USDA files Motion to Dismiss in Wright’s vs. USDA Monday, July 29, 2024

USDA files Motion to Dismiss in Wright’s vs. USDA


 

The United States Department of Agriculture filed a motion to dismiss on July 25, 2024 in the Michael, Casey and Josh Wright vs. U.S. Department of Agriculture, Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack, Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service and Administrator Michael Watson case.

The USDA argues the Wright’s lack Article III standing and thus the complaint should be dismissed. The USDA also argues several of the Wright’s claims are time-barred by the Administrative Procedures Act’s six-year statute of limitations. The answer by the Wright’s attorneys (Torridon Law Firm) is due within 28 days of the Motion to Dismiss and they will object to the USDA’s positions. The court will then decide next steps in the case.




New APHIS Rule effective Feb 1st 2025

WASHINGTON, April 29, 2024 – In an effort to end horse soring at Tennessee Walking Horse shows, the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) is announcing strengthened Horse Protection Act regulations. Soring is a cruel and inhumane practice where some owners and trainers chemically or physically irritate or burn horses to provide an accentuated gait that gives them an unfair advantage in walking horse competitions and fraudulent purchase prices at horse shows.

Walking horses are known for their naturally high gait, but to be more successful in competitions some owners and trainers use cruel methods to exaggerate a horse’s gait. These inhumane methods may cause the horse to suffer physical pain, distress, inflammation, or lameness while walking and moving.

“For far too long, some within the Tennessee Walking Horse industry have sored and abused their horses, despite the industry’s inspection process and our own enforcement efforts,” said Jenny Lester-Moffitt, Under Secretary for USDA Marking and Regulatory Programs. “This abuse must stop. Eliminating this cruel practice will help protect horses competing in these shows and level the playing field for the industry. The independent inspection process should strengthen the competition at these shows and benefit the many owners and trainers who do right by their animals.”

The stronger regulations include:

Eliminating industry self-regulation and the role of industry-backed Designated Qualified Persons as inspectors at horse shows, exhibitions, sales, and auctions. Only APHIS inspectors and independent non-APHIS-employed horse protection inspectors screened, trained, and authorized by APHIS will have inspection authority.
Prohibiting any device, method, practice, or substance applied to a horse that can cause or is associated with soring.
Prohibiting on Tennessee Walking or racking horses all action devices and non-therapeutic pads, artificial toe extensions, and wedges, as well as all substances on the extremities above the hoof, including lubricants.
Removing the scar rule from the regulations and replacing it with a more accurate description of visible dermatological changes indicative of soring.
Amending recordkeeping and reporting requirements for management at covered events to better enforce the HPA.
In 2017, APHIS withdrew the initial Horse Protection Act final rule from public inspection per a memorandum issued by the Executive Office of the President. Following a lawsuit based on that action, the agency withdrew the 2017 rule on October 30, 2023, and published a new proposed rule, receiving 8,787 comments. The new rule builds upon information we have learned since the 2017 rule was drafted. Notably, it incorporates lessons and science-based recommendations from the 2021 National Academies of Science review of the inspection program.

The Horse Protection Act is a Federal law that prohibits sored horses from participating in shows, exhibitions, sales or auctions. The Horse Protection Act also prohibits the transportation of sored horses to or from any of these events.

A copy of this rule may be viewed today, and the rule will be published in the Federal Register in the coming weeks. This rule will be effective February 1, 2025.




Amended Complaint Filed in Wrights v. USDA Thursday, April 4, 2024

Amended Complaint Filed in Wrights v. USDA


 

Torridon Law PLLC filed an amended complaint in the United States District Court for the Western District of Tennessee on Wednesday April 3, 2024.  The original complaint was filed on March 11, 2024.  The USDA has 60 days to respond to the complaint filed by Torridon Law PLLC.

The amendments to the original complaint are due to an email from USDA-APHIS during the middle of the 2024 National Trainers’ Show that changed the application of the scar rule effective immediately, reversing seven years of training and application in the field of the highly subjective Scar Rule.  No reason was given by USDA-APHIS nor was any comment or notice period given to the industry.

USDA Veterinary Medical Officers had already been in attendance at two shows in 2024 applying the Scar Rule as it had been for the last seven years and the change came before the third night of the four-night National Trainers’ Show.

