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Tester secures logging device prohibition for livestock hauler

Bipartisan deal includes ELD prohibition, FSA funding, PILT, among others

Press release

Legislation to fund the government that Sen. Jon Tester, D-Mont., and a small bipartisan group of lawmakers secured last week includes resources and policy wins for critical Montana agriculture programs, including a prohibition on the Department of Transportation from enforcing electronic logging device — ELD — rules on livestock haulers, as well as full funding for the Farm Service Agency and PILT, a release from Tester’s office said.

While much of the debate about the government funding legislation centered around border security, Tester — a senior member of the Senate Appropriations Committee — also helped craft six bills to fund the Departments of Agriculture, Interior, Commerce, Justice, Transportation, Treasury, State, and Housing and Urban Development, in addition to other critical programs, the release said.

“Our bipartisan deal brings Montana common sense to a bureaucratic problem that’s cost our state’s ranchers time and money,” Tester said in the release. “We’ve secured the much-needed flexibility for our ranchers and livestock haulers to safely transport their products across the country in the way they know best, and I’ll be working to ensure that flexibility is permanent.”

Tester has been a longtime advocate for fixing the ELD rule, the release said. Groups across the state praised Tester’s provision in the bipartisan deal.

“We’d like to thank Sen. Jon Tester and others in Congress for working quickly to delay the implementation of Electronic Logging Devices for livestock haulers,” said Leo McDonnell of Columbus, director emeritus of the United States Cattlemen’s Association. “This spending package grants the livestock industry crucial time to work out a more permanent solution to the restrictive Hours-of-Service rules. Livestock transporters need to be able to deliver their living, breathing cargo to its destination as safely and efficiently as possible. We brought this issue to Sen. Tester and his staff and we’re grateful for the temporary regulatory relief they were able to provide through this provision.” 

“We would like to thank Sen. Tester for his leadership on the ELD issue,” said Fred Wacker, President of the Montana Stockgrowers Association. “The health and safety of our livestock is our number one priority, the ability to get them to their final destination in a safe and effective manner is key.”

“As a Montana livestock producer and auction market owner, flexibility for livestock haulers is greatly appreciated. Cattle have to travel a long way from where they’re born in Montana to where they’re fed in the Midwest,” said Joe Goggins, a Billings-based rancher and member of the Livestock Marketing Association. “This electronic logging device mandate delay will allow haulers more time to seek needed regulatory and legislative relief so that they can get our livestock safely and quickly where they need to go. We appreciate Sen. Tester’s work to achieve this delay.”

“Montana Farm Bureau is pleased that our livestock haulers have more time to work on a solution to a mandatory Electronic Logging Device rule,” said Montana Farm Bureau President Hans McPherson. “Although this was passed as part of a larger spending bill, we appreciate Sen. Tester’s support of this stop gap measure to keep Montana Livestock haulers on the road.  This is an important step to eventually getting to a permanent exemption of this onerous rule.”

The budget legislation also includes full funding for the Fort Keogh Research Laboratory, despite President Trump’s efforts to close the facility, as well as full funding for the Wheat & Barley Scab Initiative, which the president aimed to eliminate despite its importance to protecting Montana’s wheat and barley crops, the release said. 

 

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