Feed Lot

NOV 2015

Feedlots and cow/calf operations in the beef industry who feed 500 or more has annually on grains and concentrates; maintain 500 or more beef cows; backgrounder, stocker/grower, preconditioner; veterinarian, nutritionist, consultant

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4 FEED•LOT  November 2015 Many of you recall how the live- stock industry went to battle earli- er this year after hearing lean meat was going to be removed from what defined a healthy diet in the 2015 Dietary Guidelines. Following that effort, it appeared much was for not when the Dietary Guidelines Advisory Committee re- leased their report, sans meat and encouraging sustainability as part of the conversation. Then about a month ago, infor- mation was released that there would be a Congressional hearing on the 2015 Dietary Guidelines. Al- though this didn't get near the press attention of the debate earlier in the year, a few interesting items have surfaced. First, the day before the hearing, Secretaries Vilsak and Bur- well announced the guidelines will not discuss sustainability. The sec- retaries said they will use other av- enues to discuss sustainability. Second, the secretaries testified that the Dietary Guidelines Commit- tee's report is only one part of what is considered for the final guide- lines. They are also considering in- put from the public and federal agencies. Does that mean the sec- retaries are taking a stronger look at some of the meatless arguments? Possibly so. On the USDA Blog, the secretaries wrote: This year, we will release the 2015 edition, and though the guidelines have yet to be finalized, we know they will be similar in many key respects to those of past years. Fruits and veg- etables, low-fat dairy, whole grains and lean m e a t s and other proteins, and limit- ed amounts of saturated fats, added s u g a r s a n d s o d i u m r e - m a i n t h e b u i l d i n g b l o c k s o f a healthy lifestyle. Did you see those two key words? Lean meats… They were missing in the committee's report. So what does that mean? We don't know for sure until the secretaries release the final guidelines. But there is room for optimism. Regardless what the final guide- lines say, I suspect many will con- tinue with their own version of a healthy diet. What defines a healthy diet is largely different from one person to another. My definition includes lean beef and lower fats. Unfortunately, the offi- cial guidelines will have a large bearing on federal nutrition policy. And we'll have to wait a while longer to see what direction this debate takes… FL EDITOR'S DESK Is the glass half full? B Y JILL J. DUNKEL

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