The amended complaint just further emphasizes the arbitrary nature of the scar rule, which was included in the original complaint.  The complaint still includes the lack of due process claims in the original complaint as well as the disqualification of horses for post-show inflammation.

CLICK HERE  to read the amended complaint.




Lawsuit filed challenging enforcement of Horse Protection Act

Lawsuit filed challenging enforcement of Horse Protection Act


Editor’s Note: The following summary of a lawsuit filed earlier today in federal court in Jackson, Tenn., outlines the three main areas being challenged in enforcement of the Horse Protection Act. The lawsuit filed today is independent of the proposed rulemaking currently in process by USDA. To view the full complaint, click here.

SUMMARY OF NEW LAWSUIT CHALLENGING  HORSE PROTECTION ACT  REGULATIONS AND POLICIES

On March 11, 2024, trainers Michael Wright, Casey Wright, and Josh Wright sued the U.S. Department of Agriculture (“USDA” or “Agency”) challenging multiple USDA decisions disqualifying their horses in past shows and challenging the USDA rules that were applied to disqualify their horses.  The Tennessee Walking Horse Industry supports the Wrights in their lawsuit, which raises issues that are important for the entire industry.  The lawsuit asserts that USDA has been unlawfully disqualifying horses and violating trainers’ and owners’ due process rights by failing to provide any mechanism to review disqualification decisions.  The lawsuit focuses on three challenges that may have impacts across the industry.

First, the lawsuit argues that the USDA has been violating constitutional due process rights by disqualifying horses without giving owners or trainers any opportunity to challenge disqualification decisions.  USDA’s rules provide no hearing or other means—either before or after a disqualification—by which a trainer can challenge a disqualification and argue why a horse inspector’s decision was wrong.  That violates the most fundamental principles under the Due Process Clause, which requires a meaningful opportunity to be heard in connection with any government deprivation of a liberty or property interest.  As the lawsuit points out, a federal court determined eight years ago that the USDA violated due process rights by failing to provide any review mechanism, but the USDA has continued to operate under the same unconstitutional regime.  The suit seeks an order declaring the USDA’s practice unlawful and an order requiring USDA to provide due process in connection with any disqualification decisions.

Second, the suit challenges the USDA’s continued enforcement of the Scar Rule, a regulation describing certain conditions which, if found on a horse’s legs, require deeming that horse to be sore.  The Scar Rule exceeds the USDA’s authority under the Horse Protection Act (“HPA”) by using criteria different from those set by Congress in the Act.  In addition, after a review conducted at USDA’s request, the National Academy of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine told the USDA years ago that the criteria in the Scar Rule have no actual scientific connection to soring and that they cannot be consistently applied—and thus produce arbitrary results.  For those reasons, too, the rule is inconsistent with the statute.

Third, the suit challenges USDA’s policy under which inspectors must disqualify a horse as sore if the horse shows any signs of inflammation in a post-show inspection, without regard to how the inflammation was caused.  That approach also violates the statute by departing from the statutory definition of “sore,” which is triggered only when a person has taken some deliberate action to make a horse sore.  Contrary to the USDA’s approach, any inflammation caused naturally during a competition—such as that caused by horse’s rear legs rubbing on the dirt or gravel in the ring—cannot be treated as a sign of soring under the Act.

The lawsuit asks the court to declare that the USDA’s rules are unlawful and to set them aside so that they can no longer be enforced against the Wrights or any other horse owners and trainers.

QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS

How does this lawsuit relate to the new rule USDA has proposed?
 This lawsuit challenges USDA’s existing rules and policies, not the new rule USDA has proposed.  We are still waiting for USDA to issue the new rule, at which time there will likely be another lawsuit to challenge it.  However, the issues raised in this lawsuit—in particular the due process concerns—are unlikely to go away once the new rule is adopted.  A favorable ruling in this lawsuit will prevent USDA from enforcing its existing unlawful rules and should be taken into account by the USDA in the new rules it adopts.

Does the lawsuit help only the Wrights?  What about other horse owners and trainers? The lawsuit is brought on behalf of the Wrights, but it seeks relief that would affect all horse owners and trainers.  Because the rules and policies used to disqualify the Wrights’ horses are unlawful each and every time they are used, the complaint asks the court to prevent USDA from using them at all moving forward.

