Friday, February 22, 2013

New federal requirements for moving horses across state lines; Maryland working on mid-Atlantic Alternative

Via the Equiery:


Posted by EditorFebruary 5, 2013
Beginning March 11, 2013, traveling across state lines with horses will become more involved.  Below is an explanatory article courtesy of the American Horse Council. Recognizing that Marylanders travel on a regular basis across state lines in the mid-Atlantic area, Maryland State Veterinarian Guy Hohenhaus, with the guidance of the Maryland Equine Health Advisory Committee (chaired by Dr. John Lee, who serves on the Maryland Horse Industry Board) is working on a more practical option for Maryland residence. This involves, of course, coordinating with the other mid-Atlantic States. Please send any questions or concerns to editor@equiery.com, and The Equiery will do its best to provide the answers.

USDA Adopts Animal Disease Traceability Program
The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) has instituted its Animal Disease Traceability Program (ADTP) to improve its ability to trace livestock, including horses, in the event of a disease outbreak.  The new system applies to all livestock moving interstate.
  
Under the new federal regulations, horses moving interstate must be identified and accompanied by an Interstate Certificate of Veterinary Inspection (ICVI).  The new system is built on methods of identification and movement documentation that are already employed in the horse industry, e.g., written descriptions, digital photographs, brands, tattoos, electronic identification methods, and interstate certificates of veterinary inspection.  The person or entity responsible for moving the horse interstate must ensure that it has an ICVI or other document required by the new rule.  

The ADTP will be administered by the states with federal support.
Background
The horse industry has been dramatically affected by serious disease outbreaks in the last ten years, which have halted or restricted the movement of horses and the commerce surrounding the horses.  The new program is intended to help the Department, state authorities and the horse industry better deal with such disease outbreaks and to minimize disease effects on horses and economic effects on owners and the industry.  

This new rule is based on the previous National Animal Identification System (NAIS), which was the original voluntary system proposed by USDA to deal with disease outbreaks and traceability.  Since the prior rule was voluntary and generated significant concerns over complexity, confidentiality, liability, cost and privacy, it was not supported and was rethought.  USDA reconsidered its approach and decided that rather than attempting to identify every animal, every premise, and every movement to achieve traceability within 48 hours of a disease outbreak, it would develop a more limited and simpler system.  The ADTP just adopted is the result.  The new system does not require the registration of premises housing livestock or the specific reporting of individual movements of horses.
Effective Date
The new rules will be effective March 11, 2013.  We expect that there will be a transition period during which USDA has suggested it will not enforce the new rule.  This is to give livestock owners time to understand the rules and make any changes necessary to comply.  We don’t know how long that period might be.
Specific Requirements for Horse Owners


Under the new regulations, horses moving interstate must be (1) identified prior to movement and (2) accompanied by an Interstate Certificate of Veterinary Inspection (ICVI) or other state-approved document.  

All states now require an ICVI to accompany any horse entering their state.  This should make for a smooth transition to the new traceability rule since most horse owners moving their horses interstate for breeding, racing, showing, recreation, etc. should already be in compliance with the provisions in the new rule.
1) Identification of Horses.
Horses that are required to be officially identified under the new rules may be identified by one of the following methods:
A description sufficient to identify the individual horse including, but not limited to, name, age, breed, color, gender, distinctive markings, and unique and permanent forms of identification, such as brands, tattoos, scars, cowlicks, blemishes, or biometric measurements).  In the event that the identity of the horse is in question at the receiving destination, the state animal health official in the state of destination or APHIS representative may determine if the description provided is sufficient; or
Electronic identification (Animal Identification Number) that complies with ISO 11784/11785; or
Non-ISO electronic identification injected into the horse on or before March 11, 2014; or
Digital photographs sufficient to identify the individual horse; or
A USDA backtag for horses being transported to slaughter as required by the Commercial Transport of Horses to Slaughter regulations.
Animal Identification Numbers and microchips are an option, but not a requirement for horses.
2) ICVI Requirements
Under the new rules, horses moved interstate must be accompanied by an ICVI or other document acceptable to the states involved.  The person or entity responsible for moving the horse interstate must ensure it has an ICVI or other document.  

The APHIS representative, state representative or accredited veterinarian issuing the ICVI or other document must forward a copy to the state health official in the state of origin within seven days of issuing the document.  The state representative in the state of origin must forward a copy to the state representative in the state of destination within seven days of receiving it.  In the event of a disease outbreak, these documents will be used to trace horses that are or have been at the site of the outbreak and horses that have come into contact with them.

The new regulations give states the discretion to approve other methods of movement documentation, which may include an EIA test chart, when agreed upon by the animal health officials in the states involved in the interstate movement.

While not specifically referenced, movement documents could also include an event passport.  USDA has maintained options in the final rule to support the use of other movement documentation, for example an owner-shipper statement or brand certificate, if agreed to by the state animal health officials involved.  


Retention of Records
Currently, states bear the responsibility for the collection, maintenance, and retrieval of data on interstate livestock movements.  These responsibilities will be maintained under the new rules.  The animal health official or accredited veterinarian issuing or receiving an ICVI or other document must keep a copy for five years to ensure horses can be identified and traced if a disease manifests itself at or after an event.
Exclusions


There are exclusions to the new requirements for the following horses:
Horses used as a mode of transportation (horseback, horse and buggy) for travel to another location that return directly to the original location.
Horses moved from a farm or stable for veterinary treatment that are returned to the same location without change in ownership.
Horses moved directly from a location in one state through another state to a second location in the original state.
Horses moved between shipping and receiving states with another form of identification or documentation other than an ICVI, e.g., a horse infectious anemia test chart, as agreed to by the shipping and receiving states or tribes involved in the movement.
You can download a PDF of the final rule here.
NOTE:  All horse owners or anyone moving horses interstate or involved in that process should review the new requirements to ensure they are complying with them.

If you have any questions, please call the AHC.
Here is additional comment from MD State Veterinarian, Dr. Guy Hohenhaus:

With respect to the interstate certificate of veterinary inspection (ICVI)
The ICVI has always been a formal requirement for horses entering from out of State. The longstanding agency policy has been to allow horses from neighboring states to enter Maryland for exhibition and other short term purposes with current documentation of negative equine infectious anemia (EIA) testing only in lieu of the ICVI.
Because the present focus of the Federal Animal Disease Traceability (adt) rule is on cattle movements, we intend to continue to allow entry of horses from neighboring states for short term purposes with the negative EIA document only. At some point in the future, it is likely that an ICVI or equivalent document , to include the Go Pass or similar will be needed for entry into Maryland.
With respect to the Go Pass question.
We have been in numerous discussions with states using Go Pass or contemplating similar systems. We agree in principle with the concept of the longer term travel document, but like many other states, cannot agree on a single set of interstate standards. If you look at the fine print in Go Pass, there are several specific additional requirements (ie testing intervals) that vary somewhat state to state. Given that the longer term ICVI in the form of a Go-Pass or similar passport style document greatly reduces the role of the inspecting veterinarian, we believe there needs to be some additional appropriate biosecurity related activities performed by those involved in transporting the animal to compensate for the additional risk associated with the much longer inspection interval of the passport.
The Maryland Department of Agriculture is committed to doing all we can to facilitate efficient and effective movements of animals in and out of the State. Where restrictions are necessary and appropriate, they should be based on a reasonable assessment of risk and should be proportional to that risk. We are participating in extensive discussions with neighboring states and nationally in an attempt to most rationally and effectively implement activities in our purview that are necessary under the federal adt rule.


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