www.regulations.gov. Comments may also be filed with the
Hearing Clerk, U.S. Department of Agriculture, Room 1031-S, Washington,
DC 20250-9200, Facsimile number (202) 720-9976. All comments should
reference the docket number and the date and page number of this issue
of the Federal Register. All comments will be made available for public
inspection in the Office of the Hearing Clerk during regular business
hours, or can be viewed at: https://www.regulations.gov.
The public meeting will convene at 9:00 a.m. on Wednesday, February
22, 2017, at the Clovis Veterans Memorial District Building, 808 Fourth
Street, Clovis, California 93612. Additional meeting information can be
found at www.ams.usda.gov/caorder.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Erin Taylor, Acting Director, Order
Formulation and Enforcement Division, USDA/AMS/Dairy Program, STOP
0231, Room 2969-S, 1400 Independence Ave. SW., Washington, DC 20250-
0231, (202) 720-7311, email address: erin.taylor@ams.usda.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This recommended decision finds that a FMMO
for California would provide more orderly marketing conditions in the
marketing area, and therefore promulgation of a California FMMO is
warranted. The record is replete with discussion from most parties on
whether disorderly marketing conditions exist, or are even needed, to
warrant promulgation of a California FMMO. FMMOs are authorized by the
Agricultural Marketing Agreement Act of 1937, as amended (7 U.S.C. 601-
674 and 7253) (AMAA). The declared policy of the AMAA makes no mention
of ``disorder,'' and this recommended decision finds that disorderly
marketing conditions are not a requirement for an order to be
promulgated. The standard for FMMO promulgation is to ``. . . establish
and maintain such orderly marketing conditions . . .,'' (7 U.S.C.
602(4) and this recommended decision finds that the California FMMO
recommended decision meets that standard.
AMS has considered all record evidence presented at the hearing, as
well as the arguments and proposed findings submitted in post-hearing
briefs, to formulate this Recommended Decision. The package of
provisions recommended in this decision reflect California marketing
conditions, while still adhering to fundamental FMMO principles that
have historically helped to maintain orderly marketing conditions,
ensured a sufficient supply of pure and wholesome milk, and been in the
public interest.
A FMMO is a regulation issued by the Secretary of Agriculture that
places certain requirements on the handling of milk in the area it
covers. Each FMMO is established under the authority of the AMAA. A
FMMO requires handlers of milk for a marketing area pay minimum class
prices according to how the milk is used. These prices are established
under each FMMO after a public hearing where evidence is received on
the supply and demand conditions for milk in the market. A FMMO
requires that payments for milk be pooled and paid to individual
farmers or cooperative associations of farmers on the basis of a
uniform or average price. Thus, all eligible dairy farmers (producers)
share in the marketwide use-values of milk by regulated handlers.
This decision recommends the establishment of a FMMO to regulate
the handling of milk in California. Where appropriate, the recommended
California FMMO proposes adoption of uniform provisions that are
contained in the 10 current FMMOs. These uniform provisions include,
but are not limited to, product classification, end-product price
formulas, Class I differential structure, and producer-handler
definition.\1\ This decision recognizes the unique market structure of
the California dairy industry through tailored performance-based
standards to determine eligibility for pool participation.
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\1\ References to Class I, Class II, Class III and Class IV
refer to products classified in those classes based on uniform FMMO
provisions.
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As in all current FMMOs, California handlers regulated by a
California FMMO would be responsible for accurate reporting of all milk
movements and uses, and would be required to make timely payments to
producers. The order would be administered by the United States
Department of Agriculture (USDA) through a Market Administrator, who
would provide essential marketing services, such as laboratory testing,
account verification, information collection and publication, and
producer payment enforcement.
A unique feature of the proposed order is a provision for the
recognition of the California quota value specified in the California
quota program currently administered by the California Department of
Food and Agriculture (CDFA). This decision finds that the California
quota program should remain a function of CDFA in whatever manner CDFA
deems appropriate. Should CDFA continue to use producer monies to fund
the quota program, this decision finds that the proper recognition of
quota values within a California FMMO, as provided for in the
Agriculture Act of 2014 (2014 Farm Bill) (Pub. L. 113-79, sec.
1410(d)), is to permit an authorized deduction from payment to
producers, in an amount determined and announced by CDFA.
In conjunction with this Recommended Decision, AMS conducted a
Regulatory Economic Impact Analysis to determine the potential impact
of regulating California milk handlers under a FMMO on the milk supply,
product demand and
[[Page 10635]]
prices, and milk allocation in California and throughout the United
States. As part of the analysis, a regional econometric model was used
to project deviations from the USDA Agricultural Baseline Projections
to 2025 \2\ under the provisions of the proposed order. The full text
of the Regulatory Economic Impact Analysis Report and accompanying
documentation may be accessed at www.regulations.gov or
www.ams.usda.gov/caorder.
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\2\ U.S. Department of Agriculture, Office of the Chief
Economist, World Agricultural Outlook Board, Interagency
Agricultural Projections Committee, 2016. Long-term Projections
Report OCE-2016-1.
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Prior documents in this proceeding:
Notice of Hearing: Issued July 27, 2015; published August 6, 2015
(80 FR 47210);
Notice To Reconvene Hearing: Issued September 25, 2015; published
September 30, 2015 (80 FR 58636).
This administrative action is governed by the provisions of
Sections 556 and 557 of Title 5 of the United States Code and is
therefore excluded from the requirements of Executive Order 12866.
The provisions of the marketing agreement and order proposed herein
have been reviewed under Executive Order 12988, Civil Justice Reform.
They are not intended to have a retroactive effect. If adopted, the
proposed order would not preempt any state or local laws, regulations,
or policies, unless they present an irreconcilable conflict with this
rule.
AMS 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.
The AMAA provides that administrative proceedings must be exhausted
before parties may file suit in court. Under 7 U.S.C. 608c(15)(A) of
the AMAA, any handler subject to an order may request modification or
exemption from such order by filing with USDA a petition stating that
the order, any provision of the order, or any obligation imposed in
connection with the order is not in accordance with the law. A handler
is afforded the opportunity for a hearing on the petition. After a
hearing, USDA would rule on the petition. The AMAA provides that the
district court of the United States in any district in which the
handler is an inhabitant, or has its principal place of business, has
jurisdiction in equity to review USDA's ruling on the petition,
provided a bill in equity is filed not later than 20 days after the
date of the entry of the ruling.
Civil Rights Impact Analysis
AMS has reviewed this rule in accordance with Departmental
Regulation 4300-4--Civil Rights Impact Analysis, to identify and
address potential impacts the proposal might have on any protected
groups of people. After a careful review of the rule's intent and
provisions, AMS has determined that this rule would not limit or reduce
the ability of individuals in any protected classes to participate in
the proposed FMMO, or to enjoy the anticipated benefits of the proposed
program. Any impacts on dairy farmers and processors arising from
implementation of this proposed rule are not expected to be
disproportionate for members of any protected group on a prohibited
basis.
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
Pursuant to the requirements set forth in the Regulatory
Flexibility Act (RFA) (5 U.S.C. 601-612), AMS has considered the
economic impact of this action on small entities. Accordingly, AMS has
prepared this initial regulatory flexibility analysis.
The purpose of the RFA is to fit regulatory actions to the scale of
business subject to such actions so that small businesses will not be
unduly or disproportionately burdened. Small dairy farm businesses have
been defined by the Small Business Administration (SBA) (13 CFR
121.601) as those businesses having annual gross receipts of less than
$750,000. SBA's definition of small agricultural service firms, which
includes handlers that would be regulated under the proposed California
FMMO, varies depending on the product manufactured. Small fluid milk
and ice cream manufacturers are defined as having 1,000 or fewer
employees. Small butter and dry or condensed dairy product
manufacturers are defined as having 750 or fewer employees. Small
cheese manufacturers are defined as having 1,250 or fewer employees.
For the purpose of determining which California dairy farms are
``small businesses,'' the $750,000 per year criterion was used to
establish a production guideline that equates to approximately 315,000
pounds of milk per month. Although this guideline does not factor in
additional monies that may be received by dairy farmers, it is a
standard encompassing most ``small'' dairy farms. For the purpose of
determining a handler's size, if the plant is part of a larger company
operating multiple plants that collectively exceed the employee limit
for that type of manufacturing, the plant is considered a large
business even if the local plant has fewer than the defined number of
employees.
Interested persons were invited to present evidence at the hearing
on the probable regulatory and informational impact of the proposed
California FMMO on small businesses. Specific evidence on the number of
large and small dairy farms in California (above and below the
threshold of $750,000 in annual sales) was not presented at the
hearing. However, data compiled by CDFA\3\ suggests that between 5 and
15 percent of California dairy farms would be considered small business
entities. No comparable data for dairy product manufacturers was
available.
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\3\ CDFA, California Dairy Review, Volume 19, Issue 9, September
2015.
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Record evidence indicates that implementing the proposed California
FMMO would not impose a disproportionate burden on small businesses.
Currently, the California dairy industry is regulated by a California
State Order (CSO) that is administered and enforced by CDFA. While the
CSO and FMMOs have differences that will be discussed later in this
decision, they both maintain similar classified pricing and marketwide
pooling functions. Therefore, it is not expected that the proposed
regulatory change will have a significant impact on California small
businesses.
The record evidence does indicate that while the program is likely
to impose some costs on the regulated parties, those costs would be
outweighed by the benefits expected to accrue to the California dairy
industry. AMS prepared a Regulatory Economic Impact Analysis to study
the possible impacts of the proposed California FMMO. The analysis may
be viewed in conjunction with this recommended decision (Docket No.
AMS-DA-14-0095) at www.regulations.gov.
California Dairy Market Background
The record shows that the California dairy industry accounts for
approximately 20 percent of the nation's milk supply. While its 39
million residents are concentrated in the state's coastal areas, the
majority of California's dairy farms are located in the interior
valleys, frequently at some distance from milk processing plants and
consumer population centers.
CDFA has defined and established distinct regulations for Northern
and Southern California dairy regions.\4\
[[Page 10636]]
According to data published by CDFA,\5\ well over 90 percent of the
state's approximately 41 billion pounds of milk for 2015 was produced
in the Northern California region. The five leading milk production
counties in 2015 were Tulare, Merced, Kings, Stanislaus, and Kern,
together accounting for approximately 73 percent of the state's milk.
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\4\ CDFA, Stabilization and Marketing Plan for Market Milk, as
Amended, for the Northern California Marketing Area.
\5\ CDFA, California Dairy Statistics Annual 2015.
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According to CDFA, there were 1,438 dairy farms in California in
2015. Of those, 1,338 were located in Northern California, and 100 were
in Southern California. The statewide average number of cows per dairy
was 1,215; in Northern California, the average herd size was 1,235
cows, and in Southern California, 952 cows. Average milk production for
the state's 1.75 million cows was 23,382 pounds in 2015.
According to record evidence, 132 handlers reported milk receipts
to CDFA for at least one month during 2015. A CDFA February 2015 list
of California dairy product processing plants by type of product
produced \6\ shows that 35 California plants processed Class 1
products; 75 plants processed Class 2 and 3 products; 18 plants
processed Class 4a products; and 64 plants processed Class 4b
products.\7\ Some plants processed products in more than one class.
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\6\ CDFA, Milk and Dairy Food Safety Branch (MDFS). https://www.cdfa.ca.gov/ahfss/Milk_and_Dairy_Food_Safety/#Plants.
\7\ References to Class 1, Class 2, Class 3, Class 4a and Class
4b refer to products classified in those categories based on the
CSO.
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CDFA reported \8\ that approximately 99 percent of California's
2015 milk production was market grade (Grade A), and the rest was
manufacturing grade (Grade B). Thirteen percent of the milk pooled
under the CSO was utilized by California processors as Class 1 (fluid
milk). Nine percent was utilized for Classes 2 and 3 (soft and frozen
dairy products), 32 percent was utilized for Class 4a (butter and dried
milk powders), and 46 percent was utilized for Class 4b (cheese).
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\8\ CDFA, California Dairy Statistics Annual 2015.
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According to CDFA, total Class 1 sales in California were
approximately 662 million gallons in 2015. Record evidence shows that
annual California Class 1 sales outside the state averaged 22 million
gallons for the five years preceding 2015.
The record shows that for the five-year period from 2010 through
2014, an average of 230 million pounds of California bulk milk products
were transferred to out-of-state plants for processing each year.
During the same period, an average of 633 million pounds of milk from
outside the state was received and reported by California pool plants
each year.
Impact on Small Businesses
This rule proposes to establish a FMMO in California similar to the
10 existing FMMOs in the national system. The California dairy industry
is currently regulated under the CSO, which is similar to the
recommended FMMO in most respects. California handlers currently report
milk receipts and utilization to CDFA, which calculates handler prices
based on component values derived from finished product sales surveys.
Likewise, FMMO handlers report milk receipts and utilization to the
Market Administrators, who calculate handlers' pool obligations
according to price formulas that incorporate component prices based on
end product sales values. Under both programs, the value of handlers'
milk is pooled, and pool revenues are shared by all the pooled
producers. Thus, transitioning to the FMMO is expected to have only a
minimal impact on the reporting and regulatory responsibilities for
large or small handlers, who are already complying with similar CSO
regulations.
Pricing
Under the recommended California FMMO, uniform FMMO end-product
price formulas would replace the CDFA price formulas currently used to
calculate handler milk prices. FMMO end-product price formulas
incorporate component prices derived from national end-product sales
surveys conducted by AMS. Use of price formulas based on national
product sales would permit California farmers to receive prices for
pooled milk reflective of the national market for commodity products
for which their milk is utilized. Consistent with the current FMMOs,
California FMMO Class I prices would be computed using the higher of
the Class III or IV advance prices announced the previous month, and
would be adjusted by the Class I differential for the county where the
plant is located.\9\
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\9\ FMMOs have four classifications of milk: Class I--fluid milk
products; Class II--fluid cream products, soft ``spoonable''
cheeses, ice cream, and yogurt; Class III--hard cheeses and
spreadable cheese such as cream cheese; Class IV--butter and dried
milk products.
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Regulated minimum prices, especially for milk used in cheese
manufacturing, are likely to be higher than what handlers would pay
under the CSO. However, pooling regulations under the proposed FMMO
would allow handlers to elect not to pool milk used in manufacturing.
This option would be available to both large and small manufacturing
handlers.
Dairy farmers whose milk is pooled on the order would receive a pro
rata share of the pool revenues through the California FMMO uniform
blend price. The FMMO would not provide for the quota and non-quota
milk pricing tiers found under the CSO. Under the recommended FMMO,
regulated handlers would be allowed to deduct monies, in an amount
determined and announced by CDFA, from blend prices paid to California
dairy farmers for pooled milk and send those monies to CDFA to
administer the quota program.
These changes are expected to affect producers and handlers of all
sizes, but are not expected to be disproportionate for small entities.
Producer-Handlers
The record shows that there are four producer-handlers \10\ in
California whose Class 1 milk production is all or partially exempt
from CSO pricing and pooling by virtue of their ``exempt quota''
holdings, representing approximately 21 million pounds of milk each
month. It is likely that these four entities would become fully
regulated under the recommended FMMO and accountable to the marketwide
pool for all of their Class I sales in the marketing area. By
accounting to the pool for all their Class I sales in the marketing
area, the value of the marketwide pool is expected to increase,
benefiting most other large and small producers. The recommended
California FMMO makes no provision for exempting large producer-
handlers from pricing and pooling regulations under the order.
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\10\ A producer-handler is a dairy farmer who processes and
distributes their own-farm milk into dairy products.
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The evidentiary record shows that several smaller California
producer-handlers, whose production volume exceeds the threshold to
receive an exemption from the CSO's pricing and pooling regulations,
would likely qualify as producer-handlers under the recommended
FMMO.\11\
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\11\ The CSO exempts producer-handlers with sales averaging less
than 500 gallons of milk per day on an annual basis and who
distribute 95 percent of their production to retail or wholesale
outlets.
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Interstate Commerce
The evidentiary record indicates that milk in interstate commerce,
which the CSO does not have authority to regulate, would be regulated
under the FMMO. Currently, California handlers who purchase milk
produced outside the state do not account to the CSO marketwide pool
for that milk. Record
[[Page 10637]]
evidence shows approximately 425 million pounds of milk from outside
the state was processed into Class 1 products at California processing
plants during 2014.
Under the recommended FMMO, all Class I milk processed and
distributed in the marketing area would be subject to FMMO pricing and
pooling regulations, regardless of its origin. Revenues from Class 1
sales not currently regulated would accrue to the California FMMO pool
and would be shared with all producers who are pooled on the California
FMMO. If California handlers elect to continue processing out-of-state
milk into Class I products under the FMMO, they would be required to
pay the order's classified minimum price for that milk. Those
additional revenues would be pooled and would benefit large and small
producers who participate in the pool. Both large and small out-of-
state producers who ship milk to pool plants in California would
receive the California FMMO uniform blend price for their milk.
Classification and Fortification
Dairy product classification under the CSO and the recommended FMMO
is similar, but not identical. The table below compares CSO and FMMO
product classes.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
CSO class Equivalent FMMO class
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class 1................................... Class I.
Class 2 and 3............................. Class II.
Class 4b.................................. Class III.
Class 4a.................................. Class IV.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Under the proposed California FMMO, the classification of certain
California products would change to align with standard FMMO
classifications:
Reassigning buttermilk from CSO Class 2 to FMMO Class I
Reassigning half and half from CSO Class 1 to FMMO Class II
Reassigning eggnog from CSO Class 2 to FMMO Class I
There are numerous instances where the CSO classifies products
based on product type and location of where the product is sold.\12\
The proposed California FMMO would classify all products based solely
on product type.
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\12\ CDFA, Classification of Dairy Products. https://www.cdfa.ca.gov/dairy/pdf/PRDCLASS.pdf.
Under the recommended FMMO, California handlers would no longer
receive credits for fluid milk fortification. Instead, accounting for
fortification would be uniform with other FMMOs, as the classification
of the fluid milk equivalent of the milk solids used to fortify fluid
milk products would be classified as Class IV and the increased volume
of Class I product due to fortification would be classified as Class I.
The FMMO system accounts for fortification differently from the CSO,
but the record does not indicate the net impact of this change.
However, the impact is not expected to disproportionately affect small
entities.
Transportation Credits
The recommended FMMO does not contain a transportation credit
program to encourage shipments to Class 1, 2 and 3 plants as is
currently provided for in the CSO. This decision recommends that
producer payments be adjusted to reflect the applicable producer
location adjustment for the handler location where their milk is
received, thus providing the incentive to producers to supply Class I
plants. As producers are responsible for finding a market for their
milk and consequently bear the cost of transporting their milk to a
plant, the record of this proceeding does not support reducing the
producers' value of the marketwide pool through the payment of
transportation credits to handlers. This change is not expected to
disproportionately impact small business entities.
Summary
This decision finds that adoption of the recommended California
FMMO would promote more orderly marketing of milk in interstate
commerce. Classified milk prices under the recommended order would
reflect national prices for manufactured products and local prices for
fluid milk products, fostering greater equality for California
producers and handlers in the markets where they compete. Under the
recommended order, handlers would be assured a uniform cost for raw
milk, and producers would receive uniform payments for raw milk,
regardless of its use. Small dairy farmers and handlers are not
expected to be disproportionately impacted by the transition from CSO
to FMMO regulations.
Paperwork Reduction Act
In accordance with the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C.
Chapter 35) (Act), this notice announces AMS' intention to request
approval from the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) for a new
information collection totaling 2138.35 hours for the initial set-up
and annual reporting and recordkeeping requirements contained in this
proposed rule for the promulgation of a California FMMO.
OMB previously approved information collection requirements
associated with all other FMMOs and assigned OMB control number 0581-
0032. This proposed rule would change certain aspects of the
information collection and recordkeeping requirements previously
approved. Therefore, a NEW information collection is required to carry
out the requirements of this proposed rule. AMS intends to merge this
new information collection, upon OMB approval, into the approved OMB
No. 0581-0032 collection.
Below, AMS has described and estimated the annual burden for
entities to prepare and maintain information necessary to participate
in this proposed California FMMO. As with all mandatory regulatory
programs, reporting and recordkeeping burdens are periodically reviewed
to reduce information requirements and duplication by industry and
public sector agencies. The Act, as amended, provides authority for
this action.
Title: Report Forms Under a California Federal Milk Marketing Order
(From Milk Handlers and Milk Marketing Cooperatives).
OMB Number: 0581-NEW.
Expiration Date of Approval: Three years from date of approval.
Type of Request: This is a NEW collection.
Abstract: FMMO regulations (7 CFR parts 1000-1199) authorized under
the AMAA require milk handlers to report in detail the receipts and
utilization of milk and milk products handled at each of their plants
that are regulated by a Federal order. The data are needed to
administer the classified pricing system and related requirements of
each Federal order.
A FMMO is a regulation issued by the Secretary of Agriculture that
places certain requirements on the handling of milk in the area it
covers. Each FMMO is established under the authority of the AMAA. The
FMMO requires handlers of milk for a marketing area pay not less than
certain minimum class prices according to how the milk is used. These
prices are established under each FMMO after a public hearing where
evidence is received on the supply and demand conditions for milk in
the market. A FMMO requires payments for milk be pooled and paid to
individual farmers or cooperative associations of farmers on the basis
of a uniform or average price. Thus, all eligible dairy farmers
(producers) share in the marketwide use-values of milk by regulated
handlers.
[[Page 10638]]
FMMOs help ensure adequate supplies of milk and minimum returns to
producers. The FMMOs also provide for the public dissemination of
market statistics and other information for the benefit of producers,
handlers, and consumers.
Formal rulemaking amendments to the FMMOs must be approved in
referenda conducted by the Secretary.
During 2015, 1,438 California dairy farmers produced over 40.9
billion pounds of milk. This volume represents approximately 20 percent
of all milk marketed in the U.S. The value of this milk delivered to
CSO regulated handlers at minimum CSO classified prices was over $3
billion. Producer deliveries of milk used in Class 1 products (mainly
fluid milk products) totaled 13 percent of the State's market
utilization.
Under the proposed California FMMO, an estimated 3.4 billion pounds
of milk would be pooled, making it the largest FMMO pool. Class I
volume pooled would approximate 438 million pounds each month, making
it the third largest.
Each FMMO is administered by a Market Administrator. The Market
Administrator is authorized to levy assessments on regulated handlers
to carry out their duties and responsibilities under the FMMOs.
Additional duties of the Market Administrator are to prescribe reports
required of each handler, to assure handlers properly account for milk
and milk products, and to assure such handlers pay producers and
associations of producers according to the provisions of the FMMO. The
Market Administrator employs a staff that verifies handlers' reports by
examining their records to determine that required payments are made to
producers. Most reports required from handlers are submitted monthly to
the Market Administrator.
The forms used by the Market Administrators are required by the
respective FMMOs authorized by the AMAA. The forms are used to
establish the quantity of milk received by handlers, the pooling status
of the handlers, the class use of milk by the handler, and the
butterfat content and amounts of other components of the milk.
The forms covered under this information collection require the
minimum information necessary to effectively carry out the requirements
of the proposed California FMMO, and their use is necessary to fulfill
the intent of the AMAA as expressed in the FMMO and in the rules and
regulations proposed under the FMMO. The information collected will
only be used by authorized employees of the Market Administrator and
authorized representatives of the USDA, including AMS Dairy Program
staff.
Some of the established forms under ``Report Forms under Federal
Milk Orders (From Milk Handlers and Milk Marketing Cooperatives)'' OMB
No. 0581-0032 will be used and modified for this proposed order.
However, the burden shown in this section is for this collection only.
Upon approval, USDA will request to merge this burden into the
currently approved OMB No. 0581-0032. All separate burdens will become
all inclusive.
Estimate of Burden: Public reporting burden for this collection of
information is estimated to average 1.06 hours per response.
Respondents: Milk handlers and milk marketing cooperatives.
Estimated Number of Respondents: 55.
Estimated Total Annual Responses: 2,022.
Estimated Number of Responses per Respondent: 36.76.
Estimated Total Annual Burden on Respondents: 2138.35.
Comments are invited on: (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; (3) ways to enhance the quality,
utility, and clarity of the information to be collected; and (4) ways
to minimize the burden of the collection of information on those who
are to respond, including the use of appropriate automated, electronic,
mechanical, or other technological collection techniques or other forms
of information technology.
All responses to this notice will be summarized and included in the
request for OMB approval. All comments will become a matter of public
record. A 60-day period is provided to comment on the information
collection burden.
Preliminary Statement
Notice is hereby given of the filing with the Hearing Clerk of this
Recommended Decision with respect to the proposed marketing agreement
and order regulating the handling of milk in California.
This Recommended Decision is issued pursuant to the provisions of
the AMAA and the applicable rules of practice and procedure governing
the formulation of marketing agreements and orders (7 CFR part 900).
The proposed marketing agreement and order are authorized under 7
U.S.C. 608(c).
The proposed marketing agreement and order are based on the record
of a public hearing held September 22 through November 18, 2015, in
Clovis, California. The hearing was held to receive evidence on four
proposals submitted by dairy farmers, handlers, and other interested
parties. Notice of this hearing was published in the Federal Register
on August 6, 2015.
Ninety-eight witnesses testified over the course of the 40-day
hearing. Witnesses provided a broad overview of the history and
complexity of the California dairy industry, and submitted 194 exhibits
containing supporting data, analyses, and historical information.
The material issues presented on the record of hearing are as
follows:
1. Whether the handling of milk in the proposed marketing area is
in the current of interstate commerce, or directly burdens, obstructs,
or affects interstate commerce in milk or its products;
2. Whether economic and marketing conditions in California show a
need for a Federal marketing order that would tend to effectuate the
declared policy of the Act;
3. If an order is issued, what its provisions should be with
respect to:
a. Handlers to be regulated and milk to be priced and pooled under
the order;
b. Classification of milk, and assignment of receipts to classes of
utilization;
c. Pricing of milk;
d. Distribution of proceeds to producers; and
e. Administrative provisions.
Findings and Conclusions
The findings and conclusions on the material issues are based on
the record of the hearing. Discussions are organized by topic,
recognizing inevitable overlap in some areas. Topics are addressed in
the following order:
1. Regulatory Comparison
2. Overview of Proposals
3. Justification for a California FMMO
4. California Quota Program Recognition
5. Definitions and Uniform Provisions
6. Classification
7. Pricing
8. Pooling
9. Transportation Credits
10. Miscellaneous and Administrative Provisions
1. Regulatory Comparison
The purpose of the following section is to provide a general
description and comparison of the major features of the California
state dairy regulatory
[[Page 10639]]
framework and the FMMO system as provided in the evidentiary record. A
more detailed discussion of each issue is provided in the appropriate
section of this decision.
California State Order
Currently, milk marketing in California is regulated by the CDFA.
The CSO is codified in the Pooling Plan for Market Milk, as amended,
and in two Stabilization and Marketing Plan(s) for Market Milk, as
amended, for the Northern and Southern California marketing areas.\13\
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\13\ Chapter 2, Part 3, Division 21 and Chapter 3, Part 3,
Division 21 of the California Food and Agriculture Code.
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Quota
The California quota program is a state-administered producer
program that entitles the quota holder to $0.195 per pound of solids-
not-fat above the CSO base and overbase price of milk.\14\ The quota
premium is funded through a deduction from the CSO marketwide pool
before the CSO overbase price is calculated. The quota program requires
quota holders to deliver milk to a pool plant at least once every 60
days. Quota can be bought and sold, and according to record evidence,
approximately 58 percent of California dairy farms owned some volume of
quota in 2015.
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\14\ The hearing record reveals that the $0.195 per pound
solids-non-fat equates to a $1.70 per cwt of milk quota premium.
Additionally, under current CSO provisions, base and overbase prices
are equal.
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Classification
The CSO provides for the pricing of five classified use values of
milk. In general, Class 1 is milk used in fluid milk products; Class 2
is milk used in heavy cream, cottage cheese, yogurt, and sterilized
products; Class 3 is milk used in ice cream and frozen products; Class
4a is milk used in butter and dry milk products, such as nonfat dry
milk; and Class 4b is milk used in cheese--other than cottage cheese--
and whey products.
Pricing
The CSO utilizes an end-product pricing system to determine
classified prices for raw milk produced and manufactured in the State
of California. Class 1, 4a, and 4b prices are announced monthly. Class
2 and 3 prices are announced bi-monthly. Prices for all five milk
classes are component-based. Three components of milk are used to
determine prices: Butterfat (fat); solids-not-fat (SNF), which includes
protein and lactose; and a fluid carrier (used in only the Class 1
price).
The CSO determines milk component prices based on commodity market
prices obtained from the Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME), the AMS
Dairy Market News Western Dry Whey--Mostly (WDW-Mostly) price series,
and the announced nonfat dry milk (NFDM) California Weighted Average
Price (CWAP), which is determined by CDFA through weekly surveys of
California manufacturing plants.
The price for milk used in cheese manufacturing (CSO Class 4b) is a
central issue in this proceeding. The Class 4b price is announced
monthly and utilizes average commodity market prices for block Cheddar
cheese, butter, and dry skim whey to determine the Class 4b component
values. The average CME prices for butter and 40-pound Cheddar blocks
are adjusted by f.o.b. price adjusters, which are designed to represent
the difference between the CME price and the price California
manufacturers actually receive. The CME butter price is also reduced by
$0.10 per pound to derive the value of whey butter as it relates to
cheese processing. The value of dry skim whey is determined through a
sliding scale that provides a ``per hundredweight (cwt)'' value based
on a series of announced WDW-Mostly per pound value ranges. The sliding
scale determines dry whey's contribution to the Class 4b price, with a
floor of $0.25 per cwt and a ceiling of $0.75 per cwt when the WDW-
Mostly price equals or exceeds $0.60 per pound.
The CSO pricing system has a number of features worth highlighting.
First, under the CSO, handlers must pay at least minimum classified
prices for all Grade A milk purchased from California dairy farmers,
regardless of whether the milk is pooled on the CSO. Additionally,
Class 1 processors may claim credits against their pool obligations to
offset the cost of fortifying fluid milk to meet the State-mandated
solids content standards.
The classified use values of all the milk pooled on the CSO are
aggregated, and producers are paid on the fat and SNF component levels
in their raw milk. Producers are paid on the basis of their allocated
quota (if applicable), base, and overbase production for the month.
While the CSO pricing formulas have changed over time, in their current
form, the base and overbase prices are the same. Generally, the quota
price is the overbase price plus the $1.70 per cwt quota premium.
Pooling
Almost all California-produced milk received by California pool
plants is pooled on the CSO, with some exceptions. Grade B milk is
neither pooled nor subject to minimum prices. Manufacturing plants that
do not make any Class 1 or 2 products can opt out of the pool, however,
they are still required to pay announced CSO classified minimum prices
for Grade A milk received. The requirement that quota holders must
deliver milk to a pool plant at least once every 60 days tends to limit
the amount of Grade A milk not pooled on the CSO. The decision not to
pool milk in California carries with it a stipulation that the plant
may not repool for 12 months after opting not to pool, and after
repooling, a plant cannot opt out of pooling for 12 months.
Entities recognized as producer-handlers under the CSO may be
exempt from pooling some or all of their milk. Producer-handlers are
dairy farmers who also process and distribute their dairy products.
Fully exempt (``Option 66'') producer-handlers have minimal production
volumes and are exempt from the pricing and pooling provisions of the
CSO. Producer-handlers who own exempt quota (``Option 70'') do not
account to the CSO marketwide pool for the volume of Class 1 milk
covered by their exempt quota.
The State of California cannot regulate interstate commerce, and
therefore milk from out-of-state producers cannot be regulated by the
CSO. While the record reflects that California handlers typically pay
for out-of-state milk at a price reflective of the receiving plant's
utilization, those prices are not regulated or enforced by the CSO.
Transportation Credits
The CSO provides transportation credits to producers for farm-to-
plant Class 1, 2 and 3 milk movements between designated supply zones
and plants with more than 50 percent Class 1, 2 and/or 3 utilization in
designated demand zones. The CSO also provides for transportation
allowances to handlers for plant-to-plant milk movements.
Classification
Whereas the CSO designates five classes of milk utilization, FMMOs
provide for four classes of milk utilization. FMMO Class I is milk used
in fluid milk products. Class II is milk used to produce fluid cream
products, soft ``spoonable'' products like cottage cheese, ice cream,
sour cream, and yogurt, and other products such as kefir, baking mixes,
infant formula and meal replacements, certain prepared foods, and
ingredients in other prepared food products. Class III is milk used to
[[Page 10640]]
produce spreadable cheeses like cream cheese, and hard cheeses, like
Cheddar, that can be crumbled, grated, or shredded. Class IV is milk
used to produce butter, evaporated or sweetened condensed milk in
consumer-style packages, and dry milk products.
Federal Milk Marketing Orders
A FMMO is a regulation issued by the Secretary of Agriculture
(Secretary) that places certain requirements on the handling of milk in
a defined geographic marketing area. FMMOs are authorized by the AMAA.
The declared policy of the AMAA is to ``. . . establish and maintain
such orderly marketing conditions for agricultural commodities in
interstate commerce . . .'' (7 U.S.C. 602(1)) . The principle means of
meeting the objectives of the FMMO program are through the use of
classified pricing of milk and the marketwide pooling of returns.
Pricing
Like the CSO, the FMMO program currently uses end-product price
formulas based on the wholesale prices of finished products to
determine the minimum classified prices handlers pay for raw milk in
the four classes of utilization. However, the FMMO pricing system has
some notable differences. While the CSO announces some classified
prices on a bi-monthly basis, FMMOs announce prices for all four milk
classes monthly. FMMOs use four components of milk to determine prices:
Butterfat, protein, nonfat solids and other solids.
Like the CSO, the FMMO determines component prices based on
commodity prices. However, AMS administers the Dairy Product Mandatory
Reporting Program (DPMRP) to survey weekly wholesale prices of four
manufactured dairy products (cheese, butter, NFDM and dry whey), and
releases weekly average survey prices in the National Dairy Product
Sales Report (NDPSR).\15\ The FMMO product-price formulas use these
surveyed prices to determine the component values in raw milk.
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\15\ Official Notice is taken of the Notice of Equivalent Price
Series: 77 FR 22282. The National Dairy Product Sales Report was
deemed as equivalent to the price series previously released by the
National Agricultural Statistics Service.
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As referenced previously, a main feature of this proceeding is the
pricing of milk used for cheese manufacturing (FMMO Class III). The
FMMO pricing system determines the Class III value from DPMRP surveyed
butter, cheese, and dry whey prices. The FMMO does not utilize a
sliding scale to determine the value of whey that contributes to the
Class III price.
Unlike the CSO, FMMOs do not provide for a tiered system of
producer payments. A uniform blend price is computed for each FMMO
reflecting the use of all milk in each marketwide pool. A blend price
is paid for all milk that is pooled on the FMMO, adjusted for location.
In six of the FMMOs, producers are paid for the pounds of butterfat,
pounds of protein, pounds of other solids, and cwt of milk pooled. The
cwt price is known as the producer price differential (PPD) and
reflects the producer's pro rata share of the value of Class I, Class
II, and Class IV uses in the pool relative to Class III value. In the
other four FMMOs, producers are paid on a butterfat and skim basis.
Pooling
Inclusion in the FMMO marketwide pool carries with it an obligation
to be available to serve the fluid market with necessary milk supplies
throughout the year. In the FMMO system, participation in the pool is
mandatory for distributing plants that process Grade A milk into Class
I products sold in a FMMO marketing area. Handlers of manufacturing
milk (Class II, III or IV) have the option of pooling, and pool
eligibility is based on performance standards specific to each FMMO.
FMMOs recognize the unique business structures of producer-
handlers, and exempt them from the pricing and pooling regulations of
the orders based on size. Producer-handler exemptions under FMMOs are
limited to those vertically-integrated entities that produce and
distribute no more than three million pounds of packaged fluid milk
products each month.
Unlike the CSO, FMMOs are authorized to regulate the interstate
commerce connected with milk marketing. Thus, there is no
differentiated regulatory treatment for milk produced outside of a FMMO
marketing area boundary. All eligible milk is pooled and priced in the
same manner, regardless of its source.
Transportation Credits
The Appalachian and Southeast FMMOs provide for transportation
credits to offset a handler's cost of hauling supplemental milk to
Class I markets. During deficit months, handlers can apply for
transportation credits to offset the cost of supplemental milk
deliveries from outside the marketing area to meet the Class I demand
of FMMO handlers. The most significant difference from the CSO is that
the FMMO transportation credits described are not paid from the
marketwide pool. Instead, they are paid from separate funds obtained
through monthly assessments on handlers' Class I producer milk. The
exception is the Upper Midwest FMMO, which provides transportation
credits on plant-to-plant milk movements paid from the marketwide pool.
2. Overview of Proposals
Four proposals were published in the Hearing Notice of this
proceeding. Dairy Farmers of America, Inc., Land O'Lakes, Inc., and
California Dairies, Inc., jointly submitted Proposal 1. Dairy Farmers
of America, Inc. (DFA), is a national dairy-farmer owned cooperative
with approximately 14,000 members and several processing facilities
located throughout the United States, with products marketed both
nationally and internationally. Within California, DFA represents 260
members and operates three processing facilities. Land O'Lakes (LOL) is
a national farmer-owned cooperative with over 2,200 dairy-farmer
members. LOL has processing facilities in the Upper Midwest, the
eastern United States, and the State of California, with products
marketed nationally and internationally. Within California, LOL
represents 200 dairy-farmer members and operates three processing
facilities. California Dairies, Inc. (CDI), is a California based
dairy-farmer owned cooperative with 390 dairy-farmer members, six
processing facilities in California, and national and international
product sales. Combined, DFA, LOL, and CDI (Cooperatives) market
approximately 75 percent of the milk produced in California.
Proposal 1 seeks to establish a California FMMO that incorporates
the same dairy product classification and pricing provisions as those
used throughout the FMMO system. Proposal 1 also includes unique
pooling provisions, described as ``inclusive'' throughout the
proceeding that would pool the majority of the milk produced in
California each month, while also allowing for the pooling of milk
produced outside of the marketing area, if it meets specific pooling
provisions. The proposal includes fortification and transportation
credits similar to those currently provided by the CSO. Lastly,
Proposal 1 provides for payment of the California quota program quota
values from the marketwide pool before the FMMO blend price is computed
each month.
Proposal 2 was submitted on behalf of the Dairy Institute of
California (Institute). The Institute is a California trade association
representing proprietary fluid milk processors and cheese
manufacturers, and cultured and
[[Page 10641]]
frozen dairy products manufacturers in 38 plants throughout California.
Institute plants process 70 percent of the fluid milk products, 85
percent of the cultured and frozen dairy products, and 90 percent of
the cheese manufactured in the state. The Institute's first position is
that a California FMMO should not be promulgated. However, should USDA
find justification for promulgation, the Institute supports Proposal 2.