What about other things the USDA does?  Why isn’t the USDA’s foreign substance policy part of this lawsuit?
 The lawsuit challenges rules and policies that were used against the Wrights in specific instances.  It also challenges rules and policies that we believe give us a high chance of success.  Should we win, we hope to be able to use that ruling to stop USDA from enforcing other unlawful rules (like its foreign substance policy) that go beyond the scope of its authority.

When will the court rule on the lawsuit? That depends on several factors, some of which will be up to the judge and the government.  We hope to press for a ruling sometime this year.




USDA sends Proposed Rule to OMB

 

USDA sends Proposed Rule to OMB

Wednesday, February 28, 2024

 

The United States Department of Agriculture’s proposed rule to amend the Horse Protection Act was sent to the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) for its final review on February 26, 2024. This move is the last step in the review of the proposed rule before USDA issues the final rule.

 

The OMB reviewed the proposed rule previously before USDA put out the proposed rule for comment. The industry, through its attorneys submitted comment on the rule during this phase but the contents of any changes made by the USDA after the comment period have still not been released.

 

The industry is prepared the challenge the final rule if changes were not made to the earlier released proposed rule. The proposed rule seeks to eliminate all Horse Industry Organizations, turn over enforcement of the HPA to USDA solely, ban the use of action devices, pads, and bands as well as change the language of the scar rule. Organizations that represent both the pleasure and performance Tennessee Walking Horse opposed the rule, each citing that it would eliminate the show horse industry.

 

The exact time of the review at OMB is not known but could be up to 90 days. The final rule will have an effective date at some point in the future with the initial proposed rule having a 270 day period before it is effective.




Do you agree with the new TWH Exhibitor and Horse cards required starting in 2024 show season, earmarking funds for industry legal fund?

Do you agree with the new TWH Exhibitor and Horse cards required starting in 2024 show season, earmarking funds for industry legal fund?

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USDA withdraws 2017 Horse Protection Act Final Rule

(CLARIFICATION: THE ANNOUNCEMENT OF THIS 2017 RULE WITHDRAWL  ONLY INFORMS INDUSTRY STAKE HOLDERS THAT THE OLD SCIENCE AND OLD DATA, AND THE OLD RULE ITSELF WILL BE WITHDRAWN, AS PUBLISHED TOMORROW OCT 31, 2023. THE COMMENT PERIOD WAS ON THE NEW HPA PROPOSAL. DATED AUGUST 21ST 2023)

 

On July 21, 2023, APHIS published a proposal to withdraw the 2017 final rule in the Federal Register and requested public comment. On August 21, 2023, APHIS issued a new HPA proposed rule. Based on the comments received on the proposal to withdraw, as well as the issuance of a new and stronger HPA proposed rule, APHIS decided to move forward with the final rule to withdraw the 2017 rule.

APHIS has for several years been working to update and strengthen our regulatory framework under the Horse Protection Act (HPA). Following several regulatory and legal developments, this withdrawal is a necessary step that will allow the Agency to move forward in strengthening the HPA regulations with transparency and appropriate public input. With this withdrawal, the agency can now fully focus on the new proposed rule. The new proposed rule would strengthen HPA requirements, incorporating data and the latest science gathered since 2016, including the 2021 National Academies of Science, “Review of Methods for Detecting Soreness in Horses.”

APHIS initially withdrew the 2017 HPA final rule from public inspection in 2018. However, following a lawsuit, the Circuit Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia found this withdrawal to be unlawful. The D.C. Circuit Court indicated that one appropriate remedial action is a proposed withdrawal, published in the Federal Register with an opportunity for public comment.

The HPA is a federal law that prohibits sored horses from participating in shows, exhibitions, sales or auctions. The HPA also prohibits the transportation of sored horses to or from any of these events. APHIS is absolutely committed to protecting the welfare of horses under the HPA.

This withdrawal rule is on display in today’s Federal Register.




The Celebration comments on proposed USDA rules

The comment period for the USDA’s latest proposed rule to amend the Horse Protection Act ended yesterday, October 20th. The industry hired Ellis, George, Cipollone to prepare its comments and those were filed late yesterday afternoon. Below you will find an executive summary of those comments.

