advertisement

PD Poll Question: Dairy Reform

subscribe

advertisement

advertisement

Yevet Tenney's header

cityboy

mike_gangwer

baxter_black

nelson_brad

mechanics_corner



PD POLL: Dairy Reform [Results] PDF Print E-mail


1310pd_pollThe results are in from Progressive Dairyman's dairy reform poll.

Click here to download the pdf that displays the final vote totals broken out into a pie chart by plan and broken out in a bar graph by medium received. And check out a breakdown of the votes by state and by date.

Be sure to read Ryan Curtis's "Consumers sway dairy poll" article to get the behind-the-scenes story.

And if you haven't been following the poll throughout the summer, read up about it through these articles:
PD Poll: Dairy Reform [Updated July 2]
This article features a summary of each of the most well-known plans for dairy reform

PD Poll: Dairy Reform [Updated August 11]
These pdfs lay out three popular plans for dairy reform and compares them side-by-side, issue-by-issue.
 
The results are in, so now what do we do? PDF Print E-mail
Written by PD Editor Walt Cooley   

At the end of April, we began a one-of-a-kind Progressive Dairyman straw poll, asking dairy producers to evaluate and choose the dairy reform plan they support most for needed industry reform.

Why did we do it? 2009 was an extreme low milk price year. Producers drained their equity to survive. By the time prices pulled upward, most felt beat up, used and abused. Ideas for reforming dairy pricing policy that previously lacked traction rekindled interest.

Read more...
 
Consumers sway dairy poll PDF Print E-mail
Written by PD Assistant Editor Ryan Curtis   

1310pd_curtis_poll_1Dear Progressive Dairyman,
I’m a consumer, and I support the Specter-Casey bill.

Signed,
John Doe, Consumer

Over the past several months, Progressive Dairyman has literally received hundreds of letters that are almost identical to the one above, mostly from Pennsylvania. They usually come in groups, but with individual names and addresses of people that are responding to the magazine’s dairy reform plan poll.

Read more...
 
Solutions require more than one appearance PDF Print E-mail
Written by PD Editor Walt Cooley   

When New Zealand holds its annual agricultural exhibition, one of similar size and exposure to our World Ag Expo show, the minister of agriculture makes an appearance. And sometimes more than just a one-day, couple of hours’ appearance. This past year he was on the Fieldays show grounds twice during the four-day event. Can you imagine U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack doing the same? Probably not. Yet it’s not hard to understand why David Carter was there if you know New Zealand’s top three export commodities are ag-related – milk, meat and forestry products.

The minister is a 58-year-old, dapper politician from New Zealand's south island. He is the founder of the country’s first cattle-embryo transplant business. My interview with him can be viewed here.

Read more...
 


advertisement

About Us | Subscribe | Advertise | Contribute | Contact Us | Industry Stats | Progressive Forage Grower | Progressive Cattleman

Copyright 2010 Progressive Dairyman

This site is optimized to be viewed with Firefox, Safari and Internet Explorer 8 web browsers.