Santa Fe New Mexican

Navajo ranchers want imported beef labeled

- By Vida Volkert

CROWNPOINT — Continued drought and lack of precipitat­ion in the Southwest has forced rancher Majorie Lantana to reduce the number of cows at the ranch she leases from the Navajo Nation.

The ranch, registered as the Pitts Ranch 4, is located about 15 miles from Crownpoint. Lantana said the ranch allows for 64 head of cattle, but she has had to reduce that number several times because there’s limited grass on the range.

“There has been very scattered rainfall in the past six months,” Lantana said during a recent phone interview with the Gallup Independen­t. “Right now I can only run 29 heads, and I supplement.”

Drought is not the only concern

Lantana said she is a member of the New Mexico Beef Council and the New Mexico Cattle Growers Associatio­n. It is through these circles that she learned beef from other countries is entering the United States and getting repackaged and labeled as a product of the U.S.

This, she said, is adding more challenges to a market already impacted by drought and pandemic lockdowns and regulation­s. It is adding more stress to ranchers and beef producers as they have to compete with cheaper products.

“New Mexico ranchers are very opposed to this,” she said. “We are in support of raising cattle for profit.”

Lantana expressed her concerns to Navajo Nation Council Delegate Edmund Yazzie, who represents several communitie­s of the Eastern Agency on the Navajo Nation Council.

Yazzie said he had already heard from other ranchers about the imported beef issue and was informed that U.S. Sen. Ben Ray Lujan had joined other members of Congress to co-sponsor the America Beef Labeling Act of 2021.

Lujan, a member of the Senate

Agricultur­e Committee, has said the pandemic “proved how important it is to have a strong, reliable, local food supply, and consumers deserve to know where their food comes from.”

America Beef Labeling Act of 2021

In short, the legislatio­n seeks to reinstate the mandatory country of origin labeling requiremen­ts for beef. The proposed Senate bill states that the current beef labeling system in the United States allows imported beef that is neither born nor raised in the United States, but simply finished in the U.S., to be labeled as a U.S. product.

Yazzie said this process is unfair to cattle producers and misleading for consumers, and he decided to sponsor his own legislatio­n on the Navajo Nation Council to support the Senate bill.

According to Yazzie’s legislatio­n, “the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e estimated in 2012 that 18 percent of the available beef in the U.S. market is sourced either as an imported beef product or from imported cattle converted to beef in a U.S. packing plant.” Yazzie’s legislatio­n states beef is entering from more than 20 countries.

Yazzie said he is not opposed to these imports, he just wants to make sure they are properly labeled and represente­d in the U.S. market in order for consumers to make an educated decision about what they want to put on their table.

Yazzie’s legislatio­n is moving through Navajo Nation Council committees.

 ?? ?? ABOVE: Ranchers moving cattle from a corral to a trailer last year at the Sims Ranch near Crownpoint.
ABOVE: Ranchers moving cattle from a corral to a trailer last year at the Sims Ranch near Crownpoint.
 ?? PHOTOS BY VIDA VOLKERT GALLUP INDEPENDEN­T FILE PHOTOS ?? LEFT: Cattle graze in arid land earlier this year in Casamero Lake. The proposed Senate bill states that the current beef labeling system in the United States allows imported beef that is neither born nor raised in the United States, but simply finished in the U.S., to be labeled as a U.S. product.
PHOTOS BY VIDA VOLKERT GALLUP INDEPENDEN­T FILE PHOTOS LEFT: Cattle graze in arid land earlier this year in Casamero Lake. The proposed Senate bill states that the current beef labeling system in the United States allows imported beef that is neither born nor raised in the United States, but simply finished in the U.S., to be labeled as a U.S. product.

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