Proposal 2 incorporates the same dairy product classification
provisions used throughout the FMMO system, as well as pooling
provisions that are consistent with those found in other FMMOs. The
Proposal 2 pooling provisions require the pooling of Class I milk, but
the pooling of milk used in manufactured products is optional. Proposal
2 includes fortification and transportation credits similar to those
currently provided by the CSO. It also includes an additional shrinkage
allowance for extended shelf life (ESL) products above that provided in
the FMMO system. Lastly, Proposal 2 recognizes quota value by allowing
producers to opt out of the quota program, thus receiving a FMMO blend
price reflective of the market's utilization. Under Proposal 2,
producers who remain in the quota program would have their blend price
monies transferred to CDFA and redistributed according to their quota
and non-quota holdings.
Proposal 3 was submitted on behalf of the California Producer
Handlers Association (CPHA). CPHA is an association of four producer-
handlers: Foster Farms Dairy, Inc. (Foster), Hollandia Dairy, Inc.,
Producers Dairy Foods, Inc. (Producers), and Rockview Dairies, Inc.
(Rockview). CPHA members own their respective dairy farms and process
that farm milk, as well as the milk of other dairy farms, for delivery
to consumers. CPHA members own exempt quota, which entitles them to
exemption from CSO pricing and pooling provisions for the volume of
Class 1 milk covered by their exempt quota. Proposal 3 seeks
recognition and continuation of CPHA members' exempt quota status under
a California FMMO.
Proposal 4 was submitted on behalf of Ponderosa Dairy (Ponderosa).
Ponderosa is a Nevada dairy farm that supplies raw milk to California
fluid milk processing plants. Ponderosa contends that disorderly
marketing conditions do not exist in California that would warrant
promulgation of a FMMO. However, if USDA finds justification for a
California FMMO, Proposal 4 seeks to allow California handlers to elect
partially-regulated plant status with regard to milk they receive from
out-of-state producers. Such allowance would enable handlers to not
pool out-of-state milk, as long as they could demonstrate that they
paid out-of-state producers an amount equal to or higher than the
market blend price.
3. Justification For A California FMMO
This section reviews and highlights the testimony and evidence
received regarding whether or not promulgation of a California FMMO is
justified. This decision finds that the proposed California FMMO would
provide for more orderly marketing conditions for the handling of milk
in the State of California, as provided for and authorized by the AMAA.
A Cooperative witness testified regarding current California
marketing conditions and the need for establishing a California FMMO.
According to the witness, California is the largest milk-producing
state, producing more than 20 percent of the nation's milk. The witness
stated that the pooled volume of a California FMMO would be the largest
of all FMMOs, averaging slightly below 3.4 billion pounds per month;
the Class I volume would represent the third largest, following the
Northeast and Mideast FMMOs.
The Cooperative witness testified that the primary reason
California farmers are seeking the establishment of a FMMO is to
receive prices reflective of the national commodity values for all milk
uses. The witness opined that orderly marketing is no longer attainable
through the CSO because the prices California dairy farmers receive do
not reflect the full value of their raw milk. The witness estimated
that this pricing difference has reduced California dairy farm income
by $1.5 billion since 2010. The witness maintained that Proposal 1
allows California dairy farms to receive an equitable price for their
milk, while also tailoring FMMO provisions to the California dairy
industry. The Cooperatives' post-hearing brief reflected this position.
The Cooperative witness testified that there are significant
differences in prices, depending on whether a producer's milk is
regulated by the CSO or a FMMO. To illustrate this difference, the
witness compared California farm milk prices to those received by
producers in the states that comprise the Upper Midwest and Pacific
Northwest marketing areas.\16\ The witness selected these areas for
comparison due to the similar milk utilization in the Upper Midwest
FMMO and the geographic proximity of the Pacific Northwest FMMO. The
witness estimated that between August 2012 and May 2015, California
dairy farmers received on average $1.85 per cwt less (ranging from
$0.43-$4.27 per cwt lower) than producers pooled on the Upper Midwest
and Pacific Northwest FMMOs. The witness used the data to emphasize a
wide difference in prices for farmers in similarly situated areas. The
witness opined that a California FMMO, as advanced in Proposal 1, would
ensure California dairy farmers receive equitable prices, more in line
with those received by their FMMO counterparts.
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\16\ Wisconsin, Minnesota, and Illinois; Oregon, Washington and
Northern Idaho, respectively.
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The Cooperative witness emphasized that while both the CSO and the
FMMOs use end-product pricing formulas to determine class prices, the
two regulatory systems use different commodity series, effective dates,
yield factors, and make allowances, which result in substantially
different prices, as highlighted above. The witness explained that
while the two regulatory systems have always had price differences,
historically CSO and FMMO prices were relatively close. According to
the witness, prices began to diverge significantly in 2007 when the CSO
established a fixed whey factor in its formula for milk used to produce
cheese. From that point forward, the witness said, price differences
have become significant and have led to market disruptions both in the
fluid and manufacturing markets.
The Cooperative witness summarized USDA's justification from the
FMMO Order Reform decision for adopting a national Class I price
surface that assigns a Class I differential for every county in the
country, including counties in California. The witness said that the
separate CSO Class 1 price surface undermines the integrity of the
nationally coordinated Class I price surface and has become a source of
disorder in California. To demonstrate the disorder, the witness
compared FMMO Class I and CSO Class 1 prices for both in-state and out-
of-state purchases. The witness said that because of the CSO and FMMO
differences in both classified price formulas and Class I/1 price
surfaces, the Class 1 price paid by California handlers is almost
always lower than what it otherwise would be if FMMO Class I prices
were applicable for those same purchases.
The Cooperative witness presented a similar comparison between CSO
Class 1 prices and Class I prices in FMMO areas that were likely
competitors. The witness said that under FMMO regulations, the
difference in Class I prices between two FMMO areas is attributed to
the difference in the Class I differential at the two locations. For
[[Page 10642]]
example, the witness explained, the Class I price difference between
two plants, one located in a $2.10 zone and another in the $2.00 zone,
would be $0.10 per cwt. However, when the witness compared Class 1
prices in California and a competing FMMO area, the price difference
was always greater than the difference in differentials. For example,
the FMMO differential in the Los Angeles/San Diego market is $2.10,
while the differential in neighboring Phoenix is $2.35, a difference of
$0.25. However, said the witness, when comparing the actual CSO Class 1
price in Los Angeles/San Diego with the FMMO Class I price in Phoenix
from August 2012 to July 2015, the difference averaged $0.62. The
witness concluded that these observed price differences undermine a
nationally-coordinated pricing structure and contribute to disorderly
marketing where fluid milk handlers pay different minimum prices
depending on where they are regulated.
The Cooperative witness also provided testimony on the CSO and FMMO
price disparities for manufacturing milk. The witness testified that
FMMO Class II, III, and IV prices reflect national prices for products
manufactured in these classes. If Proposal 1 is adopted, the witness
said, California handlers would pay the same uniform prices as their
FMMO competitors in the national marketplace. The witness noted past
FMMO decisions that discussed the national supply and demand for
manufactured dairy products and the need for national uniform
manufacturing prices. The witness stressed that California producers
should also receive these national prices like their FMMO counterparts.
The Cooperative witness elaborated on the differences between CSO
and FMMO manufacturing class prices. When comparing FMMO Class II to
CSO Class 2 and Class 3 prices, the witness cited differences in the
commodity series used as price references, the time periods of data
used, and the length of time prices are applicable to explain the
sometimes large differences in prices under the two regulatory systems.
As a result, the witness said, Class 2 products are sometimes sold on a
spot basis to exploit short-term price differences.
The Cooperative witness presented a comparison of CSO Class 4a and
FMMO Class IV prices from January 2000 to July 2015, revealing that
over the entire time period the Class 4a price averaged $0.29 per cwt
less than the Class IV price. The witness added that over this 15-year
period, the CSO Class 4a price on an annual average basis was never
above the FMMO Class IV price.
The Cooperative witness also provided testimony on the price
disparity between CSO Class 4b and FMMO Class III price formulas. Data
from January 2000 to July 2015 revealed that the CSO Class 4b price was
lower than the Class III price in 161 of the 187 months examined. The
witness computed the difference over that 15-year time period averaged
$0.91 per cwt, with the largest difference of $3.24 per cwt occurring
in November 2014. The witness attributed the observed price differences
to differences in the valuation of dry whey between the CSO 4b and the
FMMO Class III formulas. The witness said that in 2007, the whey factor
in the CSO Class 4b formula became a tiered, bracketed system with a
floor of $0.25 and a ceiling of $0.75 which is reached when the WDW-
Mostly price is greater than or equal to $0.60 per pound. The witness
added that the whey value contained in the FMMO Class III price comes
from the AMS NDPSR, and reflects the mandatory reporting of dry whey
sales throughout the country. The witness estimated that from August
2012 through July 2015, the DMN whey value contributed $0.68 per cwt to
the CSO 4b price, while the NDPSR whey value contributed $2.39 per cwt
to the FMMO Class III price. The witness concluded that the whey cap
contained in the CSO 4b price results in lower contributions to the
marketwide pool than what is observed in the national marketplace and
reflected in FMMO prices.
The Cooperative witness reiterated the consequences of two
different regulatory pricing schemes have led to severe differences
between the regulated markets. The witness opined that the regulatory
differences allow California handlers who purchase raw milk and
manufacture products for sale on the national marketplace to pay
substantially different regulated minimum prices than handlers
regulated by the FMMO system. The witness estimated that because of the
regulatory price differences, from August 2012 to July 2015, California
farms received, on average, $1.89 per cwt less than similarly-situated
FMMO farms. The witness concluded that this results in California farms
being in a worse competitive position than other similarly situated
FMMO farms. The witness labeled this as disorderly and said that this
condition should be remedied through the adoption of Proposal 1.
The Cooperative witness also entered data estimating the value of
regulating interstate commerce through the establishment of a
California FMMO. The witness cited January 2009 through July 2015 CDFA
data that indicated a monthly average of 54.5 million pounds of milk
originating outside the state was processed by California processing
plants and another monthly average 36 million pounds of milk was
produced inside California and sold to plants located outside of the
state. The witness explained that this milk is able to evade CSO
minimum-price regulations because of the state's inability to regulate
interstate commerce. Consequently, the witness said, out-of-state farms
delivering milk to California plants can receive plant blend prices,
which can be higher than the market's overbase price received by in-
state producers delivering to the same plant. The witness elaborated
that the problem is compounded because processors receiving these
unregulated supplies are not required to pay minimum classified prices
and can instead pay a lower price than their regulated competitors. By
regulating these transactions through the establishment of a California
FMMO, the witness stressed, the California market would be more
orderly.
The Cooperatives' post-hearing brief also highlighted the CSO's
inability to regulate out-of-area milk as a market dysfunction. The
Cooperatives wrote that out-of-area sales financially harm California
dairy farms because the Class 1 revenues from those sales does not
contribute to the CSO marketwide pool that is shared with all the farms
in the market.
A consultant witness, appearing on behalf of the Cooperatives,
testified in support of Proposal 1. The witness was of the opinion that
the primary purpose of FMMOs is to enhance producer prices, which is
provided in the AMAA through its flexibility to regulate milk and/or
milk products, not just fluid milk. As evidence of this flexibility,
the witness discussed the Evaporated Milk Marketing Agreement, in
existence until 1947, under which manufacturing milk was regulated.
Therefore, the witness said, it is reasonable to conclude from this
example that the regulation of all California plants that purchase milk
from California farms, as contained in Proposal 1, would fall within
the scope of the AMAA.
The consultant witness elaborated that extending minimum price
regulation to all classes of milk in California is necessary to avoid
the market-disrupting practice of handlers opting to not pool eligible
milk because of price, often referred to as depooling. The witness said
that many FMMOs have adopted provisions to reduce the instances of
depooling. Currently, under the CSO, the witness said, while plants
[[Page 10643]]
can choose to not participate in the marketwide pool, there is no price
advantage, because they are still required to pay minimum classified
prices. The witness was of the opinion that the impact of depooling
would be greater in a California FMMO because of how California quota
premiums are paid. The witness testified that uniform prices calculated
after deducting quota premiums would be less than they otherwise would
be, if large volumes of milk were not pooled. Additionally, the witness
addressed the issue of uniform producer payments. The witness was of
the opinion that once quota premiums were paid, as required by
California law, remaining pool revenues would be distributed uniformly
to producers for non-quota milk, as required by the AMAA.
The consultant witness addressed the issue of whether Proposal 1
would implement classified prices that were too high. The witness
opined that the classified price formulas contained in Proposal 1 would
not establish manufacturing milk prices that are too high because FMMO
regulated handlers in other areas are already paying those prices. The
witness entered data showing that cheese production has increased in
the western states (not including California and Idaho) by 92 percent
from 2000 to 2014, while California cheese production has increased
only 64 percent. The witness concluded that minimum FMMO prices have
not been detrimental to FMMO-regulated plants, and offered the fact
that over-order premiums are currently paid to FMMO producers to
support that claim. The witness stated that provisions providing for
orderly marketing conditions should also provide stability (regulations
should not alter market transactions) and efficiency (regulations
should stimulate a competitive economic environment), and concluded
that both are embodied in Proposal 1.
Twenty-seven California dairy farmers testified in support of
Proposal 1. Sixteen belong to one of the three proponent Cooperatives:
Nine LOL members, three DFA members, and four CDI members. An
additional 11 dairy farmers not associated with the Cooperatives
provided testimony supporting the adoption of Proposal 1.
Although each dairy farmer provided unique testimony, several
difficulties challenging the California dairy industry were addressed
repeatedly. Producer testimony described financial hardships due to the
CSO producer prices they receive consistently being below the amount
needed to cover the cost of production. One farmer witness cited CDFA
cost of production data from the first quarter of 2015 for the North
Valley of California, and estimated that 90 percent of surveyed farms
had negative net incomes. Farmer witnesses stated that a FMMO would
provide an opportunity for dairy farms to cover their cost of
production and work toward reducing debts incurred from historically
low mailbox prices.
A number of producers testified that historically they had many
competitive advantages (low cost of land, grain, hay and water)
enabling them to produce milk at a significantly lower cost than farms
located in the rest of the county. All of the witnesses testified that
the hardships of high land, feed, and/or water costs, as compared to
those in other dairy states, have eroded their competitive advantage.
Citing no competitive advantage, coupled with the difference between
the FMMO and CSO pricing formulas, dairy farmers testified they are
receiving a lower mailbox price than their FMMO counterparts. Testimony
stressed that these realities are forcing many California dairy farms
out of business.
Many producers were of the opinion that their inability to cover
the cost of production is tied to how whey is valued in the CSO Class
4b formula. Thirteen of the 27 producers testified regarding the impact
of the whey valuation on mailbox prices. The witnesses stressed that
the CSO historically responded to producers' needs by encouraging
manufacturing plant investment that would provide an outlet for milk to
be processed at a regulated price considered fair. According to the
witnesses, this regulatory balance shifted in 2007 because of a CDFA
rulemaking that adopted a sliding scale that capped the value of the
dry whey factor in the Class 4b formula. Testimony was provided that
stated that the 2007 hearing marked the start of the widening
discrepancy between mailbox prices for California dairy farmers and
those received by other dairy farmers across the nation. Witnesses
stated the reduced mailbox prices continue to undervalue milk
throughout the State. The producers were of the opinion that a
California FMMO would bring California's valuation of dry whey in line
with the rest of the country. With comparable whey values, producers
testified their mailbox price would become more representative of the
true market value of their milk.
Three testifying producers owned farms in both California and FMMO
regulated areas. These producers testified to the difference in
production costs and mailbox prices received by their farms over the
last decade or more. Their testimonies specifically highlighted the
industry differences between California and Wisconsin. The producers
said the production advantages California dairy farmers enjoyed
(inexpensive land, feed, and a different regulatory environment) no
longer exist, and as a result, California dairy farms are closing or
moving out of state at an increasing rate.
Seven producers testified that the use of futures contracting and
hedging as risk management tools are hindered by the differences in the
CSO and FMMO price formulas. They explained that current risk
management tools are based on FMMO prices, and the fact that CSO prices
are different make those tools less effective for California producers.
Eight producers provided evidence about reductions in the
California dairy industry since 2007. According to the witnesses, many
farms have elected to reduce their herd size or cease dairy farming. A
witness provided September 2014 to September 2015 data showing that the
Cooperatives have experienced a 6.6 percent reduction in milk
production volume. The witness stated that the reduction seen by the
Cooperatives is supported by CDFA data showing a 3.5 percent reduction
in California milk production. The witness noted that while milk
production in California is decreasing, it is increasing in the rest of
the country. The witnesses believed the discrepancy between California
milk production and national production is due to the inability of
California farms to compete on a level-playing field with farms in the
FMMO system. Many also expressed concern with the impact on related
businesses due to the closing of many California dairy farms.
According to six producer witnesses, many farms have opted to
weather the milk price volatility by diversifying their operations and
investing in tree-crop production. Several witnesses testified that
lenders encourage tree-crop production over dairy farming, due to the
reduction of risk and the large margins attainable in tree-crop
farming. Producers expressed a belief that the adoption of a California
FMMO would lead to a more stable dairy industry supported by lenders.
Overall, California producer witnesses stated they are currently
subject to a regulatory system that does not provide producer milk
prices representative of the full value of their raw milk in the
market. The producers believe adoption of a California FMMO represents
an opportunity to remedy this regulatory disadvantage and to compete on
a level-
[[Page 10644]]
playing field with the rest of the country.
A Western United Dairymen (WUD) representative testified in support
of Proposal 1. WUD is a trade organization representing approximately
50 percent of California dairy farmers, whose farm sizes range from 17
to 10,000 cows. According to the WUD witness, the difference between
CSO Class 4b and FMMO Class III prices demonstrates that the CSO is not
providing California dairy farms with a milk price reflective of the
national marketplace for manufactured dairy products. The witness
attributed the pricing differences to how dry whey is accounted for in
the two price formulas. The witness said the value difference has
become increasingly larger since the CSO adopted a fixed whey factor in
2007, and then subsequently replaced it with a sliding scale whey
factor in 2011. The witness said that from August 2014 to July 2015,
the CSO Class 4b whey value averaged $1.50 per cwt less than the FMMO
Class III whey value. As a result, the witness said, there are
different regulated minimum milk prices for the milk products that
compete in a national market. This milk price difference, the witness
stressed, results in market decisions based on government regulations
instead of market fundamentals. Furthermore, the witness said, the
resulting lower CSO class prices put California dairy farmers at a
competitive disadvantage compared to their FMMO counterparts. The
witness concluded that this situation is disorderly and reiterated
WUD's support for Proposal 1 as a more appropriate method to determine
the value of whey.
A witness representing the California Dairy Campaign (CDC)
testified in support of Proposal 1. CDC is a dairy producer
organization with members located throughout California. The CDC
witness said that over the last 10 years, more than 600 California
dairy farms have permanently closed or moved to other states. The
witness attributed this to milk prices that have been consistently
lower than the cost of producing milk in California, and noted that
water and feed availability due to the ongoing drought is the primary
reason for increased production costs. The witness highlighted the
consolidation and concentration of the California dairy manufacturing
sector that causes dairy producers to be price takers in the market,
thus making equitable minimum regulated prices vital to the long-term
viability of California dairy farms.
The CDC witness testified that the failure of the CSO to align with
FMMO prices, particularly between CSO Class 4b and FMMO Class III, has
resulted in a more than $1.5 billion loss to California producers since
2010. The witness also said that risk-management tools, particularly
the USDA Margin Production Program (MPP), are not as effective for
California dairy farms because the national all-milk price used to
determine MPP payments is significantly higher than California producer
mailbox prices under CSO regulation.
The witness highlighted CDC's support of specific provisions
contained in Proposal 1, including the adoption of FMMO end-product
pricing formulas, unique pooling provisions that address the needs of
the California market, regulation of out-of-state milk, uniform
producer-handler provisions, fluid milk fortification allowances, and
the continuation of the California quota program. The witness was of
the opinion that Proposal 1 addresses California's unique market
conditions and is the only path to restoring California producer price
equity and the health of the California dairy industry.
CDC's post-hearing brief stated CDC has supported adoption of a
California FMMO for over 20 years. The brief highlighted 2015 CDFA data
showing California cost of production at $19.30 per cwt, while the
average farm income was $15.94 per cwt. The brief stated the belief
that minimum prices are put in place to ensure dairy farmers are able
to share in some minimal level of profitability. CDC estimated that in
2015, a 1,000-cow California dairy farm was paid approximately $1.4
million less than equal-sized farms whose milk was pooled on a FMMO.
A witness representing Milk Producers Council (MPC) testified in
support of Proposal 1. MPC is a nonprofit trade association with 120
California dairy-farmer members, accounting for approximately 10
percent of the California milking herd. The witness agreed with
testimony given by the Cooperatives outlining California's disorderly
marketing conditions. The witness said that California dairy farmers
have repeatedly, though unsuccessfully, sought relief through CDFA to
bring CSO classified prices more in line with FMMO classified prices.
This is why California dairy farmers are now seeking to join the FMMO
system, the witness added.
The MPC witness testified that Proposal 1 would establish orderly
marketing conditions in California, resulting in a level-playing field
for producers and processors. The witness stressed that not only would
Proposal 1 provide price alignment between California and FMMOs, but a
California FMMO would regulate interstate commerce--something the CSO
cannot do. Proposal 1 would also maintain the current California quota
program, a vital financial tool for many California dairy farmers, the
witness stated. The witness said that while the quota program has no
impact on the minimum prices handlers pay, it does aid in providing a
local milk supply for some plants that would otherwise have to source
milk from farther distances. The witness explained that in some
instances, quota is an investment farms located in higher cost areas of
the state make to remain financially viable and be able to provide a
local milk supply to plants that would otherwise have to seek a supply
from farther distances.
A witness representing the National Farmers Union (NFU) testified
in support of Proposal 1. NFU is a national grassroots farmer
organization with over 200,000 members across the nation, including
dairy farmers located in California. The witness testified that NFU
supports the inclusion of California in the FMMO system so California
dairy farms could receive prices similar to those received by dairy
farms located throughout the country. The witness testified that
California's low-milk prices and high-feed costs have resulted in
strained margins and ultimately the closure of over 400 dairy farms in
the last five years.
The NFU witness testified the pay price differences between dairy
farms whose milk is pooled under the CSO and FMMOs is primarily due to
the difference in the Class 4b and Class III prices and has resulted in
disorderly marketing conditions and a revenue loss to California dairy
farms of more than $1.5 billion since 2010. The witness added that pay-
price differences have reduced the ability of California dairy farms to
utilize risk management tools, and puts them at a competitive
disadvantage when competing for resources such as feed, land, cattle
and labor.
A witness appearing on behalf of the Institute testified that while
the Institute offered Proposal 2 as an alternative to the Cooperatives'
proposal, their first position is that disorderly marketing conditions
do not exist in California to warrant the promulgation of a FMMO. The
witness stated that the California dairy industry is currently
regulated by the CSO, whose purpose, much like a FMMO, is to provide
for orderly marketing conditions. The witness emphasized their opinion
that orderly marketing conditions are currently achieved through CSO
classified pricing and marketwide pooling.
[[Page 10645]]
The Institute witness reviewed CSO history and regulatory
evolution, and highlighted regulatory changes demonstrating how the CSO
has consistently adapted to changing market conditions. Some, but not
all, of these regulatory changes are highlighted below.
The Institute witness explained that California sought state
solutions to disorderly marketing conditions through the Young Act of
1935. When FMMOs were authorized in 1937, California opted to remain
under the purview of the CSO.
The Institute witness explained that the CSO adopted marketwide
pooling through the Gonsalves Milk Pooling Act. Before that time,
handlers operated individual handler pools, giving Class 1 handlers
strong bargaining power as producers sought Class 1 contracts.
According to the witness, this led to handler practices that eroded
producer revenues. The witness testified that the California quota
program, also authorized by the Gonsalves Milk Pooling Act, was a way
for Southern California dairy farmers, who at the time had a higher
percentage of Class 1 contracts, to preserve some of the Class 1
earnings they would otherwise be required to share with all producers
through marketwide pooling. At the time, the witness said, producers
were assigned a production base, and producer quota was allocated based
on historical Class 1 sales. Milk marketed in excess of a producer's
base and quota allocations was termed overbase milk. The witness
explained that, during this time, the state's population was growing,
and quota was deemed necessary to ensure the market's Class 1 needs
would always be met.
The Institute witness said that when the quota program was
established, there was a growing number of dairy farmers who also owned
fluid milk bottling operations. They typically processed all the milk
they produced, and were referred to as producer-handlers. These
operations feared that the income benefits they gained from processing
their own milk would disappear with the establishment of mandatory
pooling. To relieve this concern, the witness said smaller producer-
handlers were exempted from pooling in return for not receiving a quota
allocation. The witness explained larger producer-handlers had the
option of not receiving a quota premium, and deducting those quota
pounds from their Class 1 obligations to the pool, an amount referred
to as exempt quota.
The Institute witness testified that the CSO was modified numerous
times in the late 1970's and early 1980's to ensure that Class 1 needs
of the market would always be met. First, call provisions were
established requiring manufacturing plants participating in the pool to
maintain a percentage of quota milk available to Class 1 plants.
Second, a system of transportation credits and allowances was
established to cover part of the cost of moving milk from surplus areas
to deficit areas for Class 1 use. According to the witness, CDFA
regularly updates these milk movement incentives to reflect current
costs.
In the early 1990's, CDFA amended how the quota premium was
derived. At the time, quota funds were derived from Class 1, 2 and 3
prices, while overbase prices were derived from Class 4a and 4b prices.
Consequently, the witness noted, the difference between quota and
overbase prices varied greatly by month. The witness said the historic
value of quota, in comparison to the overbase value, was evaluated to
derive a fixed quota price of $0.195 per pound of quota solids nonfat.
The Institute witness also reviewed several instances since 2000
where CSO provisions were amended to reflect changing market conditions
and changing FMMO regulations. These instances included adopting the
``higher of''' concept for pricing Class 1 milk, incorporating a dry
whey factor in the price formulas, and changing the make allowances
contained in the product price formulas--all changes the witness said
were necessary to maintain orderly marketing conditions in California.
The Institute witness maintained that current California marketing
conditions are orderly, and therefore the establishment of a FMMO is
not justified. The witness stated the CSO program focuses on orderly
marketing conditions to ensure Class 1 needs are met, while providing
reasonable returns to those dairy farms who supply the Class 1 market.
The witness stressed the regulated price differences between CSO Class
4a/4b prices and FMMO Class III/IV prices do not amount to disorder,
and in fact, those differences are needed to maintain orderly marketing
in the state.
The Institute witness testified that in the CSO-regulated
environment, where all milk is subject to minimum price regulation, it
is important that manufacturing prices are not set above market-
clearing levels. The witness elaborated that the largest market, and
therefore the highest value, for finished dairy products is in the
eastern United States where most of the population resides. Therefore,
the witness said, in order for California dairy products to be
transported and compete in the eastern markets, they must have a lower
value in the West. The witness was of the opinion that FMMO Class III
and Class IV prices are not appropriate local, market-clearing prices
for California.
The Institute witness also was of the opinion that current
differences between CSO Class 2 and 3 prices and FMMO Class II prices
are not disorderly. The witness explained that Class 2 and 3 prices are
set relative to the Class 4a price, and it is important that these
prices are not set so high as to encourage dairy ingredient
substitution with Class 4a products. The witness argued the
Cooperatives provided no evidence that the class price differences
between the CSO and FMMO systems are disorderly.
The Institute witness also testified regarding the difference
between CSO Class 1 and FMMO Class I prices. While CSO Class 1 prices
are somewhat lower than those in neighboring FMMO areas, the witness
said, they are not causing disorderly marketing conditions. The witness
explained that if lower priced California milk is sold into FMMO areas,
there are provisions for FMMO partial regulation to ensure the
California Class 1 plants do not have a regulatory price advantage over
the FMMO plants.
The Institute witness testified that recent declines in California
milk production and increases in dairy farm consolidation are not
evidence of disorderly marketing conditions. The witness elaborated
that dairy-farm consolidation is a natural market evolution resulting
from differences in producers' cost structure, risk tolerance, and
access to capital. This is no different than consolidation trends that
have happened in other regions of the country, added the witness. The
witness also testified that, while dairy farmer margins have been
volatile in recent years, California milk production costs have
remained below the United States average. According to USDA Economic
Research Service data, the witness said 2010-2014 California milk
production costs were well below the national average, by a yearly
average of $4.19 per cwt. Regardless of milk production and
consolidation trends, the witness stated that California has adequate
milk supplies to meet fluid demand, and milk movements to meet
processing and manufacturing demands are largely efficient.
The Institute witness explained its members represent approximately
65 percent of the fluid milk processing in California, and none have
expressed difficulty obtaining milk supplies or any type of disorderly
marketing condition. The witness expressed concern that any changes in
the regulatory environment
[[Page 10646]]
would likely increase the cost of fluid milk. This cost would be passed
onto consumers, thereby creating a barrier for fluid milk sales, said
the witness.
The Institute witness opined the CSO has an effective pricing and
pooling system that has evolved over time to address changing market
conditions, and disorderly marketing conditions do not exist to warrant
a California FMMO. However, should USDA recommend a California FMMO,
the witness said the provisions outlined in Proposal 2 should be
adopted.
The post-hearing brief submitted on behalf of the Institute
reiterates its opinion that USDA must find disorderly marketing
conditions to justify intervention. Disorderly marketing conditions
under the AMAA, the Institute wrote, refers to the fluid milk supply
and not the market for manufactured milk. The brief stated that
California has, on average, an 11 to 12 percent Class 1 utilization and
more than enough reserve milk to meet fluid demand.
The Institute's brief outlined a six-point test that it argued
needs to be met in order to justify a California FMMO. The Institute
stated the current CSO already meets all six of the requirements and
thus Federal intervention is not justified.
The Institute's brief also addressed the 1996 and 2014 Farm Bills
as they pertain to the consideration of a California FMMO. The
Institute stressed that in neither case did Congress amend the AMAA,
and therefore USDA is authorized, but not required, to incorporate the
California quota program. According to the Institute, whatever decision
USDA makes, it must uphold the AMAA's uniform payments and trade
barrier provisions. The Institute stated that Proposal 1's
incorporation of the California quota program does not uphold either of
these provisions.
The Institute's post-hearing brief argued that the differences in
Class III and Class 4b prices, highlighted by the Cooperatives, do not
provide justification for a California FMMO. According to the brief,
the AMAA requires marketing orders to have regional application that
recognizes differences in production and market conditions.
A witness appearing on behalf of Hilmar Cheese Company (Hilmar)
testified that USDA has consistently found that evidence of disorderly
marketing conditions must exist in order to justify Federal
intervention through the promulgation or amendment of a FMMO. Hilmar is
a dairy manufacturer with facilities in California and Texas selling
dairy products both domestically and internationally. According to the
witness, Hilmar's California cheese and whey manufacturing facility is
the largest cheese manufacturing facility in the State, processing 12
percent of the total California milk supply, which is purchased from
200 dairy farms, most of whom are not affiliated with any cooperative.
The Hilmar witness cited previous USDA decisions, including the
1981 Southwestern Idaho/Eastern Oregon and the 1990 Carolina
promulgations, as examples of what market conditions should be present
in order for USDA to act. The witness was of the opinion that the
Cooperatives did not provide evidence of actual disorderly marketing
conditions in California warranting Federal intervention.
In its post-hearing brief, Hilmar stated that FMMOs are designed to
be a marketing tool to address problems associated with the inherent
instability in milk marketing. Hilmar reiterated its opposition to a
California FMMO, stating that USDA has consistently denied proposals
seeking price enhancement, as they believe is the case in this
proceeding. Hilmar stated the record does not support the notion that
there is an inadequate supply of milk for fluid use in California, and
therefore a California FMMO is not justified.
A witness appearing on behalf of HP Hood, LLC, a milk processor
with facilities in California and other states, testified that
disorderly marketing conditions are not present in California and
therefore a FMMO is not warranted. The witness said the CSO is an
efficient program that has been routinely updated to reflect changing
market conditions. The witness stated that HP Hood has not had any
difficulty securing an adequate supply of raw milk for its California
processing plants, nor is HP Hood aware of instances where raw milk had
to be transported long distances in order to meet California demand.
The HP Hood witness suggested USDA consider the potential adverse
impacts of recommending a California FMMO on other FMMOs, as well as
potential increases in milk costs to consumers that may stem from
adoption of the higher uniform minimum milk prices included in Proposal
1. The witness specifically opposed the inclusive pooling portion of
Proposal 1 and explained how the ability for milk handlers to pool or
not pool is how orderly marketing has been maintained in the existing
FMMOs. The witness urged the adoption of Proposal 2, should USDA find
that a California FMMO is warranted.
A witness appeared on behalf of Saputo Cheese USA, Inc. (Saputo), a
proprietary international dairy and grocery products manufacturer and
marketer with seven dairy product-manufacturing facilities in
California. Saputo opposes the promulgation of a California FMMO, but
should USDA find a FMMO warranted, it supports adoption of Proposal 2.
The witness testified that disorderly marketing conditions are not
present in California to warrant FMMO promulgation. The witness
explained how CDFA has been responsive to dairy industry concerns, has
held many hearings in the past, and administers the CSO in a manner
that facilitates orderly marketing as well as, or better than, the FMMO
system.
The Saputo witness summarized many of the similarities and
differences between the CSO and FMMO systems. The witness was of the
opinion that the CSO mandatory pooling rules increased milk production
to surplus levels and encouraged the construction of bulk, storable
dairy product manufacturing facilities. In conjunction with these
rules, the witness explained, CSO regulated minimum prices are set at
levels that are not too high to encourage significant additional
increases in supply.
The Saputo witness described the California cheese production
landscape. The witness, relying on CDFA data, said that from January
through March of 2015, 57 cheese plants processed 45 percent of
California's milk. The witness noted that out of the 57 cheese plants,
3 of the plants processed more than 25 percent of the state's entire
milk supply. The witness stated that if the increase in the
hypothetical California FMMO Class III price included in the USDA
Preliminary Economic Analysis of $1.84 per cwt occurred, under a system
of mandatory pooling, the aforementioned 3 cheese plants would face
combined increased annual raw milk costs of nearly $196.5 million. The
witness testified that such raw milk cost increases would be disorderly
and threaten the viability of California manufacturing facilities.
A witness appearing on behalf of Farmdale Creamery (Farmdale)
testified in support of Proposal 2. Farmdale is a proprietary dairy
processing company located in San Bernardino, CA, that manufactures
cheese, sour cream, dried whey protein concentrate, and buttermilk. The
witness was of the opinion that disorderly marketing conditions are not
present in California, since there is no shortage of milk to meet fluid
milk needs. The Farmdale
[[Page 10647]]
witness was of the opinion that the CSO maintains an orderly market by
responding to changing market conditions when warranted. Should USDA
find a California FMMO justified, the witness supported adoption of
Proposal 2 and opposed the mandatory pooling provisions contained in
Proposal 1.
The witness also testified about financial losses incurred by
Farmdale since 2005, when the CSO whey value was sometimes higher than
what they could obtain from the market. The witness added that their
on-again, off-again financial losses demonstrate the inability of
current regulatory pricing systems to track and value the whey markets.
A witness appeared on behalf of Pacific Gold Creamery (Pacific
Gold) in opposition to the adoption of a California FMMO, although the
witness supported the provisions contained in Proposal 2 should a FMMO
be recommended. Pacific Gold operates a dairy farmer owned specialty
cheese plant in California. The witness testified that across existing
FMMOs and unregulated areas, dairy product manufacturers regularly pay
below FMMO minimum prices. The witness presented and explained USDA-
prepared FMMO data regarding volumes of milk pooled and not pooled
across existing FMMOs.
The Pacific Gold witness explained how their business produces
ricotta from the whey stream of their cheese manufacturing, and how
ricotta sales supplement the income of the cheese operation. The
witness was of the opinion that the FMMO Class III price, and the
accompanying higher whey value contained in Proposal 1, would be
devastating to small and mid-size facilities. The witness also
testified how an increase in California minimum-regulated prices would
jeopardize exports, saying that U.S. domestic cheese prices are already
relatively higher than global prices.
A post-hearing brief was submitted on behalf of Trihope Dairy Farms
(Trihope). Trihope is a dairy farm located in, and pooled on, the
Southeast FMMO. Trihope stated that disorderly marketing conditions do
not exist in California to warrant promulgation of a FMMO. Trihope was
of the opinion that California dairy farmers are seeking higher prices
through a new regulatory body, which is not a justification for USDA to
proceed. According to Trihope, the AMAA was designed to solve marketing
problems in unregulated areas, not to address price disparities between
Federal and State regulation.
Trihope expressed concern about the potential impact a California
FMMO would have on the entire system. Trihope specifically noted the
impacts to the southeastern marketing areas contained in the USDA
Preliminary Economic Impact Analysis. According to their brief, Trihope
estimates losses from 2017 to 2024 of approximately $313,091. Trihope
wrote that California's marketing issues of high California milk
production and limited plant capacity would not be solved by a FMMO.
A post-hearing brief submitted by Select Milk Producers, Inc.
(Select), expressed support for the adoption of a California FMMO.
Select is a national dairy-farmer cooperative that markets over 6.5
billion pounds of milk annually, and whose members' milk is regularly
pooled on the Appalachian, Mideast, Southeast and Southwest FMMOs.
Select also supplies plants located in many other FMMOs, but it does
not supply any California plants. Select was of the opinion that having
California's milk supply priced similarly to the rest of the FMMOs
would remedy the competitive disadvantages faced by companies competing
in the national marketplace, and would allow for more efficient milk
movements. Select expressed support for maintaining a uniform national
pricing system and opposed the Institute's alternative whey-pricing
proposal. Select expressed support for the Cooperatives' inclusive
pooling provisions on the basis that the provisions would apply only to
California, due to its unique marketing conditions. Select stated the
California quota program should be addressed outside of this rulemaking
proceeding. Select was of the opinion that adoption of a California
FMMO would lead to more orderly milk marketing throughout the entire
FMMO system, and thus uphold the intent of the AMAA.
A post-hearing brief submitted on behalf of the Northwest Dairy
Association (NDA) expressed support for Proposal 1. NDA is a dairy
farmer-owned cooperative that markets the milk of its 460 members and
operates numerous fluid milk and manufacturing plants located in
Washington, Oregon, Idaho, and Montana. NDA was of the opinion that
adoption of Proposal 1 would create more orderly marketing conditions
and strengthen the entire FMMO system. As California represents the
largest milk supply in the United States, NDA wrote, it is important
for the integrity of the FMMO program to include the additional 20
percent of United States milk represented by California. NDA stated
that California producers should not be disadvantaged with lower Class
III and IV prices than what their western FMMO producer counterparts
receive.
