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APHIS safeguards US exports in event of FAD outbreak

USDA APHIS has updated Veterinary Services form 16-4, allowing it to to strike a specific disease from the form in real time.

Washington Dc, Usa- September 4, 2018: Facade At The United Stat
Florin Cnejevici | Bigstock.com

Animal Plant Health Inspection Service updates Veterinary Services form 16-4, protecting the animal food industry’s ability to export products in the event of a foreign animal disease outbreak.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) Animal Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) has made a change that would protect the animal food industry’s ability to export products in the event of a foreign animal disease outbreak.

APHIS announced on April 5 an updated Veterinary Services form 16-4 in response to concerns that all animal food manufacturers would be barred from exporting animal-based products amid a foreign animal disease outbreak in the United States, under the previous language of the 16-4 health certificate.

Under the previous form, the language certifies that “rinderpest, foot-and-mouth disease, classical swine fever, swine vesicular disease, African swine fever and contagious bovine pleuropneumonia do not exist in the United States of America.”

As almost all animal-based feed products, pet food and treats are exported using the VS 16-4, should one of the listed foreign animal diseases occur, the disease statement on the certificate would invalidate the entire form because the United States could no longer claim the disease “does not exist in the United States.”

The updated form moves the disease statement, “This is to certify that rinderpest, foot-and-mouth disease, classical swine fever, swine vesicular disease, African swine fever, and contagious bovine pleuropneumonia do not exist in the United States of America,” from the letterhead to the additional declarations section. With the statement moved to the additional declarations section, APHIS will be able to strike the specific disease from the form in real time without having to go through the arduous Office of Management and Budget review process for changing a government form.

The change comes after the American Feed Industry Association (AFIA), its members and partners applied pressure on APHIS and Capitol Hill to amend the form and support animal-based products’ ability to export.

“The VS 16-4 form has been one of those issues that keeps me up at night,” said AFIA President and CEO Constance Cullman. “Our ability to export animal-based products is a top priority for the AFIA and we very much appreciate APHIS for taking our call to action seriously.

“Without the update, chaos would have ensued in the animal food marketplace,” Cullman said. “For example, there should be no reason for a poultry-based product to not be able to be exported if the United States has a swine-based foreign animal disease, but that is what would have happened if APHIS did not make this change.”

Next steps include working with APHIS to only list the disease(s) that are relevant to that commodity – for example, listing contagious bovine pleuropneumonia on the bovine products 16-4 form and not on the swine or poultry products form.

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