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Round-up on USDA compliance

This is the fifth in a series of seven posts about regulatory compliance priorities and enforcement trends.  The first post was about the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC).  The second post was about the Federal Trade Commission (FTC).  The third post was about the Securities & Exchange Commission (SEC).  Last week’s post was about the Food & Drug Administration (FDA).  Today’s post will be about the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA).  Next week’s post, on Thursday January 25, will be about the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).  Finally, on Thursday February 1, the post will be about the Federal Communications Commission (FCC).

The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) is the US regulator charged with supervising and enforcing federal laws concerning farming, agriculture, forestry, and food.  The USDA was created in 1862 by an order of President Abraham Lincoln and was subsequently elevated to executive cabinet status by President Grover Cleveland in 1889.  The legislation which sets the regulatory policy and enforcement standards for the USDA is far-reaching and broad, signifying the major role agricultural activities and products have always played in the U.S. economy and many communities.  The mandate of the USDA includes running a variety of departments, including as the Farm Service Agency (formed 1994, responsible for farm conservation and regulation), the Office of Rural Development (formed 1990, responsible for administering programs intended to improve economies and communities in the rural United States),  the Food and Nutrition Service (formed 1969, responsible for running nutrition assistance programs), and the National Resources Conservation Service (formed 1932, responsible for protecting and conserving agricultural lands and other natural resources on private lands), among numerous others.

The broad scope of these agencies and programs gives the USDA a sweeping jurisdiction which touches upon farmers and ranchers, trade and production within the agricultural supply chain, food safety, conservation and protection of natural resources, and issues affecting rural communities, such as nutrition assistance, housing services, and other development-focused activities.  The USDA also collaborates broadly with other regulatory entities, particularly the FDA and the EPA, insofar as their mandates overlap or contain co-dependencies from the federal laws which guide their activities.  While the USDA may have once had great oversight responsibilities for the business activities of farmers and ranchers and the community developments within rural areas, due to this fact that other supervisors share jurisdiction and to change in the domestic markets, the USDA’s focus has shifted   accordingly.  Therefore the majority of the present and upcoming developments on the USDA’s regulatory agenda touch upon food safety, nutrition, and the treatment of animals in farming practices.

Be sure to check back next week for a round-up on EPA regulatory compliance.

 

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