Findings
The record contains a voluminous amount of testimony, evidence and
opinions as to whether or not a California FMMO is justified. The
Cooperatives and their supporters argue that a California FMMO was
authorized by Congress in the 2014 Farm Bill. They contend that this
proceeding is not about whether or not a FMMO should be established,
but rather to determine what the California FMMO provisions should be.
The Cooperatives are of the opinion that the existence of disorderly
marketing conditions is not required by the AMAA to justify order
promulgation. They stressed in their post-hearing briefs that a FMMO
needs to establish and maintain orderly marketing conditions, and that
would be accomplished through the adoption of their proposal. However,
should the Department find that disorderly marketing conditions must be
present, the Cooperatives provided evidence of what they believe are
ongoing disorderly marketing conditions in California.
In general, the record reflects that the California producer
community supports joining the FMMO system. Producers are of the
opinion that the prices they currently receive under the CSO do not
reflect the appropriate value for their milk and its components.
Particularly, producers believe that the price they receive for milk
used for cheese manufacturing does not value the dry whey component at
a level commensurate with what manufacturers receive for whey in the
marketplace.
In contrast, the Institute and its members consistently argued
throughout the hearing and in their post-hearing briefs that the
existence of disorderly marketing conditions is required by the AMAA,
and that such conditions do not exist in California. They provided
testimony explaining how the CSO is a flexible system that is routinely
evaluated through the CDFA hearing process and changes are made as
market conditions warrant. The Institute and its members were united in
the opinion the Cooperatives are solely seeking to receive higher
prices for their milk, and that such higher prices are not justified
for California.
As discussed earlier, the declared policy of the AMAA is to ``. . .
establish and maintain such orderly marketing conditions for
agricultural commodities in interstate commerce . . .'' FMMOs
accomplish this through the classified
[[Page 10648]]
pricing of milk products and marketwide pooling of those classified use
values. Through these mechanisms, orderly marketing conditions are
provided so that handlers are assured uniform minimum raw milk costs
and producers receive minimum uniform payments for their raw milk,
regardless of its use.
While in recent history FMMOs have been consolidated, amended and
expanded, it has been decades since a new order has been promulgated.
The records of those promulgation proceedings include descriptions of
the market conditions at the time, and how a FMMO would provide order
in the market. However, those decisions did not, nor does this decision
find, that disorderly marketing conditions must exist to justify order
promulgation. Order promulgation and amendatory proceedings have
reiterated that a FMMO must adhere to the declared policy of the AMAA,
where there is no mention of disorderly marketing conditions.
This decision finds that a FMMO for California would provide more
orderly marketing conditions in the marketing area, and therefore
promulgation of a California FMMO is warranted. The record is replete
with discussion from most parties on whether disorderly marketing
conditions exist, or are even needed, to warrant promulgation of a
California FMMO. The declared policy of the AMAA makes no mention of
``disorder,'' and this decision finds that disorderly marketing
conditions are not a requirement for an order to be promulgated. The
standard for FMMO promulgation is to ``. . . establish and maintain
such orderly marketing conditions . . .,'' and this decision finds that
the California FMMO recommended meets that standard by providing
uniform minimum raw milk costs to handlers and minimum uniform payments
to producers for their raw milk, regardless of its use.
The record indicates that there are both handler and producer price
differences between the CSO and the FMMO systems. The record contains
data regarding the difference in classified use values paid by handlers
regulated by the CSO and FMMOs. As discussed later, this decision
recommends the adoption of the classified price formulas that currently
exist in the FMMO system. A California FMMO, under the provisions
recommended in this decision, will ensure that the prices handlers pay
to purchase pooled California milk will be similar to prices paid for
milk pooled on other FMMOs. As commodity dairy products compete in the
national market, current FMMOs uniformly price the raw milk used in
those products. This pricing system ensures that competing handlers
have uniform minimum raw milk costs, and consequently none has a
regulatory price advantage. The record demonstrates that California
manufactured dairy products compete in the national market, however the
CSO regulated prices paid by California manufacturers are different
than those priced by FMMOs. This decision finds the proposed California
FMMO would provide classified milk prices that would be more uniform
with those paid by competing handlers, and more reflective of the
national market for manufactured milk products and the local market for
fluid milk products, as is the policy for the 10 current FMMOs. This
decision finds that these prices would provide more orderly market
conditions for California.
This decision also finds that the classified prices proposed for a
California FMMO will provide producers with a minimum producer blend
price more reflective of the national market for manufactured products
and the utilization of the local California market. Taken together,
handler and producer prices reflective of the national market, for
which manufactured dairy products are sold, will ensure orderly
marketing conditions in California.
While the current CSO provides classified pricing and marketwide
pooling similar to a FMMO, the hearing record reflects that California
dairy producers have been unsuccessful in obtaining a minimum regulated
price they believe is reflective of the full value of their raw milk.
Some parties argued on the record that because the CSO already provides
classified pricing and marketwide pooling, disorderly marketing
conditions do not exist and therefore there is no justification for
promulgating a California FMMO. As discussed earlier, disorderly
marketing conditions are not a requirement for order promulgation.
Furthermore, this decision finds that it is not the intent of the AMAA
to preclude a group of producers from petitioning for a FMMO because
they are otherwise regulated by a state that provides classified
pricing and marketwide pooling. Such a requirement would place an undue
barrier on those producers as they would not have the opportunity to
petition for FMMO regulation simply because they are currently
regulated by a state.
Additionally, unlike the CSO, a California FMMO would have the
authority to regulate interstate commerce. The record reveals that
there is milk, both raw and packaged, being sold into and out of
California over which the CSO has no regulatory jurisdiction. The
revenues from those Class I sales are not shared with all the producers
supplying the California market. A FMMO would ensure that those
classified use values would be shared with all producers who supply the
California market. The ability of a California FMMO to regulate these
interstate sales, either through full or partial regulation, protects
the integrity of the entire regulatory framework. Furthermore, out-of-
state producers supplying that milk would be paid the order's blend
price, which is reflective of the market's total classified use value.
In their post-hearing brief, the Institute made reference to a
``six-point test'' that must be met in order for a FMMO to be
promulgated. While the Institute correctly lists various factors that
have been used in some order promulgations, the articulated AMAA
standard that must be met for order promulgation is that the order will
``. . . establish and maintain such orderly marketing conditions. . .
.''
Other parties in post-hearing briefs contend that the 2014 Farm
Bill mandated that a California FMMO be promulgated. The Farm Bill
authorized a California FMMO that recognizes quota value as determined
appropriate through a rulemaking proceeding. It is important to note
that California producers could have petitioned for a FMMO at any time.
However, Congress did not provide for the recognition of quota before
the 1996 Farm Bill, and later, the 2014 Farm Bill. This decision finds
that a California FMMO is justified, as it will meet the objective of
the AMAA to ``. . . maintain such orderly marketing conditions . . ..''
The provisions recommended are tailored to the California market,
adhere to the uniform handler and producer pricing provisions of the
AMAA, and recognize quota as authorized by the 2014 Farm Bill and as
deemed appropriate by an analysis of this hearing record.
Additionally, some hearing participants indicated that a goal of
FMMOs, and therefore of a California FMMO, is to enhance producer
prices. Other participants from outside of California, in testimony and
post-hearing briefs, expressed the opinion that a California FMMO
cannot be promulgated if it would have adverse impacts on other FMMOs,
and that the Department must act to negate those adverse impacts before
such promulgation.
FMMOs are a marketing tool that, among other things, establish a
[[Page 10649]]
marketing framework and enforce market-based minimum prices to handlers
and uniform payments to producers reflective of all classified use
values in the market. The record reflects that California represents
over 20 percent of the United States milk supply. If a California FMMO
is established, over 80 percent of the United States milk supply would
fall under the same regulatory framework. This decision finds that a
California FMMO will provide more orderly marketing conditions in
California. Through inclusion of California in the FMMO regulatory
framework, the prices received by all producers participating in the
FMMO system would be more reflective of the national marketplace for
dairy products. This would send uniform market signals to producers
that would allow them to make their own individual business decisions.
4. California Quota Program Recognition
This section reviews and highlights the testimony and evidence
received regarding the appropriate recognition of the California quota
program, including exempt quota, in a California FMMO. The California
quota program is a state-administered program that entitles the quota
holder to an additional $0.195 per pound of SNF over the CSO overbase
price. The money to pay the quota premium is deducted from the CSO
marketwide pool before the CSO overbase price is calculated. This
decision finds that the quota program should remain entirely within the
jurisdiction of CDFA, and that its proper recognition under the
proposed California FMMO would be through an authorized deduction from
payments due to producers.
Proposal 1
A Cooperative witness testified regarding the development of the
California quota program and its continued significance to California
dairy farmers. The witness explained the California quota system is a
tiered pricing system, developed in the late 1960's, that pays
producers on three price calculations referred to as quota, base, and
overbase. In its current form, ownership of quota entitles producer-
owners to a higher price for milk covered by quota, and a lower base/
overbase price on their nonquota milk production. Approximately 58
percent of all California farmers own quota at varying levels, which in
aggregate represents approximately 2.2 million pounds of SNF on a daily
basis. The witness testified that, currently, quota premium payments
are approximately $12.5 to $13 million per month, and this money is
taken out of the CSO marketwide pool before the base/overbase price is
calculated. The witness stressed that the quota program is an important
revenue source for California dairy farms, and the value of quota
should not be diminished with the adoption of a California FMMO.
The Cooperative witness reviewed the authorization of the
California milk pooling and quota programs by the 1967 Gonsalves Milk
Pooling Act (Gonsalves Act). Originally, the witness explained,
producers were assigned quota holdings as they related to the
producers' historical milk production and individual deliveries to the
Class 1 market. The witness said that in the beginning, quota premiums
were not a set value, but instead were determined by allocating quota
holdings to the highest value milk (Class 1), then base and overbase
production were allocated to the remaining classes in descending order
of classified value. In essence, the witness explained, quota holders
were paid the Class 1 price for their quota holdings, and then a
separate lower value for their non-quota holdings. According to the
witness, when CDFA sought to enhance producer prices, typically
additional revenue was assigned to Class 1 and subsequently quota
holders, and overbase prices were not impacted. As milk production grew
without corresponding increases in quota holdings, the witness said
that producers were faced with lower milk prices on their non-quota
production. Therefore, the Gonsalves Act was amended, effective January
1, 1994, and set a quota premium at $0.195 per pound of SNF (equivalent
to $1.70 per cwt). The result, said the witness, was that overbase
production did not subsidize quota milk, and quota holders could
receive a reasonable return on their quota holdings.
The witness also discussed adjustments made to the total CSO
marketwide pool value in conjunction with the quota program. According
to the witness, when pooling was originally established, the provisions
contained producer location differentials designed to encourage quota
milk to be delivered to Class 1 plants. However, as overbase milk
production began to grow, location differentials applicable to only
quota milk did not ensure that the market's Class 1 needs would always
be met, the witness stated. Consequently, in 1983 transportation
allowances (on milk movements from ranch-to-plants) were established in
lieu of location differentials. At the same time, the witness said,
regional quota adjusters (RQAs), while providing no direct incentive to
move Class 1 milk, were established to address producer equity issues
that arose with the elimination of location differentials. The witness
described RQAs as reductions (ranging from $0.00 to $0.27 per cwt) to
the producer's quota premium, depending on their farm location and
plant of receipt. In essence, the witness said, quota premiums have a
location value: The farther the dairy farm is located from the
receiving plant, the lower the quota premium.
The Cooperative witness stated that quota can only be held on Grade
A milk produced in California, and a quota holder must deliver milk to
a pool handler at least every 60 days. The witness also noted the fact
that quota is bought and sold on a monthly basis, which underscores its
continued importance to California dairy farms. The witness estimated
that at a price of $525 per pound of SNF, the California quota program
has a value of $1.2 billion to California dairy farms.
The witness was of the opinion, which was reiterated in the
Cooperatives' post-hearing briefs, that under current California and
Federal statutory authorities, a California FMMO can be established and
the California quota program maintained. The witness said that the main
objective of Proposal 1 is to preserve the quota program to the maximum
extent possible, and proponents believe this is consistent with the
Congressional intent of the Agricultural Act of 2014 (2014 Farm Bill),
which authorized a California FMMO that recognizes the quota program.
The witness concluded by outlining what the proponents believe is
the necessary framework of a proposed working relationship between CDFA
and USDA, and that the provisions contained in Proposal 1 are needed to
effectively maintain the quota program. The witness explained that
Proposal 1 allows the quota premium to be removed from the marketwide
pool before a FMMO blend price is computed. Producers would then
receive the blend price for their nonquota holdings and the FMMO blend
price plus the quota premium (adjusted for RQAs) for their quota
holdings. According to the witness, USDA would enforce all producer
payments, including quota payments, and jurisdiction over quota
administration, calculations, record keeping and regulatory changes
would remain with CDFA.
In their post-hearing brief, the Cooperatives asserted that their
proposal is the only one that properly
[[Page 10650]]
recognizes the quota program as intended by Congress. The Cooperatives
rebutted the Institute's claim that adoption of Proposal 1 would create
a trade barrier to milk produced outside the state because that milk
would be ineligible for the quota program. The Cooperatives offered a
modification that would create an out-of-state adjustor to ensure out-
of-state producers do not receive a lower price due to California quota
premium payments.
The Cooperatives further argued that Proposal 1 upholds the AMAA's
uniform pricing provisions, as all quota would be paid uniformly, all
non-quota milk would be paid uniformly, and all milk located outside of
the proposed marketing area would be unaffected by the quota program.
The Cooperatives' brief stated that the ability of a FMMO to regulate
interstate commerce would provide a more level playing field among all
handlers with sales in California.
A consultant witness, appearing on behalf of the proponents of
Proposal 1, testified regarding the economic importance of the
California quota program, and provided a brief history of its
evolution. At current market prices, the witness estimated the value of
the California quota program at $1.164 billion--a significant economic
asset for dairy farms and the communities they support, especially in
counties where a high percentage of milk production is covered by
quota. The witness noted that not only is quota a solid financial
investment for dairy farms, but it is a tangible asset used by dairy
farms to obtain additional financing from banks and lenders.
The witness utilized an economic impact analysis model to estimate
the total economic impact of the California quota program. The witness
estimated that total annual economic value of quota is associated with
a $27.9 million increase in California GDP, creation of 1,269 jobs, an
$11 million increase in local tax revenue, and a $16.7 million increase
in Federal tax revenue. The witness clarified that the analysis did not
consider the economic impact of the quota program on non-quota holders,
but stressed any change to the quota program would create regulatory
uncertainty and diminish the economic value of quota. The witness was
of the opinion that Proposal 2 does not recognize the economic value of
quota and would result in the devaluation of the asset, which would
financially harm California quota holders. The witness concluded that
Proposal 1 was the only proposal that would preserve and maintain the
California quota program.
Twelve dairy farmers testified that a California FMMO must provide
for the continuation of the California quota program. The farmers
stressed the importance of the California quota program as an asset for
dairy farms throughout the state. The witnesses explained that farms
utilize quota not only for the monthly quota premium they receive, but
also as an asset on farm balance sheets for lending purposes. The
witnesses expressed concern that any devaluation of their quota asset
would be financially harmful to their businesses. Of the 27 dairy
farmers who testified, 8 said they owned quota, and both quota and non-
quota holders expressed support for the quota program.
A witness testifying on behalf of WUD also elaborated on the
importance of maintaining the quota program and the need for strict
pooling provisions to ensure the quota premium could continue being
paid. The witness said quota is considered an asset and if its value is
diminished, it could create cash flow and lending difficulties for
dairy farms. The witness was of the opinion that if a California order
was adopted with pooling provisions similar to those found in other
FMMOs, the quota value would likely be diminished, which would violate
the California statute.
Proposal 2
A witness appearing on behalf of the Institute testified regarding
Proposal 2's recognition of the California quota program. Like the
Cooperative witness, the Institute witness provided a historical
overview of the quota program's authorization and evolution. The
witness stated that the quota program served as a way to compensate
producers who shipped most of their milk to Class 1 plants through the
contract system in place prior to marketwide pooling. At the time, the
witness said, the industry believed prices to producers would become
more uniform and quota allocation would be equalized among producers as
Class 1 utilization grew.
The Institute witness outlined the problems they believe arise from
Proposal 1's method for quota recognition. The witness was of the
opinion, which also was stressed in the Institute's post-hearing
briefs, that the Cooperatives have rendered an overly broad
interpretation of the 2014 Farm Bill, and in doing so, proposed
provisions that violate the AMAA. The witness said that before quota
can be recognized, a California FMMO must first determine and pay a
traditional FMMO blend price to out-of-state dairy farms who cannot own
quota. The witness said that subtracting the quota value from the
marketwide pool first, before computing a non-quota blend price, as
suggested in Proposal 1, would result in non-uniform payments to
producers and violate the AMAA.
The Institute witness explained the mechanics of quota recognition
in Proposal 2, which were modeled after the former Oregon-Washington
FMMO. The witness said that out-of-state producers would receive a
traditional FMMO blend price for their milk pooled on the California
FMMO. In-state producers would have the option to receive the CDFA
calculated quota and non-quota prices, or they could irrevocably opt
out of the quota program and receive the traditional FMMO blend price.
The witness explained that producers opting to be paid on a quota/non
quota basis would have their aggregate FMMO blend price monies
transferred to CDFA for reblending and distribution to that producer
subset. The witness was of the opinion that by giving in-state
producers the payment choice, the uniform payment provision of the AMAA
would be satisfied. The Institute witness said that Proposal 2 sought
to recognize quota value as authorized by the 2014 Farm Bill while
simultaneously upholding the purpose and provisions of the AMAA. These
opinions were reiterated in the Institute's post-hearing brief.
The Institute witness highlighted California producer support for
the quota program, and was of the opinion that USDA's Preliminary
Economic Impact Analysis prediction that the program would quickly
erode under Proposal 2 was overstated.
Proposal 3
Proposal 3, submitted by the CPHA, seeks to have exempt quota--as
part of the California quota program--be recognized and preserved,
should a California FMMO be recommended. CPHA also proposed that the
terms of consanguinity, as currently applied to producer-handlers under
CDFA regulations, be removed to allow indefinite perpetuation of exempt
quota. CPHA withdrew the second part of their proposal at the hearing.
A consultant witness for CPHA provided testimony regarding the
history of the Gonsalves Act and detailed how exempt quota was included
as part of the State's milk marketing program from its inception.
According to the witness, the CSO marketwide pooling system and quota
program was developed as an alternative to a FMMO. The witness said the
quota program was originally designed so that farmers who
[[Page 10651]]
historically served fluid milk processors would continue to receive a
higher price for the portion of their milk that had previously been
under Class 1 contract; under the CSO marketwide pooling system, all of
the Class 1 revenue would be shared with the market's producers. Over
time, the witness said, it was thought that quota holdings would be
equalized among dairy farmers. Those who had not previously held
contracts with fluid milk processors were expected to be assigned
rights to new quota created as the fluid milk market expanded.
The consultant witness explained that dairy farmers who processed
their own milk into fluid milk products were issued exempt quota,
rather than regular quota, under the new CSO system. The exempt quota
was allotted to these vertically integrated entities, known as
producer-handlers, in recognition of how their milk was marketed. The
witness said that there were originally 49 exempt quota holders, but
only 4 remain. The witness said that the amount of exempt quota was
legislatively capped in 1995.
The consultant witness clarified that exempt quota was issued as
certificates of ownership to the producer entity. The witness explained
that the handler side of the business is still required to report all
its milk receipts to the CSO, and in turn, the handler entity receives
a credit against its financial obligation to the pool for the volume of
exempt quota owned by the producer entity. The handler entity then
accounts to the CSO marketwide pool for Class 1 sales in excess of the
exempt quota volume, said the witness. The producer entity side
receives the Class 1 price from the handler side for the exempt quota
volume of milk they produce, and then they receive a combination of the
quota and overbase prices from the marketwide pool, depending on their
regular quota holdings.
A witness from Producers, testifying on behalf of CPHA, said that
all four members of CPHA own exempt quota, are referred to as ``Option
70'' producer-handlers, are fully regulated, and report to the CSO
marketwide pool for all their Class 1 sales. The witness contrasted
this to ``Option 66'' producer-handlers, who are fully exempt from the
CSO and do not participate in the quota program. Of the original 49
``Option 70'' producer-handlers, the witness said only the 4 CPHA
members remain, and all have maintained essentially the same business
structures since the quota program was established.
According to the Producers witness, CPHA members hold both exempt
quota and regular quota, but most of the milk produced by CPHA members
is accounted for as overbase production. Using 2015 CDFA data, the
Producers witness calculated that ``Option 70'' producer-handler milk
represents approximately 0.6 percent of all California production. The
witness estimated that exempt quota represents 17.4 percent of ``Option
70'' producer-handler production and 4.6 percent of all California
Class 1 sales. The witness said that all of the milk produced and sold
by CPHA members, including volumes covered by exempt quota, is reported
to the CSO marketwide pool.
The Producers witness said that the Gonsalves Act primarily
addressed industry problems that did not impact producer-handlers
because all the milk from their dairy operations flowed to their own
Class 1 plants and the markets they had developed. The witness was of
the opinion that the exempt quota feature was included as part of the
quota program to recognize the vertically integrated producer-handler's
unique business structure.
Additional CPHA witnesses representing Foster and Rockview joined
the Producers witness in describing their acquisition and maintenance
of exempt quota over the years. Each mentioned they had to make
strategic business decisions or sacrifices in order to preserve their
exempt quota status.
The CPHA witnesses attempted to quantify the value of exempt quota,
explaining that exempt quota is carried as an asset on their farms'
books and can be sold as or converted to regular quota. The CPHA
witnesses measured the value of exempt quota as the difference between
the CSO Class 1 and the quota prices. Using historical CDFA data, the
Producers and Rockview witnesses calculated the average exempt quota
value over the previous 20 years to be approximately $1.14 and $1.20
per cwt, respectively.
Using CDFA data for the preceding five years, a second Foster
witness calculated the value of exempt quota in terms of regular quota
for both northern and southern California. The witness estimated that
every pound of exempt quota in northern California and southern
California is worth 1.96 pounds and 2.12 pounds of regular quota,
respectively. Valuing regular quota at $525 per pound of SNF, but not
adjusting for RQAs, the witness estimated the value of exempt quota as
$1,029 per pound of SNF in northern California, and $1,113 per pound of
SNF in southern California. Citing CDFA production data, the witness
calculated the value of the collective 40,244.51 pounds of SNF exempt
quota in northern California as $41,411,600 and the 17,669.59 pounds of
SNF exempt quota in southern California as $19,666,253.
The Rockview witness added that converting exempt quota to regular
quota would make those volumes eligible for CSO transportation credits
that are not currently available for exempt quota milk.
A Cooperative witness also testified with regard to the evolution
of exempt quota for ``Option 70'' producer-handlers. The witness
estimated that the four CPHA members market approximately five percent
of all California Class 1 sales. The witness explained that exempt
quota entitles the producer-handler to waive any pool obligation on
those holdings. The witness described the value of exempt quota as the
difference between the Class 1 and quota prices. The witness estimated
that from 1970 through 2014, the additional value of exempt quota was
approximately $0.58 per cwt in southern California. The witness
estimated the monthly impact to the marketwide pool of recognizing
exempt quota in this manner at less than one-half of one cent per cwt.
The witness testified that the Cooperatives did not oppose adoption of
Proposal 3.
A witness representing the Institute was of the opinion that exempt
quota was offered to large producer-handlers for political expediency.
According to the witness, as the Gonsalves Act and the particulars of
marketwide pooling were being developed in the 1960s, larger producer-
handlers worried they would lose advantages enjoyed under the then-
prevailing system. To head off producer-handler opposition to
marketwide pooling, the witness contended concessions were made to
smaller producer-handlers who were exempted entirely from pooling and
received no quota allocation. Larger entities were given the option to
forgo the quota premium and instead exempt those pounds from their
Class 1 pool obligations.
The Institute witness testified that exempt quota holds no real
market value, as it cannot be bought and sold. The witness acknowledged
that determining an equivalency between exempt quota and regular quota
might be one method to assign a value to exempt quota. The Institute
witness was of the opinion that exempt quota holders have already
recovered the cost of their exempt quota, which they were last able to
purchase 20 years ago.
A witness from Dean Foods testified that the competitive advantage
producer-handlers gain from their exempt quota can be spread out over
[[Page 10652]]
their total volume of Class 1 sales. The witness argued that CPHA
witnesses diluted the impact of exempt quota on Class 1 sales by
comparing exempt quota volumes to total California milk production. The
witness contended that it was more accurate to compare total ``Option
70'' producer-handler Class 1 production to total California Class 1
sales. The witness calculated that the total volume of the 4 producer-
handlers, including their exempt quota volumes, accounted for 24
percent of total California Class 1 volume, including milk from out of
state. The witness testified that 31 handlers process the other 76
percent of California Class 1 milk.
Additional fluid milk processor witnesses representing Clover
Stornetta Farms and Farmdale Creamery, along with another Dean Foods
witness, all testified that their companies face significant
disadvantages compared to producer-handlers with exempt quota because,
unlike exempt quota holders, their companies must account to the CSO
pool at classified prices every month for all the milk they utilize.
Some witnesses claimed they have lost sales to ``Option 70'' producer-
handlers due to these regulatory disadvantages.
The Producers witness countered opposition testimony that exempt
quota provides a competitive advantage enabling them to bid customers
away from fully-regulated handlers. The witness said that Producers
pays the Class 1 price to the farm side of the business for the exempt
quota milk they use, and pays the quota or overbase price for the rest
of the farm's milk it processes.
In its post-hearing brief, the Institute argued against recognition
of exempt quota under a California FMMO. According to the Institute's
brief, the recognition of exempt quota in a California FMMO would
violate the AMAA's uniform pricing provisions. The Institute explained
that by recognizing exempt quota, exempt-quota-holding-producer
entities would not share the value of all their Class 1 sales with
their fellow dairy farmers, and handler entities would not be required
to pay uniform minimum prices for their raw milk supplies.
The Institute brief further argued that the 2014 Farm Bill language
authorizing a California FMMO that recognizes quota value does not mean
California's entire quota system should be preserved and maintained,
nor that certain Class 1 handlers should be permitted to have a
regulatory competitive advantage over other Class 1 handlers. The
Institute brief also argued that permitting a differentiated status for
only those few entities who currently own exempt quota would be
inequitable to new market entrants.
In response, CPHA's reply brief asserted that CPHA handler entities
currently pay Class 1 prices for all their raw milk, exempt quota
provides no financial advantage over other fully-regulated handlers,
and there are no market disruptions attributable to exempt quota. The
reply brief stressed that CPHA producer entities, not their handler
counterparts, hold exempt quota. Their reply brief also asserted the
record contains no evidence that exempt quota holders enjoy raw milk
price advantages. CPHA contended that all handlers pay the same
classified price for raw milk in California despite misperceptions to
the contrary. CPHA pointed out that competitors have won and lost
accounts for milk sales for a variety of reasons not necessarily
attributed to exempt quota ownership.
According to CPHA's reply brief, Congress's use of the term ``quota
system,'' and its omission of specific reference to exempt quota in the
2014 Farm Bill language is consistent with its directive that the
Secretary should hold a hearing to consider, and is authorized to
recognize, all aspects of California's quota program under a California
FMMO.
CPHA's reply brief clarified the intent of Proposal 3 to allow for
the preservation of exempt quota status for those few producer-handlers
who own it. CPHA argued its members are not seeking exemption from all
pricing and pooling obligations under a California FMMO, but merely
recognition of their ownership of exempt quota and the related volumes
of production it represents.
A post hearing brief submitted by Trihope expressed concerns
regarding the recognition of the California quota program within the
FMMO framework. Trihope was of the opinion that any recognition of
quota would violate the AMAA's uniform payments provision. Trihope also
wrote that authorizing quota payments would give a revenue advantage to
California dairy farms and create a trade barrier for out-of-state
farms seeking to be pooled on the California FMMO.
Findings
The record contains detailed information about the establishment
and evolution of the quota program administered by the State of
California. The record reflects that the Gonsalves Act legislatively
authorized both the California quota program and marketwide pooling
within the structure of the CSO. Until that point, dairy farms were
paid through individual handler pools that reflected a plant's use
values for their milk--there was no marketwide pooling function that
allowed all producers to share in the benefits from Class 1 sales and
the burden of balancing the market to ensure an adequate supply of milk
to meet Class 1 demand. Many witnesses spoke to the political
compromise reached to compensate dairy farmers who held Class 1 supply
contracts from the financial loss they would incur by pooling and
sharing their Class 1 revenue with all dairy farmers in California.
While the original quota allotment was based on existing Class 1
contracts, it was thought at the time that quota would equalize among
producers as Class 1 utilization increased and future quota allotments
were issued; however, this did not occur.
Many witnesses spoke of the importance they believe the California
quota program has for the state's dairy industry. Producers spoke of
the investments they made in purchasing quota allotments, and the
continued financial benefit it provides through the monthly quota
premium they receive. Even producers who own little or no quota spoke
of the importance of continuing the program for their fellow dairy
farmers.
The 2014 Farm Bill authorized the promulgation of a California
FMMO, and specified that the order ``shall have the right to reblend
and distribute order receipts to recognize quota value.'' The hearing
record is replete with testimony on the proper interpretation of those
final three words, ``recognize quota value.'' The Cooperatives
conveyed, and stressed in their post-hearing brief submissions, that
the 2014 Farm Bill mandates the quota program must be recognized, and
only the method of recognition is to be decided through this rulemaking
proceeding. The Cooperatives are of the opinion that the proper
recognition of quota value is through the deduction of quota monies
from the marketwide pool before a California blend price is calculated,
as is current practice for the CSO.\17\ The Cooperatives stressed
repeatedly that should any conflict be found between the provisions of
the 2014 Farm Bill and the AMAA, the 2014 Farm Bill language should be
given more credence, as it is the most recent Congressional action.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\17\ This position was slightly modified in their post-hearing
brief to also adjust prices for out-of-state producers so that their
price was not impacted by quota payments.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Institute witnesses and post-hearing briefs stressed that quota
recognition must be harmonized with the AMAA, in
[[Page 10653]]
particular its uniform payments and trade-barrier provisions. Should
any conflict arise, the Institute contends that because the Farm Bill
did not amend the AMAA, the AMAA as the authorizing legislation should
take precedent. The Institute's approach to recognizing quota value is
to first allow producers the one-time decision to opt out of the quota
program. Those producers who opt out of the quota program would be paid
a FMMO blend price calculated without a deduction for quota. Those
producers who remain in the quota program would have their FMMO blend
price monies sent, in aggregate, to CDFA for reblending and
redistribution according to their quota and nonquota milk marketings.
The Institute is of the opinion that because dairy producers opting out
of the quota program would not have their payments affected by quota,
recognizing quota under a California FMMO would not violate the uniform
pricing and trade-barrier provisions of the AMAA.
As discussed earlier, when promulgating or amending any FMMO, the
Department must always evaluate whether the proposed action is
authorized by the AMAA. The AMAA not only clearly defines its policy
goal, which this decision has already discussed, but it also defines
specific provisions that must be contained in the FMMO framework. The
two most relevant to the discussion on quota recognition are the
provision for uniform payments handlers make to producers, and the
provision to prevent trade barriers. The uniform payment provisions
require all handlers regulated by a FMMO to pay the same classified use
value for their raw milk, and all producers whose milk is pooled on a
FMMO to receive the same price for their milk regardless of how it is
utilized. In this respect, similarly situated handlers are assured that
they are paying the same raw milk costs as their competitors, and
producers are indifferent as to where or how their milk is utilized, as
they receive the same price regardless.
The trade barrier provision specifies that no FMMO may, in any
manner, limit the marketing of milk or milk products within the
marketing area. In this regard, FMMOs cannot adopt provisions that
would create any economic barrier limiting the marketing of milk within
marketing area boundaries.
To determine how to properly recognize quota value, Congress
provided additional guidance to the 2014 Farm Bill language through the
2014 Conference Report.\18\ In the report, Congress specified that the
Department has discretion to determine how best to recognize quota
value in whatever manner is appropriate on the basis of a rulemaking
proceeding. Consistent with the Conference Report, this decision
evaluated record evidence pertaining to how the current California
quota program operates, how it can best be recognized within FMMO
provisions tailored to the California market, and how all the FMMO
provisions work in conjunction with each other to adhere to all AMAA
provisions.
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\18\ Official Notice is taken of the Agricultural Agreement of
2014 Conference Report. https://www.congress.gov/congressional-report/113th-congress/house-report/333/1.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The California quota program, like the CSO, is administered by
CDFA. The record reflects that 58 percent of California dairy farmers
own quota. In its current form, the quota program entitles a quota
holder to an additional $0.195 per pound SNF (equivalent to $1.70 per
cwt) over the market's overbase price on the quota milk they market
each month. Similar to their FMMO counterparts, California handlers pay
classified use values for their milk, and those values make up the CSO
marketwide pool. Each month, CDFA deducts quota monies from the CSO
marketwide pool before a marketwide blend price, otherwise known as the
overbase price, is calculated. CDFA then announces the quota and
overbase prices \19\ to be paid to California dairy farmers. As a
result, in general, nonquota milk receives the market's overbase price,
and quota milk receives the overbase price plus an additional $1.70 per
cwt. CDFA enforces payments of both quota and overbase prices. Record
data shows that the deduction from the CSO marketwide pool to pay quota
premiums is approximately $12.5 to $13 million per month. Numerous
witnesses estimated, at current quota market prices, the asset value of
quota at $1.2 billion.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\19\ The record reflects that CDFA also announces a base price
which is equal to the overbase price. For simplicity, this decision
will refer only to the overbase price.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The record reflects that the California quota program is funded by
California producers. All handlers regulated through the CSO pay
minimum classified use values, and it is only once those values have
been pooled that the quota value is deducted from the pool. Data on the
record reflects all California dairy farmers, including quota holders,
receive $0.37 per cwt less, on average, for all of their milk
marketings in order to fund the $0.195 per pound of quota SNF payment
to quota holders.
This decision finds the California quota program could be
maintained, administered, and enforced by CDFA and that a California
FMMO should operate as a stand-alone program. As is currently done in
all FMMOs, handlers would pay classified use values into the pool, and
all producers, both in state and out of state, would receive a FMMO
blend price reflective of the market's use values. It is through this
structure that a California FMMO could ensure the uniform payment and
trade barrier provisions of the AMAA are upheld.
Should CDFA determine it can continue to operate the California
quota program through the use of producer monies, as is the current
practice, the proposed California FMMO could recognize quota values
through an authorized deduction by handlers from the payments due to
producers for those dairy farmers determined by CDFA to be participants
in the state-administered California quota program. The amount of the
deduction would be determined and announced by CDFA.
Currently, FMMOs allow for authorized deductions, such as the Dairy
Promotion and Research Program assessment, from a producer's milk
check. The California FMMO similarly would authorize a deduction for
the state-administered California quota program. The California FMMO
would allow regulated handlers to deduct monies, in an amount
determined and announced by CDFA, from blend prices paid to California
dairy farmers for pooled milk, and send those monies to CDFA to
administer the quota program. CDFA would in turn enforce quota payments
to quota holders.
In essence, this decision proposes that the California quota
program could continue to operate in essentially the same manner as it
currently does. The record reflects that the California quota program
already assesses California producers to pay quota values to quota
holders. While producers may not see this as an itemized deduction on
their milk checks, their overbase price is lower than it otherwise
would be. This is a result of deducting the quota value from the pool
prior to calculating the overbase price.
The California FMMO would authorize deductions from those
California producers whose milk is pooled on the order. As this
decision will later explain, the proposed California FMMO would have
performance-based pooling standards that allow for milk to not be
pooled. CDFA would be responsible for the collection of California
producer monies for milk not pooled, because a California FMMO would
only apply to producer
[[Page 10654]]
milk as defined by the order. USDA and CDFA could cooperate by sharing
data through a memorandum of understanding to ensure that, between the
two regulatory bodies, all appropriate California producers are
assessed an amount necessary to administer the quota program.
In regard to the treatment of exempt quota as addressed in Proposal
3, this decision finds that exempt quota is part of the California
quota program and therefore its proper recognition should be determined
by CDFA. The record demonstrates that exempt quota was initially
granted when the California quota program was established, and like
regular quota, the provisions have been adjusted numerous times through
both California legislative and rulemaking actions. This decision finds
the continuation of exempt quota, in whatever manner appropriate,
should be determined by CDFA.
The record reflects that under the proposed FMMO, the four
California producer-handlers who own exempt quota would likely become
fully-regulated handlers because their sales exceed three-million
pounds per month. These fully-regulated handlers would be required to
account to the marketwide pool for all of their Class I utilization and
pay uniform FMMO minimum classified prices for all milk they pool. The
CPHA witnesses testified that exempt quota is held on the producer side
of their businesses. CDFA could best determine how those producers
holding exempt quota should be compensated. Such compensation cannot be
made from reducing the minimum Class I obligation of FMMO fully-
regulated handlers without undermining the uniform handler payment
provision of the AMAA.
Throughout the hearing and in post-hearing briefs, dairy farmers
and their Cooperative representatives stressed that while a California
FMMO would provide them a more equitable price for their milk, entry
into the FMMO system must not diminish or disturb, in any form,
California quota values. This decision finds that the package of FMMO
provisions recommended in this decision would create more orderly
marketing of milk in California, adhere to all the provisions of the
AMAA, and allow the California quota program to operate independently
of the FMMO. In doing so, the California quota program will not be
diminished or disturbed in any form by California's entry into the FMMO
system.
5. Definitions and Uniform Provisions
This section outlines definitions and provisions of a California
FMMO that describe the persons and dairy plants affected by the FMMO
and specify the regulation of those entities.
The Cooperatives and the Institute both proposed regulatory
language for an entire FMMO, including definitions and regulations
specific to a California FMMO, as well as adoption of several of the
uniform provisions common to other FMMOs. In many cases, hearing
witnesses simply provided the list of uniform provisions for which they
supported adoption, and in most cases, proponents for Proposals 1 and 2
agreed on the inclusion of these provisions.
The FMMO system currently provides for uniform definitions and
provisions, which are found in Part 1000 under the General Provisions
of Federal Milk Marketing Orders. Where applicable, those provisions
are incorporated by reference into each FMMO. The uniform provisions
were developed as part of FMMO Order Reform to prescribe certain
provisions that needed to be contained in each FMMO to describe and
define those entities affected by FMMO regulatory plans.
As outlined in the Order Reform Proposed Rule \20\ and as
implemented in the Final Rule,\21\ the establishment of a set of
uniform provisions provides for regulatory simplification and defines
common terms used in the administration of all FMMOs, resulting in the
uniform application of basic program principles throughout the system.