 

The USDA will now review all of the comments received in response to the proposed rule and make needed changes to prepare a final rule. The USDA will once again be required to send the proposed final rule to OMB/OIRA for its review. Once OMB/OIRA send the rule back to USDA, a final rule will be prepared and sent to the office of the Federal Register to be printed and become final.

 

The industry has the option, if it remains in disagreement, to challenge the rule’s implementation in court and would seek a stay. The effective date of the rule will also be at some point in the future after its printing in the Federal Register.

 

 

 

 

 

THE TENNESSEE WALKING HORSE NATIONAL CELEBRATION ASSOCIATION’S COMMENTS ON 2023 USDA PROPOSED RULE

 

On August 21, 2023, the U.S. Department of Agriculture (“USDA” or “Agency”) issued a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (“Proposed Rule”) proposing to amend the Agency’s current regulations by which it enforces the Horse Protection Act (“HPA”). While the Proposed Rule purports to strengthen the Agency’s regulations in order to protect horses from soring, the Rule proposed a number of sweeping changes to the existing regulations that would not only fail to address soring in any meaningful way, but would potentially devastate the Tennessee Walking Horse show industry. On October 20, 2023, The Tennessee Walking Horse National Celebration (“TWHNCA” or “Association”) submitted public comments (“Comments”) highlighting the numerous problems with the Proposed Rule. While the hope is that USDA will react to the Comments by withdrawing the Proposed Rule, the Comments will also form part of the record on which any future litigation challenging the rule will be based.

 

THE PROPOSED RULE

The USDA justifies the Proposed Rule by explaining that “soring persists despite the Agency’s efforts to regulate and work with the Tennessee Walking Horse and racking horse industries to eliminate the practice.” It claims that the Proposed Rule would “strengthen regulatory requirements intended to protect horses from soring and eliminate unfair competition.” The amendments in the Proposed Rule fall roughly into three categories:

 

(1) Amendments that would impose blanket bans on using pads (supplemental weight on the underside of a horseshoe) and action devices, hoof bands, and substances—but only for Tennessee Walking Horses or Racking Horses at Horse Events. Other breeds of horses that are covered by the HPA are exempt from these bans. USDA justifies the differential treatment because, “based on [its] informed knowledge about the practices of all breeds performing or exhibiting in the United States, [it] know[s] that soring in breeds other than Tennessee Walking Horses and Racking Horses confers no significant performance advantage and is therefore rarely if ever practiced.” 88 Fed. Reg. at 56937.

 

(2) Amendments to the current inspection program, which is largely reliant on “Designated Qualified Persons” (or “DQPs”), for Horse Events. These DQPs are currently appointed by Horse industry organizations (“HIOs”), who are largely responsible for administering this program now. The Proposed Rule would eliminate DQPs and the role of HIOs in administering the inspection program, and it would require all horse inspectors (now dubbed “HPIs”) to either be private Veterinarians certified by USDA or USDA’s own inspectors. The Proposed Rule would place administration of the HPA enforcement program solely in USDA’s hands.

 

(3) Amendments that would impose new or different obligations on the management of certain Horse Events with respect to, inter alia: record-keeping; the identification of horses; security matters; the checking of identification of persons entering horses in Horse Events; the number of HPIs to conduct inspections; and the requirement to have a farrier at Horse Events. Many of these tasks are currently handled by HIOs that would no longer exist.

 

In addition to these proposed amendments, USDA has sought input on other issues, including recommendations for addressing the due process concerns that have been raised concerning the current inspection and disqualification process.

 

THE ASSOCIATION’S COMMENTS

 

The Association’s Comments are broken down into seven sections, which address the following topics.

The Proposed Rule Is Based On Unreliable Data. Section I of the Comments discusses a fundamental, overarching defect that undermines the entire Proposed Rule: the USDA bases the rule on unreliable data. This is true for five reasons.

 

First, the USDA’s data purporting to show the number of violations found by USDA inspectors does not match USDA’s own prior publicly reported data showing such violations, which are significantly lower than what is included in the public rule. USDA must explain the discrepancy and permit the public to comment on the source of the data.

 

Second, by USDA’s own admission, the data which purports to show evidence of soring is not based on a random sample, as USDA admits that it chose to inspect an indeterminate number of horses based on suspicion of soring.

