NMPF's Kozak Offers Five Points for Future

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National Milk Producers Federation (NMPF) President and CEO Jerry Kozak presented an inspiring and impassioned speech during the 2008 Joint Annual Meeting. The meeting brings together dairy farmers and industry leaders from NMPF, Dairy Management Inc. (DMI) and the United Dairy Industry Association (UDIA). Kozak suggested that the dairy industry needs to chart a new course for the future in five key areas – including making major revisions to the organization’s policies on certain issues. You can view his entire speech on the NMPF website.

The first area Kozak addressed was immigration reform, since “the issue of a stable and available workforce is of paramount importance to the dairy industry,” Kozak stated. “No other issue has the potential to cause catastrophic results with respect to the production and marketing of milk in this country than the failure of our leaders in Washington to pass meaningful immigration reform.”

In his second point, Kozak stressed the need to reform and revitalize the Federal Milk Marketing Order program. He proposed “replacing the make allowance structure with a competitive pay price that would allow processing plants to pay what they must for the milk they procure.” NMPF’s Federal Order task force had not yet come up with a way to do this, but Kozak was convinced “that it is the right thing to do.”

Kozak’s third point
was that the industry should consider alternatives to the Dairy Product Price Support and Milk Income Loss Contract programs. Instead of “fighting a rear-guard battle with these initiatives,” Kozak suggested that NMPF “should ask Congress to end both programs, and replace them with programs that will benefit the entire industry in a new global marketplace.”

Kozak’s fourth point was that the industry should take a more comprehensive approach to animal care and well-being and environmental initiatives. To further NMPF’s resources in that area, Kozak said NMPF is assimilating the programs of the Dairy Quality Assurance Center in Iowa into a new national program available to all producers. Kozak also said NMPF’s members should start work on helping dairy farmers be well-positioned to take advantage of a growing carbon credit market that will develop when Congress passes a cap and trade system to control greenhouse gases.

For his final point, Kozak addressed the need to maintain, adapt, and expand Cooperatives Working Together, the farmer-funded self-help program in it sixth year of operation.

“Precisely because the government won’t have the resources or the inclination to help farmers as much in the future, now more than ever, we need to have a self-help program, without government involvement,” he said. Kozak said CWT’s export program should be expanded through creation of a U.S. Marketing Agency in Common (USMAC) to use the potential of NMPF’s cooperative structure. To address the “free-rider problem” and expand membership, Kozak said “we have to find new creative ways to reward CWT’s members, above and beyond those who don’t contribute to the program.”