Application of standardized terminology and administrative procedures
enhances communication among regulated entities and supports effective
administration of the individual FMMOs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\20\ Official Notice is taken of Federal Order Reform Proposed
Rule: 63 FR 4802.
\21\ Official Notice is taken of Federal Order Reform Final
Rule: 64 FR 47898.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
This decision finds that a set of uniform provisions should
continue to be maintained throughout the FMMO system to ensure
consistency between uses of terms. Therefore, this decision finds that
a California FMMO should contain provisions consistent with those in
the 10 current FMMOs.
Marketing conditions in each regulated marketing area do not lend
themselves to completely identical provisions. Consequently, some
provisions are tailored to the marketing conditions of the individual
order, and provisions recommended for a California FMMO in this
decision are similarly tailored to the California market where
appropriate. This section provides a brief description of the uniform
definitions and provisions recommended for a California FMMO. Where a
definition or provision does not lend itself to uniform application, it
is discussed in greater detail here or in other sections of this
document.
This decision recommends the following definitions for a California
FMMO:
Marketing Area. The Marketing Area refers to the geographic area
where handlers who have fluid milk sales would be regulated. In this
case, the marketing area should include the entire state of California.
The marketing area encompasses any wharves, piers, and docks connected
to California and any craft moored there. It also includes all
territory within California occupied by government reservations,
installations, institutions, or other similar establishments.
Route Disposition. A Route Disposition should be a measure of fluid
milk (Class I) sales in commercial channels. It should be defined as
the amount of fluid milk products in consumer-type packages or
dispenser units delivered by a distributing plant to a retail or
wholesale outlet, either directly or through any distribution facility.
Plant. A Plant should be defined as what constitutes an operating
entity for pricing and regulatory purposes. Plant should include the
land, buildings, facilities, and equipment constituting a single
operating unit or establishment where milk or milk products are
received, processed, or packaged. The definition should include all
departments, including where milk products are stored such as coolers,
but not separate buildings used as reload points for milk transfers or
used only as distribution points for storing fluid milk products in
transit. On-farm facilities operated as part of a single dairy farm
entity for cream separation or concentration should not be considered
plants.
Distributing Plant. A Distributing Plant should be defined as a
plant approved by a duly constituted regulatory agency to handle Grade
A milk that processes or packages fluid milk products from which there
is route disposition.
Supply Plant. A Supply Plant should mean a regular or reserve
supplier of bulk milk for the fluid market that helps coordinate the
market's milk supply and demand. A supply plant should be a plant,
other than a distributing plant, that is approved to handle Grade A
milk as defined by a duly constituted regulatory agency, and at which
fluid milk products are received or from which fluid milk products are
transferred or diverted.
[[Page 10655]]
Pool Plant. A Pool Plant should mean a plant serving the market to
a degree that warrants their producers sharing in the added value that
derived from the classified pricing of milk. The pool plant definition
provides for pooling standards that are unique to each FMMO. The
specifics of the pooling standards recommended for a California FMMO
are discussed in detail in the Pooling section of this decision.
Nonpool Plant. A Nonpool Plant should be defined as plants that
receive, process, or package milk, but do not satisfy the standards for
being a pool plant. This provision provides additional clarity to
define the extent of regulation applicable to plants. Nonpool plants
should be further defined to include: A Plant Fully Regulated under
Another Federal Order, which means a plant that is fully subject to the
pricing and pooling provisions of another order; a Producer-Handler
Plant, which means a plant operated by a producer-handler as defined
under any Federal order; a Partially Regulated Distributing Plant,
which means a plant from which there is route disposition in the
marketing area during the month, but does not meet the provisions for
full regulation; and an Unregulated Supply Plant, which is a supply
plant that does not qualify as a pool supply plant.
Exempt Plant. An Exempt Plant also is a nonpool plant, and should
be defined as a plant exempt from the pricing and pooling provisions of
any order, although the exempt plant operator would still need to
comply with certain reporting requirements regarding its route
disposition and exempt status. Exempt plants should include plants
operated by a governmental agency with no route disposition in
commercial market channels, plants operated by duly accredited colleges
or universities disposing of fluid milk products only through their own
facilities and having no commercial route disposition, plants from
which the total route disposition is for individuals or institutions
for charitable purposes and without remuneration, and plants that have
route disposition and sales of packaged fluid milk products to other
plants of no more than 150,000 pounds during the month.
The exempt plant definition was standardized as part of Order
Reform to provide a uniform definition of distributing plants which,
because of their size, did not significantly impact competitive
relationships among handlers in the market. The 150,000 pound limit on
route disposition and sales of packaged fluid milk products was deemed
appropriate because at the time it was the maximum amount of fluid milk
products allowed by an exempt plant in any FMMO. Therefore, the uniform
provisions ensured that exempt plants remained exempt from pricing and
pooling provisions as part of Order Reform. This decision finds that to
provide for regulatory consistency, the exempt plant definition in a
California FMMO should be uniform with the 10 current FMMOs. This
provision would allow for smaller California distributing plants that
do not significantly impact the competitive relationship among handlers
to be exempt from the pricing and pooling provisions of a California
FMMO.
Both the Cooperatives and the Institute proposed adoption of the
standard FMMO definition of exempt plants, and hearing witnesses were
supportive of the proposals. However, in their post-hearing brief, the
Cooperatives proposed two additional exempt plant categories to provide
regulatory relief to small handlers under Proposal 1. The two
additional exempt plant categories proposed include: (1) Plants that
process 300,000 pounds or less of milk during the month into Class II,
III, and IV products, and have no Class I production or distribution;
and (2) plants that process, in total, 300,000 pounds or less of milk
during the month, from which no more than 150,000 pounds is disposed of
as route disposition or sales of packaged fluid milk products to other
plants. Proposal 1, as originally drafted, would have fully regulated
all handlers that received California milk, except for plants with
150,000 pounds or less of route disposition. Through the proposed
modification, the Cooperatives sought to extend exempt plant status to
smaller plants regardless of their use of milk. In essence, it would
allow smaller plants with primarily manufacturing uses to be exempt
from the pricing and pooling provisions. This decision finds the
recommended performance-based pooling provisions make such additional
exemptions unnecessary, as plants with manufacturing uses will have the
option to elect not to pool their milk supply.
Handler. A Handler should be defined as a person who buys milk from
dairy farmers. Handlers have a financial responsibility for payments to
dairy farmers for milk in accordance with its classified use. Handlers
must file reports with the Market Administrator detailing their
receipts and utilization of milk.
The handler definition for a California FMMO should include the
operator of a pool plant, a cooperative association that diverts milk
to nonpool plants or delivers milk to pool plants for its account, and
the operator of a nonpool plant.
The handler definition should also include intermediaries, such as
brokers and wholesalers, who provide a service to the dairy industry,
but are not required by the FMMO to make minimum payments to producers.
The Cooperatives proposed adoption of the uniform FMMO handler
definition for a California FMMO. The Institute proposed adopting the
uniform handler definition, modified to include proprietary bulk tank
handlers (PBTH). A witness representing the Institute and Hilmar
testified regarding the PBTH provision. The witness said a PBTH
provision had been included in some former FMMOs to allow proprietary
handlers to pool milk in a fashion similar to cooperative handlers,
without needing to first deliver milk to a pool supply plant to meet
the performance standards of the order. The witness explained that
under Proposal 2, a PBTH would have to operate a plant--located in the
marketing area--that does not process Class I milk and further, the
PBTH would have to be recognized as the responsible handler for all
milk pooled under that provision. The witness was of the opinion that
the PBTH provision would promote efficient milk movements, reduce
transportation costs, and eliminate unnecessary milk loading and
unloading simply to meet the order's performance standards.
The witness said the flexibilities of a PBTH provision would offer
operational efficiencies to Hilmar and allow them to meet criteria
similar to the pool supply plant qualifications advanced in Proposal 2.
The witness explained that Hilmar would be able to ship milk directly
from a farm to a distributing plant, rather than shipping milk first to
a pool supply plant and then on to a distributing plant.
In their post-hearing briefs, the Cooperatives opposed the PBTH
provision, citing disorderly marketing conditions with its use in
earlier marketing orders, and stating that the provision is
unnecessary, prone to create disorder, and, as proposed,
administratively unworkable.
The record supports adoption of the standard FMMO handler
definition without the additional PBTH provision prescribed in Proposal
2. The Department has found in the past that PBTH provisions led to the
pooling of milk that was not part of the legitimate reserve supply for
distributing plants in
[[Page 10656]]
the marketing area.\22\ In California, with a relatively low Class I
utilization, such a provision is unnecessary to ensure an adequate
supply of milk for Class I use. Therefore, this decision finds that the
uniform handler definition, without the inclusion of a PBTH provision,
is appropriate for a California FMMO.
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\22\ Official Notice is taken of Pacific Northwest and Western
Marketing Areas Tentative Final Decision: 68 FR 49375.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Producer-Handler. Under the 10 existing FMMOs, Producer-Handlers
are defined as persons who operate, as their own enterprise and at
their sole risk, both a dairy farm and a distributing plant from which
there is route disposition within the marketing area, and have total
Class I fluid milk sales of no more than three million pounds per
month. Seven of the existing orders also allow producer-handlers to
receive up to 150,000 pounds of fluid milk products per month from
fully-regulated handlers in any order. Producer-handlers are exempt
from the pricing and pooling provisions under each of the existing
orders.
As a result of their exemption from the pricing and pooling
provisions, producer-handlers, in their capacity as handlers, are not
required to pay the minimum class prices established under the orders,
nor are they, in their capacity as producers, granted minimum price
protection for disposal of their surplus milk. Producer-handlers, in
their capacity as handlers, are not obligated to equalize their use-
value of milk through payment of the difference between their use-value
of milk and the respective order's blend price into the producer-
settlement fund. Thus, producer-handlers retain the full value of milk
processed and disposed of as fluid milk products by their operation.
Entities defined as FMMO producer-handlers must adhere to strict
criteria that limit certain business practices, including the purchase
of supplemental milk. Given these limitations, producer-handlers bear
the full burden of balancing their milk production between fluid and
other uses. Milk production in excess of their Class I route
disposition does not enjoy minimum price protection under the orders
and may be sold at whatever price is obtainable in the market.
Producer-handlers are required to submit reports and provide access
to their books, records and any other documentation as deemed necessary
by the Market Administrator to ensure compliance with the requirements
for their regulatory status as producer-handlers. Therefore, producer-
handlers are regulated under the orders, but are not ``fully
regulated'' like other handlers who are subject to an order's pricing
and pooling provisions.
Under the CSO, two categories of producer-handlers are recognized.
``Option 66'' producer-handlers may request exemption from the CSO's
pooling regulations if both their farm production and their sales
average less than 500 gallons of milk per day on an annual basis, and
if they ship 95 percent of their production to retail or wholesale
outlets. ``Option 66'' producer-handlers are fully exempt from the pool
for their entire production and may not own quota or production base.
The record reflects that there were two ``Option 66'' producer-handlers
in California at the time of the hearing. No production data was
submitted at the hearing to quantify the volume of ``Option 66''
producer-handler milk exempt from the CSO pool.
The CSO's second producer-handler category pertains to ``Option
70'' producer-handlers--large scale entities that own exempt quota,
which exempts them from pooling a portion of their Class 1 milk. The
exempt quota held by ``Option 70'' producer-handlers was discussed
earlier in this decision.
Proposals 1 and 2 both include definitions and provisions for
producer-handlers consistent with the 10 FMMOs that currently exempt
persons who operate both dairy farms and distributing plants, and
process and distribute no more than three million pounds of fluid milk
per month. The producer-handler regulations under Proposal 2 more
closely resemble those in the Pacific Northwest and Arizona FMMOs in
that they contain additional specificity about producer-handler
qualifications.
A Cooperative witness supported adoption of the standard FMMO
producer-handler definition for a California FMMO as contained in
Proposal 1. Under the standard definition, producer-handlers who sell
or deliver up to three million pounds of Class I milk or packaged fluid
milk products monthly would be exempt from the pricing and pooling
provisions. The witness added that under Proposal 1, producer-handlers
could own regular quota and qualify for transportation credits.
Two producer witnesses who also operate processing facilities in
California described their individual experiences related to running
small dairy farms and fluid milk processing operations. Both witnesses
testified that they supported Proposal 1 because, among other things,
they thought the proposed FMMO producer-handler definition could
provide them exemptions from the pooling requirements for their Class I
production and sales, something that they do not currently enjoy from
the CSO.
A witness from Organic Pastures Dairy Company, LLC (Organic
Pastures) testified on behalf of Organic Pastures and three other small
San Joaquin Valley ``producer-distributor'' entities. According to the
witness, these entities produce and bottle their own Class 1 milk, but
do not qualify as ``Option 66'' producer-handlers, and must therefore
account to the CSO pool. The witness explained that these businesses
have taken risks to develop their own brands and customer bases, but
struggle to survive financially. The witness said that Organic
Pastures' monthly pool obligation for December 2014 was $50,000 for the
milk they bottled and sold in California. The witness contended that
because they produce, process, and distribute their own products, they
should be exempt from regulation.
The entities represented by the witness supported a California FMMO
because they believe they would meet the FMMO producer-handler
definition and thus be exempt from the pricing and pooling provisions.
The witness testified that the standard three-million pound limit would
allow them to grow their businesses, but remain exempt from pricing and
pooling provisions.
A witness from Dean Foods testified in support of the producer-
handler provision contained in Proposal 2. The witness described
similarities and differences between the producer-handler definitions
in Proposals 1 and 2. The witness added that proponents of Proposal 2
recommended adoption of the additional ownership requirements, which
mirror the standards in the Pacific Northwest and Arizona FMMOs. The
witness explained that the additional requirements would ensure that
larger-size operations typical of the western Federal orders that meet
the producer-handler definition would not be able to undermine the
intent of the provision.
The witness testified that Dean Foods fully supported the
Institute's proposal to cap producer-handler exemptions at three
million pounds of monthly Class I route disposition. The witness cited
USDA decisions that found producer-handlers with greater than three
million pounds of route disposition per month impacted the market, and
thus their exemption from pricing and pooling provisions was
disorderly.
Support for the producer-handler provisions contained in Proposal 2
was
[[Page 10657]]
also expressed by two small California processors and by the
Cooperatives in their post-hearing brief.
The FMMO system has historically exempted producer-handlers from
the pricing and pooling provisions of FMMOs on the premise that the
burden of disposal of their surplus milk was borne by them alone. Until
2005, there was no limit on the amount of Class I route disposition
producer-handlers were allowed before they would be fully regulated. A
Pacific Northwest and Arizona FMMO rulemaking established a three-
million pound per month limit on Class I route disposition.\23\ The
record of that proceeding revealed large producer-handlers were able to
market fluid milk at prices below those that could be offered by fully
regulated handlers in such volumes that the practice was undermining
the order's ability to establish uniform prices to handlers and
producers. That proceeding found that producer-handlers with more than
three million pounds of Class I route disposition significantly
affected the blend prices received by producers and should therefore be
fully regulated. The producer-handler provisions in all FMMOs were
later amended in 2010.\24\ In that proceeding, USDA found a three-
million pound monthly limit on producer-handler total Class I route
dispositions was appropriate to maintain orderly marketing conditions
throughout the FMMO system.
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\23\ Official Notice is taken of Pacific Northwest and Arizona
Proposed Rule: 70 FR 19636.
\24\ Official Notice is taken of FMMO Producer-Handler Final
Rule: 75 FR 21157.
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This decision finds the regulatory treatment of producer-handlers
should continue to be uniform throughout the FMMO system. The monthly
three-million pound limit on Class I route disposition would ensure
that California FMMO producer-handlers could not use their pricing and
pooling exemption to undermine orderly marketing conditions. Therefore,
the proposed California FMMO should contain the uniform FMMO producer-
handler provision that limits monthly Class I route disposition to
three million pounds.
The adoption of the standard FMMO producer-handler definition was
supported by proponents of Proposals 1 and 2, as well as by entities
that could meet the proposed producer-handler definition. The record
does not contain data to indicate how many California entities would
meet the proposed FMMO producer-handler definition, but it does
indicate that only a small number would be impacted.
The additional qualification standards contained in the Pacific
Northwest and Arizona FMMOs were explained in the Order Reform Proposed
Rule.\25\ The decision explained the larger than average herd size of
dairy farms in the western United States lent itself to the existence
of producer-handlers that were a significant factor in the market.
Therefore, the Pacific Northwest and Arizona FMMOs adopted producer-
handler provisions with additional qualification standards tailored to
the larger dairy farm size typical of the western region of the United
States.
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\25\ See infra.
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The record reveals that herd sizes in California tend to be typical
of the larger herd sizes found in the western FMMOs. According to CDFA
data, in 2015 California's average herd size was 1,215. This decision
finds it appropriate that the producer-handler provision in a
California FMMO should include the additional qualification standards
similar to those in the nearby Pacific Northwest and Arizona FMMOs.
In their post-hearing brief, the Cooperatives proposed modifying
Proposal 1 to broaden the producer-handler definition to include
utilization other than Class I. The modification would allow producer-
handlers with Class II, Class III, or Class IV manufacturing, in
conjunction with their Class I processing, to be granted producer-
handler status, as long as their total production remained under the
three million pound processing limit. The Cooperatives contend this
would provide regulatory relief to smaller producer-handlers, who would
otherwise become regulated under the inclusive pooling provisions of
Proposal 1. This decision finds that extending the producer-handler
definition to include manufacturing uses is not necessary because the
package of pooling provisions recommended in this decision allows for
optional pooling of milk used in manufacturing.
California Quota Program. The California Quota Program should be
defined as the program outlined by the applicable provisions of the
California Food and Agriculture Code and related provisions of the
pooling plan administered by CDFA. Details about the proposals, hearing
record, and this decision's findings regarding appropriate recognition
of the California quota program were discussed earlier in this
decision.
Producer. A Producer should be defined as a dairy farmer that
supplies the market with Grade A milk for fluid use or who is at least
capable of doing so if necessary. Producers would be eligible to share
in the revenue that accrues from marketwide milk pooling. The producer
definition in each FMMO order typically differs with respect to the
degree of association that dairy farmers must demonstrate within a
marketing area, as provided in the producer milk definition. The
details of the proposals, hearing evidence, and this decision's
findings regarding the producer milk definition are described later in
the Pooling section of this decision.
Producer Milk. Producer Milk should be defined to identify the milk
of producers that is eligible for inclusion in the marketwide pool.
This definition is specific to the proposed California FMMO marketing
order, reflecting California marketing conditions, and provides the
parameters for the efficient movement of milk between dairy farms and
processing plants. The details of the proposals, hearing evidence, and
this decision's findings regarding the producer milk definition are
described later in the Pooling section of this decision.
Other Source Milk. The order should include the uniform FMMO
definition of Other Source Milk to include all the skim milk and
butterfat in receipts of fluid milk products and bulk fluid cream
products from sources other than producers, cooperative handlers, or
pool plants. Other source milk should also include certain products
from any source that are used to make other products and products for
which a handler fails to make a disposition.
Fluid Milk Product. A California FMMO should include the standard
FMMO definition of a Fluid Milk Product, which sets out the criteria
for determining whether the use of producer milk and milk-derived
ingredients in those products should be priced at the Class I price.
Under the definition, Fluid Milk Product includes any milk products in
fluid or frozen form that are intended to be used as beverages
containing less than 9 percent butterfat, and containing 6.5 percent or
more nonfat solids or 2.25 percent or more true milk protein. Fluid
milk products would include, but not be limited to: Milk, eggnog, and
cultured buttermilk; and those products could be flavored, cultured,
modified with added or reduced nonfat solids, sterilized, concentrated,
or reconstituted. Nonfat solid and protein sources include, but are not
limited to, casein, whey protein concentrate, dry whey, and lactose,
among others.
Products such as whey, evaporated milk, sweetened condensed milk,
yogurt beverages containing 20 or more percent yogurt by weight, kefir,
and certain
[[Page 10658]]
packaged infant formula and meal replacements, would not be considered
fluid milk products for pricing purposes.
Fluid Cream Product. The order should include the standard FMMO
definition of Fluid Cream Product. Fluid cream product includes cream
or milk and cream mixtures containing at least 9 percent butterfat.
Plastic cream and frozen cream would not be considered fluid cream
products.
Cooperative Association. The order should include the uniform FMMO
definition of Cooperative Association to facilitate administration of
the order as it applies to dairy farmer cooperative associations. Under
the uniform definition, a cooperative association means any cooperative
marketing association of producers that the Secretary determines is
qualified to be so recognized under the Capper-Volstead Act.
Cooperative associations have full authority to engage in the sales and
marketing of their members' milk and milk products. The definition also
provides the recognition of cooperative association federations that
function as cooperative associations for the purposes of determining
milk payments and pooling.
Commercial Food Processing Establishment. The uniform FMMO
definition for Commercial Food Processing Establishment should be
included in a California FMMO to describe those facilities that use
fluid milk and cream as ingredients in other food products. The
definition helps identify, for classification purposes, whether
disposition to such a facility should be considered anything but Class
I, and clarifies that packaged fluid milk products could not be further
disposed of by the facility other than those received in consumer-type
containers of one gallon or smaller. Producer milk may be diverted to
commercial food processing establishments, subject to the diversion and
pricing provisions of a California FMMO.
Market Administrator. The record supports a provision for the
administration of the order by a Market Administrator, who is selected
by the Secretary and responsible for the oversight of FMMO activities.
The market administrator receives and reviews handler reports,
allocates handlers' milk receipts to their proper utilization and
classification, publicizes monthly milk prices, provides monthly
written account statements to handlers, and manages the producer
settlement fund which serves as a clearing house for marketwide pool
revenues. The market administrator is authorized to make adjustments to
the order's shipping and diversion provisions, where justified, and to
investigate noncompliance with the order. The market administrator
manages the marketwide pool, conducts handler audits, provides
laboratory testing of milk samples, and performs many other functions
that support the regulation of milk marketing in the area. Market
administrator activities are funded through an administrative
assessment on handlers.
Continuity and Separability of Provisions. Each FMMO prescribes
uniform rules governing the implementation and maintenance of the
marketing order itself, and a California FMMO should likewise include
these provisions. These rules state that the Secretary determines when
the FMMO becomes effective and whether and when it should be
terminated. The rules also provide for the fulfillment of any
outstanding obligations arising under the order and liquidating any
assets held by the Market Administrator, if the order is terminated or
suspended. Finally, the rules provide that if, for some reason, one
provision of the order--or its applicability to a person or
circumstance--were to be held invalid, the applicability of that
provision to other persons or circumstances and the remaining order
provisions would otherwise continue in force.
Handler Responsibility for Records and Facilities. Provision should
be made for the maintenance and retention by handlers of the records
pertaining to their operations under a California FMMO. Records of the
handler's milk purchases, sales, processing, packaging, and disposition
should be included, along with records of the handler's milk
utilization, producer payments, and other records required by the
market administrator to verify the handler's compliance with order
provisions. The market administrator should be able to review and audit
each handler's records, and should have access to the handler's
facilities, equipment and operations, as needed to verify the handler's
obligation under the order. Handlers should be required to retain all
pertinent records for three years, or longer if part of a compliance
enforcement action, or as directed by the market administrator.
Termination of Obligations. Provision should be made under a
California FMMO for notification to any handler who fails to meet
financial obligations under the order, including payments to producers,
other handlers, and to the market administrator. Such provision is
contained in the uniform provisions of all FMMOs, and specifies that
the market administrator has two years after the receipt of the
handler's report of receipts and utilization to notify the handler of
any unmet financial obligation. Provisions are included for the
enforcement of the handler's payment requirement and for the handler's
opportunity to file a petition for relief as provided under the AMAA.
6. Classification
The AMAA authorizes FMMOs to regulate milk in interstate commerce,
and its provisions require that milk be classified according to the
form in which or purpose for which it is used. Therefore, the
classification of milk is uniform in all FMMOs to maintain orderly
marketing conditions within and between FMMOs and to ensure that
handlers competing in the national market for manufactured products
have similar raw milk costs.
This decision finds that because California would be joining the
FMMO system it should contain the uniform classification provisions
included in the 10 existing FMMOs. Adoption of standard FMMO product
classification provisions in the proposed California FMMO is
appropriate to maintain uniform pricing for similar products both
within the California FMMO and throughout the FMMO system. This section
provides a summary of the hearing evidence and post-hearing arguments
regarding milk classification under a California FMMO.
Proposals 1 and 2 both offer standard FMMO product classifications
for their respective California FMMO provisions. Proposal 2 also
provides an additional shrinkage allowance for ESL production at
qualified ESL pool distributing plants.
A Cooperative witness testified regarding the proposed
classification provisions contained in Proposal 1. The witness reviewed
the evolution of the FMMO classification provisions and noted that the
CSO uses a similar classification system, with limited differences. The
witness was of the opinion that the FMMO classification provisions
should be adopted in a California FMMO to ensure uniform classification
of milk and milk products throughout the entire FMMO system.
A Cooperative witness contended that ESL products are value-added
products and should not be granted additional shrinkage allowances
under a California FMMO. The Cooperatives further argued that ESL
shrinkage allowances should be evaluated at a national hearing because
ESL products are manufactured in other FMMO marketing areas, as well as
in California.
A consultant witness, appearing on behalf of the Institute,
testified in support of the portion of Proposal 2 that
[[Page 10659]]
establishes an additional shrinkage allowance for the manufacture of
ESL and ultra-high temperature (UHT) milk products. The witness
explained that the shrinkage allowance recognizes the inherent loss of
milk from farm to plant and within the plant. The FMMO system currently
allows for up to a 2 percent shrinkage allowance for pool distributing
plants, depending on how the milk was received at the plant. The
witness contended that the standard 2 percent allowance was developed
before extensive use of ESL technology became common-place, and was
based on typical shrinkage experienced in traditional high temperature,
short time pasteurization (HTST) processing. The witness explained that
under current FMMO classification provisions, a portion of the milk
accounted for as shrinkage is classified at the lowest priced class for
the month and shrinkage losses beyond 2 percent are considered excess
shrinkage and classified as Class I.
The consultant witness testified that Proposal 2 provides an
additional shrinkage allowance of 3 percent on ESL production at plants
qualified as ESL pool distributing plants. Under the proposed
provisions, the plants eligible for the additional shrinkage allowance
would be distributing plants located in the marketing area that process
15 percent of the respective plant's total receipts of fluid milk
products physically received at the plant into ultra-pasteurized or
aseptically-processed fluid milk products.
The intent of Proposal 2, explained the witness, is for an eligible
plant to have a maximum shrinkage allowance of up to 5 percent on milk
used in its ESL production, not on all milk used in the plant. Data
from the witness' ESL processing clients, all located outside of
California, showed their total product pound shrinkage averaged above 5
percent. The witness also estimated based on 2013 to 2014 USDA record
data, excess shrink in ESL and UHT plants throughout the country
averaged 2.09 percent.
Another Institute consultant witness testified regarding a 19-plant
shrinkage study of ESL plants; three of the plants in the study were
located in California. The study showed a weighted average product
pound shrinkage of 2.73 percent.
Two additional Institute consultant witnesses and a witness from HP
Hood testified in support of the ESL shrinkage allowance provided in
Proposal 2. The witnesses presented historical shrinkage data for ESL
and UHT manufacturing facilities and offered extensive technical
explanations for why shrinkage levels are higher in those systems than
in HTST systems. The witnesses explained that shrinkage refers to milk
lost in the manufacturing process due primarily to the fact it sticks
to the equipment pipes and is lost in the cleaning process. The
witnesses stressed that ESL equipment has longer piping, and noted
numerous operational differences which inherently lead to higher losses
of milk when compared to HTST processing.
The HP Hood witness provided a similar explanation of ESL
processing and why it lends itself to higher product losses. The
witness said that even though fluid milk sales across the United States
are declining, HP Hood ESL product sales have grown. The witness was of
the opinion that because increases in ESL fluid milk sales benefit the
entire dairy industry, dairy producers should share the burden of
producing these products through greater shrinkage allowances, as
reflected in the classification provisions provided in Proposal 2.
HP Hood, in its post-hearing brief, reiterated its position that
the heavy investment in the development of ESL technology and market
expansion for those products should be shared by dairy farmers. The
Institute, in its post-hearing brief, concurred with HP Hood's brief
and argued the shrinkage allowances provided in Proposal 2 would assure
ESL processors, like conventional fluid milk processors, would only be
charged Class I prices for milk contained in fluid milk products and
not for milk lost during processing. The Institute also stated that a
promulgation proceeding for a new FMMO was an appropriate place to
consider ESL shrinkage allowances.
The Cooperatives' reply brief reiterated that ESL products are
value-added products and handlers already receive a premium in the
market. As well, the Cooperatives claimed that the manufacturing costs
cited by HP Hood in its brief were not significant enough to warrant
the proposed change to the uniform classification rules.
Findings
As discussed earlier in this decision, the primary objective of
FMMOs is to establish and maintain orderly marketing conditions. FMMOs
achieve this goal through the classified pricing and the marketwide
pooling of the proceeds of milk associated with a marketing area. To
that end, the AMAA specifies that a FMMO should classify milk ``in
accordance with the form in which or the purpose for which it is
used.'' The classification of milk ensures competing handlers have the
same minimum regulated price for milk used in a particular product
category. Thus, FMMOs have found it is reasonable and appropriate that
milk used in identical or nearly identical products should be placed in
the same class of use. This reduces the incidence of disorderly
marketing that could arise from regulated price differences between
competing handlers.
Currently, the provisions providing the classification of milk
pooled on the existing FMMOs are identical.\26\ Uniform classification
provisions are particularly important in assuring orderly marketing
because markets are no longer isolated, and handlers often sell
products outside of their local marketing area. The current FMMO
classification provisions provide four classes of milk use, and specify
provisions for the classification of milk transfers and diversions,
plant shrinkages and overages, allocation of handler receipts to
handler utilization, and Market Administrator reporting and
announcements concerning classification.
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\26\ 7 CFR 1000.40 through 1000.45.
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Under the current FMMO uniform provisions, Class I consists of milk
used to produce fluid milk products (whole milk, lowfat milk, skim
milk, flavored milk such as chocolate milk). Class II milk includes
milk used to make a variety of soft products, including cottage cheese,
ice cream, yogurt and yogurt beverages, sour cream, baking mixes,
puddings, meal replacements, and prepared foods. Class III includes
milk used to make hard cheeses that may be sliced, grated, shredded, or
crumbled, cream cheese, and other spreadable cheeses. Class IV milk
includes milk used to produce butter, evaporated or condensed milk in
consumer-type packages, and dried milk products. Other milk
dispositions, including milk that is dumped, fed to animals, or
accidentally lost or destroyed, is generally assigned to the lowest
priced class for the month.
The record reflects that current product classification provisions
under the CSO are comparable to those under FMMOs. While the CSO has
five classes of milk (1, 2, 3, 4a and 4b), the record reflects that
under the uniform FMMO classification provisions, products currently
classified by the CSO as Class 2 and 3 would be classified by the
California FMMO as Class II; CSO Class 4b products would be classified
as California FMMO Class III; and CSO Class 4a products would be
classified as California FMMO Class IV products.
Both the Cooperatives and the Institute supported the product
classification provisions already
[[Page 10660]]
provided in the current FMMOs. Neither group was of the opinion that
the proposed FMMO classification provisions would disadvantage any
handler currently regulated by the CSO.
This decision finds that a California FMMO should contain, to the
maximum extent possible, provisions that are uniform with the FMMO
system California producers are seeking to enter. To that end, the
proposed California FMMO should include the same classification
provisions as currently provided in existing FMMOs to allow for
consistency of regulation between FMMOs. Adoption of these provisions
would ensure that milk pooled on the California FMMO is classified
uniformly with the rest of the FMMO system, and consequently, competing
handlers will incur the same regulated minimum prices.
Therefore, this decision finds a California FMMO should provide the
following product classifications used in existing FMMOs: Class I milk
should be defined as milk used to produce fluid milk products; Class II
milk should be defined as milk used to make a variety of soft products,
including cream products, high-moisture cheeses like cottage cheese,
ice cream, yogurt and yogurt beverages, sour cream, baking mixes,
puddings, meal replacements, and prepared foods; Class III milk should
be defined as milk used to make spreadable cheeses like cream cheese,
and hard cheeses that may be sliced, grated, shredded, or crumbled;
Class IV milk should be defined as milk used to make butter, evaporated
or condensed milk in consumer-type packages, and dried milk products.
Other uses for milk, including milk that is dumped, fed to animals, or
accidentally lost or destroyed, should be assigned to the lowest-priced
class for the month.
This decision also finds that the California FMMO should adopt the
same provisions as the existing FMMOs regarding the classification of
milk transfers and diversions, plant shrinkage and overages, and
allocation of handler receipts to handler utilization.
The existing FMMOs also contain uniform provisions recognizing that
some milk loss is inevitable in milk processing. This is referred to as
shrinkage and is calculated as the difference between the plant's total
receipts and total utilization. Pool handlers must account for all
receipts and all utilization. Shrinkage provisions assign a value to
milk losses at a plant. There is, however, a limit on the quantity of
shrinkage that may be allocated to the lowest priced class. The limit
depends on how the milk is received. For instance, milk physically
received at the plant directly from producers based on farm weights and
tests is limited to 2 percent, whereas, milk received directly from
producers on a basis other than farm weights and tests is limited to
1.5 percent. Similar limits are placed on other types of bulk receipts.
Quantities of milk in excess of the shrinkage limit are considered
``excess shrinkage.'' Excess shrinkage is assigned to the highest class
of utilization at the plant to arrive at gross utilization, from which
the allocation process begins.
The CSO provides a shrinkage allowance of up to 3 percent of the
plant's total receipts, which is allocated on the basis of the plant's
utilization. Similar to the FMMOs, excess shrinkage in the CSO is
assigned as Class 1.
This decision does not find justification for an additional
shrinkage allowance for ESL production at ESL pool distributing plants.
While the record contains some ESL plant shrinkage data, data
pertaining to ESL production at California plants is limited. The
record does indicate that ESL production occurs throughout the country.
Therefore, amending provisions that are uniform throughout the FMMO
system to allow an additional shrinkage allowance on ESL production
should be evaluated on the basis of a separate national rulemaking
proceeding.
7. Pricing
The two main proposals in this proceeding offered end-product price
formulas as the appropriate method for pricing producer milk pooled on
a California FMMO, although the factors in the formulas differed. This
section reviews arguments presented in testimony and post-hearing
briefs regarding the appropriate way to value producer milk. This
section further explains the finding that the recommended California
FMMO should adopt the same end-product price formulas as contained in
the 10 existing FMMOs.
Summary of Testimony
A LOL witness, appearing on behalf of the Cooperatives, testified
in support of the classified price provisions contained in Proposal 1.
The witness testified that under Proposal 1, California would adopt the
classified prices (including the commodity price series, product
yields, and make allowances), the component prices, and the advanced
pricing factors presently used in the FMMO system. The witness stated
that 65 percent of the United States milk production is currently
priced under these common provisions, and the same should apply to the
20 percent of the national milk supply produced in California.
The witness provided testimony regarding the evolution of a
national manufacturing price, starting with the Minnesota-Wisconsin
price series in the 1960's, and ending with the national classified
end-product price formulas adopted in 2000. The witness discussed the
national pricing system that resulted from FMMO Order Reform (Order
Reform), including the multiple component pricing (MCP) system used in
6 of the 10 current FMMOs. The witness explained that the MCP system
met the criteria set forth by Congress to make pricing simple,
transparent, and based on sound economic theory. Under the MCP system,
the witness said, prices are derived from actual, observed market
transactions for wholesale commodity milk products, and utilize yield
factors and make allowances to determine the value of raw milk in each
class. The witness explained that through the Dairy Product Mandatory
Reporting Program (DPMRP), manufacturers of the four commodity dairy
products (cheese, butter, NFDM, and dry whey) are required to submit
sales information on current market transactions. The witness said that
information is aggregated, released in the National Dairy Product Sales
Report (NDPSR), and utilized in the FMMO price formulas. The witness
stated that because many large-scale California dairy plants are part
of the DPMRP, California commodity prices are reflected in the prices
paid by FMMO handlers and received by producers in the rest of the
country, and the same prices should be applicable to milk pooled under
a California FMMO.
The witness also testified regarding the influence of California
dairy manufacturing costs on the current FMMO make allowances. The
witness noted that a USDA Rural Cooperative Business Service (RCBS)
study, a Cornell University study of processing costs, and a CDFA cost-
of-processing survey were relied upon by USDA to determine appropriate
make allowance levels for cheese, butter, NFDM, and dry whey. In the
witness's opinion, the inclusion of CDFA manufacturing cost data in the
formulation of FMMO manufacturing allowances would justify the use of
the same manufacturing allowances (butter: $0.1715 per pound; NFDM:
$0.1678 per pound; cheese: $0.2003 per pound; and dry whey: $0.1991 per
pound) in a California FMMO. The witness also reviewed the rulemaking
history on the derivation of the product yields contained in the
current FMMO price formulas, and was
[[Page 10661]]
of the opinion they are similar to product yields attainable by
California manufacturing plants. The witness stated that the FMMO make
allowances and product yields remained relevant, as they had been
reaffirmed by USDA through a 2013 Final Rule.\27\
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\27\ Official Notice is taken of FMMO Class III and IV Price
Formula Final Rule 78 FR 24334.
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The witness also testified regarding the FMMO national Class I
price surface. The witness said that Order Reform resulted in the
adoption of a national pricing surface, which assigned a value to milk
for every county in the United States based on milk supply and demand
at those locations. The witness was of the opinion that since
California was factored into USDA's Order Reform analysis to derive the
price surface, it would be appropriate for the price surface to be
adopted in a California FMMO. The witness noted the price surface
identifies five pricing zones covering California, ranging from $1.60
to $2.10 per cwt. The witness explained that in the FMMO system, the
Class I differential is added to the higher of the Class III or Class
IV price to determine the Class I price for a distributing plant at its
location. The witness elaborated that since Class I processors compete
with Class III and IV manufacturers for a milk supply, Class I prices
are linked to manufacturing prices in the FMMO system, and this concept
should likewise apply to a California FMMO.
The witness also explained how the base Class I differential, $1.60
per cwt, was derived during Order Reform. The witness said that the
$1.60 base differential assumes a cost per cwt of $0.40 to maintain a
Grade A facility, $0.60 for marketing, and $0.60 for securing a milk
supply in competition with manufacturers. The witness noted these
values were established in 2000, and although still relevant, the
actual costs are higher in the current marketplace. The Cooperatives
provided additional information in their post-hearing brief, contending
that current costs support a base Class I differential of $2.40, a 50
percent increase over the base listed above.
The witness concluded by saying that California dairy farmers
should receive prices reflecting the current national market and that
are comparable to what producers receive from FMMO regulated plants in
the rest of the country. This position was reiterated in the
Cooperatives' post-hearing brief.
