Raw Milk (Continued from Page A 1) ing lively applause from the crowd of 170 people. Interest in raw milk is growing among both dairy farmers and consumers, according to raw milk advocates and ag officials who gathered Monday at the Lancaster Farm and Home Cen ter. The meeting was organized by the Pennsylvania Association for Sustainable Agriculture (PASA). The group heard details about the permitting process for raw milk sales, discussions on the health benefits of raw milk and its products, and stories from two out-of-state dairymen who mar ket them. “The whole movement is ba sically about honesty,” said Tim Wightman, organic dairy produc er from Wisconsin. Wightman has struggled for several years to find a way to sell his raw milk in Wisconsin, a state that bans the outright sale of raw milk or its products. Eventually, after spending $35,000 in legal fees and losing an estimated $lOO,OOO in income, Wightman was able to form a limited liabili ty corporation that allows con Maureen Diaz with son Wilson, 6 months, says it should be up to consumers to choose clean milk prod ucts. sumers to buy shares in the farm. Since the raw milk and products can be legally consumed by own ers of the farm, the arrangement is approved by law. Wightman said that Pennsyl vania farmers have a long history of direct marketing and are for tunate to having a raw milk per mitting process. Pennsylvania’s policy allows farmers to sell fluid raw milk and hard cheese with a permit. How ever, selling products made from raw milk, such as butter, yogurt, and soft cheese, is prohibited. “You actually have a state sponsored raw milk program,” Wightman said. “Don’t let it go away.” Wightman has his milk tested routinely for disease-carrying or ganisms and posts results for cus tomers to see. He urged fanners to take an active role in assuring milk quality for consumers, in cluding making sure their cows are certified Johne’s-free. “Big companies can never match the job you do at control ling milk quality,” he said. In Wightman’s system, con sumers “certify” the product by coming on the farm, seeing how it is produced, and talking to the farmer. “That’s called America free dom of choice.” Wightman said “people are coming out of the woodwork” to buy raw milk and products such as artisan cheeses. Across the country, “we revere things that are handmade because nobody does it anymore.” Mark McAfee, California dairy producer, told his story from a state that allows raw milk sales. McAfee of Organic Pastures Dairy sells raw milk and its prod ucts in 325 stores throughout California, and has even shipped colostrum (milk from newly calved cows) to countries around the world. “Raw milk has never been banned (in California),” McAfee said, “although there’s a tremen dous number of hoops to go through to sell raw milk on the shelf.” The health benefits of raw milk are becoming better-known, according to McAfee. He pointed out increasing claims that prob lems such as autism, asthma, and attention deficit disorder (ADD) are alleviated by a diet that in cludes raw milk and/or its prod ucts. Immunity can also be in creased by drinking raw milk and colostrum, McAfee said. Colos trum from his cows was shipped to Asian countries to help protect health workers during the SARS outbreak. Before the war in Afghanistan and Iraq, Navy Seals in southern California were “drinking the heck out of our raw milk and co lostrum” to bolster their immune systems against foreign diseases they might encounter in the Mid dle East, McAfee said. Raw milk contains compounds that act as safety mechanisms and kill disease-carrying organ isms. Pasteurization actually in activates these compounds, according to McAfee. As long as the milk is clean from the start, “these (safety mechanisms) keep raw milk safe,” he said. McAfee referred to recent stud ies at the University of Califor nia-Davis which show that path ogens do not survive when added to raw milk from his farm. Producing that kind of raw milk means the cows have to be grass-fed, kept in a clean, stress free environment, and not given antibiotics, he said. “The reason you don’t have pathogens in this milk is that you’ve changed the internal physiology of the cow (from the conventional system),” McAfee said. “It’s really not organ ic it’s more than that.” McAfee believes selling raw milk is a way for dairy farmers to add a lot of value to their product. In California, he gets $7O per hundredweight (about $6 per gallon wholesale) for Taylor Diaz asks why consumers have easy ac cess to tobacco when raw milk products are so regu lated. raw, certified organic milk. His organic, raw colostrum re tails for $9O a gallon, according to McAfee. “Don’t cheat yourself,” he said. “The value of a pasture raised, organic product is very high.” McAfee encouraged farmers to work together with government officials to build a thriving raw milk industry and help to teach the public about its value. “The more we stick together, the more we’re going to win this battle of, basically, education,” he said. The ability of raw milk to cre ate health as one part of a whole some diet is “as close to a miracle as you can get,” McAfee said. But it has to be viewed as a pre ventative, not as something that will necessarily bring people back from the brink of death. “There are a lot of people out there who have saved their’ lives on raw milk and raw milk prod ucts,” he said. “There are also some who have gone overboard. “This is about prevention. It’s about living well and eating well so you can have a healthy life.” On hand at the meeting were Bobby McLean, director of the Bureau of Food Safety and Labo ratory Services under the Penn sylvania Department of Agricul ture (PDA), and Roy Malik, PDA’s supervising milk inspector for much of the state, to discuss Pennsylvania’s raw milk permit ting process. Mark McAfee of Califor nia shares his experiences selling raw milk. “Over the last few months. I’ve received what I’d call a warm welcome to the raw milk issue,” McLean said, referring to calls to the PDA over a rumor that raw milk sales were being outlawed in the state. The PDA’s stance on raw milk is that “we’re not trying to pre vent anyone from getting any thing that would be beneficial to their health,” McLean said. “We want that product to be safe.” The law that prohibits retailing raw milk products such as butter and yogurt has been in effect since 1935. The PDA’s job is to interpret the law and make sure it is being followed not to change it, McLean said. In order for the law to be changed, a new version would have to be drafted and approved by the Pennsylva nia legislature. “We as a regulatory agency cannot turn our backs on the reg ulations that are in place.” As for raw milk itself, McLean said he recently tried a glass and liked it. Roy Malik explained the two types of permits for selling raw milk in the state: the customer container permit and the pre filled container permit. The customer-container permit allows farmers to sell milk to cus tomers who bring their own jugs. For farmers who have this type of permit, Malik recommended keeping clean, disposable plastic containers on hand, in case the customer needs one. The pre filled container permit requires (Turn to Page A 33)