 

Third, the data purporting to reflect soring is overinflated, as USDA includes in its numbers violations that have nothing to do with soring. For example, USDA includes in its violations failures would include violations for using an action devices that weighed 6.1 ounces, regardless of whether or not the horse wearing the device was actually sore.

 

Fourth, the data was obtained by means of a subjective inspection protocol, the reliability of which has been found to be unreliable by the National Academy of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine (“NAS”), which was commissioned by USDA to study its inspection protocol, as well as other equine experts. As the Association has been pointing out for years, because the inspection protocol has been shown to produce results that are not repeatable, subjective findings of soring cannot be treated as reliable evidence of actual soring.

 

Fifth, USDA’s decision to ban certain practices only as to TWHs is improper because USDA does not support its differential treatment of TWHs with any data about soring in other HPA Breeds. USDA claims that soring does not occur in other breeds, but it has no evidence on which it can rely upon to say that is the case. In fact, it has previously been acknowledged by the USDA itself, that soring occurs in other breeds. And publicly available records suggest the same.

 

The Proposed Ban on Action Devices and Pads is Unlawful. Section II of the Comments discusses the Proposed Rule’s ban on all action devices and pads as to TWHs. This ban exceeds the Agency’s authority under the HPA and is arbitrary and capricious, as there is no evidence that action devices and pads cause soring. The principal study relied on by USDA now to support the proposed ban actually establishes that action devices and pads do not cause soring. And USDA has relied on that same study in the past to support the existing rules permitting the use of such devices precisely because the study shows that such equipment does not cause soring. The Agency provides no adequate explanation for its course reversal and fails to justify a ban on equipment that it has previously acknowledged does not cause soring. Indeed, by permitting the use of this equipment by other HPA breeds, USDA continues to recognize these devices do not cause soring.

 

The USDA’s rationale is particularly deficient, because the USDA fails to grapple with the fact that it is effectively abolishing the entire Performance division of competition for Tennessee Walking Horses. The USDA’s only purported explanation for the ban is that, according to the USDA’s questionable data, a significant number of soring violations continue to occur among horses that compete wearing action devices and pads – that is, in the Performance division. But that rationale is like an agency empowered to address doping in Alpine Skiing finding that 25% of contestants in the Giant Slalom were cited for doping and deciding to abolish the Giant Slalom event entirely in order to eradicate doping. Nothing in the HPA gives the USDA such power here.

 

USDA’s ban would also amount to an unconstitutional taking of property, given that its actions would effectively eliminate the sport in which all Performance division horses have been bred and trained to compete and thereby destroy the value of horses that have been trained to show in that division.

 

The Ban On All Substances Is Unlawful. Section III of the Comments discusses the Proposed Rule’s extension of the existing ban on prohibited substances to cover all substances without exception. This ban also exceeds the Agency’s authority under the HPA and is arbitrary and capricious because USDA fails to provide any rationale (or evidence) to explain how currently permitted substances cause soring. In fact, the Proposed Rule would irrationally prohibit the use of substances that are currently permitted and that are used precisely to reduce friction and thereby prevent soring, as well as substances that are prescribed by equine veterinarians for the welfare of the horse.

 

The Revisions To The Scar Rule Fail To Correct The Defects In The Current Rule. Section IV of the Comments discusses the Proposed Rule’s modifications to the existing Scar Rule, a rule that NAS has found to be unenforceable as written because research has shown that the methods used during visual inspections to identify evidence of soring cannot reliably identify any evidence of soring. NAS recommended that USDA conduct additional studies to determine if there are objective criteria that can be relied on in a visual examination to support a finding of soring. USDA ignored NAS’s suggestions and failed to conduct any additional studies to determine what characteristics might be found in a gross visual inspection that would accurately identify evidence of soring. Instead, the Proposed Rule exacerbates the existing rule’s deficiencies by replacing it with a rule that is even more vague, unsupported by scientific evidence, and that provides no objective guidance to inspectors as to what should or should not be a violation.