Another Cooperative witness provided testimony on the handler's
value of milk and related provisions. The witness proposed that
handlers regulated by a California FMMO pay classified prices based on
the components in the raw milk they receive (otherwise known as
``multiple component pricing''): Butterfat, protein, and other solids.
Under Proposal 1, the witness said, regulated handlers would pay for
milk on the following components:
Class I: Butterfat and skim
Class II: Butterfat and solids nonfat
Class III: Butterfat, protein and other solids
Class IV: Butterfat and solids nonfat
The witness reiterated the Federal Order Reform Recommended
Decision justification for implementing a national pricing structure
and contended the same reasons apply to extending national pricing to a
California FMMO. The witness added that while California handlers would
be paying the same national prices for milk components, there would be
no need to adjust price formulas for regional product yields because
handlers only pay for the components they receive. The witness also
explained that Proposal 1 did not prescribe location adjustments in the
price formulas because California plants are included in the price
surveys that determine the national commodity prices used in the FMMO
formulas.
The witness also testified that Proposal 1 provides for a
fortification allowance on milk solids used to fortify Class I products
to meet California's fluid milk standards, as is currently provided in
the CSO. The witness noted that Proposal 1 does not propose a somatic
cell adjustment or producer location differentials since both features
are not currently contained in the CSO.
The witness said Proposal 1 seeks to have producers paid on the
basis of butterfat, protein and other solids, and does not include a
producer price differential (PPD) adjustment per se. The witness said
that the PPD is typically viewed as the benefit to FMMO producers for
participating in the marketwide pool since the PPD reflects the
additional revenue shared from the higher value class utilizations.
Instead, the witness explained that under Proposal 1, the California
FMMO would calculate a monthly PPD, but the value of the PPD would be
paid to producers according to each component's annual contribution to
the Class III price. For example, said the witness, if on an annual
basis butterfat accounted for 32 percent of the total value of the
Class III price, then 32 percent of the monthly PPD value would be paid
out through an adjustment to the butterfat price. This same adjustment,
the witness said, would apply to the producer protein and other solids
prices. The witness explained that FMMO producers typically find the
monthly PPD concept confusing and complicated, especially in months
when it is a negative value. The witness said that California
producers, who do not receive a PPD adjustment under the CSO, might
find Proposal 1's method of distributing the PPD value simpler to
understand.
The witness also clarified that the Cooperatives were amending the
proposal regarding announcement of producer prices contained in
Proposal 1 from ``on or before the 11th'' to ``on or before the 14th
day after the end of the month.''
Support for a national uniform pricing system was reiterated in the
Cooperatives' post-hearing brief. The Cooperatives argued that the
hearing record demonstrates California cheese competes in the national
market. Having California milk priced uniformly in the FMMO system
would not disadvantage California processors, reiterated the
Cooperatives, but it would diminish the current pricing advantage they
have under the CSO. The brief noted record evidence that many FMMO
cheese processors paid higher than FMMO minimum prices for milk as
proof that FMMO minimum prices are not too high.
The Cooperatives' brief also discussed California whey processing.
The brief stated that 85.8 percent of cheese manufactured nationally is
produced in plants that also process whey. In California, the
Cooperatives wrote, the percentage is closer to 90 percent. Based on
these comparable percentages, the Cooperatives stated whey pricing in
California should be no different from the rest of the country.
The Cooperatives also stressed opposition to any adjustment to the
price formulas to reflect a lower location value in California. The
Cooperatives stated milk prices should not be California centric
because manufactured products are sold nationally. If California
classified prices were to be based solely on California product sales,
the Cooperatives were of the opinion that California handlers would
receive a raw milk cost advantage over other FMMO regulated handlers.
The brief noted that the Cooperatives manufacture a majority of the
butter and NFDM produced in California, and they did not believe the
proposed California FMMO prices associated with those Class IV products
would be too high. The Cooperatives stressed that any changes to the
FMMO pricing system should be considered at a national hearing and not
in this single-market proceeding.
[[Page 10662]]
An Institute witness testified regarding the pricing provisions
included in Proposal 2. The witness explained that Class I products
have the highest use value in order to encourage adequate milk
production to meet Class I needs, and to attract milk to Class I rather
than manufacturing uses. As manufacturing class uses balance the supply
and demand needs of the marketing area, the witness said it would be
important that those classified use values not be set above market-
clearing levels.
The Institute witness testified that historically, as milk began to
travel greater distances for processing, FMMO pricing policy became
more coordinated to promote orderly marketing conditions both within
and between FMMOs. The witness said that the Minnesota-Wisconsin price
series served as the basis for FMMO pricing because the area surveyed
represented the largest reserve supply of milk in the country, and
therefore generated an appropriate market-clearing price for
manufacturing milk. The witness stated that California is now the
region with the largest reserve supply and because California products
must compete for sales in the East, the value of raw milk in California
is lower than in eastern parts of the country. Therefore, emphasized
the witness, minimum prices for a California FMMO should not be set
above market-clearing levels in California. This opinion was reiterated
in the Institute's post-hearing brief.
The Institute witness cautioned against setting minimum prices too
high because it could lead to the inability of dairy farmers to find a
willing buyer for their milk. Alternatively, the witness said, if
minimum prices are set too low, dairy farmers could be compensated by
the market through over-order premiums. The witness said Class III and
IV prices for a California FMMO need to be reflective of commodity
prices received by California plants, and reflective of current
California manufacturing costs. The witness was of the opinion that the
national values used in the current FMMO Class III and IV formulas are
not appropriate for California.
The Institute witness explained their preference would be to use
western commodity prices in the Class III and IV formulas. However, the
witness said that, due to data confidentiality issues, USDA is unable
to report these prices. As an alternative, the witness said, Proposal 2
contains default commodity values that would adjust the NDPSR prices
based on the historical difference between the NDPSR prices and
California or western based prices as reported by either CDFA or Dairy
Market News. This western adjustment, the witness said, would result in
commodity prices in the price formulas more representative of the
prices received by California handlers. The witness noted the only
exception to how the adjustors are calculated is the default adjustor
proposed for the Class III protein price. The Class III protein price
adjustor utilized CME 40-pound block Cheddar cheese prices, because
CDFA stopped reporting California 40-pound block Cheddar prices after
August 2011.
The Institute witness also reviewed the manufacturing allowances
contained in Proposal 2. Except for the dry whey manufacturing
allowance, explained the witness, all are based on the most recent CDFA
manufacturing cost survey for 2013.\28\ The witness explained that CDFA
no longer reports the dry whey cost data. Therefore, Proposal 2
provides for a dry whey manufacturing allowance that adds the
difference between the FMMO manufacturing allowances for nonfat dry
milk and dry whey to the most recent CDFA weighted average
manufacturing cost for nonfat dry milk. The witness was of the opinion
that the yields contained in the FMMO price formulas would be
appropriate for California, and are therefore also prescribed in
Proposal 2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\28\ Proposed manufacturing allowances were later amended to
incorporate a marketing cost.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Institute witness testified that many California cheese plants
manufacture products other than dry whey that often do not generate
revenues to match the dry whey value in the regulated formulas. Other
plants, according to the witness, do not have the capability to process
the whey by-product from their cheese making operations. Therefore, the
witness offered an alternative Class III other solids price formula
that would be based on whey protein concentrate (WPC), and would cap
the whey value to recognize that not all plants are able to capture
value from their whey stream. The witness testified that a more
appropriate reference commodity for whey products, one that would be
more applicable to most California cheesemakers' operations, would be
WPC. The witness explained that over the previous eight years, the
production of dry whey declined 3.3 percent, while the production of
various WPC and Whey Protein Isolate (WPI) products has seen increases
ranging from 1.1 percent to 9.5 percent.
The Institute witness testified that cheese and whey markets are
vastly different, and not all cheese plants find it profitable to
invest in whey processing. According to the witness, when cheese plants
do invest, it is usually in the limited processing of whey into
concentrate solids for transportation savings. The witness said that
only one plant in California consistently dries whey, and of the 57
California cheese plants, only 13 process whey in any fashion. The
witness explained that the alternative other solids price formula
offered by the Institute incorporates the value of liquid WPC-34 sold
to a plant that would then process the product further into a dry
product. While there are a variety of liquid whey products marketed,
the witness said using WPC-34 prices as a reference price for other
solids would be most appropriate because WPC-34 is the predominant form
of liquid whey sold. The witness explained how Proposal 2 would convert
the WPC-34 reference price to a dry whey equivalent basis so that the
other parts of the other solids price formula could be retained. The
witness added that the dry whey make allowance would need to be
increased to include the cost of cooling and delivering the liquid whey
to a processing facility. To provide some protection to small
cheesemakers when the price is very high, and to dairy producers when
the price is very low, the witness proposed another solids price floor
of $0.25 per pound and a ceiling of $1.50 per pound.
The Institute's post-hearing brief discussed several of the unique
aspects of the California dairy industry. The brief stated that from
1995 to 2014, while the state's population grew 23 percent, California
milk production increased 82 percent, which in turn fueled the
expansion of cheese processing in the state. The brief stated that
three processing facilities account for 25 percent of California's
cheese manufacturing, and much of that production is marketed east of
the Mississippi River. The brief cautioned that increasing minimum
prices would create an economic trade barrier where California
processors would no longer have the ability to compete in eastern
markets due to higher minimum regulated prices.
The Institute's post-hearing brief also addressed the need for a
national FMMO pricing hearing. The Institute reiterated hearing
testimony that current pricing formulas are based on data from the
1990s, making the prices out of alignment with current market
realities. The brief stated that pricing formulas need to be updated in
order to be representative of current marketing conditions. The FMMO
pricing system, the Institute stressed, needs all pricing
[[Page 10663]]
formulas to be set at market clearing levels that enable over-order
premiums to be paid when appropriate.
A witness appearing on behalf of Leprino Foods, a mozzarella cheese
and whey products manufacturer in Denver, Colorado, testified regarding
the Class III price formula contained in Proposal 2. Leprino operates
nine plants in the U.S., three of which are based in California.
Leprino is a member of the Institute and supports adoption of Proposal
2 if USDA recommends a California FMMO.
The Leprino witness stressed the importance of minimizing the
impacts of minimum regulated pricing on the dairy marketplace. The
witness testified that the United States dairy industry is increasingly
integrated with global dairy markets since more than 15 percent of
United States milk solids are exported, and that many manufacturers,
including Leprino, have made significant investments in developing
export markets to increase demand for United States dairy products. The
witness said it is important that any future California FMMO facilitate
rather than inhibit the dairy industry's ability to leverage this
export opportunity.
The Leprino witness testified about the importance of setting
minimum regulated milk prices at market clearing levels that would
allow for reasonable returns achievable under good management practices
by California manufacturers. The witness testified that 80 percent of
California milk production is utilized in Class III and IV products, a
large percentage of which are marketed outside of California.
Therefore, the witness said, California FMMO minimum prices should
reflect values of California-manufactured products, f.o.b. the
manufacturing plant. The witness added that because price formulas
could only be changed through a hearing process, it would be important
to set the regulated price formulas at minimum levels that allow market
forces to function outside of the regulated system. The witness said
regulated prices that are too high would lead to over-production of
milk and disorderly marketing conditions. This concept was reiterated
in the post-hearing briefs submitted by the Institute and Leprino.
The Leprino witness summarized findings from the Order Reform Final
Decision that explained how manufacturing plant operators who find
make-allowances inadequate to cover their actual costs are free to not
participate in the order. The witness noted this option would not be
available under Proposal 1, which underscores the importance of setting
appropriate market clearing prices.
The Leprino witness testified that a California FMMO would require
a Class III formula that is set in relation to achievable returns in
California using the most recent data. The witness explained Leprino's
preference that USDA suspend the California FMMO hearing to defer
implementation until after a national hearing could be held to review
and revise the existing Class III formula. The witness added that USDA
should hold a national Class III and IV price formula hearing after
this rulemaking to utilize more current data and account for the
impacts of a California FMMO, if necessary.
The Leprino witness testified in support of establishing a DPMRP
western price survey to determine minimum milk prices under a
California FMMO. The witness explained how USDA might rely on surveyed
commodity prices from other western states, if necessary, to overcome
any data confidentiality issues. In brief, Leprino encouraged USDA to
establish a definition for the Western Area, and recommended it include
California, Oregon and Washington. In addition to these three states,
the witness said that other areas should be considered in order to
eliminate confidentiality constraints. However, the witness said that
in the event confidentiality concerns continue to arise, Proposal 2
contained alternative default equations.
The Leprino witness discussed the justification for pricing western
produced products differently than those in the rest of the country.
The witness stressed that the location value of California manufactured
products is lower because of the additional transportation costs
required to deliver products to the population centers in the East.
This opinion was reiterated in Leprino's post-hearing brief. The
witness noted that nearly half of Leprino's cheese production sold
domestically is shipped to markets east of the Mississippi, and they
incur transportation costs ranging from $0.10 to $0.15 per pound.
The Leprino witness was of the opinion that bulk Cheddar cheese
remains the most appropriate product from which to derive the FMMO
Class III price, but California Class III price formulas should rely on
40-pound block Cheddar prices because all California Cheddar production
is in blocks. The adoption of 40-pound block cheddar prices was
reiterated in Leprino's post-hearing brief.
The witness testified in support of modifying the make allowances
in Proposal 2 to incorporate a sales and administrative cost of $0.0015
per pound. Therefore, the new proposed make allowances per pound of
product would be as follows: $0.2306 for cheese, $0.1739 for butter,
$0.2310 for whey, and $0.2012 for NFDM.
The Leprino witness provided extensive testimony on the appropriate
valuation of whey in FMMO Class III minimum pricing. The witness
explained how the explicit whey factor had been a problem for
cheesemakers and led the Institute to propose an alternative valuation.
Proposal 2 would value the whey portion of the Class III price formula
relative to its concentrated liquid whey value, which the witness said
was the most generic whey product produced. The witness stated that the
WPC-34 price index is the most common reference used for the sale of
liquid whey by cheese plants selling concentrated whey in California.
The witness added that the prices received for liquid whey are
discounted to reflect additional processing required to produce a full-
value whey product. Accordingly, said the witness, California FMMO
minimum prices should rely on WPC-34 survey prices to approximate a
whey value in the Class III price.
The Leprino witness testified in opposition to the Class III and IV
formulas contained in Proposal 1. The formulas, the witness said, do
not reflect California market conditions. The witness warned that
higher regulated prices in California would lead to disorderly
marketing conditions. In its post-hearing brief, Leprino stated the
pricing formulas in Proposal 1 used old manufacturing cost data and the
national weighted average prices for the four products exceeded the
prices received in California. Leprino noted that there was no evidence
provided by the Cooperatives related to the relevance of the Proposal 1
formulas to California.
A witness testifying on behalf of Hilmar spoke to how the current
FMMO Class III and IV pricing formulas, if applied to a California FMMO
incorporating inclusive pooling, would lead to disorderly marketing
conditions. In its brief, Hilmar stated that disorderly marketing
conditions would negate the competitive equilibrium present between
eastern and western markets and lead to a trade barrier that would
hinder the California dairy industry.
The witness testified that Hilmar had not experienced difficulties
in sourcing raw milk supplies, and that there was currently no disorder
in California to warrant promulgation of a California FMMO. The witness
described several scenarios in the past where CSO whey pricing
methodology over valued whey
[[Page 10664]]
and led to disorderly marketing conditions for Hilmar, its independent
producer suppliers, and other California dairy farmers, which CDFA was
able to remedy through an adjustment to the whey factor.
The Hilmar witness testified that if milk used in California cheese
production was subject to the whey factor used in the current FMMO
Class III price, the whey product stream in California would be
overvalued. Use of that whey factor, along with the inclusive pooling
provisions in Proposal 1, would give rise to disorderly marketing
conditions.
The Hilmar witness was of the opinion that 2015 California milk
production decreased for reasons not relevant to the differences in CSO
4b versus FMMO Class III pricing. Instead, the witness said, production
was influenced by low milk powder prices related to global oversupply
of milk powder, as well as drought, environmental regulations, and
competition for land from other crops.
The Hilmar witness testified that CSO milk prices are minimums, and
cooperatives have the ability to negotiate for higher milk prices from
their proprietary plant customers. The witness said that Hilmar paid
premiums of approximately $120 million for milk above the CSO 4b price
over the last several years. The witness explained that these premiums
were paid for milk characteristics such as component content and other
market-based factors. The witness added that when CSO 4b prices were
temporarily increased through CDFA's adjustment to the sliding scale
whey factor, the premiums Hilmar paid for milk decreased.
The Hilmar witness testified that the make-allowances in the FMMO
Class III and IV formulas are outdated, and new manufacturing cost
studies are necessary. The witness stated that Hilmar's manufacturing
costs for cheese and milk powders are higher than those provided for in
the FMMO Class III and IV formulas. The witness said that if a
California FMMO was adopted with inclusive pooling, it would be
impossible for Hilmar to clear the market, unlike in existing FMMOs
where manufacturing milk is not required to be pooled.
The Hilmar witness explained that California FMMO minimum milk
prices need to reflect local supply and demand conditions. The witness
entered Hilmar data showing that prices received for the sale of Hilmar
cheese averaged $0.04 per pound lower than the announced NDPSR weighted
average cheese price from 2010 to 2013. This price difference, the
witness explained, is a function of the additional transportation cost
incurred by Hilmar to transport product to eastern markets. The witness
made similar price comparisons for NFDM and butter.
The Hilmar witness stressed that if California FMMO prices are not
reflective of the California market, the California dairy industry will
be less competitive in the global marketplace. The witness noted that
in 2014, Hilmar exported 10 percent of its cheese, 50 percent of its
WPC, and 95 percent of its lactose; and they planned to export all of
the skim milk powder to be produced at a manufacturing facility nearing
completion in Turlock, California. Inclusive pooling and U.S.-centric
milk pricing in California, said the witness, would lead to competitive
disadvantages for California manufacturers in international and
domestic markets.
The Hilmar witness testified that they produce several types of
whey products, but not dry whey. The witness was of the opinion that
dry whey is a poor indicator of the value of Hilmar's WPC products. The
witness said the potential minimum regulated cost under inclusive
pooling provisions in a California FMMO would make production of
Hilmar's whey products unprofitable.
In the post-hearing brief submitted by Hilmar, concerns regarding
an adequate return on investment were raised. Hilmar was of the opinion
that Proposal 1 does not provide an adequate level of return on
investment to allow for processors to remain viable. The brief stated
that adoption of provisions allowing for handlers to opt not to pool
manufacturing milk could alleviate those concerns.
In its post-hearing brief, Hilmar sought to counter the
Cooperatives' claim that California manufacturers have a competitive
advantage over their FMMO counterparts and thus should be able to pay
FMMO minimum prices. Hilmar countered that California handlers have a
long-term competitive disadvantage when compared to their FMMO
counterparts because of the CSO's mandatory pricing and pooling
provisions. Hilmar maintained that the value of milk in California is
lower than in the eastern part of the country, and California FMMO
price formulas should reflect this reality.
A witness testified in support of Proposal 2 on behalf of Marquez
Brothers International (Marquez), a Hispanic cheese manufacturer
located in Hanford, California. The witness explained how their company
invested in a processing facility in 2004 to address challenges with
whey disposal. The witness explained that of the total milk solids they
receive, approximately 48 percent is used in cheese, and 52 percent
ends up in the whey stream. The formulation of Marquez's whey stream,
the witness noted, is approximately 5.11 percent whey cream, 9.45
percent WPC-80, and 85.44 percent lactose permeate.
The Marquez witness testified that out of 57 California cheese
plants, 49 plants (19.1 percent of California cheese production) have
limited or no ability to process whey. The witness testified that whey
disposal had been a burden for their business in the past, costing $1.5
million per year with no revenue offset and no recognition in the CSO
4b price of whey disposal costs. The witness added that the same
problems existed in the FMMO Class III formula price contained in
Proposal 1. The witness testified that the reliance on dry whey to
price the other solids component of the FMMO Class III price would be
inappropriate since cheesemakers must pay producers for the value of
whey that can be generated from their milk, regardless of whether that
price is actually obtained from the market.
The Marquez witness testified that adoption of Proposal 1 would
discourage investment in cheese processing technologies. The witness
said that a system of inclusive pooling coupled with other increases in
operating costs would lead to competitive difficulties for California
cheese plants.
A witness appeared on behalf of BESTWHEY, LLC (BESTWHEY), in
opposition to adoption of Proposal 1. BESTWHEY provides consulting
services to cheese manufacturing facilities, with a focus on specialty
cheeses and whey handling and disposal. According to the witness,
Proposal 1 would restrict the growth of California's cheese industry
and eliminate most of the small cheese businesses in the state, and
Proposal 1's inclusive pricing and pooling would lead to an over-supply
of California milk. The witness highlighted the limited number of
California plants with whey processing capabilities. The witness
supported adoption of Proposal 2 because, according to the witness, it
would provide a more realistic value for whey in the other solids price
calculation, based on the actual value of liquid whey sold by cheese
plants.
A witness appeared on behalf of Klondike Cheese (Klondike), a
Wisconsin-based cheese manufacturer. The witness said that Klondike
cools its liquid whey by-product and sells it to a larger whey
processing facility. The witness provided detailed descriptions
[[Page 10665]]
of whey processing methodology and the associated costs. The witness
testified that basing the other solids price on dry whey markets is
inappropriate and does not accurately reflect the revenues from whey at
their operation. The witness entered Klondike 2014 data showing an
average loss on its whey production of $0.6516 per cwt of milk.
A witness testified on behalf of Decatur Dairy (Decatur), a
cooperative-owned, Wisconsin-based cheese manufacturer, in regards to
using dry whey as the basis for the other solids price. The witness
provided detailed descriptions of whey processing methodology and the
associated costs. The witness said that Decatur sells warm wet whey to
a nearby plant for further processing. The witness said that dry whey
prices contained in the FMMO product-price formulas did not reflect the
revenue they receive from their liquid whey sales, and it is not
feasible for them to invest in drying equipment. The witness entered
Decatur data for 2012 to 2015 showing average annual losses on its whey
production ranging from $0.0627 to $0.7114 per cwt of milk.
A consultant witness appeared on behalf Joseph Gallo Farms (Gallo
Farms). The witness explained that Gallo Farms owns two dairy farms, as
well as cheese and whey processing facilities in California, and
supports adoption of Proposal 2. Gallo Farms processes WPC from their
own cheese operation and from other cheese facilities.
The Gallo Farms witness testified that if they had been required to
pay the FMMO Class III price for milk, they would not have been able to
make updates or improvements to their facilities. The witness estimated
their cheese costs would have increased by $0.2237 per pound if
Proposal 1 had been in effect from January 2014 through September 2015.
The witness was of the opinion that California dairy farmers should not
compare the prices received in California to prices received in the
Midwest or East Coast, where significant population centers are
serviced. The witness characterized the California market as
significantly different from eastern markets, as it includes not only
the West Coast population centers, but also Mexico and other export
markets. The witness was of the opinion that a California FMMO, as
provided for in Proposal 1, could lead to the closure of small and
medium sized manufacturing plants.
The Gallo Farms witness supported the portion of Proposal 2 that
relies on WPC to determine the other solids price, as most whey pricing
is related to the WPC market rather than dry whey.
An Institute witness testified regarding Class I pricing. The
witness was of the opinion that the policy of assigning Class I milk
the highest classified value should be reevaluated, given current
market realities. The witness said that Proposal 1 relied on the
current Class I price surface and fluid milk pricing system
incorporated in the existing FMMOs, while other potential fluid milk
pricing options have not been thoroughly investigated. The witness
argued that although the ``higher of'' pricing mechanisms dampens Class
I sales and limits the ability of fluid milk processors to hedge their
Class I milk volumes, the Institute still supported the Class I milk
pricing mechanism advanced in Proposal 2.
The Institute witness also testified regarding a technical
modification to Proposal 2 that would affect how handlers pay for the
milk components used in Class I products and how handler credits for
fortifying fluid milk products would be determined. The witness
explained that milk standards set by the State of California require a
higher nonfat solids content than the Food and Drug Administration
standard used elsewhere in the country. California fluid milk
processors fortify raw milk with either condensed or nonfat dry milk to
meet these higher standards.
The Institute witness described the differences between CSO and
FMMO accounting for fluid milk fortification. Under FMMOs, the witness
said, handlers account to the pool at the Class IV price for the solids
used to fortify milk, but then are charged the two-factor (butterfat
and skim) Class I price for the volumetric increase in fluid milk
realized through fortification. Under the CSO, handlers account to the
pool using a three-factor (butterfat, nonfat solids, and fluid carrier)
Class 1 price for all solids used in Class 1 products, but then receive
a credit for the solids used to fortify milk to meet the state
standards. The Institute witness was of the opinion that the CSO three-
factor system, coupled with its fortification credits, is superior to
the FMMO system because it encourages orderly milk movements by making
fluid milk handlers indifferent to the solids content of milk they
receive, and it ensures that Class 1 handlers do not have a regulated
milk price advantage over one another. The witness explained that
plants receiving milk with a higher solids content might pay a higher
Class 1 price for the raw milk, but less for fortification, while
plants receiving milk with a lower solids content might pay a lower
Class 1 price for the milk, but more for fortification, making both
plants competitive with each other. The witness emphasized that in the
absence of a fortification credit for meeting the California milk
solids requirement, handlers under a California FMMO might make milk
sourcing decisions solely to take advantage of a two-factor Class I
price formula.
A witness appeared on behalf of Hilmar to outline the history of
FMMO surplus milk pricing policies. The witness, referring to decisions
from previous FMMO rulemakings and reports, stated that FMMO minimum
pricing should be set at levels aligning with net revenues received by
manufacturers in the local marketing area in order for milk to
``clear'' the market. Therefore, the witness concluded, USDA must
examine the local California market situation when determining
appropriate minimum prices in a California FMMO.
A Cooperative witness addressed the alternative Other Solids price
formula that was offered by the Institute. The witness stressed that
there was not then available a verifiable price series for WPC-34, nor
had the Institute presented any third-party WPC-34 manufacturing cost
studies. The witness estimated that 86 percent of the Class 4b milk was
processed at plants that had whey drying capabilities. In addition, the
witness said that the Cooperatives' modified exempt plant provision
would exempt as many as 25 of the 57 cheese plants from FMMO minimum
price regulation.
Findings
Handler's Value of Milk
The FMMO program currently uses product price formulas relying on
the wholesale price of finished products to determine the minimum
classified prices handlers pay for raw milk in the four classes of
products. Class III and Class IV prices are announced on or before the
5th day of the month following the month to which they apply. The Class
III and Class IV price formulas form the base from which Class I and
Class II prices are determined. The Class I price is announced in
advance of the applicable month. It is determined by adding a Class I
differential assigned to the plant's location to the higher of an
advanced Class III or Class IV price computed by using the most recent
two weeks' DPMRP data released on or before the 23rd of the preceding
month. The Class II skim milk price is announced at the same time as
the Class I price, and is determined by adding
[[Page 10666]]
$0.70 to the advanced Class IV skim milk price. The Class II butterfat
price is announced at the end of the month, at the same time as the
Class III and Class IV prices, by adding $0.70 to the Class IV
butterfat price.
AMS administers the DPMRP to survey weekly wholesale prices of four
manufactured dairy products (cheese, butter, NFDM and dry whey), and
releases weekly average survey prices in the NDPSR. The FMMO product
price formulas use these surveyed products to determine the component
values in raw milk. The pricing system determines butterfat prices for
milk used in products in each of the four classes from surveyed butter
prices; protein and other solids prices for milk used in Class III
products from surveyed cheese and dry whey prices, respectively; and a
nonfat solids price for milk used in Class II and Class IV products
from surveyed NFDM product prices. The skim milk portion of the Class I
price is the higher of either the protein and other solids prices of
the advanced Class III skim milk price or the NFDM price of the
advanced Class IV skim milk price.
The butterfat, protein, other solids, and nonfat solids prices are
derived through the average monthly NDPSR survey price, minus a
manufacturing (make) allowance, multiplied by a yield factor. The make
allowance factor represents the cost manufacturers incur in making raw
milk into one pound of product. The yield factor is an approximation of
the product quantity that can be made from a hundredweight of milk
received at the plant. The milk received at the plant is adjusted to
reflect farm-to-plant shrinkage when using farm weights and tests. This
end-product pricing system was implemented as a part of Order Reform on
January 1, 2000,\29\ and last amended on July 1, 2013.\30\
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\29\ See infra.
\30\ See infra.
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The pricing methodology described above were proposed by the
Cooperatives to apply in a California FMMO and are contained in
Proposal 1. The Cooperatives maintain USDA has for many years held that
the market for manufactured dairy products is national in scope and
that the price of milk used to manufacture those products should
therefore be the same across the nation. Proponents of Proposal 1
explained that the commodity prices used in the formulas are based on a
survey of prices for manufactured dairy products from plants across the
country, including California. They went on to point out that the
surveyed manufacturing costs were from plants in California, as well as
in other states. These surveyed costs have been used to determine FMMO
make allowances in the product-price formulas since their inception.
The Cooperatives, through witness testimony and post-hearing
briefs, stressed that prices used to determine California handlers'
value of milk should be based on the same national average factors as
those used in the FMMOs. They repeatedly stressed that manufactured
products compete in a national market, and therefore California dairy
farmers should receive a milk price reflective of those commodity
values. The Cooperatives' primary justification for a California FMMO
is that the CSO does not provide dairy farmers a milk price reflective
of these national values, and they are now seeking to be included in
the FMMO system so California dairy farmers can receive prices similar
to their counterparts in the rest of the country.
The Institute, through witness testimony and post-hearing briefs,
argued that classified prices in a California FMMO must be reflective
of the current market conditions in California. They were of the
opinion that not only has data used in the formulas become outdated,
but that the value of California milk is inherently lower because of
California's geographic location in the West and the additional cost of
transporting finished product to population centers in the East. They
argued that these conditions make it hard for the Institute's dairy
manufacturing member companies to remain competitive in the market.
In Proposal 2, the Institute proposed several changes to the
current FMMO pricing formulas that would be applicable in California.
First, the Institute proposed a western states price series for each
commodity surveyed by the DPMRP. If a western price could not be used
because of data confidentiality issues, the Institute proposed that a
fixed value for each commodity be subtracted from the current NDPSR
prices to represent the lower value of products in the West. Second,
the Institute suggested that a Western states manufacturing cost survey
be conducted to determine relevant California make allowances for each
commodity, and if this was not feasible, they proposed specific make
allowance levels that they asserted are representative of manufacturing
costs in California. Third, they proposed that the NDPSR Cheddar cheese
price used in the FMMO protein price formula for California only
consider 40-pound block prices. They proposed that 500-pound barrel
Cheddar cheese prices should not be included as they are in current
FMMOs.
Class III and Class IV Pricing. This decision recommends that the
classified and component price formulas used in the 10 current FMMOs
\31\ be utilized without change in the proposed California FMMO. These
formulas were adopted nationally as part of Federal Order Reform and
were described at the beginning of this section. The Order Reform Final
Decision \32\ found that because commodity dairy products compete in
the national market, it was appropriate that the raw milk used in those
products be priced uniformly across the FMMO system. This hearing
record contains testimony explaining the FMMO evolution toward national
uniform pricing for manufactured products. Such explanation was also
outlined in the Order Reform Final Decision.
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\31\ 7 CFR 1000.50 and 1000.52.
\32\ Official Notice is taken of FMMO Reform Final Decision: 64
FR 16026.
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In the early 1960s, FMMOs used a Minnesota-Wisconsin (M-W)
manufacturing grade milk price series to determine a price for milk
used in manufactured products based on the supply and demand for Grade
B milk. As Grade B milk production and the number of plants purchasing
Grade B milk declined, FMMOs moved to a Basic Formula Price (BFP). The
BFP price incorporated an updating formula with the base M-W price to
account for the month-to-month changes in the prices paid for butter,
NFDM, and cheese. The Order Reform decision recognized that Grade B
milk would only continue to decline and that the FMMO system needed a
new way of determining the value of producer milk.
As outlined in the Order Reform Final Decision, the goals for
replacing the BFP price were: (1) To meet the supply and demand
criteria set forth in the AMAA; (2) not to deviate greatly from the
general level of the current BFP; and (3) to demonstrate the ability to
change in reaction to changes in supply and demand. The product-price
and component formulas currently used in the FMMO system were found to
be the appropriate market-oriented alternative to the BFP.
Additionally, that final decision specifically addressed the national
market for commodity dairy products:
``. . . the current BFP may have a greater tendency to reflect
supply and demand conditions in Minnesota and Wisconsin rather than
national supply/demand conditions. The formulas in this decision use
national commodity price series, thereby reflecting the
[[Page 10667]]
national supply and demand for dairy products and the national demand
for milk.'' \33\
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\33\ See infra.
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The Department subsequently reiterated the necessity for FMMO
classified prices to reflect national markets in a later final decision
on Class III and IV pricing when it specifically addressed public
comments pertaining to the relationship of the CSO and FMMOs:
``Class III and Class IV dairy products compete in a national
market. Because of this, Class III and Class IV milk prices established
for all Federal milk marketing order areas are the same.'' \34\
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\34\ Official Notice is taken of FMMO Class III and IV Final
Decision: 67 FR 67937.
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This decision finds the prices used in the California FMMO should
also reflect the national marketplace for cheese, butter, NFDM and dry
whey. The record reflects that commodity products produced in
California compete in the same national market as products produced
throughout the country. Uniform FMMO price formulas ensure similarly
situated handlers have equal minimum raw milk costs regardless of where
the handler is regulated. As California is seeking to join the FMMO
system, it is appropriate that the milk pooled on the California FMMO
be priced under the same uniform price provisions found in all current
FMMOs. Additionally, this decision finds that by pricing California
milk under these uniform pricing provisions, prices received by farmers
whose milk is pooled on the California FMMO would be more reflective of
the national market for commodity products for which their milk is
utilized. Therefore, adopting a western adjusted price series, a 40-
pound only Cheddar cheese price, and California-specific make
allowances is not appropriate. As explained below, FMMO price formulas
already account for California market conditions; therefore, it is
reasonable to use these price formulas in a California FMMO. This
decision finds that the national FMMO pricing policy continues to
reflect the marketing conditions of the entire FMMO system and is
appropriate for adoption in California.
FMMO product-price formulas generally consist of three factors:
Commodity price, manufacturing allowance, and yield factor. Product
yields contained in the formulas reflect standard industry norms. The
yields were last updated in 2013,\35\ and the record shows that these
values continue to reflect current market conditions, as there was no
dispute as to their continued relevancy.
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\35\ See infra.
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Commodity prices used in the FMMO formulas are announced by AMS in
the NDPSR every month and reflect current commodity prices received for
products over the previous four or five weeks. While surveyed plant
names and locations are not released by USDA, several witnesses
testified that California dairy product sales meeting the reporting
specifications \36\ are included in the NDPSR. These California sales
are part of the NDPSR prices used by the FMMOs in the same way that
sales from plants located in other areas of the United States are
currently included.
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\36\ 7 CFR 1170.8.
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FMMO pricing formulas currently contain the following per-pound
make allowances: Cheese--$0.2003, butter--$0.1715, NFDM--$0.1678, and
dry whey--$0.1991. These make allowances were last updated in 2013.\37\
They were determined on the basis of a 2006 CDFA survey (plants located
inside of California) and a 2006 Cornell Program on Dairy Markets and
Policy (CPDMP) survey (plants located outside of California) of
manufacturing costs. The butter and NDFM make allowances were computed
by taking a weighted average of the CDFA and CPDMP surveys, weighted by
national commodity production volumes, and adjusting for marketing
costs. The cheese make allowance was computed by relying solely on the
CDFA survey and adjusting for marketing costs. The dry whey make
allowance was computed by relying solely on the CPDMP survey and
adjusting for marketing costs. California dry whey data was not
considered because at the time, it was restricted and therefore not
available.
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\37\ See infra.
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As the record demonstrates, most of the manufacturing allowances
already account for California manufacturing costs. In regard to the
Institute's position that data used to determine make allowance levels
is not current, this decision recognizes 2006 data was used to
determine current make allowance levels. Since that time, USDA has not
received a hearing request to amend the levels. It may be appropriate
to amend these levels in the future, and USDA would evaluate any
changes to those levels on the basis of a formal rulemaking record.
Institute witnesses stressed that California manufacturers would be
competitively harmed should California FMMO minimum classified prices
not reflect a solely western location value. This decision finds that
California manufacturers would not face competitive harm with the
adoption of the uniform FMMO prices. Western manufacturing handlers who
purchase milk pooled on the Pacific Northwest and Arizona FMMOs already
routinely pay these prices. The record reflects that the Institute's
primary concern was the adoption of the current FMMO price formulas for
California, coupled with the adoption of the inclusive pooling
provisions contained in Proposal 1. The provisions recommended by this
decision allow handlers to elect not to pool milk used in manufacturing
as determined appropriate for their individual business operations. The
proposed California FMMO provisions would not prohibit handlers and
producers from utilizing the Dairy Forward Pricing Program \38\ to
forward contract for pooled manufacturing milk.
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\38\ See 7 CFR part 1145.
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Other Solids Price. Currently, the FMMO system determines the other
solids price using the same basic formula used to determine the other
component prices: (Commodity price less make allowance) times yield,
using dry whey as the NDPSR-referenced commodity price. As the market
price for dry whey moves and is reflected in the NDPSR price, it moves
the other solids price accordingly.
At the hearing, the Institute proposed an alternative method for
computing the whey value in the other solids formula. The Institute
argued, in testimony and post-hearing brief, that dry whey is not an
appropriate reference commodity for California because little dry whey
is produced in the state. Instead, they testified that prices from the
more commonly produced WPC-34 should be used. The Institute provided
evidence regarding WPC-34 production in California. The record contains
testimony explaining how WPC-34 and dry whey production practices and
manufacturing costs differ.
This decision finds that prices adopted in the California FMMO
should be uniform with all current FMMOs and be reflective of the dry
whey market. Therefore, it is not appropriate on the basis of this
hearing record to adopt a change in other solids pricing for only one
FMMO. The data and testimony presented by the Institute could warrant
further consideration, but to consider such a change for only one FMMO
is inappropriate. While an academic expert did provide testimony on the
record about a WPC-34 manufacturing cost survey, results of the survey,
which would be of interest if such a proposal was being evaluated, were
not available.
[[Page 10668]]
Class II Pricing. The FMMO system currently prices milk used in
Class II products uniformly. The Class II skim milk price is computed
as the advanced Class IV skim price plus $0.70 per cwt. The Class II
butterfat price is the Class III butterfat price for the month, plus
$0.007 cents per pound. The $0.70 differential between the Class IV and
Class II skim milk prices adopted in the Order Reform Final Decision
was an estimate of the cost of drying condensed milk and re-wetting the
solids for use in Class II products.
