Members of Vermont's organic industry are celebrating after the U.S. Department of Agriculture closed a loophole in dairy standards.
The USDA Origin of Livestock rule outlines how organic dairy farms can source the cows they use to produce milk. Generally, organic dairy farms can only transition cows from conventional care — using antibiotics and cheaper, non-organic feed — to the more expensive organic care once in that farm's lifetime.
Under the old version of the rule however, Vermont Organic Farmers certification director Nicole Dehne says some out-of-state certifiers could allow operations to continuously raise cows using conventional care, then switching to organic care when the cows were a year old.
"So they would basically get, you know, a year — maybe a bit more — of the cost savings and managing those young stock," Dehne said.