 

Abolition Of The DQP Program Is Unlawful. Section V of the Comments discusses the proposal in the Proposed Rule to abolish the DQP Program. That proposal is unlawful, because it effectively eliminates the Industry’s role in administering the HPA. In enacting the HPA, Congress envisioned an enforcement program in which USDA would work hand-in-hand with the TWH Industry to prevent soring while preserving legitimate competition. In the Proposed Rule, USDA allocates management and oversight of the program solely to itself, primarily by forcing show managers to pay out of pocket to choose a USDA-approved veterinarian inspector or accept a free inspector that is hand-selected by USDA.

 

The USDA’s Economic Analysis Is Deficient And Fails To Consider The Devastating Effect Of The Proposed Rule On The Industry, Including Small Businesses. Section VI of the Comments explains that the economic analysis included in the Proposed Rule and required by law is incomplete and deficient. The economic analysis completely fails to take into account the fact that a blanket ban on action devices and pads effectively eliminates the entire Performance category of competition for TWHs, which will have a devastating effect on the TWH industry. That ban would have ripple effects that threaten the livelihoods of industry employees and the economies of local communities. USDA’s cursory economic analysis fails to contemplate any of these issues, despite the fact that the Association has been warning of them for years.

 

USDA Must Establish an Inspection Process that Comports with Due Process. Section VII of the Comments discusses due process concerns that have arisen out of the current inspection procedures used by USDA at shows and the lack of an adequate appeal mechanism. The due process problems with the existing system largely originate with the vague and subjective inspection process currently put in place by USDA. The TWHNCA recommends that USDA require any disqualification to be supported by documentary evidence, including photographs supporting the finding. In addition, the TWHNCA recommends that USDA replace the current inspection system with one based on objective measures, similar to what is done for other breeds subject to the HPA. Such measures could include a combination of (i) blood testing, (ii) urinalysis, (iii) thermography, (iv) radiology/x-rays, and (v) gas chromatography-mass spectrometry. Other HPA breeds use these methods to ensure the welfare of their horses in competition, and there is no reason to believe such methods would be ineffective when used in TWH shows.

 

CONCLUSION

 

The Association requested that the USDA withdraw this Proposed Rule and work with the Industry to develop an Independent Organization and objective, science based inspection protocols similar to what the USDA currently allows all other horse breeds subject to the HPA to utilize.




FINAL HOURS….POST NOW…Opposed to the new USDA rulemaking? Here is the link to participate in the comment period! CLICK HERE

CLICK HERE-COMMENT NOW ON HORSE PROTECTION RULE MAKING

You are submitting an official comment to Regulations.gov.
Comments are due 10/20/2023 at 11:59 pm EDT.

Thank you for taking the time to create a comment in againist the USDA over reach. Your input is important!

Once you have filled in the required fields by using the link… you can preview and/or submit your comment to the Agriculture Department for review. All comments are considered public and will be posted online once the Agriculture Department has reviewed them.

You can view alternative ways to comment or you may also comment via Regulations.gov at https://www.regulations.gov/commenton/APHIS-2022-0004-0001.

COMMENT NOW-CLICK BELOW

CLICK HERE-COMMENT NOW ON HORSE PROTECTION RULE MAKING

 

Here is a video on how to use the comment system…




Celebration seeks extension of comment period Tuesday, September 5, 2023

Celebration seeks extension of comment period
Tuesday, September 5, 2023

The Tennessee Walking Horse National Celebration sent a letter seeking a 60-day extension to the comment period on the USDA’s proposed rule published at 88 FR 56924. The letter, sent from Patrick F. Philbin, counsel for The Celebration, points out two major reasons the extension should be granted.

The first highlights the enormous impact the rule would have and how many horses would be affected by the elimination of pads and action devices. This rule would effectively eliminate the entire performance division of horses.

In addition, the letter points out that the USDA published the proposed rule seeking comment just days before the 85th Annual Celebration. The Celebration, and its SHOW HIO, has limited resources to devote to comment on the rule and those resources will be dedicated to The Celebration and the ensuing required reporting by USDA until mid-September. This timeline would exhaust half the comment period and only leave 30 days for The Celebration to comment.

The data collected by the SHOW HIO will be critical in the response and it will take time for that data over the last six years to be accumulated and analyzed to help support the comment from The Celebration. In addition, data from this year’s Celebration will also be critical as the rule eliminates all HIOs and changes the inspection process.

The USDA has not yet replied to The Celebration’s request seeking additional time. The original comment period will end on October 21, 2023 if no extension is granted.

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