The record reflects--and this decision finds--that milk pricing in
the FMMO system should be as uniform as possible. Therefore, this
decision finds that Class II pricing in the California FMMO should be
the same as in current FMMOs. Class II pricing in the California FMMO
would result in forward pricing the skim portion of Class II while
pricing butterfat on a current basis. Butterfat used in Class II
products competes on a current-month basis with butterfat used in
cheese and butter, and its price should be determined on the basis of
the same month's value.
Class I Pricing. Currently, FMMOs determine Class I prices as the
higher of the advanced Class III or Class IV price, plus a location-
specific differential referred to as a Class I differential. Class I
differentials have been determined for every county in the continental
United States, including California.\39\ Class I prices paid in all
current FMMO's are on a skim/butterfat basis. Handlers who fortify
their Class I products have the NFDM or condensed skim used to fortify
classified as a Class IV use, and pay the Class I price for the
volumetric increase attributed to fortification.
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\39\ 7 CFR 1000.52.
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The Cooperatives have proposed that the California FMMO adopt the
same Class I pricing structure: The higher of the advanced Class III or
Class IV price plus a Class I differential based on the plant location.
They argued that the Class I price surface was designed as a nationally
coordinated structure and already includes differential levels for all
California counties. According to the Cooperatives, any change to the
Class I differential surface should be done through a national
rulemaking hearing where all interested parties can participate.
The Institute argued, in testimony and post-hearing brief, that the
Class I differential surface adopted as part of Order Reform did not
consider California in its inception, and is inappropriate for adoption
here. The Institute did not offer an alternative.
This decision finds that the Class I price formula contained in
Proposal 1, and as currently used in all current FMMOs, is appropriate
for the proposed California FMMO. This decision finds that prices for
milk pooled on the California FMMO and used in Class I products should
be location-specific, since Class I products generally compete on a
more local market. Therefore, the Class I differential surface that
applies in all current FMMOs is recommended for the California FMMO. As
such, Class I prices for milk pooled on the California FMMO would be
determined by the higher of the advanced Class III or Class IV milk
price announced on or before the 23rd day of the preceding month, plus
the Class I differential at a plant's location.
This decision recommends for a California FMMO the same Class I
differential surface used in the current FMMOs. Contrary to Institute
testimony, this differential surface was determined through a United
States Dairy Sector Simulator (USDSS) model that included California
supply and demand factors. An academic expert testifying in this
proceeding was one of the lead authors of the model and stated that
California was included when the model was constructed. This price
surface was designed to facilitate the movement of milk to Class I
markets without causing disorderly marketing conditions within or
across markets. Therefore, it is inappropriate on the basis of this
hearing record to make a change to this nationally coordinated Class I
price surface.
The Institute repeatedly argued that the Department did not
consider California when determining the nationally coordinated Class I
price surface. Prior to January 1, 2000, there were 31 FMMOs. As part
of the 1996 Farm Bill, the Department was instructed by Congress to
consolidate the existing orders into as few as 10, and no more than 14,
FMMOs, reserving one place for California. Since California
stakeholders did not express a desire to enter the FMMO system at that
time, the Order Reform process only considered the FMMO marketing areas
in existence at the time for consolidation. In the Order Reform Final
Decision, the reference to ``not including the State of California''
\40\ pertained to determining appropriate consolidated marketing areas,
not the analysis pertaining to Class I pricing, which included
California.
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\40\ See infra.
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Three-Factor FMMO Class I Pricing and Fortification. The Institute
proposed that California Class I prices be paid on a 3-factor basis:
Butterfat, nonfat solids and fluid carrier, as well as incorporate a
fortification credit similar to what is currently provided for in the
CSO. The fortification credit offered in Proposal 2 provides a credit
to a Class I handler's pool obligation for the NFDM or condensed skim
milk a handler uses to fortify Class I products to meet the State's
higher nonfat solids content requirement. The proposed fortification
credit would be paid out of the California FMMO marketwide pool funds.
The Institute explained these two features are currently provided
for in the CSO and work together to financially assist Class 1 handlers
in meeting the State-mandated higher nonfat solids content for Class 1
products. The Institute explained that handlers receiving high solids
milk pay a higher Class 1 price, but use less solids to fortify Class 1
products, and thus incur less cost to meet the state's nonfat solids
standards for fluid milk products. Conversely, handlers purchasing low
solids content milk pay a lower Class 1 price, but then incur a higher
cost to fortify their Class 1 products. The Cooperatives supported this
concept in their post-hearing brief.
The current FMMO system prices all Class I skim milk at the same
price regardless of the solids content. The record does not contain
enough justification to deviate from the uniform treatment of Class I
pricing. Therefore Class I milk pooled on the California FMMO will be
paid on a skim and butterfat basis. This uniform treatment will avoid
disorderly marketing with adjacent or other Federal orders, as handlers
could seek to engage in inefficient milk movements solely for the
purpose of seeking a Class I price advantage.
Current FMMOs do not provide credits to a handler's pool obligation
for fortification of Class I products. Instead, NFDM or condensed skim
used to fortify Class I products is classified as a Class IV product on
a skim equivalent basis. The volumetric increase due to fortification
is classified and priced as Class I. Proposal 2 contains this same
system of credits to a handler's pool obligation for fortification.
The record reflects that the CSO fortification credit system is
also included in Proposal 2. The record indicates the CSO fortification
credit system was designed in response to California's legislatively
mandated higher nonfat solids standard for Class 1 products. The record
does not address how incorporation of the CSO fortification credit
system would operate in the context of the existing
[[Page 10669]]
FMMO fortification classification provisions without resulting in a
double credit for fortification.
This decision does not find justification for incorporating into
the California FMMO a modification to how the FMMO system uniformly
addresses fortification of Class I products. As described above, and as
contained in the proposed classification structure in both Proposals 1
and 2, the California FMMO would provide a lower classification for
products used to fortify Class I products. Handlers would only be
charged the Class I price on the volumetric increase in Class I
products resulting from fortification.
In its post-hearing brief, the Institute filed a Negative Inference
Motion asserting that because the Cooperatives did not enter into the
record of this proceeding a study they commissioned evaluating their
proposed milk pricing provisions, USDA should conclude that the study
results contradict the Cooperatives' justification for adopting the
price formulas contained in Proposal 1.
It is left to the discretion of the trier of fact to determine
whether or not a negative inference will be drawn from the failure to
present any specific piece of evidence under one party's exclusive
control. The USDA finds that the recommended pricing provisions are
properly based on testimony of those witnesses who appeared and the
evidence that has been presented by all parties on the record.
Producer's Value of Milk
Currently, 6 of the 10 FMMOs utilize multiple component pricing to
determine both the handler's and producer's value of milk. In the six
orders, producers are paid for the pounds of butterfat, pounds of
protein, pounds of other solids of milk pooled, as well as a per
hundredweight (cwt) price known as the producer price differential
(PPD). The PPD reflects the producer's pro rata share of the value of
Class I, Class II, and Class IV use in the market relative to Class III
use. The Class III butterfat, protein, and other solids prices are the
same component prices charged to handlers based on the value of the use
of milk in Class III. In four of these six FMMOs, there is an
adjustment to the producer's payment for the somatic cell count (SCC)
of the producers' milk.
Proposal 1 and Proposal 2 seek to pay producers on a multiple
component basis for the milk they produce. As will be discussed below,
the proposals differ on how they would apply a PPD to producer
payments. Unlike Proposal 2, Proposal 1 does not specify a somatic cell
adjustment to the producer's value of milk.
The record reflects that milk use in California is concentrated in
manufactured dairy products. In 2015, California Class 1 utilization
was 13 percent, Class 2 and Class 3 utilization combined was 8.6
percent, while 78.4 percent was used in Class 4a and Class 4b products
(cheese, butter and dried milk powders). As California is clearly a
manufacturing market, it is appropriate for producers to be paid for
the components they produce that are valued by the manufacturers.
Therefore, this decision recommends producer payments on a multiple
component basis. Producers would be paid for the butterfat, protein,
and other solids components in their producer milk and for the cwt of
milk pooled.
This decision recommends that producers be paid a PPD calculated in
the same manner as six current FMMOs. The PPD represents to the
producer the value from the Class I, Class II, and Class IV uses in the
pool that they are entitled to share because they participate in the
FMMO pool. In general, the PPD is computed by deducting the Class III
component values from the total value of milk in the pool, and then
dividing the result by the total pounds of producer milk in the pool.
The PPD paid to producers participating in the California FMMO pool
would be adjusted to reflect the applicable producer location
adjustment for the handler location where their milk is received.
Therefore, under the proposed California FMMO, the minimum payment
to producers would be determined by summing the result of: Multiplying
the hundredweight of a producer's milk pooled by the PPD adjusted for
handler location; multiplying the pounds of butterfat in the producer's
milk by the butterfat price; multiplying the pounds of protein in a
producer's milk by the protein price; and multiplying the pounds of
other solids in a producer's milk by the other solids price.
Proponents of Proposal 1 proposed distributing the PPD value across
the butterfat, protein and other solids components, based on the
average value each component contributed to the Class III price during
the previous year. The Cooperatives purported that the PPD is confusing
to producers, particularly when it is negative, and spreading the value
of the PPD across the components would be a simpler method of
distribution.
The PPD is the difference between value associated with all the
milk pooled during the month and the producers' value for the
butterfat, protein, and other solids priced at the Class III component
prices for the month. In general, if the marketwide utilization value
of all milk in the pool, on a per cwt basis, is greater than the
marketwide utilization value of the producer's components priced at
Class III component values, dairy farmers receive a positive PPD.
A negative PPD occurs when the value of the priced producer
components in the pool exceeds the total value generated by all classes
of milk. This is possible since all producer components are priced at
the Class III components values, but pooled milk is utilized in all
four classes, each with its own separately derived value.
Specifically, negative PPDs can happen when large increases occur
in NDPSR survey prices from one month to the next resulting in the
Class III price (announced at the close of the month) exceeding, or in
a close relationship to, the Class I price (announced in advance of the
month). Negative PPDs can also occur in markets with a large Class IV
use when the Class IV price is significantly lower than the Class III
price. A negative PPD does not mean that there is less total revenue
available to producers. It often means the Class III component values
are high relative to Class I prices. Because component values are the
biggest portion of a producer's total revenue, high component prices
coupled with negative PPDs often result in higher overall revenue to
producers than when component prices are lower and PPDs are large and
positive.
This decision does not find justification for distributing the PPD
through the component prices as offered in Proposal 1. Current FMMO
producers receive and understand that the PPD represents the additional
value from the higher classified markets that they are able to share
because they participate in the FMMO. This includes times when the PPD
is negative.
While the proponents claim a negative PPD is confusing, this
decision finds that distributing the PPD through the component prices
would distort market signals to producers. As in the current FMMOs, a
negative PPD in the California FMMO would inform producers that
component values are rising rapidly. Regulated FMMO prices should not
block those market signals. Producers in other FMMOs have been able to
adapt to a multiple component pricing system that incorporates an
announced PPD. This decision finds that California producers can do the
same.
[[Page 10670]]
Four of the current FMMOs provide for a SCC adjustment on producer
milk values. The CSO does not include any such adjustment. Proposal 1
did not include a provision for a SCC adjuster, and a Cooperative
witness specifically testified against its inclusion. Proposal 2
included a SCC adjuster, but no Proposal 2 witnesses testified
regarding this aspect of their proposal. This decision does not
recommend a SCC adjuster for the California FMMO, as the record does
not contain evidence to support its inclusion.
This decision proposes that handlers regulated by the California
FMMO should be allowed to make various deductions from a producer's
milk check, identical to what is allowed in the current FMMOs. These
deductions include such things as hauling expenses and National Dairy
Promotion charges, as well as other authorized deductions such as
insurance payments, feed bills, equipment expenses, and other dairy
related expenses. Authorized deductions from the producer's check must
be authorized in writing by the producer. For the California FMMO,
authorized deductions would include any assessment identified by CDFA
for the payment of California quota values. A quota assessment would be
authorized upon announcement by CDFA; it would not have to be
authorized in writing by the producer.
Some hearing witnesses suggested that changes to the FMMO pricing
system need to be considered in a separate rulemaking proceeding before
California producers vote on a FMMO. This decision finds no
justification for California producers to wait for a decision on a
California FMMO until after what would most likely be a lengthy
proceeding on national FMMO pricing. California producers should have
the opportunity to vote on whether to join the FMMO system and adopt
the provisions recommended in this decision with the full awareness
that prices can be re-evaluated at a future hearing.
8. Pooling
This section addresses the pooling provisions of the recommended
California FMMO. A summary of testimony for the pooling provisions
contained in Proposals 1 and 2 is provided below. Additionally,
Proposal 4 is addressed in this section as it seeks to allow handlers
the ability to elect partially regulated distributing plant status with
respect to milk received from farmers located outside of the marketing
area. Proposal 4 would continue the practice of handlers paying the
plant blend price for milk produced from outside of the state, instead
of the market's blend price, since such interstate transactions cannot
be regulated by the State. Essentially, Proposal 4 pertains to whether
or not out-of-state milk would be incorporated into the proposed
California FMMO marketwide pool and therefore it is addressed in this
section.
This decision recommends pooling provisions for a California FMMO
that are conceptually similar to the current 10 FMMOs, but tailored for
the California market. The recommended pooling provisions are
performance based and designed to determine those producers who
consistently supply the Class I market, and therefore should share in
the revenues from the market. There would be no regulatory producer
payment difference given to milk based on the location of the dairy
farm where it was produced.
Summary of Proposals
A Cooperative witness testified regarding the pooling provisions
contained in Proposal 1. The witness said the Proposal 1 pooling
provisions are designed to address the wide disparity in producer and
handlers prices that currently exists in California when compared to
the FMMO system. The witness stated that in order to design adequate
California pooling standards, the Cooperatives evaluated historical
producer blend prices using both CSO classified prices and the proposed
California FMMO classified prices, from January 2000 through July 2015.
The witness estimated that producer blend prices would have averaged
$14.65 per cwt using CSO classified prices and $15.22 per cwt using the
proposed California FMMO classified prices, an average difference of
$0.57 per cwt. The witness' analysis showed that in every month, the
estimated CSO blend price was less than the FMMO blend price, and that
in using the most recent data (January 2015 through July 2015) the
average difference was $0.86 per cwt. The witness stressed that to
bring California producer blend prices in closer alignment with FMMO
producer blend prices, the pooling provisions of a California FMMO must
require the pooling of all classified use values.
The witness was of the opinion that California's combination of low
utilization in the higher valued classes (Class 1, 2, and 3) and a
state-administered quota program requires strict pooling provisions to
prevent handlers from electing not to pool a significant portion of
California milk each month. The witness was of the opinion that when
the California overbase price is below Class 4a or 4b prices, there is
an incentive to not pool milk in those classes because the handler can
avoid a payment into the marketwide pool. The witness stated that from
January 2000 through July 2015, the California overbase price was below
either the Class 4a or 4b price 91 percent of the time. Thus, in those
months, if not all milk was pooled, producers would receive different
minimum prices--those producers whose milk was pooled would receive the
minimum FMMO blend price, and those producers whose milk was not pooled
had the potential to receive a higher price because the handler avoided
sharing the additional revenue with all the producers in the market
through the marketwide pool. This concern regarding producer price
disparity was reiterated in the Cooperatives' post-hearing brief.
The Cooperative witness added that even after adjusting producer
blend prices to account for quota payments (-$0.37), transportation
credits (-$0.09), and RQAs ($0.03), there would be a financial
incentive to not pool a significant portion of California milk in most
months. Using the pricing provisions contained in Proposal 1, the
witness estimated that from August 2012 through July 2015, handlers
would have chosen not to pool Class III or Class IV milk 94 percent of
the time. The consequence, the witness emphasized, would not only be
unstable producer prices, but the inability of the FMMO to achieve
uniform producer prices. The witness stressed that to accumulate the
revenue needed to provide adequate, uniform producer blend prices and
facilitate orderly marketing, all the milk delivered to California
plants must be pooled. While provisions requiring all milk to be pooled
cannot be found in another FMMO, the witness explained that FMMO
pooling provisions have always been tailored to the market and the
pooling provisions contained in Proposal 1 are no different. The
Cooperatives' post-hearing brief stressed California's need to have
tailored pooling provisions that are different from other FMMOs. The
Cooperatives' brief reiterated that allowing for milk to not be pooled
would inhibit a California producer's ability to receive the national
FMMO prices they are seeking.
The witness proceeded to describe the proposed pooling provisions
contained in Proposal 1. The witness explained that under Proposal 1,
any California plant receiving milk from California farms would be
qualified as a pool plant, and all California milk delivered to that
plant would be qualified as
[[Page 10671]]
producer milk. The witness said Proposal 1 also contains provisions for
plants located outside of the marketing area that demonstrate adequate
service to the California Class I market to qualify as pool plants on
the order. The witness highlighted an additional provision that would
regulate all plants located in Churchill County, Nevada, and receiving
milk from farms located in Churchill County or California. According to
the witness, producers in the Churchill County milkshed have
historically supplied milk to the California Class 1 market and this
provision would ensure they could remain affiliated. The witness
proposed the partially regulated distributing plant (PRDP) provision
should be the same as in other FMMOs; a plant qualifies as a PRDP if
the plant does not have more than 25 percent of the plant's total
disposition within the marketing area.
The Cooperative witness defined a producer as any dairy farmer
producing Grade A milk received by a pool plant or a cooperative
handler. This provision allows for dairy farmers located inside or
outside of the marketing area to qualify as producers under the order,
the witness added. The witness said a majority of the producer milk
pooled on a California FMMO would be milk received by a pool plant
directly from qualified producers or cooperative handlers. Proposal 1
also contains a provision to allow producer milk to be pooled in the
order if it was received by a cooperative handler, the witness noted.
The Cooperative witness explained that Proposal 1 prohibits milk
from being diverted to nonpool plants outside of the marketing area and
remaining qualified for pooling on a California FMMO until five days'
production is delivered to a pool plant, and subsequently diversions
are limited by the amount the plant delivers to distributing plants.
The witness said the California market appears to have an adequate
reserve supply of Class I milk, so strict diversion limit standards are
needed to ensure that additional milk being pooled is needed in the
market.
The Cooperative witness provided examples of previous FMMO changes
that the witness described as significant policy shifts, including the
elimination of individual handler pools in favor of marketwide pools,
the regulation of large producer-handlers, adoption of multiple
component pricing, and the establishment of transportation credit
programs. The witness said that in these examples the Department found
it appropriate to significantly deviate from historical precedent
because market conditions justified such changes. The witness stated
that Federal Order Reform provided a FMMO foundation that was national
in scope, while also allowing for some provisions to be tailored to
meet the marketing conditions of individual orders. The witness
concluded that the AMAA provides the Department the flexibility to
tailor pooling provisions, and Proposal 1 recognizes the unique needs
of the California market.
Another Cooperative witness offered testimony modifying Proposal 1
to include call provisions. The witness explained that call provisions
are currently contained in the CSO, and while not often utilized, their
existence alone encourages milk to be supplied to fluid processing
plants when needed. As proposed, the witness said, call provisions
should only be used on a temporary basis when the market's milk supply
cannot meet distributing plant demand, not when an individual
distributing plant is short on milk.
The Cooperatives' post-hearing brief reiterated the justification
for the inclusive pooling provisions contained in Proposal 1. The brief
stressed that the AMAA authorizes the pooling of milk, irrespective of
use.
The Cooperatives' post-hearing brief also offered a modification to
extend exempt plant status to small plants that process products other
than, or in addition to, fluid milk products. The modification would
increase the exempt plant production limit from route sales under
150,000 pounds of fluid milk product to sales under 300,000 pounds of
milk in Class I, II, III or IV products during the month. The brief
explained that this would allow for small fluid and manufacturing
plants to be exempt from the pricing and pooling provisions of the
order that would otherwise be required to participate in the marketwide
pool.
A witness testifying on behalf of Western United Dairymen said that
without inclusive pooling provisions, as outlined in Proposal 1,
handlers could opt not to pool large amounts of milk. The witness said
this would have a substantial impact on the pool value and consequently
lower blend prices to those producers who remain pooled.
An Institute witness testified regarding the pooling provisions
contained in Proposal 2. The witness explained how current FMMO
provisions work together to assure an adequate milk supply for fluid
use. First, said the witness, higher Class I revenues attract producers
and producer milk to participate in the pool, then pooling provisions
direct the producer milk to fluid plants. Class I plants, which by
regulation are required to be pooled and pay the higher Class I price,
receive in exchange the assurance that the regulations provide them an
adequate supply of milk, the witness explained. The witness summarized
a previous USDA decision finding that performance-based pooling
provisions are the appropriate method for determining those producers
who are eligible to share in the marketwide pool. The witness stressed
that performance-based pooling provisions are essential in maintaining
orderly milk movements to Class I.
The Institute witness objected to the Cooperatives' assertion that
Class I premiums would be sufficient to move milk to Class I use. The
witness was of the opinion that Class I plants already pay a high
regulated Class I price and they should not have to pay additional
over-order Class I premiums to attract milk to their plant. The witness
questioned the purpose of Class I differentials if the use of premiums
would be the primary way to attract milk for fluid uses in a California
FMMO.
The Institute witness also spoke to Proposal 1's dependence on
transportation credits to ensure that the Class I market is served. The
witness was of the opinion that transportation credits are not an
appropriate substitute for performance-based pooling standards.
The Institute witness testified that Proposal 1 provides no
incentive for plants to serve the Class I market in order to qualify
its producers to share in the market's Class I revenues. Instead, said
the witness, Proposal 1 would allow plants to gain access to Class I
revenues for their producers without bearing any burden in servicing
the Class I market, thus making pooling provisions ineffective.
Another issue the Institute witness highlighted was inclusive
pooling provisions in combination with regulated classified prices that
are not market-clearing. If regulated classified prices are set above
what a plant can pay for that milk, the witness stressed that many of
those plants would exit the industry and available market plant
capacity would shrink. According to the witness, this would lead to
uneconomic milk movements as excess milk would need to find willing
processing capacity.
The Institute witness opposed Proposal 1's provision to
automatically grant pooling status to any dairy manufacturing plant
located in Churchill County, Nevada. The witness said that all plants,
whether located in state or out of state should qualify for pooling by
meeting appropriate performance-based pooling standards.
[[Page 10672]]
The Institute witness concluded that pooling standards play a
pivotal role in ensuring consumers an adequate supply of fluid milk.
Inclusive pooling challenges the usefulness of pooling standards by
allowing producers and handlers to benefit from the pool without
actually being required to serve the Class I market, the witness said.
The witness urged the Department to adopt the performance-based pooling
standards contained in Proposal 2.
The Institute's post-hearing brief reiterated its position that the
Department's policy has consistently ensured marketwide pool proceeds
are distributed to those that demonstrate service to the Class I
market. The brief maintained this standard should be upheld through
performance-based pooling standards in a California FMMO. The Institute
stressed that the inclusion of provisions to recognize the California
quota program is not an adequate justification to exclude performance-
based pooling standards.
The Institute also raised the issue in its post-hearing brief that
adoption of mandatory pooling in California would result in trade
barriers that are prohibited by the AMAA. With no way to avoid minimum
regulatory pricing, the brief stressed that California handlers would
be at a disadvantage since handlers regulated by other FMMOs can elect
not to pool milk and avoid minimum regulated prices. With the inability
to elect not to pool, the Institute was of the opinion that California
plants would be discouraged from expanding plant capacity to handle
surplus milk because they would be required to pay prices above market-
clearing values.
Lastly, as it pertains to the proposed pooling provisions, the
Institute expressed the opinion that inclusive pooling would de facto
regulate farmers, something that is expressly prohibited by the AMAA.
A Dean Foods witness, on behalf of the Institute, testified
regarding specific pooling provisions contained in Proposal 2. The
witness revised Proposal 2 and expressed support for the distributing
plant in-area route disposition standard of 25 percent offered by the
Cooperatives. The witness explained the Class I route disposition
levels that determine a plant's pool status is set by each of the
individual orders, depending on the Class I utilization of the market,
among other factors. The witness was of the opinion that a 25 percent
in-area route disposition standard is appropriate for a California FMMO
with a low Class I utilization.
The Dean Foods witness also supported the unit pooling provision
provided in Proposal 2. The witness testified that the unit pooling
provision allows two or more plants, operated by the same handler and
located in the marketing area, to qualify for pooling as a unit by
meeting the total and in-area route disposition standards as an
individual distributing plant. Proposal 2 requires one of the plants to
qualify as a distributing plant and other plant(s) in the unit to
process at least 50 percent or more of the total milk processed or
diverted by the plant into Class I or II products.
The witness expressed concern that the pooling provisions contained
in Proposal 1 would not ensure Dean Foods an adequate milk supply to
meet their needs because it provides no incentive to supply Class I
plants.
A Hilmar consultant testified on behalf of the Institute regarding
the pool supply plant performance standards contained in Proposal 2.
The witness explained that the proposed supply plant performance
standards and diversion limits would establish the volume of milk that
could be associated with the California marketwide pool. The witness
said that 10 percent is an appropriate base shipping standard for
supply plants seeking to be pooled on a California FMMO. The witness
explained this standard is similar to that in the Upper Midwest FMMO,
which has a similar Class I utilization. The witness described Proposal
2's sliding scale system that would automatically change the supply
plant shipping standard based on market Class I utilization over the
previous three months. The witness was of the opinion that the sliding
scale system would ensure the Class I market is adequately served by
automatically adjusting should there be a change in the market's Class
I utilization.
The Hilmar consultant witness also described different performance
standards proposed for pool supply plants that receive quota milk.
Proposal 2 would require 60 percent, or a volume equivalent, of a pool
supply plant's quota receipts to be delivered to pool distributing
plants, the witness said. The witness was of the opinion this
additional requirement on quota milk would ensure that Class I needs
would always be met. However, if additional milk is needed, that
responsibility would fall first on quota milk as the Market
Administrator would have the ability to adjust the quota milk shipping
standard up to 85 percent if warranted. The witness added that this
additional standard on quota milk is similar to provisions in the CSO.
The Hilmar consultant witness also testified that servicing the
fluid milk needs of the market, the responsibility of quota milk to
service the fluid market, and flexibility and supply chain efficiency
should guide the Department in its decision making. The witness
highlighted additional proposed provisions that would provide
regulatory flexibility such as allowing for split-plants, the pooling
of supply plant systems, and a provision to allow the Market
Administrator to investigate market conditions and adjust shipping
percentages if warranted by current market conditions.
The Hilmar consultant witness also addressed what Hilmar believes
are appropriate producer milk provisions for a California FMMO, namely
provisions modeled after the Upper Midwest FMMO. The witness was of the
opinion that an appropriate producer touch-base standard would be the
lesser of one-day's production or 48,000 pounds of milk, delivered to a
pool plant during the first month the dairy farmer is a producer. In
the following months, explained the witness, the producer's milk would
be eligible for diversion to nonpool plants and still be pooled and
priced under the terms of a California FMMO. The witness testified that
handlers should not be allowed to pool more than 125 percent of the
volume they pooled during the previous month, except during March when
the appropriate limit should be 135 percent, due to the fewer number of
days in February. The witness testified that the Institute relied on
justification and methodology provided in Upper Midwest FMMO rulemaking
decisions to determine appropriate repooling standards for a California
FMMO.
In addition, the Hilmar consultant witness said that a California
FMMO should not allow milk to be simultaneously pooled on a FMMO and a
State order with marketwide pooling. Handlers, or a group of handlers,
should be penalized if they attempt to not pool large volumes of Class
III or Class IV milk to avoid pooling standards, the witness added.
A Leprino witness expressed opposition to mandatory-regulated
minimum prices as advanced in Proposal 1. The witness characterized the
inclusive pooling provisions of Proposal 1 as actually being mandatory
minimum pricing provisions because they would cause all California milk
to be pooled and priced under the terms of the FMMO. The witness
explained how the CSO has applied minimum regulated pricing to all
Grade A milk produced and processed in the state for decades, which the
witness believed has
[[Page 10673]]
led to negative market impacts. For example, the witness described how
mandatory pricing and pooling has reduced competition across
manufactured product classes and lessened incentives for milk to move
to higher-valued uses.
The Leprino witness did not characterize the CSO as disorderly, but
rather explained how there had been periods of dysfunction when CDFA
set minimum-regulated prices that exceeded market-clearing levels,
leading to overproduction of milk. The witness added that when there
have been periods of large milk surpluses, milk has been shipped and
sold outside of the state at discounted rates. The witness said this
led to losses for California producers that could have been reduced
under a more flexible regulatory scheme.
The Leprino witness stressed that a California FMMO should have
voluntary pricing and pooling for manufactured milk, as is the case in
all other FMMOs. The witness was of the opinion this promotes market
efficiency, allowing milk to move to its highest valued use. In its
brief, Leprino stated that the inclusive pooling provisions are over-
reaching by regulating all milk and are inconsistent with the goals of
the AMAA. Leprino stated that inclusive pooling standards combined with
overvalued pricing formulas would result in a disorderly California
market.
Another witness appeared on behalf of HP Hood in support of
adoption of Proposal 2. HP Hood operates fluid milk processing
facilities in California and in existing FMMOs, and is a member of the
Institute. The witness testified that if a California FMMO were adopted
that included inclusive pooling, there would be an oversupply of
California milk, leading to decreased investment in dairy product
manufacturing facilities. The witness supported a California FMMO that
allows for optional milk pooling for non-fluid milk uses.
A Gallo Farms consultant witness testified that unlike other FMMOs,
Proposal 1 would not allow handlers to elect not to pool manufacturing
milk, which would lead to disorderly marketing conditions and increased
operational costs for cheese plants. The witness supported the ability
of cheese plants to elect not to pool milk as provided in Proposal 2.
A witness spoke on behalf of Nestle S.A. (Nestle) in support of
Proposal 2. Nestle is the world's largest food company, headquartered
in Switzerland. Its U.S. operations include Nestle USA, Nestle
Nutrition, Nestle Purina Pet Care Company, and Nestle Waters North
America.
The Nestle witness was of the opinion that milk marketing in
California is orderly. However, if a California FMMO is adopted, Nestle
supports Proposal 2 that would allow for optional pooling of
manufactured milk. The witness stated that in all current FMMOs,
handlers have the option to pool manufacturing milk. Inclusive pooling
as contained in Proposal 1, according to the witness, would place
Nestle at a competitive disadvantage with competitors in other FMMOs
that can avoid minimum-regulated prices. Should mandatory pooling
standards, in conjunction with the higher-regulated prices contained in
Proposal 1 be adopted, the witness asserted that Nestle would seek to
move more of its manufacturing outside of the state.
The Nestle witness added that the vast majority of its purchased
California manufactured dairy powder products is utilized in its
international plants. If California regulated prices increase and
pooling becomes mandatory, the witness said that Nestle would look
elsewhere globally to replace those products. The witness concluded
that Nestle would like to see a consistent approach to regulations in
all FMMOs so that its business continues to be competitive and grow.
Proposal 4 was submitted by Ponderosa Dairy (Ponderosa) in response
to the Cooperatives' original Proposal 1. Proposal 4 would amend the
provisions that regulate payments by a handler operating a partially-
regulated distributing plant--under either Proposal 1 or 2--to allow
handlers to elect partially regulated distributing plant status with
respect to milk received from out-of-state farms.
A consultant witness on behalf of Ponderosa testified in support of
Proposal 4. The witness described past judicial decisions regarding the
treatment of out-of-state milk delivered to California handlers.
According to the witness, out-of-state producers cannot currently
obtain quota, are not eligible for transportation benefits under the
CSO, and do not participate in the CSO marketwide pool. Instead, the
witness said, they negotiate separate prices with the California
handlers who buy their milk. The witness speculated that out-of-state
producers receive the plant's blend price, although that is not
enforced or verified by CDFA.
The Ponderosa consultant witness outlined the provisions of
Proposal 4, which would modify the standard payment provisions for
partially-regulated plants under a California FMMO. Proposal 4 would
allow California handlers to elect partially-regulated status with
respect to milk from out-of-state producers, and out-of-state milk
would be classified according to the plant's overall utilization and
receive the plant blend price. Since the milk would not be pooled under
the FMMO, it would not receive the marketwide blend price. The witness
clarified that although the out-of-state milk would be isolated for
payment purposes, the handler's status as a fully regulated pool plant
should not be lost if it otherwise meets the definition of a pool
plant.
The Ponderosa consultant witness said that features of Proposal 4
are similar to those of individual handler pools that are no longer
provided in the FMMO system. Such accommodation is needed, the witness
said, to counter the inherent inequalities of California's unique quota
system, which would otherwise disadvantage out-of-state producers. In
the witness's opinion, the provisions of Proposal 4 should be contained
in any California FMMO recommended by the Department, as it would
establish a regulated and audited pricing mechanism to ensure out-of-
state producers receive at least the price they would have if they
shipped to an otherwise fully-regulated plant--something that is not
provided in the CSO.
A witness representing Ponderosa explained that Ponderosa Dairy was
founded in southern Nevada to supply raw milk to the Rockview plant in
southern California with the expectation of receiving the plant blend
price reflective of Rockview's plant utilization even though the plant
was regulated by the CSO. With a Class 1 utilization of approximately
85 percent, the witness said that the plant blend price compensates
Ponderosa for its inability to participate in the California quota
program and for its higher transportation expenses to haul its milk 280
miles to Rockview.
Another Nevada producer, representing Desert Hills Dairy (Desert
Hills), a dairy farm with 4,000 cows that delivers 50 percent of its
production to California processing plants, testified in opposition to
any California FMMO. However, the witness said that should a FMMO be
adopted, Proposal 4 should be included as it most closely resembles the
current CSO provisions for out-of-state milk. The witness testified
that Desert Hills receives the plant blend price for the milk shipped
to California, and that the dairy farm pays all transportation costs.
The Desert Hills witness said that should Proposal 4 not be adopted, it
would be financially harmful because Desert Hills would be pooled on a
California FMMO and
[[Page 10674]]
receive more than $1.00 per cwt less for the milk they ship to
California.
Without addressing Ponderosa's concern that out-of-state producers
are unable to own quota, the Cooperatives modified Proposal 1 in their
post-hearing brief. Modified Proposal 1 would provide for the payment
of a blend price adjuster to out-of-state producers so that those
producers' total receipts would not be diminished by the deduction of
quota premium payments from the marketwide pool.
The Cooperatives' brief argued that out-of-state producers have
taken advantage of the fact that the CSO cannot regulate out-of-state
milk and have sold milk to California Class 1 handlers for prices
higher than the CSO regulated blend price but lower than the CSO
classified use value. According to the Cooperatives, modified Proposal
1 does not erect trade barriers as it provides for uniform payment to
California producers in similar circumstances by establishing uniform
quota premium payments for milk covered by quota, and establishing a
uniform blend price for production not covered by quota.
An Institute witness explained that under Proposal 2, out-of-state
producers would receive the traditional FMMO blend price for their milk
pooled on a California FMMO. That blend price, the witness said, would
be determined before the value of quota is deducted from total
marketwide pool revenues. According to the witness, out-of-state
producers, who could never own quota under California's current laws,
and in-state producers should be paid uniformly through a traditional
FMMO blend price calculation.
The Institute witness explained they originally considered
proposing the establishment of two marketwide pools or blend price
calculations. The first would pay out-of-state producers, and then the
second would recalculate and apportion all the remaining funds to
California producers in the pool, on the basis of quota/non-quota
prices and whether handlers elected to pool their milk. But the witness
said that upon further consideration they realized that this solution
would present additional problems.
The Institute witness provided examples where two producers
shipping into the same California plant received different prices by
virtue of their farms' locations. The witness was of the opinion that
this treatment erects a trade barrier, provides non-uniform payments to
producers, and violates the AMAA.
The Institute witness said Proposal 2 addresses these issues by
providing that out-of-state producers receive the traditional FMMO
blend price for their milk pooled on a California FMMO. According to
the witness, by paying the traditional blend to out-of-state producers,
rather than the non-quota price, no trade barrier is erected with
respect to out-of-state milk.
A consultant witness representing Hilmar supported the Institute's
position regarding the treatment of out-of-state milk.
Ponderosa's reply brief argued that the Cooperatives' proposed
remedy--the out-of-state adjustment rate--would not resolve the
discriminatory trade barrier issue raised in Ponderosa's initial brief.
Ponderosa asserted the mechanics of the Cooperatives' proposal are
unclear, but they seemed to add complication to the pooling process
without fairly compensating out-of-state producers for their inability
to participate in the quota program. According to Ponderosa, out-of-
state producers can never realize the historic and ongoing benefits of
quota ownership and can only avoid discriminatory treatment by being
allowed to receive the plant blend price.
Findings
Two fundamentally different pooling philosophies have been proposed
in this proceeding. The first, contained in Proposal 1, has been termed
``inclusive pooling'' and would automatically pool all California
produced milk delivered to California plants, similar to how milk
currently becomes pooled by the CSO. The Cooperatives are of the
opinion that any change that would allow handlers to opt not to pool
milk would be disorderly in an industry where all of the milk has
historically been regulated. The Cooperatives testified that because
California has a high percentage of both Class III and Class IV milk,
in any given month handlers would elect to not pool one of those
classes of milk because of price. The Cooperatives estimated the
incentive to not pool one or both classes of manufacturing milk could
occur 94 percent of the time. The resulting fluctuation in uniform
producer prices, they claim, would be disorderly.
The second pooling philosophy, offered by the Institute, is
performance-based pooling standards that are more typical of what
exists in the current 10 FMMOs. These standards require the pooling of
plants with predominantly Class I milk sales. Handlers have the option
of pooling Class II, III and IV milk diverted to nonpool plants. The
provisions set out standards for what plants, producers, and producer
milk are eligible to be pooled and priced by the FMMO. The Institute
testified that the inclusive pooling standards offered in Proposal 1
are not authorized by the AMAA, and performance-based pooling standards
are the only means to ensure that Class I demand is always met.
The pooling standards of all current FMMOs are contained in the
Pool Plant, Producer and Producer Milk provisions of an order. Taken
together, these provisions are intended to ensure an adequate supply of
milk is available to meet the Class I needs of the market, and provide
the criteria for determining the producers that have demonstrated a
reasonable measure of service to the Class I market, and thereby should
share in the marketwide distribution of pool proceeds.
While the Cooperatives have put forth the argument that inclusive
pooling is authorized by the AMAA, the analysis of the record of this
proceeding finds that performance-based pooling standards remain the
appropriate method for identifying the producers and producer milk that
serves the Class I market. Therefore, performance-based pooling
provisions, tailored to the local market, are recommended for the
proposed California FMMO.
Pooling standards that are performance based provide a viable
method for determining those eligible to share in the marketwide pool.
It is primarily the additional revenue generated from the higher-valued
Class I use of milk that adds additional revenue, and it is reasonable
to expect that only producers who consistently bear the costs of
supplying the market's fluid needs should be the ones to share in the
returns arising from higher-valued Class I sales. Therefore, FMMOs
require the pooling of milk received at pool distributing plants, which
is predominately Class I milk. Handlers of Class II, III and IV uses of
milk qualify their milk to be pooled by meeting the pooling and
performance standards of an order. Pooling of Class II, III and IV milk
is optional. By delivering a portion of their milk receipts to Class I
distributing plants, handlers benefit from the marketwide pool by
receiving the difference between their use-value of milk and the
order's blend price in order to pay their producer suppliers the
uniform producer blend price. This decision finds that the following
performance-based pooling provisions are appropriate for the proposed
California FMMO.
Pool Plant. The Pool Plant definition of each order provides the
standards to identify plants engaged in serving the fluid needs of the
marketing area and that receive milk eligible to share in the
marketwide pool. The Pool Plant provisions recommended in this decision
are a combination of those offered in both Proposal 1 and Proposal
[[Page 10675]]
2. Both proposals recommend similar distributing plant and supply plant
provisions. However, Proposal 1 would automatically regulate any plant
located in California that receives milk from a producer located in the
marketing area, and the remaining proposed pool plant provisions (both
distributing plant and supply plant provisions) would apply to only
plants located outside of the marketing area. As discussed earlier,
this decision finds that pooling provisions should be performance
based, and therefore it is not appropriate to recommend provisions that
would regulate plants based solely on location.
There are two performance standards applicable to distributing
plants. First, this decision finds that a pool distributing plant
should have a minimum of 25 percent of the total quantity of fluid milk
products physically received at the plant (excluding concentrated milk
received from another plant by agreement for other than Class I use)
that are disposed of as route disposition or are transferred in the
form of packaged fluid milk products to other distributing plants. This
decision finds that a 25 percent route disposition standard for the
proposed California FMMO is adequate to determine those plants that are
sufficiently associated with the fluid market. The second criteria is
an ``in-area'' standard and is designed to recognize plants that have
an adequate association with the fluid market in the California
marketing area. The record supports the adoption of the same in-area
standard of 25 percent of total route disposition that is found in the
current 10 FMMOs.
The Pool Plant provision also provides for regulation of
distributing plants that distribute ultra-pasteurized or aseptically-
processed fluid milk products. The record evidence shows that plants
specializing in these types of products tend to have irregular
distribution patterns that could cause the plant to shift its
regulatory status. This shifting can be considered disorderly to the
producers and cooperatives who supply those plants. Therefore
regulating those plants based on location, as is done in other FMMOs,
provides regulatory stability. Current FMMOs allow these plants to be
regulated in the marketing area where they are located, as long as they
process a minimum percent of their milk receipts into ultra-pasteurized
or aseptically-processed fluid milk products during the month.
The record reveals that both the Cooperatives and the Institute
used the Upper Midwest FMMO, which contains a 15 percent standard for
distributing plants producing ultra-pasteurized or aseptically-
processed products, as a template for pooling provisions. However, as
explained in the Federal Order Reform Final Decision,\41\ this standard
was set equal to the total route disposition standard required for pool
distributing plants in the respective FMMO. In this decision, the pool
distributing plant standard is proposed to be 25 percent. Accordingly,
this decision recommends that plants located in the marketing area that
process at least 25 percent of their total quantity of fluid milk
products into ultra-pasteurized or aseptically-processed fluid milk
products would be fully regulated by the proposed California FMMO.
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\41\ See infra.
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Performance standards for pool supply plants are designed to
attract an adequate supply of milk to meet the demands of the fluid
milk market by encouraging pool supply plants to move milk to pool
distributing plants that service the marketing area. The record reveals
that California has significant volumes of manufacturing milk, and the
California Class 1 utilization in 2015 was only 13 percent. This
decision recommends that a pool supply plant should deliver at least 10
percent of the plant's total milk receipts from producers, including
milk diverted by the handler, to plants (qualified as pool distributing
plants, plants in a distributing plant unit, producer-handlers,
partially regulated distributing plants, or distributing plants fully
regulated by another order) each month in order to qualify all of the
milk associated with the supply plant for pricing and pooling under a
California FMMO. This shipping provision is reasonable given that it
mirrors the approximate Class I utilization of the market and is low
enough to avoid uneconomic shipments of milk.
To prevent uneconomic shipments of milk solely for the purpose of
pool qualification, this decision finds it appropriate to recommend two
additional pooling provisions. First, this decision recommends a unit
pooling provision that allows for two or more plants located in the
marketing area and operated by the same handler to qualify for pooling
as one unit. This applies as long as one or more of the plants in the
unit qualifies as a pool distributing plant and the other plant(s)
processes at least 50 percent of its bulk fluid milk products into
Class I or II products. This unit pooling provision is designed to
provide regulatory flexibility and avoid uneconomic milk movements in
markets, like California, where there is often specialization in plant
operations.
Second, this decision recommends a system pooling provision that
allows for two or more supply plants, located in the marketing area and
operated by one or more handlers, to qualify for pooling as a system by
meeting the supply plant shipping requirements as a single plant. This
system pooling provision recognizes the benefits supply plants provide
by balancing the market's fluid needs, while ensuring that the plant is
a consistent supplier to the market and therefore eligible to benefit
from participation in the marketwide pool. Both unit and system pooling
provisions are provided in other FMMOs.
The Cooperative and Institute witnesses testified in support of
authorizing the Market Administrator to adjust shipping percentages if
warranted by changing market conditions. This decision finds it
appropriate to adopt such provisions should the Market Administrator
conclude, after conducting an investigation, that justification for
adjusting shipping standards for supply plants, and systems of supply
plants to encourage shipments of milk to meet Class I demand, or to
prevent uneconomic shipments of milk is warranted. This provision will
ensure that California FMMO provisions can quickly respond to changing
market conditions and that orderly marketing can be maintained. This
provision negates the need to add call provisions, as advanced by the
Cooperatives, to ensure that fluid milk demand is always met.
Like other FMMOs, the proposed California FMMO allows a plant,
qualifying as a pool plant in the immediately preceding three months,
to be granted relief from performance standards for no more than two
consecutive months if it is determined by the market administrator that
it cannot meet the performance standards because of circumstances
beyond the control of the handler operating the plant. Examples of such
circumstances include natural disaster, breakdown of equipment, or work
stoppage.
In their post-hearing brief, the Cooperatives offered a
modification to the exempt plant definition that would expand exempt
plant status to plants with less than 150,000 pounds of Class I route
disposition, and less than 300,000 pounds of total Class I, II, III or
IV milk usage during the month. This modification was offered to exempt
smaller plants that would otherwise be regulated under the inclusive
pooling provisions of Proposal 1. This decision puts forth a package of
performance-based pooling provisions; therefore,
[[Page 10676]]
there is no need to alter the standard exempt plant definition, as
plants with manufacturing uses can elect to not participate in a
California FMMO.
Proposal 2 offered a sliding scale supply plant shipping standard
that would automatically adjust if the average Class I utilization
percentage over the prior three months changed. Justification provided
for this provision centered on administrative ease and flexibility of
the regulations to change in order to reflect market conditions,
without necessitating a formal rulemaking hearing. This decision
recommends provisions allowing the market administrator to adjust
supply plant shipping standards if warranted by changing market
conditions. Therefore, it is not necessary to incorporate automatic
adjustments to the standards, as that is provided with the
flexibilities granted to the market administrator.
This decision does not recommend separate pooling standards for
plants receiving California quota milk, as offered in Proposal 2. As
discussed previously, this decision finds that proper recognition of
the California quota program could be through an authorized deduction
to payments to producers if deemed appropriate by CDFA. Therefore, it
is not appropriate for the supply plant shipping standards to differ on
the basis of whether or not they receive quota milk.
Proposal 1 contained a provision that would regulate a plant
located in Churchill County, Nevada, receiving milk from producers
within the county or in the California marketing area. The Cooperatives
argued that currently a plant located in Churchill County has a long
standing association with the California market, and this provision
would ensure the plant would remain associated within the FMMO
framework. This decision does not find it appropriate to regulate a
supply plant based on its location and not in combination with some
form of performance standard. If the Churchill County plant meets the
pool plant provisions of the recommended California FMMO, and thus
demonstrates an adequate association to the market, then that plant
would become regulated and enjoy the benefits of participating in a
California FMMO marketwide pool.
Lastly, this decision incorporates provisions contained in all
other FMMOs implementing the provisions of the Milk Regulatory Equity
Act of 2005 (MREA). The MREA amended the AMAA to ensure regulatory
equity between and among dairy farmers and handlers for sales of
packaged fluid milk in FMMO areas and into certain non-Federally
regulated milk marketing areas from Federal milk marketing areas.
Incorporation of these provisions is required to ensure that the
proposed California FMMO does not violate the MREA.
Producer. The Producer definition identifies those dairy farmers
supplying the market with milk for fluid use, or who are at least
capable of doing so if necessary. Producers are eligible to share in
the revenue that accrues from the marketwide pooling of milk. The
Producer provisions proposed in Proposals 1 and 2 were virtually
identical. This decision finds that the proposed California FMMO will
recognize producers as any person who produces Grade A milk that is
received at a pool plant directly from the producer or diverted from
the plant, or received by a cooperative in its capacity as a handler. A
dairy farmer would not be considered a producer under more than one
FMMO with respect to the same milk. Additionally, the proposed
California FMMO exempts producer-handlers and exempt plants from the
pricing provisions, so the term producer would not apply to a producer-
handler, or any dairy farmer whose milk is delivered to an exempt
plant, excluding producer milk diverted to such exempt plant. Finally,
the term producer would not apply to a dairy farmer whose milk is
received at a nonpool plant as other than producer milk. Such a
provision is commonly referred to as a dairy farmer for other markets
provision.
The Cooperatives proposed an additional provision that would
identify those dairy farmers who had lost their Grade A permit for more
than 30 consecutive days as dairy farmers for other markets, and
therefore would lose their ability to qualify as a producer on a
California FMMO for 12 consecutive months. The Cooperatives explained
that this provision was part of the inclusive pooling provisions and
was designed to prevent producers from voluntarily giving up their
Grade A status to avoid regulation. This decision is recommending a
package of pooling provisions that are performance based and only those
dairy farmers who meet the producer definition would be entitled to
share in the marketwide pool. Therefore, any dairy farmer who delivers
Grade A milk to a pool plant will be considered a producer.
Producer milk. The Producer Milk definition identifies the milk of
producers that is eligible for inclusion in the marketwide pool. The
recommended provisions are a combination of the provisions contained in
Proposals 1 and 2, and uphold the performance-based pooling philosophy
advanced in this decision.
This decision finds that for the proposed California FMMO, producer
milk is defined as the milk of a producer that is received at a pool
plant, or received by a cooperative association in its capacity as a
handler.
The proposed California FMMO must also provide for the diversion of
producer milk to facilitate its orderly and efficient disposition when
not needed for fluid use. Diversion provisions are needed to ensure
that milk pooled on the order but not used for Class I purposes is part
of the legitimate reserve supply of Class I handlers. Providing for the
diversion of milk is a desirable and needed feature of a FMMO because
it facilitates the orderly and efficient disposition of milk when not
needed for fluid use.
Accordingly, the recommended California FMMO would allow a pool
plant to divert milk to another pool plant, and pool plants and
cooperatives in their capacity as handlers could also divert milk to
nonpool plants located in California, or in the surrounding states of
Arizona, Nevada and Oregon. Milk would not be eligible to be diverted
to a nonpool plant and remain priced and pooled under the terms of a
California FMMO, unless at least one day of the dairy farmer's
production is physically received as producer milk at a pool plant
during the first month the dairy farmer is qualifying as a producer on
the order. Given the large supply of milk for manufactured use in
California, the record supports that a one-day ``touch base'' provision
during the first month would be adequate to define the producer milk
that should be included in a California marketwide pool. Proposal 2
offered an alternative touch base standard of the lesser of one-day's
production or 48,000 pounds. This decision finds that a one-day touch
base standard is an adequate demonstration of a dairy farmer's ability
to service the market. Conversely, a higher standard, such as the five-
day standard contained in Proposal 1, could lead to uneconomic milk
movements for the sole purpose of meeting regulatory standards.
It is equally appropriate to safeguard against excessive milk
supplies becoming associated with the market as the recommended
California FMMO one-day touch base standard could lead to milk from far
distances associating with a California marketwide pool without
actually being available to service the market's fluid needs.
Therefore, this decision recommends diversions be limited to 100
percent minus the supply plant shipping percentage (or 90 percent of
all milk
[[Page 10677]]
being pooled by the handler). Diversions would further be limited to
nonpool plants within California and its surrounding states. This limit
should allow the economic movement of milk to balance the fluid needs
of the market, while simultaneously preventing the milk of producers
located in areas distant from the marketing area from being delivered
to a pool plant once, and then all the milk of that producer being
diverted to a distant plant and still pooled on and receiving the
recommended California FMMO blend price.
The recommended California FMMO also contains repooling standards
of 125 percent for the months of April through February, and 135
percent for the month of March of the producer milk receipts pooled by
the handler in the previous month. The record contains evidence that
other FMMOs have experienced large swings in the volume of milk pooled
on the order. This volatility was attributed to manufacturing handlers
having opted to not pool all their eligible milk received in a month in
order to avoid payment to the marketwide pool. The unrestricted ability
of manufacturing handlers and cooperatives to elect not to pool milk
and avoid payment into the marketwide pool is inequitable and contrary
to the intent of the FMMO system.\42\ Repooling standards have been
found to be an appropriate remedy to safeguard marketwide pooling and
deter the disorderly conditions that occur when milk is not pooled.
These standards would not prevent manufacturing handlers or
cooperatives from electing to not pool milk. However, they should serve
to maintain and enhance orderly marketing by encouraging participation
in the marketwide pooling of all classified uses of milk.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\42\ Official Notice is taken of Upper Midwest Final Decision
(71 FR 54136), Central Final Decision (71 FR 54152), and Mideast
Final Decision (71 FR 54172).
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Therefore, this decision finds that repooling standards are
justified for the proposed California FMMO to avoid known disorderly
marketing conditions that have occurred in numerous FMMOs. As
California is currently regulated by the CSO, there is no data on the
record from which to discern how much milk plants that will qualify as
pool plants on the recommended California FMMO will seek to pool.
Therefore, the 125 and 135 percent repooling standards serve as a
reasonable starting point for determining a handler's consistent supply
of milk available to service the market's fluid needs. Any milk
delivered to a pool distributing plant in excess of the previous
month's pooled volume would not be subject to the repooling standards.
The recommended California FMMO also contains a provision that allows
the market administrator to waive these provisions for new handlers, or
existing handlers with a significant change in their milk supply due to
unusual circumstances.
Lastly, milk that is subject to inclusion and participation in a
State-authorized marketwide equalization pool and classification system
would not be considered producer milk. Without such exclusion, milk
could be simultaneously pooled on a California FMMO and on a marketwide
equalization pool administered by another government entity, resulting
in a double payment on the same milk and giving rise to competitive
equity issues between producers.
The record reflects that under the CSO, milk serving the California
Class I market but produced from outside the state is not priced and
pooled, and out-of-state producers commonly receive the plant blend
price. Proposal 4 seeks to allow plants that otherwise qualify as fully
regulated distributing plants to elect partially regulated distributing
plant status with respect to milk received from out-of-state farms. If
Proposal 4 were adopted, the recommended California FMMO would enforce
payment to out-of-state producers of at least the plant blend price on
the out-of-state milk and thus the out-of-state producers would receive
the same price as they currently do by being exempt from CSO
regulation.
Throughout the hearing, California producers extolled the virtues
of joining the FMMO system and enjoying system-wide uniform product
classification and pricing, which they believed would put them on a
level-playing field with their producer counterparts across the
country. In an effort to fairly compensate out-of-state producers while
accommodating the California quota program under the proposed FMMO,
proponents offered various payment alternatives. Under the modified
provisions of Proposal 1, out-of-state producers would be entitled to a
uniform blend price adjusted for quota. Under Proposal 2, out-of-state
producers would be entitled to the traditional FMMO blend price
calculated before quota premiums are paid.
Proponents of Proposal 4 argued that out-of-state producers should
be allowed to continue receiving the plant blend price for milk shipped
to plants regulated under a California FMMO to compensate for the fact
that they have not historically been entitled to own and benefit from
California quota and cannot expect to in the future. Under Proposal 4,
otherwise fully regulated handlers could elect partially regulated
distributing plant status with respect to out-of-state milk, for which
they would pay the plant's blend price, based on classified use.
The record reflects that out-of-state milk is not priced and pooled
by the CSO because the State of California is prohibited from
regulating interstate commerce. One benefit of Federal regulation is
the ability to regulate the interstate marketing of milk, something
that states are expressly prohibited from doing. FMMO provisions ensure
that all milk servicing a market's Class I needs is appropriately
classified and priced, and the producers who supply that milk share in
the marketwide revenues from all Class I sales in the market.
A key feature of FMMOs is that producer milk is classified and
priced at the plant where it is utilized, regardless of its source.
Similarly situated handlers pay at least the class prices under each
order, and producers are paid at least the order's minimum uniform
blend price, determined through marketwide pooling. This allows
producers to share equally in the classified use value of milk in the
market, while minimizing uneconomic milk movements.
As explained earlier, this decision recommends that a California
FMMO operate independent of the State's quota program. Under the
recommended provisions, no quota premium would be subtracted from the
FMMO pool, and all producers delivering to regulated pool plants under
the order would be paid at least the same minimum producer blend price,
less authorized deductions. Therefore, all producers are paid
uniformly, as is allowed by the uniform payments provision of the AMAA.
Accordingly, this decision finds no justification for differential
producer treatment for milk servicing California's Class I needs and
produced outside the marketing area. If an out-of-state dairy farmer
qualifies as a producer on the recommended California FMMO, then their
milk will be priced and pooled uniformly with all other producers
serving the Class I market.
9. Transportation Credits
Transportation credits were contained in both Proposals 1 and 2 to
reimburse handlers for part of the cost of transporting milk to Class I
and/or Class II use. This decision does not recommend transportation
credit provisions for a California FMMO.
A witness appearing on behalf of the Cooperatives testified in
support of the transportation credit provisions
[[Page 10678]]
contained in Proposal 1. The witness said that transportation credits
are needed because Class I differentials are not high enough to cover
the cost of moving milk from the Central Valley where most of the milk
is produced, to Class I distributing plants which are primarily located
on the coast where most of the population resides.
The Cooperative witness utilized April 2013 to October 2014 CDFA
hauling cost data of milk deliveries to plants with Class 1, 2 and/or 3
utilization, and compared it to the proposed California FMMO Class I
differentials that would be applicable for comparable hauls. The
witness said the average cost to haul a load of milk from a supply
region to a demand region was $0.75 per cwt, with a range of $0.35 to
$1.82 per cwt. According to the witness, in all instances, the
difference in FMMO Class I differentials between the two locations was
much less than the actual haul cost, therefore an additional cost
recovery mechanism is needed to assure orderly movements of milk to
Class I plants.
The witness explained that Proposal 1 contains transportation
credit provisions similar to the current CSO where marketwide pool
monies are used to provide a credit for farm-to-plant milk movements
within designated transportation zones to handlers with greater than 50
percent Class 1, 2 and/or 3 utilization. The witness said that the
transportation credit zones represent current market procurement
patterns where transportation credit assistance is necessary, and a
similar credit system should be incorporated into a California FMMO.
The witness stressed that the proposed credits would be mileage and
transaction based, with a reimbursement rate cap of 175 miles,\43\ and
a fuel cost adjustor. The witness noted that the transportation credit
rate would be calculated on a per-farm basis. So one haul route could
have more than one farm stop and each farm stop would be eligible
individually for a transportation credit. In their post-hearing brief,
the Cooperatives modified their proposal to allow for milk outside the
marketing area to be eligible for transportation credits.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\43\ The mileage rate cap was modified at the hearing to 175
miles.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Cooperative witness explained that their proposed reimbursement
equations were a result of Cooperative members' transportation cost
data analyzed by the Pacific Northwest FMMO office. The Cooperatives
requested that the FMMO office analyze the data and determine cost
equations based on actual observed costs, minus $0.30 per cwt which
represents the a producer's responsibility for a local haul. The
witness said that the resulting equations are valid because they
calculated a $5.205 million payment which was close to the actual
observed costs of $5.261 million. The witness explained that because
diesel prices are a key variable cost to transportation, a monthly fuel
cost adjustor is needed to ensure that the transportation credit
provisions maintain an accurate reflection of costs. The witness noted
that Proposal 1 does not contain transportation credit reimbursement
for plant-to-plant milk movements.
The Cooperative witness elaborated that Proposal 1 seeks to pay all
producers the same FMMO blend price, unadjusted for location. Therefore
the incentive to supply milk to Class I plants is borne solely through
their proposed transportation credit provisions. The witness said that
because all producers share in the higher valued class uses, it is
appropriate that they share in the cost of supplying and balancing
those markets by using marketwide pool monies to provide a handler
credit on those milk movements.
The Institute, in its post-hearing brief, expressed support for the
transportation credit provisions contained in Proposal 1, subject to
the transportation credits being adjusted for the difference in
location differentials.
A witness representing Ponderosa testified that any proposed
California FMMO should allow for transportation credits of out-of-state
milk that serves the California Class I and/or Class II market. The
witness explained that Ponderosa experiences high-transportation costs
because they haul their milk approximately 280 miles to a southern
California Class I plant. The witness was of the opinion that this milk
should be eligible for transportation credits if it is serving the
California fluid market.
Findings
The record of this proceeding reflects that the California fluid
market is structured such that some handlers and cooperative
associations rely on the current CSO transportation credit system to
assist them in making an adequate milk supply available for fluid use.
The record reveals that Los Angeles, San Francisco, San Diego and
Sacramento metropolitan areas contain an overwhelming majority of the
state's population as well as the Class I plants that service those
areas. However, these plants must often source milk from milk
production regions of the state located farther away. The record
reveals that this supply/demand imbalance, coupled with flat producer
pricing necessitated the development of the CSO transportation credits
for milk deliveries from designated supply regions to Class 1, 2 and/or
3 handlers located in demand regions where a majority of the population
resides. The Cooperatives designed their transportation credit proposal
to replicate the transportation credits currently paid by the CSO on
farm-to-plant milk shipments, but attempted to make the proposed system
more transaction based.
As previously discussed, this decision does not recommend flat
producer pricing. The record of this proceeding supports the finding
that producer payments should be adjusted to reflect the applicable
producer location adjustment for the handler location where their milk
is received. Therefore, the incentive to producers to supply Class I
plants is embodied within the proposed producer payment provisions. As
in all FMMOs, producers are responsible for finding a market for their
milk, and consequently bear the cost of transporting their milk to a
plant. Therefore the record of this proceeding does not support
reducing the producers' value of the marketwide pool through the
payment of transportation credits to handlers. The proposed Class I
differential structure provides for higher differentials in the major
metropolitan areas of Los Angeles, San Diego, San Francisco, and
Sacramento to incentivize movements of Class I milk. If additional
monies are needed above minimum classified prices to supply Class I
plants, marketplace principles should dictate the source and amount of
those additional funds.
10. Miscellaneous and Administrative Provisions
This section discusses the various miscellaneous and administrative
provisions that would be necessary to administer the proposed
California FMMO. All current FMMOs contain administrative provisions
that provide for the handler reporting dates, announcements by the
Market Administrator, and payment dates that are necessary to
administer the provisions of the FMMOs. A California FMMO likewise
needs similar administrative provisions to ensure its proper
administration. The provisions outlined below generally conform to
provisions contained in the 10 current FMMOs with reporting and payment
dates tailored to the California dairy market.
Handler Reports. Handlers subject to a California FMMO would be
required to submit monthly reports detailing the
[[Page 10679]]
sources and uses of milk and milk products so that market average use
values, or uniform prices, could be determined and administered. Under
a California FMMO, handler reports of receipts and utilization would be
due by the 9th day following the end of the month. To ensure the
minimum payments to producers are made in accordance with the terms of
a California FMMO, handlers would need to report producer payroll by
the 20th day following the end of the month to the Market
Administrator.
Announcements by the Market Administrator. In the course of
administering a California FMMO, the Market Administrator would be
required to make several announcements each month with respect to
classification, class prices and component prices, an ``equivalent
price'' when necessary, and various producer prices. Under a California
FMMO, the Market Administrator would make these announcements on or
before the 14th day following the end of the month.
Producer-Settlement Fund. Handlers regulated by a California FMMO
would be required to pay minimum class prices for the milk received
from producers. These minimum values would be aggregated in a
California FMMO marketwide pool so that producers could receive a
uniform price, or blend price for their milk. The equalization of a
handler's use value of milk and the uniform value would occur through
the producer-settlement fund that would be established and administered
by the Market Administrator.
The producer-settlement fund ensures that all handlers would be
able to return the market blend price to producers whose milk was
pooled under the order. Payments into the producer-settlement fund
would be made each month by handlers whose total classified use value
of milk exceeds the values of such milk calculated at the announced
producer prices. In a California FMMO, handlers would be required to
pay into the producer-settlement fund by the 16th day following the end
of the month.
Payments out of the producer-settlement fund would be made each
month to any handler whose use value is below the value of their milk
at producer prices. Under a California FMMO, the Market Administrator
would distribute payments from the producer-settlement fund by the 18th
day following the end of the month. This transfer of funds would enable
handlers with a classified use value of milk below the average for the
market to pay their producers the same uniform price as handlers whose
classified use value of milk exceeds the market average.
In view of the need to make timely payments to handlers from the
producer-settlement fund, it is essential that money due to the fund is
received by the due date. Accordingly, payment to the producer-
settlement fund is considered made upon receipt of funds by the Market
Administrator. Payment cannot be received on a non-business day.
Therefore, if the due date for a payment, including a payment to or
from the producer-settlement fund, falls on a Saturday, Sunday, or
national holiday, the payment would not be due until the next business
day.
Payments to Producers and Cooperative Associations. The AMAA states
that handlers must pay the uniform price to all producers and producer
associations. As under other FMMOs, a California FMMO would provide for
proper deductions authorized by the producer in writing. Such
authorized deductions would be those that are unrelated to the minimum
value of milk in the transaction between the producer and handler. The
proposed California FMMO would also allow a deduction for any
assessment announced by CDFA for the administration of the California
quota program. The producer would not need to authorize this deduction
in writing.
As in other FMMOs, producer associations would be allowed to
``reblend'' their payments to their producer members. The Capper
Volstead Act and the AMAA make it clear that cooperative associations
are unique in this regard.
A California FMMO would require handlers to make at least one
partial payment to producers in advance of the announcement of the
applicable uniform prices. The partial payment rate for milk received
during the first 15 days of the month could not be less than the lowest
announced class price for the preceding month, and would be paid to
producers by the last day of the month. The final payment for milk
under a California FMMO would be required to be made so that it is
received by producers no later than the 19th day after the end of the
month.
Handlers would pay Cooperatives for bulk milk and skim milk, and
for bulk milk received by transfer from a cooperative's pool plant, on
the terms described for individual producers, with the exception that
payment would be due one day earlier. An earlier payment date for
cooperative associations is warranted because it would then give
cooperative associations the time they need to distribute payments to
individual producer members.
All payment dates specified in the proposed California FMMO are
receipt dates. Since payment cannot be received on a non-business day,
payment dates that fall on a Saturday, Sunday, or national holiday
would be delayed until the next business day. While this has the effect
of delaying payments to cooperatives and producers, the delay is offset
by the shift from ``date of payment'' to ``date of payment receipt.''
Payment Obligation of a Partially Regulated Distributing Plant. All
FMMOs provide a method for determining the payment obligations due to
producers by handlers that operate plants not fully regulated under any
Federal order. These unregulated handlers are not required to account
to dairy farmers for their milk at classified prices or to return a
minimum uniform price to producers who have supplied the handler with
milk. However, such handlers may sell fluid milk products on routes in
a regulated area in competition with handlers who are fully regulated.
To address this, FMMOs provide a minimum degree of regulation to all
handlers who have route sales in a regulated marketing area. Partial
regulation preserves the integrity of the FMMO classified pricing and
pooling provisions and assures that orderly marketing conditions can be
maintained. Without these provisions, milk prices under an order would
not be uniform among handlers competing for sales in the marketing
area, a milk pricing requirement of the AMAA. Like the other FMMOs, a
California FMMO would partially regulate handlers who have route sales
into the marketing area, but do not meet the threshold to be fully
regulated.
The proposed California FMMO would provide regulatory options for a
partially regulated plant handler. All partially regulated plant
handlers would account to the California FMMO producer-settlement fund
on the volume of packaged Class I sales in the California marketing
area that exceeds receipts previously priced as Class I under a FMMO.
Under the first option, a payment could be made by the partially
regulated plant handler into the producer-settlement fund of the
California FMMO at a rate equal to the difference between the Class I
price and the California FMMO uniform price. Under the second option,
the operator of a partially regulated plant handler could pay any
positive difference between the gross obligation of the plant, had it
been fully regulated, and the actual payments made for its milk supply.
This is commonly referred to as the Wichita
[[Page 10680]]
Option. The third option applies to a partially regulated plant handler
that is subject to a marketwide pool operated under the authority of a
State. In this last case, the partially regulated plant handler would
account to the producer settlement fund at the difference between the
Federal order Class I value and the value at which the handler accounts
to the State order pool on such route sales, but not less than zero.
Adjustment of Accounts. Current FMMOs provide for the audit of
handler reports by the Market Administrator. The Market Administrator
may adjust, based on verification of handler records, any amount due to
or from the Market Administrator, or to a producer or cooperative
association. Adjustments can affect the Producer-Settlement Fund, the
Administrative Fund, and/or the Marketing Service Fund. A California
FMMO would likewise provide for the adjustment of handler accounts
based on audits of handler reports and records. The Market
Administrator would promptly notify the handler of any necessary
adjustments so that payments could be made on or before the next date
for the payment related to the adjustment.
Charges for Overdue Accounts. The proposed California FMMO
provisions require handlers to make payments to producers and
cooperatives by the dates described earlier in this section. Payments
not made by the specified due dates would be subject to a late payment
charge of 1 percent per month by the Market Administrator and would
accrue to the administrative fund. Additional late payment charges
would accrue on any amounts that continue to be late on the
corresponding due dates each succeeding month.
Assessment of Order Administration. The AMAA provides that the cost
of order administration be financed by an assessment on handlers. Under
the proposed California FMMO, a maximum rate of $0.08 per cwt would
apply to all of a handler's receipts pooled under the order. The
specific rate would be announced by the Market Administrator.
Partially-regulated handlers would be assessed the same administrative
rate on their volume of Class I route disposition inside of the
marketing area. The money paid to the administrative fund is each
handler's proportionate share of the cost of administering the FMMO.
Deduction for Marketing Services. The proposed California FMMO
would provide marketing services to producers for whom cooperative
associations do not perform services. Such services include providing
market information and establishing or verifying weights, samples, and
tests of milk received from such producers. In accordance with the
AMAA, these marketing services are intended to benefit all nonmember
producers under a California FMMO. Accordingly, as is uniform in the
current FMMOs, each handler regulated by a California FMMO would be
allowed to deduct a maximum of $0.07 per cwt from amounts due each
producer for whom a cooperative association does not provide such
services. The specific allowable rate would be announced by the Market
Administrator and would be subtracted from the handler's obligation.
Rulings on Proposed Findings and Conclusions. In accordance with
the Administrative Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. 557(c), USDA has analyzed
and reached a conclusion on all material issues of facts, law, and
discretion presented on the record. Briefs, proposed findings and
conclusions, and the evidence in the record were considered in making
the findings and conclusions set forth in this recommended decision. To
the extent that the suggested findings and conclusions filed by
interested persons are inconsistent with the findings and conclusions
of this recommended decision, the requests to make such findings or
reach such conclusions are denied for the reasons stated in this
decision.
General Findings
(a) The proposed marketing agreement and order, and all of the
terms and conditions thereof, will tend to effectuate the declared
policy of the Act;
(b) The parity prices of milk, as determined pursuant to Section 2
of the Act, are not reasonable in view of the price of feeds, available
supplies of feeds, and other economic conditions that affect market
supply and demand for the milk in the marketing area, and the minimum
prices specified in the proposed marketing agreement and order are such
prices as will reflect the aforesaid factors, insure a sufficient
quantity of pure and wholesome milk, and be in the public interest; and
(c) The proposed marketing agreement and order will regulate the
handling of milk in the same manner as, and will be applicable only to,
persons in the respective classes of industrial and commercial activity
specified in the marketing agreement and order upon which a hearing has
been held.
(d) All milk and milk products handled by handlers covered by the
proposed marketing agreement and order are in the current of interstate
commerce or directly burden, obstruct, or affect interstate commerce in
milk or its products; and
(e) It is hereby found that the necessary expense of the market
administrator for the maintenance and functioning of such agency will
require the payment by each handler, as their pro rata share of such
expense, 8 cents per hundredweight or such lesser amount as the
Secretary may prescribe with respect to the milk specified in Sec.
1051.85 of the aforesaid tentative marketing agreement and the order.
Recommended Marketing Agreement and Order
The recommended marketing agreement is not included in this
decision because the regulatory provisions thereof would be the same as
those contained in the order, as hereby proposed to be established. The
following order regulating the handling of milk in California marketing
area is recommended as the detailed and appropriate means by which the
foregoing conclusions maybe carried out.
List of Subjects in 7 CFR Part 1051
Milk marketing orders.
The Agricultural Marketing Service proposes to add 7 CFR part 1051
to read as follows:
PART 1051--MILK IN THE CALIFORNIA MARKETING AREA
Subpart A--Order Regulating Handling
General Provisions
Sec.
1051.1 General provisions.
Definitions
1051.2 California marketing area.
1051.3 Route disposition.
1051.4 Plant.
1051.5 Distributing plant.
1051.6 Supply plant.
1051.7 Pool plant.
1051.8 Nonpool plant.
1051.9 Handler.
1051.10 Producer-handler.
1051.11 California quota program.
1051.12 Producer.
1051.13 Producer milk.
1051.14 Other source milk.
1051.15 Fluid milk product.
1051.16 Fluid cream product.
1051.17 [Reserved]
1051.18 Cooperative association.
1051.19 Commercial food processing establishment.
Market Administrator, Continuing Obligations, and Handler
Responsibilities
1051.25 Market administrator.
1051.26 Continuity and separability of provisions.
1051.27 Handler responsibility for records and facilities.
1051.28 Termination of obligations.
[[Page 10681]]
Handler Reports
1051.30 Reports of receipts and utilization.
1051.31 Payroll reports.
1051.32 Other reports.
Subpart B--Milk Pricing
Classification of Milk
1051.40 Classes of utilization.
1051.41 [Reserved]
1051.42 Classification of transfers and diversions.
1051.43 General classification rules.
1051.44 Classification of producer milk.
1051.45 Market administrator's reports and announcements concerning
classification.
Class Prices
1051.50 Class prices, component prices, and advanced pricing
factors.
1051.51 Class I differential and price.
1051.52 Adjusted Class I differentials.
1051.53 Announcement of class prices, component prices, and advanced
pricing factors.
1051.54 Equivalent price.
Producer Price Differential
1051.60 Handler's value of milk.
1051.61 Computation of producer price differential.
1051.62 Announcement of producer prices.
Subpart C--Payments for Milk
Producer Payments
1051.70 Producer-settlement fund.
1051.71 Payments to the producer-settlement fund.
1051.72 Payments from the producer-settlement fund.
1051.73 Payments to producers and to cooperative associations.
1051.74 [Reserved]
1051.75 Plant location adjustments for producer milk and nonpool
milk.
1051.76 Payments by a handler operating a partially regulated
distributing plant.
1051.77 Adjustment of accounts.
1051.78 Charges on overdue accounts.
Administrative Assessment and Marketing Service Deduction
1051.85 Assessment for order administration.
1051.86 Deduction for marketing services.
Subpart D--Miscellaneous Provisions
1051.90 Dates.
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 601-608.
Subpart A--Order Regulating Handling
General Provisions
Sec. 1051.1 General provisions.
The terms, definitions, and provisions in part 1000 of this chapter
apply to this part unless otherwise specified. In this part, all
references to sections in part 1000 refer to part 1000 of this chapter.
Definitions
Sec. 1051.2 California marketing area.
The marketing area means all territory within the bounds of the
following states and political subdivisions, including all piers,
docks, and wharves connected therewith and all craft moored thereat,
and all territory occupied by government (municipal, State, or Federal)
reservations, installations, institutions, or other similar
establishments if any part thereof is within any of the listed states
or political subdivisions:
California
All of the State of California.
Sec. 1051.3 Route disposition.
See Sec. 1000.3.
Sec. 1051.4 Plant.
See Sec. 1000.4.
Sec. 1051.5 Distributing plant.
See Sec. 1000.5.
Sec. 1051.6 Supply plant.
See Sec. 1000.6.
Sec. 1051.7 Pool plant.
Pool plant means a plant, unit of plants, or system of plants as
specified in paragraphs (a) through (f) of this section, but excluding
a plant specified in paragraph (h) of this section. The pooling
standards described in paragraphs (c) and (f) of this section are
subject to modification pursuant to paragraph (g) of this section:
(a) A distributing plant, other than a plant qualified as a pool
plant pursuant to paragraph (b) of this section or Sec. ___.7(b) of
any other Federal milk order, from which during the month 25 percent or
more of the total quantity of fluid milk products physically received
at the plant (excluding concentrated milk received from another plant
by agreement for other than Class I use) are disposed of as route
disposition or are transferred in the form of packaged fluid milk
products to other distributing plants. At least 25 percent of such
route disposition and transfers must be to outlets in the marketing
area.
(b) Any distributing plant located in the marketing area which
during the month processed at least 25 percent of the total quantity of
fluid milk products physically received at the plant (excluding
concentrated milk received from another plant by agreement for other
than Class I use) into ultra-pasteurized or aseptically-processed fluid
milk products.
(c) A supply plant from which the quantity of bulk fluid milk
products shipped to (and physically unloaded into) plants described in
paragraph (c)(1) of this section is not less than 10 percent of the
Grade A milk received from dairy farmers (except dairy farmers
described in Sec. 1051.12(b)) and handlers described in Sec.
1000.9(c), including milk diverted pursuant to Sec. 1051.13, subject
to the following conditions:
(1) Qualifying shipments may be made to plants described in
paragraphs (c)(1)(i) through (iv) of this section, except that whenever
shipping requirements are increased pursuant to paragraph (g) of this
section, only shipments to pool plants described in paragraphs (a),
(b), and (d) of this section shall count as qualifying shipments for
the purpose of meeting the increased shipments:
(i) Pool plants described in Sec. 1051.7(a), (b), and (d);
(ii) Plants of producer-handlers;
(iii) Partially regulated distributing plants, except that credit
for such shipments shall be limited to the amount of such milk
classified as Class I at the transferee plant; and
(iv) Distributing plants fully regulated under other Federal
orders, except that credit for shipments to such plants shall be
limited to the quantity shipped to (and physically unloaded into) pool
distributing plants during the month and credits for shipments to other
order plants shall not include any such shipments made on the basis of
agreed-upon Class II, Class III, or Class IV utilization.
(2) Concentrated milk transferred from the supply plant to a
distributing plant for an agreed-upon use other than Class I shall be
excluded from the supply plant's shipments in computing the supply
plant's shipping percentage.
(d) Two or more plants operated by the same handler and located in
the marketing area may qualify for pool status as a unit by meeting the
total and in-area route disposition requirements of a pool distributing
plant specified in paragraph (a) of this section and subject to the
following additional requirements:
(1) At least one of the plants in the unit must qualify as a pool
plant pursuant to paragraph (a) of this section;
(2) Other plants in the unit must process Class I or Class II
products, using 50 percent or more of the total Grade A fluid milk
products received in bulk form at such plant or diverted therefrom by
the plant operator in Class I or Class II products; and
(3) The operator of the unit has filed a written request with the
market administrator prior to the first day of the month for which such
status is desired to be effective. The unit shall continue from month-
to-month thereafter without
[[Page 10682]]
further notification. The handler shall notify the market administrator
in writing prior to the first day of any month for which termination or
any change of the unit is desired.
(e) A system of two or more supply plants operated by one or more
handlers may qualify for pooling by meeting the shipping requirements
of paragraph (c) of this section in the same manner as a single plant
subject to the following additional requirements:
(1) Each plant in the system is located within the marketing area.
Cooperative associations or other handlers may not use shipments
pursuant to Sec. 1000.9(c) to qualify supply plants located outside
the marketing area;
(2) The handler(s) establishing the system submits a written
request to the market administrator on or before July 15 requesting
that such plants qualify as a system for the period of August through
July of the following year. Such request will contain a list of the
plants participating in the system in the order, beginning with the
last plant, in which the plants will be dropped from the system if the
system fails to qualify. Each plant that qualifies as a pool plant
within a system shall continue each month as a plant in the system
through the following July unless the handler(s) establishing the
system submits a written request to the market administrator that the
plant be deleted from the system or that the system be discontinued.
Any plant that has been so deleted from a system, or that has failed to
qualify in any month, will not be part of any system for the remaining
months through July. The handler(s) that have established a system may
add a plant operated by such handler(s) to a system if such plant has
been a pool plant each of the 6 prior months and would otherwise be
eligible to be in a system, upon written request to the market
administrator no later than the 15th day of the prior month. In the
event of an ownership change or the business failure of a handler who
is a participant in a system, the system may be reorganized to reflect
such changes if a written request to file a new marketing agreement is
submitted to the market administrator; and
(3) If a system fails to qualify under the requirements of this
paragraph (e), the handler responsible for qualifying the system shall
notify the market administrator which plant or plants will be deleted
from the system so that the remaining plants may be pooled as a system.
If the handler fails to do so, the market administrator shall exclude
one or more plants, beginning at the bottom of the list of plants in
the system and continuing up the list as necessary until the deliveries
are sufficient to qualify the remaining plants in the system.
(f) Any distributing plant, located within the marketing area as
described in Sec. 1051.2:
(1) From which there is route disposition and/or transfers of
packaged fluid milk products in any non-federally regulated marketing
area(s) located within one or more States that require handlers to pay
minimum prices for raw milk, provided that 25 percent or more of the
total quantity of fluid milk products physically received at such plant
(excluding concentrated milk received from another plant by agreement
for other than Class 1 use) is disposed of as route disposition and/or
is transferred in the form of packaged fluid milk products to other
plants. At least 25 percent of such route disposition and/or transfers,
in aggregate, are in any non-federally regulated marketing area(s)
located within one or more States that require handlers to pay minimum
prices for raw milk. Subject to the following exclusions:
(i) The plant is described in Sec. 1051.7(a), (b), or (e);
(ii) The plant is subject to the pricing provisions of a State-
operated milk pricing plan which provides for the payment of minimum
class prices for raw milk;
(iii) The plant is described in Sec. 1000.8(a) or (e); or
(iv) A producer-handler described in Sec. 1051.10 with less than
three million pounds during the month of route disposition and/or
transfers of packaged fluid milk products to other plants.
(2) [Reserved]
(g) The applicable shipping percentages of paragraphs (c) and (e)
of this section and Sec. 1051.13(d)(2) and (3) may be increased or
decreased, for all or part of the marketing area, by the market
administrator if the market administrator finds that such adjustment is
necessary to encourage needed shipments or to prevent uneconomic
shipments. Before making such a finding, the market administrator shall
investigate the need for adjustment either on the market
administrator's own initiative or at the request of interested parties
if the request is made in writing at least 15 days prior to the month
for which the requested revision is desired effective. If the
investigation shows that an adjustment of the shipping percentages
might be appropriate, the market administrator shall issue a notice
stating that an adjustment is being considered and invite data, views,
and arguments. Any decision to revise an applicable shipping or
diversion percentage must be issued in writing at least one day before
the effective date.
(h) The term pool plant shall not apply to the following plants:
(1) A producer-handler as defined under any Federal order;
(2) An exempt plant as defined in Sec. 1000.8(e);
(3) A plant located within the marketing area and qualified
pursuant to paragraph (a) of this section which meets the pooling
requirements of another Federal order, and from which more than 50
percent of its route disposition has been in the other Federal order
marketing area for 3 consecutive months;
(4) A plant located outside any Federal order marketing area and
qualified pursuant to paragraph (a) of this section that meets the
pooling requirements of another Federal order and has had greater route
disposition in such other Federal order's marketing area for 3
consecutive months;
(5) A plant located in another Federal order marketing area and
qualified pursuant to paragraph (a) of this section that meets the
pooling requirements of such other Federal order and does not have a
majority of its route disposition in this marketing area for 3
consecutive months, or if the plant is required to be regulated under
such other Federal order without regard to its route disposition in any
other Federal order marketing area;
(6) A plant qualified pursuant to paragraph (c) of this section
which also meets the pooling requirements of another Federal order and
from which greater qualifying shipments are made to plants regulated
under the other Federal order than are made to plants regulated under
the order in this part, or the plant has automatic pooling status under
the other Federal order; and
(7) That portion of a regulated plant designated as a nonpool plant
that is physically separate and operated separately from the pool
portion of such plant. The designation of a portion of a regulated
plant as a nonpool plant must be requested in advance and in writing by
the handler and must be approved by the market administrator.
(i) Any plant that qualifies as a pool plant in each of the
immediately preceding 3 months pursuant to paragraph (a) of this
section or the shipping percentages in paragraph (c) of this section
that is unable to meet such performance standards for the current month
because of unavoidable circumstances determined by the market
administrator to be beyond the control of the handler operating the
plant, such as a natural disaster (ice storm, wind storm, flood, fire,
earthquake,
[[Page 10683]]
breakdown of equipment, or work stoppage, shall be considered to have
met the minimum performance standards during the period of such
unavoidable circumstances, but such relief shall not be granted for
more than 2 consecutive months.
Sec. 1051.8 Nonpool plant.
See Sec. 1000.8.
Sec. 1051.9 Handler.
See Sec. 1000.9.
Sec. 1051.10 Producer-handler.
Producer-handler means a person who operates a dairy farm and a
distributing plant from which there is route disposition in the
marketing area, from which total route disposition and packaged sales
of fluid milk products to other plants during the month does not exceed
3 million pounds, and who the market administrator has designated a
producer-handler after determining that all of the requirements of this
section have been met.
(a) Requirements for designation. Designation of any person as a
producer-handler by the market administrator shall be contingent upon
meeting the conditions set forth in paragraphs (a)(1) through (5) of
this section. Following the cancellation of a previous producer-handler
designation, a person seeking to have their producer-handler
designation reinstated must demonstrate that these conditions have been
met for the preceding month:
(1) The care and management of the dairy animals and the other
resources and facilities designated in paragraph (b)(1) of this section
necessary to produce all Class I milk handled (excluding receipts from
handlers fully regulated under any Federal order) are under the
complete and exclusive control, ownership, and management of the
producer-handler and are operated as the producer-handler's own
enterprise and at its sole risk.
(2) The plant operation designated in paragraph (b)(2) of this
section at which the producer-handler processes and packages, and from
which it distributes, its own milk production is under the complete and
exclusive control, ownership, and management of the producer-handler
and is operated as the producer-handler's own enterprise and at its
sole risk.
(3) The producer-handler neither receives at its designated milk
production resources and facilities nor receives, handles, processes,
or distributes at or through any of its designated milk handling,
processing, or distributing resources and facilities other source milk
products for reconstitution into fluid milk products or fluid milk
products derived from any source other than:
(i) Its designated milk production resources and facilities (own
farm production);
(ii) Pool handlers and plants regulated under any Federal order
within the limitation specified in paragraph (c)(2) of this section; or
(iii) Nonfat milk solids which are used to fortify fluid milk
products.
(4) The producer-handler is neither directly nor indirectly
associated with the business control or management of, nor has a
financial interest in, another handler's operation; nor is any other
handler so associated with the producer-handler's operation.
(5) No milk produced by the herd(s) or on the farm(s) that supplies
milk to the producer-handler's plant operation is:
(i) Subject to inclusion and participation in a marketwide
equalization pool under a milk classification and pricing program under
the authority of a State government maintaining marketwide pooling of
returns; or
(ii) Marketed in any part as Class I milk to the non-pool
distributing plant of any other handler.
(b) Designation of resources and facilities. Designation of a
person as a producer-handler shall include the determination of what
shall constitute milk production, handling, processing, and
distribution resources and facilities, all of which shall be considered
an integrated operation, under the sole and exclusive ownership of the
producer-handler.
(1) Milk production resources and facilities shall include all
resources and facilities (milking herd(s), buildings housing such
herd(s), and the land on which such buildings are located) used for the
production of milk which are solely owned, operated, and which the
producer-handler has designated as a source of milk supply for the
producer-handler's plant operation. However, for purposes of this
paragraph (b)(1), any such milk production resources and facilities
which do not constitute an actual or potential source of milk supply
for the producer-handler's operation shall not be considered a part of
the producer-handler's milk production resources and facilities.
(2) Milk handling, processing, and distribution resources and
facilities shall include all resources and facilities (including store
outlets) used for handling, processing, and distributing fluid milk
products which are solely owned by, and directly operated or controlled
by the producer-handler or in which the producer-handler in any way has
an interest, including any contractual arrangement, or over which the
producer-handler directly or indirectly exercises any degree of
management control.
(3) All designations shall remain in effect until canceled pursuant
to paragraph (c) of this section.
(c) Cancellation. The designation as a producer-handler shall be
canceled upon determination by the market administrator that any of the
requirements of paragraph (a)(1) through (5) of this section are not
continuing to be met, or under any of the conditions described in
paragraph (c)(1), (2), or (3) of this section. Cancellation of a
producer-handler's status pursuant to this paragraph (c) shall be
effective on the first day of the month following the month in which
the requirements were not met or the conditions for cancellation
occurred.
(1) Milk from the milk production resources and facilities of the
producer-handler, designated in paragraph (b)(1) of this section, is
delivered in the name of another person as producer milk to another
handler.
(2) The producer-handler handles fluid milk products derived from
sources other than the milk production facilities and resources
designated in paragraph (b)(1) of this section, except that it may
receive at its plant, or acquire for route disposition, fluid milk
products from fully regulated plants and handlers under any Federal
order if such receipts do not exceed 150,000 pounds monthly. This
limitation shall not apply if the producer-handler's own-farm
production is less than 150,000 pounds during the month.
(3) Milk from the milk production resources and facilities of the
producer-handler is subject to inclusion and participation in a
marketwide equalization pool under a milk classification and pricing
plan operating under the authority of a State government.
(d) Public announcement. The market administrator shall publicly
announce:
(1) The name, plant location(s), and farm location(s) of persons
designated as producer-handlers;
(2) The names of those persons whose designations have been
cancelled; and
(3) The effective dates of producer-handler status or loss of
producer-handler status for each. Such announcements shall be
controlling with respect to the accounting at plants of other handlers
for fluid milk products received from any producer-handler.
(e) Burden of establishing and maintaining producer-handler status.
The burden rests upon the handler who
[[Page 10684]]
is designated as a producer-handler to establish through records
required pursuant to Sec. 1000.27 that the requirements set forth in
paragraph (a) of this section have been and are continuing to be met,
and that the conditions set forth in paragraph (c) of this section for
cancellation of the designation do not exist.
(f) Any producer-handler with Class I route dispositions and/or
transfers of packaged fluid milk products in the marketing area
described in Sec. 1131.2 of this chapter shall be subject to payments
into the Order 1131 producer settlement fund on such dispositions
pursuant to Sec. 1000.76(a) and payments into the Order 1131
administrative fund, provided such dispositions are less than three
million pounds in the current month and such producer-handler had total
Class I route dispositions and/or transfers of packaged fluid milk
products from own farm production of three million pounds or more the
previous month. If the producer-handler has Class I route dispositions
and/or transfers of packaged fluid milk products into the marketing
area described in Sec. 1131.2 of this chapter of three million pounds
or more during the current month, such producer-handler shall be
subject to the provisions described in Sec. 1131.7 of this chapter or
Sec. 1000.76(a).
Sec. 1051.11 California quota program.
California Quota Program means the applicable provisions of the
California Food and Agriculture Code, and related provisions of the
pooling plan administered by the California Department of Food and
Agriculture (CDFA).
Sec. 1051.12 Producer.
(a) Except as provided in paragraph (b) of this section, producer
means any person who produces milk approved by a duly constituted
regulatory agency for fluid consumption as Grade A milk and whose milk
is:
(1) Received at a pool plant directly from the producer or diverted
by the plant operator in accordance with Sec. 1051.13; or
(2) Received by a handler described in Sec. 1000.9(c).
(b) Producer shall not include:
(1) A producer-handler as defined in any Federal order;
(2) A dairy farmer whose milk is received at an exempt plant,
excluding producer milk diverted to the exempt plant pursuant to Sec.
1051.13(d);
(3) A dairy farmer whose milk is received by diversion at a pool
plant from a handler regulated under another Federal order if the other
Federal order designates the dairy farmer as a producer under that
order and that milk is allocated by request to a utilization other than
Class I; and
(4) A dairy farmer whose milk is reported as diverted to a plant
fully regulated under another Federal order with respect to that
portion of the milk so diverted that is assigned to Class I under the
provisions of such other order.
Sec. 1051.13 Producer milk.
Except as provided for in paragraph (e) of this section, producer
milk means the skim milk (or the skim equivalent of components of skim
milk), including nonfat components, and butterfat in milk of a producer
that is:
(a) Received by the operator of a pool plant directly from a
producer or a handler described in Sec. 1000.9(c). All milk received
pursuant to this paragraph (a) shall be priced at the location of the
plant where it is first physically received;
(b) Received by a handler described in Sec. 1000.9(c) in excess of
the quantity delivered to pool plants;
(c) Diverted by a pool plant operator to another pool plant. Milk
so diverted shall be priced at the location of the plant to which
diverted; or
(d) Diverted by the operator of a pool plant or a cooperative
association described in Sec. 1000.9(c) to a nonpool plant located in
the States of California, Arizona, Nevada, or Oregon, subject to the
following conditions:
(1) Milk of a dairy farmer shall not be eligible for diversion
unless at least one day's production of such dairy farmer is physically
received as producer milk at a pool plant during the first month the
dairy farmer is a producer. If a dairy farmer loses producer status
under the order in this part (except as a result of a temporary loss of
Grade A approval or as a result of the handler of the dairy farmer's
milk failing to pool the milk under any order), the dairy farmer's milk
shall not be eligible for diversion unless at least one day's
production of the dairy farmer has been physically received as producer
milk at a pool plant during the first month the dairy farmer is re-
associated with the market;
(2) The quantity of milk diverted by a handler described in Sec.
1000.9(c) may not exceed 90 percent of the producer milk receipts
reported by the handler pursuant to Sec. 1051.30(c) provided that not
less than 10 percent of such receipts are delivered to plants described
in Sec. 1051.7(c)(1)(i) through (iii). These percentages are subject
to any adjustments that may be made pursuant to Sec. 1051.7(g); and
(3) The quantity of milk diverted to nonpool plants by the operator
of a pool plant described in Sec. 1051.7(a), (b) or (d) may not exceed
90 percent of the Grade A milk received from dairy farmers (except
dairy farmers described in Sec. 1051.12(b)) including milk diverted
pursuant to this section. These percentages are subject to any
adjustments that may be made pursuant to Sec. 1051.7(g).
(4) Diverted milk shall be priced at the location of the plant to
which diverted.
(e) Producer milk shall not include milk of a producer that is
subject to inclusion and participation in a marketwide equalization
pool under a milk classification and pricing program imposed under the
authority of a State government maintaining marketwide pooling of
returns.
(f) The quantity of milk reported by a handler pursuant to either
Sec. 1051.30(a)(1) or (c)(1) for April through February may not exceed
125 percent, and for March may not exceed 135 percent, of the producer
milk receipts pooled by the handler during the prior month. Milk
diverted to nonpool plants reported in excess of this limit shall be
removed from the pool. Milk in excess of this limit received at pool
plants, other than pool distributing plants, shall be classified
pursuant to Sec. 1000.44(a)(3)(v) and (b). The handler must designate,
by producer pick-up, which milk is to be removed from the pool. If the
handler fails to provide this information, the market administrator
will make the determination. The following provisions apply:
(1) Milk shipped to and physically received at pool distributing
plants in excess of the previous month's pooled volume shall not be
subject to the 125 or 135 percent limitation;
(2) Producer milk qualified pursuant to Sec. ___.13 of any other
Federal Order and continuously pooled in any Federal Order for the
previous six months shall not be included in the computation of the 125
or 135 percent limitation;
(3) The market administrator may waive the 125 or 135 percent
limitation:
(i) For a new handler on the order, subject to the provisions of
paragraph (f)(4) of this section; or
(ii) For an existing handler with significantly changed milk supply
conditions due to unusual circumstances; and
(4) A bloc of milk may be considered ineligible for pooling if the
market administrator determines that handlers altered the reporting of
such milk for the
[[Page 10685]]
purpose of evading the provisions of this paragraph (f).
Sec. 1051.14 Other source milk.
See Sec. 1000.14.
Sec. 1051.15 Fluid milk products.
See Sec. 1000.15.
Sec. 1051.16 Fluid cream product.
See Sec. 1000.16.
Sec. 1051.17 [Reserved]
Sec. 1051.18 Cooperative association.
See Sec. 1000.18.
Sec. 1051.19 Commercial food processing establishment.
See Sec. 1000.19.
Market Administrator, Continuing Obligations, and Handler
Responsibilities
Sec. 1051.25 Market administrator.
See Sec. 1000.25.
Sec. 1051.26 Continuity and separability of provisions.
See Sec. 1000.26.
Sec. 1051.27 Handler responsibility for records and facilities.
See Sec. 1000.27.
Sec. 1051.28 Termination of obligations.
See Sec. 1000.28.
Handler Reports
Sec. 1051.30 Reports of receipts and utilization.
Each handler shall report monthly so that the market
administrator's office receives the report on or before the 9th day
after the end of the month, in the detail and on the prescribed forms,
as follows:
(a) Each handler that operates a pool plant shall report for each
of its operations the following information:
(1) Product pounds, pounds of butterfat, pounds of protein, pounds
of solids-not-fat other than protein (other solids) contained in or
represented by:
(i) Receipts of producer milk, including producer milk diverted by
the reporting handler, from sources other than handlers described in
Sec. 1000.9(c); and
(ii) Receipts of milk from handlers described in Sec. 1000.9(c);
(2) Product pounds and pounds of butterfat contained in:
(i) Receipts of fluid milk products and bulk fluid cream products
from other pool plants;
(ii) Receipts of other source milk; and
(iii) Inventories at the beginning and end of the month of fluid
milk products and bulk fluid cream products;
(3) The utilization or disposition of all milk and milk products
required to be reported pursuant to this paragraph (a); and
(4) Such other information with respect to the receipts and
utilization of skim milk, butterfat, milk protein, and other nonfat
solids as the market administrator may prescribe.
(b) Each handler operating a partially regulated distributing plant
shall report with respect to such plant in the same manner as
prescribed for reports required by paragraph (a) of this section.
Receipts of milk that would have been producer milk if the plant had
been fully regulated shall be reported in lieu of producer milk. The
report shall show also the quantity of any reconstituted skim milk in
route disposition in the marketing area.
(c) Each handler described in Sec. 1000.9(c) shall report:
(1) The product pounds, pounds of butterfat, pounds of protein,
pounds of solids-not-fat other than protein (other solids) contained in
receipts of milk from producers; and
(2) The utilization or disposition of such receipts.
(d) Each handler not specified in paragraphs (a) through (c) of
this section shall report with respect to its receipts and utilization
of milk and milk products in such manner as the market administrator
may prescribe.
Sec. 1051.31 Payroll reports.
(a) On or before the 20th day after the end of each month, each
handler that operates a pool plant pursuant to Sec. 1051.7 and each
handler described in Sec. 1000.9(c) shall report to the market
administrator its producer payroll for the month, in the detail
prescribed by the market administrator, showing for each producer the
information described in Sec. 1051.73(f).
(b) Each handler operating a partially regulated distributing plant
who elects to make payment pursuant to Sec. 1000.76(b) shall report
for each dairy farmer who would have been a producer if the plant had
been fully regulated in the same manner as prescribed for reports
required by paragraph (a) of this section.
Sec. 1051.32 Other reports.
In addition to the reports required pursuant to Sec. Sec. 1051.30
and 1051.31, each handler shall report any information the market
administrator deems necessary to verify or establish each handler's
obligation under the order.
Subpart B--Milk Pricing
Classification of Milk
Sec. 1051.40 Classes of utilization.
See Sec. 1000.40.
Sec. 1051.41 [Reserved]
Sec. 1051.42 Classification of transfers and diversions.
See Sec. 1000.42.
Sec. 1051.43 General classification rules.
See Sec. 1000.43.
Sec. 1051.44 Classification of producer milk.
See Sec. 1000.44.
Sec. 1051.45 Market administrator's reports and announcements
concerning classification.
See Sec. 1000.45.
Class Prices
Sec. 1051.50 Class prices, component prices, and advanced pricing
factors.
See Sec. 1000.50.
Sec. 1051.51 Class I differential and price.
The Class I differential shall be the differential established for
Los Angeles County, California, which is reported in Sec. 1000.52. The
Class I price shall be the price computed pursuant to Sec. 1000.50(a)
for Los Angeles County, California.
Sec. 1051.52 Adjusted Class I differentials.
See Sec. 1000.52.
Sec. 1051.53 Announcement of class prices, component prices, and
advanced pricing factors.
See Sec. 1000.53.
Sec. 1051.54 Equivalent price.
See Sec. 1000.54.
Producer Price Differential
Sec. 1051.60 Handler's value of milk.
For the purpose of computing a handler's obligation for producer
milk, the market administrator shall determine for each month the value
of milk of each handler with respect to each of the handler's pool
plants and of each handler described in Sec. 1000.9(c) with respect to
milk that was not received at a pool plant by adding the amounts
computed in paragraphs (a) through (h) of this section and subtracting
from that total amount the values computed in paragraphs (i) and (j) of
this section. Unless otherwise specified, the skim milk, butterfat, and
the combined pounds of skim milk and butterfat referred to in this
section shall result from the steps set forth in Sec. 1000.44(a), (b),
and (c), respectively, and the nonfat components of producer milk in
each class shall be based upon
[[Page 10686]]
the proportion of such components in producer skim milk. Receipts of
nonfluid milk products that are distributed as labeled reconstituted
milk for which payments are made to the producer-settlement fund of
another Federal order under Sec. 1000.76(a)(4) or (d) shall be
excluded from pricing under this section.
(a) Class I value.
(1) Multiply the hundredweight of skim milk in Class I by the Class
I skim milk price; and
(2) Add an amount obtained by multiplying the pounds of butterfat
in Class I by the Class I butterfat price; and
(b) Class II value.
(1) Multiply the pounds of nonfat solids in Class II skim milk by
the Class II nonfat solids price; and
(2) Add an amount obtained by multiplying the pounds of butterfat
in Class II times the Class II butterfat price.
(c) Class III value.
(1) Multiply the pounds of protein in Class III skim milk by the
protein price;
(2) Add an amount obtained by multiplying the pounds of other
solids in Class III skim milk by the other solids price; and
(3) Add an amount obtained by multiplying the pounds of butterfat
in Class III by the butterfat price.
(d) Class IV value.
(1) Multiply the pounds of nonfat solids in Class IV skim milk by
the nonfat solids price; and
(2) Add an amount obtained by multiplying the pounds of butterfat
in Class IV by the butterfat price.
(e) Multiply the pounds of skim milk and butterfat overage assigned
to each class pursuant to Sec. 1000.44(a)(11) and the corresponding
step of Sec. 1000.44(b) by the skim milk prices and butterfat prices
applicable to each class.
(f) Multiply the difference between the current month's Class I,
II, or III price, as the case may be, and the Class IV price for the
preceding month and by the hundredweight of skim milk and butterfat
subtracted from Class I, II, or III, respectively, pursuant to Sec.
1000.44(a)(7) and the corresponding step of Sec. 1000.44(b).
(g) Multiply the difference between the Class I price applicable at
the location of the pool plant and the Class IV price by the
hundredweight of skim milk and butterfat assigned to Class I pursuant
to Sec. 1000.43(d) and the hundredweight of skim milk and butterfat
subtracted from Class I pursuant to Sec. 1000.44(a)(3)(i) through (vi)
and the corresponding step of Sec. 1000.44(b), excluding receipts of
bulk fluid cream products from plants regulated under other Federal
orders and bulk concentrated fluid milk products from pool plants,
plants regulated under other Federal orders, and unregulated supply
plants.
(h) Multiply the difference between the Class I price applicable at
the location of the nearest unregulated supply plants from which an
equivalent volume was received and the Class III price by the pounds of
skim milk and butterfat in receipts of concentrated fluid milk products
assigned to Class I pursuant to Sec. Sec. 1000.43(d) and
1000.44(a)(3)(i) and the corresponding step of Sec. 1000.44(b) and the
pounds of skim milk and butterfat subtracted from Class I pursuant to
Sec. 1000.44(a)(8) and the corresponding step of Sec. 1000.44(b),
excluding such skim milk and butterfat in receipts of fluid milk
products from an unregulated supply plant to the extent that an
equivalent amount of skim milk or butterfat disposed of to such plant
by handlers fully regulated under any Federal milk order is classified
and priced as Class I milk and is not used as an offset for any other
payment obligation under any order.
(i) For reconstituted milk made from receipts of nonfluid milk
products, multiply $1.00 (but not more than the difference between the
Class I price applicable at the location of the pool plant and the
Class IV price) by the hundredweight of skim milk and butterfat
contained in receipts of nonfluid milk products that are allocated to
Class I use pursuant to Sec. 1000.43(d).
Sec. 1051.61 Computation of producer price differential.
For each month the market administrator shall compute a producer
price differential per hundredweight. The report of any handler who has
not made payments required pursuant to Sec. 1051.71 for the preceding
month shall not be included in the computation of the producer price
differential, and such handler's report shall not be included in the
computation for succeeding months until the handler has made full
payment of outstanding monthly obligations. Subject to the conditions
of this introductory paragraph, the market administrator shall compute
the producer price differential in the following manner:
(a) Combine into one total the values computed pursuant to Sec.
1051.60 for all handlers required to file reports prescribed in Sec.
1051.30;
(b) Subtract the total values obtained by multiplying each
handler's total pounds of protein, other solids, and butterfat
contained in the milk for which an obligation was computed pursuant to
Sec. 1051.60 by the protein price, other solids price, and the
butterfat price, respectively;
(c) Add an amount equal to the minus location adjustments and
subtract an amount equal to the plus location adjustments computed
pursuant to Sec. 1051.75;
(d) Add an amount equal to not less than one-half of the
unobligated balance in the producer-settlement fund;
(e) Divide the resulting amount by the sum of the following for all
handlers included in these computations:
(1) The total hundredweight of producer milk; and
(2) The total hundredweight for which a value is computed pursuant
to Sec. 1051.60(i); and
(f) Subtract not less than 4 cents nor more than 5 cents from the
price computed pursuant to paragraph (e) of this section. The result
shall be known as the producer price differential for the month.
Sec. 1051.62 Announcement of producer prices.
On or before the 14th day after the end of each month, the market
administrator shall announce publicly the following prices and
information:
(a) The producer price differential;
(b) The protein price;
(c) The nonfat solids price;
(d) The other solids price;
(e) The butterfat price;
(f) The average butterfat, nonfat solids, protein and other solids
content of producer milk; and
(g) The statistical uniform price for milk containing 3.5 percent
butterfat, computed by combining the Class III price and the producer
price differential.
Subpart C--Payments for Milk
Producer Payments
Sec. 1051.70 Producer-settlement fund.
See Sec. 1000.70.
Sec. 1051.71 Payments to the producer-settlement fund.
Each handler shall make payment to the producer-settlement fund in
a manner that provides receipt of the funds by the market administrator
no later than the 16th day after the end of the month (except as
provided in Sec. 1000.90). Payment shall be the amount, if any, by
which the amount specified in paragraph (a) of this section exceeds the
amount specified in paragraph (b) of this section:
(a) The total value of milk to the handler for the month as
determined pursuant to Sec. 1051.60.
(b) The sum of:
(1) An amount obtained by multiplying the total hundredweight of
[[Page 10687]]
producer milk as determined pursuant to Sec. 1000.44(c) by the
producer price differential as adjusted pursuant to Sec. 1051.75;
(2) An amount obtained by multiplying the total pounds of protein,
other solids, and butterfat contained in producer milk by the protein,
other solids, and butterfat prices respectively; and
(3) An amount obtained by multiplying the pounds of skim milk and
butterfat for which a value was computed pursuant to Sec. 1051.60(i)
by the producer price differential as adjusted pursuant to Sec.
1051.75 for the location of the plant from which received.
Sec. 1051.72 Payments from the producer-settlement fund.
No later than the 18th day after the end of each month (except as
provided in Sec. 1000.90), the market administrator shall pay to each
handler the amount, if any, by which the amount computed pursuant to
Sec. 1051.71(b) exceeds the amount computed pursuant to Sec.
1051.71(a). If, at such time, the balance in the producer-settlement
fund is insufficient to make all payments pursuant to this section, the
market administrator shall reduce uniformly such payments and shall
complete the payments as soon as the funds are available.
Sec. 1051.73 Payments to producers and to cooperative associations.
(a) Each handler shall pay each producer for producer milk for
which payment is not made to a cooperative association pursuant to
paragraph (b) of this section, as follows:
(1) Partial payment. For each producer who has not discontinued
shipments as of the date of this partial payment, payment shall be made
so that it is received by each producer on or before the last day of
the month (except as provided in Sec. 1000.90) for milk received
during the first 15 days of the month from the producer at not less
than the lowest announced class price for the preceding month, less
proper deductions authorized in writing by the producer.
(2) Final payment. For milk received during the month, payment
shall be made so that it is received by each producer no later than the
19th day after the end of the month (except as provided in Sec.
1000.90) in an amount not less than the sum of:
(i) The hundredweight of producer milk received times the producer
price differential for the month as adjusted pursuant to Sec. 1051.75;
(ii) The pounds of butterfat received times the butterfat price for
the month;
(iii) The pounds of protein received times the protein price for
the month;
(iv) The pounds of other solids received times the other solids
price for the month;
(v) Less any payment made pursuant to paragraph (a)(1) of this
section;
(vi) Less proper deductions authorized in writing by such producer,
and plus or minus adjustments for errors in previous payments to such
producer subject to approval by the market administrator;
(vii) Less deductions for marketing services pursuant to Sec.
1000.86; and
(viii) Less deductions authorized by CDFA for the California Quota
Program pursuant to Sec. 1051.11.
(b) Payments for milk received from cooperative association
members. On or before the day prior to the dates specified in
paragraphs (a)(1) and (2) of this section (except as provided in Sec.
1000.90), each handler shall pay to a cooperative association for milk
from producers who market their milk through the cooperative
association and who have authorized the cooperative to collect such
payments on their behalf an amount equal to the sum of the individual
payments otherwise payable for such producer milk pursuant to
paragraphs (a)(1) and (2) of this section.
(c) Payment for milk received from cooperative association pool
plants or from cooperatives as handlers pursuant to Sec. 1000.9(c). On
or before the day prior to the dates specified in paragraphs (a)(1) and
(2) of this section (except as provided in Sec. 1000.90), each handler
who receives fluid milk products at its plant from a cooperative
association in its capacity as the operator of a pool plant or who
receives milk from a cooperative association in its capacity as a
handler pursuant to Sec. 1000.9(c), including the milk of producers
who are not members of such association and who the market
administrator determines have authorized the cooperative association to
collect payment for their milk, shall pay the cooperative for such milk
as follows:
(1) For bulk fluid milk products and bulk fluid cream products
received from a cooperative association in its capacity as the operator
of a pool plant and for milk received from a cooperative association in
its capacity as a handler pursuant to Sec. 1000.9(c) during the first
15 days of the month, at not less than the lowest announced class
prices per hundredweight for the preceding month;
(2) For the total quantity of bulk fluid milk products and bulk
fluid cream products received from a cooperative association in its
capacity as the operator of a pool plant, at not less than the total
value of such products received from the association's pool plants, as
determined by multiplying the respective quantities assigned to each
class under Sec. 1000.44, as follows:
(i) The hundredweight of Class I skim milk times the Class I skim
milk price for the month plus the pounds of Class I butterfat times the
Class I butterfat price for the month. The Class I price to be used
shall be that price effective at the location of the receiving plant;
(ii) The pounds of nonfat solids in Class II skim milk by the Class
II nonfat solids price;
(iii) The pounds of butterfat in Class II times the Class II
butterfat price;
(iv) The pounds of nonfat solids in Class IV times the nonfat
solids price;
(v) The pounds of butterfat in Class III and Class IV milk times
the butterfat price;
(vi) The pounds of protein in Class III milk times the protein
price;
(vii) The pounds of other solids in Class III milk times the other
solids price; and
(vii) Add together the amounts computed in paragraphs (c)(2)(i)
through (vii) of this section and from that sum deduct any payment made
pursuant to paragraph (c)(1) of this section; and
(3) For the total quantity of milk received during the month from a
cooperative association in its capacity as a handler under Sec.
1000.9(c) as follows:
(i) The hundredweight of producer milk received times the producer
price differential as adjusted pursuant to Sec. 1051.75;
(ii) The pounds of butterfat received times the butterfat price for
the month;
(iii) The pounds of protein received times the protein price for
the month;
(iv) The pounds of other solids received times the other solids
price for the month; and
(v) Add together the amounts computed in paragraphs (c)(3)(i)
through (v) of this section and from that sum deduct any payment made
pursuant to paragraph (c)(1) of this section.
(d) If a handler has not received full payment from the market
administrator pursuant to Sec. 1051.72 by the payment date specified
in paragraph (a), (b), or (c) of this section, the handler may reduce
pro rata its payments to producers or to the cooperative association
(with respect to receipts described in paragraph (b) of this section,
prorating the underpayment to the volume of milk received from the
cooperative association in proportion to the total milk received from
producers by the handler), but not by more than the amount of the
underpayment. The
[[Page 10688]]
payments shall be completed on the next scheduled payment date after
receipt of the balance due from the market administrator.
(e) If a handler claims that a required payment to a producer
cannot be made because the producer is deceased or cannot be located,
or because the cooperative association or its lawful successor or
assignee is no longer in existence, the payment shall be made to the
producer-settlement fund, and in the event that the handler
subsequently locates and pays the producer or a lawful claimant, or in
the event that the handler no longer exists and a lawful claim is later
established, the market administrator shall make the required payment
from the producer-settlement fund to the handler or to the lawful
claimant, as the case may be.
(f) In making payments to producers pursuant to this section, each
handler shall furnish each producer, except a producer whose milk was
received from a cooperative association handler described in Sec.
1000.9(a) or (c), a supporting statement in a form that may be retained
by the recipient which shall show:
(1) The name, address, Grade A identifier assigned by a duly
constituted regulatory agency, and payroll number of the producer;
(2) The daily and total pounds, and the month and dates such milk
was received from that producer;
(3) The total pounds of butterfat, protein, and other solids
contained in the producer's milk;
(4) The minimum rate or rates at which payment to the producer is
required pursuant to the order in this part;
(5) The rate used in making payment if the rate is other than the
applicable minimum rate;
(6) The amount, or rate per hundredweight, or rate per pound of
component, and the nature of each deduction claimed by the handler; and
(7) The net amount of payment to the producer or cooperative
association.
Sec. 1051.74 [Reserved]
Sec. 1051.75 Plant location adjustments for producer milk and nonpool
milk.
For purposes of making payments for producer milk and nonpool milk,
a plant location adjustment shall be determined by subtracting the
Class I price specified in Sec. 1051.51 from the Class I price at the
plant's location. The difference, plus or minus as the case may be,
shall be used to adjust the payments required pursuant to Sec. Sec.
1051.73 and 1000.76.
Sec. 1051.76 Payments by a handler operating a partially regulated
distributing plant.
See Sec. 1000.76.
Sec. 1051.77 Adjustment of accounts.
See Sec. 1000.77.
Sec. 1051.78 Charges on overdue accounts.
See Sec. 1000.78.
Administrative Assessment and Marketing Service Deduction
Sec. 1051.85 Assessment for order administration.
On or before the payment receipt date specified under Sec.
1051.71, each handler shall pay to the market administrator its pro
rata share of the expense of administration of the order at a rate
specified by the market administrator that is no more than 8 cents per
hundredweight with respect to:
(a) Receipts of producer milk (including the handler's own
production) other than such receipts by a handler described in Sec.
1000.9(c) that were delivered to pool plants of other handlers;
(b) Receipts from a handler described in Sec. 1000.9(c);
(c) Receipts of concentrated fluid milk products from unregulated
supply plants and receipts of nonfluid milk products assigned to Class
I use pursuant to Sec. 1000.43(d) and other source milk allocated to
Class I pursuant to Sec. 1000.44(a)(3) and (8) and the corresponding
steps of Sec. 1000.44(b), except other source milk that is excluded
from the computations pursuant to Sec. 1051.60 (h) and (i); and
(d) Route disposition in the marketing area from a partially
regulated distributing plant that exceeds the skim milk and butterfat
subtracted pursuant to Sec. 1000.76(a)(1)(i) and (ii).
Sec. 1051.86 Deduction for marketing services.
See Sec. 1000.86.
Subpart D--Miscellaneous Provisions
Sec. 1051.90 Dates.
See Sec. 1000.90.
Dated: February 6, 2017.
Bruce Summers,
Acting Administrator.
[FR Doc. 2017-02732 Filed 2-9-17; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 3410-02-P