98-1778. EIA; Handling Reactors at Livestock Markets  

  • [Federal Register Volume 63, Number 17 (Tuesday, January 27, 1998)]
    [Proposed Rules]
    [Pages 3849-3851]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 98-1778]
    
    
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    DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
    
    Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service
    
    9 CFR Part 71
    
    [Docket No. 97-099-1]
    
    
    EIA; Handling Reactors at Livestock Markets
    
    AGENCY: Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, USDA.
    
    ACTION: Proposed rule.
    
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    SUMMARY: We are proposing to amend the regulations pertaining to 
    livestock facilities under State or Federal veterinary supervision to 
    require that any livestock facility accepting equines classified as 
    reactors to equine infectious anemia must quarantine these animals at 
    all times at least 200 yards from all equines that are not reactors to 
    this disease. Currently, livestock facilities accepting reactors to 
    equine infectious anemia are required to quarantine the reactors that 
    will remain at the facility for longer than 24 hours at least 200 yards 
    away from all other animals. This proposed amendment would help to 
    prevent the interstate spread of equine infectious anemia, a 
    contagious, vector-borne disease affecting equines.
    
    
    [[Page 3850]]
    
    
    DATES: Consideration will be given only to comments received on or 
    before March 30, 1998.
    
    ADDRESSES: Please send an original and three copies of your comments to 
    Docket No. 97-099-1, Regulatory Analysis and Development, PPD, APHIS, 
    suite 3C03, 4700 River Road Unit 118, Riverdale, MD 20737-1238. Please 
    state that your comments refer to Docket No. 97-099-1. Comments 
    received may be inspected at USDA, room 1141, South Building, 14th 
    Street and Independence Avenue SW., Washington, DC, between 8 a.m. and 
    4:30 p.m., Monday through Friday, except holidays. Persons wishing to 
    inspect comments are requested to call ahead on (202) 690-2817 to 
    facilitate entry into the comment reading room.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Dr. James P. Davis, Senior Staff 
    Veterinarian, National Animal Health Programs Staff, VS, APHIS, 4700 
    River Road Unit 36, Riverdale, MD 20737-1231, (301) 734-5970; or E-
    mail: jdavis@aphis.usda.gov.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    Background
    
        The regulations in subchapter C, ``Interstate Transportation of 
    Animals (Including Poultry) and Animal Products,'' of chapter I, title 
    9, of the Code of Federal Regulations contain provisions designed by 
    the Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) to prevent the 
    dissemination of animal diseases in the United States. Part 71 of 
    subchapter C includes general provisions. Section 71.20 pertains to 
    APHIS approval of livestock facilities, which include stockyards, 
    livestock markets, buying stations, concentration points, or any other 
    premises under State or Federal veterinary supervision where livestock 
    are assembled. Section 71.20(a) includes an agreement that livestock 
    facilities must execute to obtain APHIS approval, and subparagraph (16) 
    of the agreement pertains to livestock facilities that accept horses. 
    (According to the definitions in Sec. 71.1, ``horses'' includes 
    ``horses, asses, mules, ponies, and zebras.'' Throughout this document, 
    the same definition applies.) According to Sec. 71.20(a)(16), approved 
    livestock facilities may elect either to accept or not accept horses 
    that are reactors to equine infectious anemia (EIA).
        EIA is a contagious, potentially fatal disease affecting horses 
    that is spread by infected blood coming into contact with the blood in 
    a healthy animal. Therefore, humans can spread EIA from horse to horse 
    through unsafe vaccination or blood-testing practices; naturally, the 
    disease is spread by insect vectors. Although, theoretically, EIA could 
    be spread by any type of blood-consuming insect, such as mosquitoes and 
    deer flies, the disease is generally spread by large horse flies. EIA 
    spreads when a blood-consuming insect is interrupted during a feeding 
    on an infected animal and then resumes feeding on an uninfected animal 
    while the infected blood is still on the insect's mouthparts. While 
    mosquitoes have finely structured mouthparts that directly penetrate 
    small blood vessels, the mouthparts of horse flies and deer flies 
    include scissorlike blades that cut and slash the horse's skin leaving 
    relatively large amounts of blood on the mouthparts. Research has shown 
    that deer flies and smaller species of horse flies are not as easily 
    disrupted from their bloodmeals on horses as are large horse flies. The 
    large flies cause painful bites that trigger a physiological response 
    from the horse. If disrupted by the horse while feeding, the horse fly 
    may then move to another horse to complete the bloodmeal.\1\
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        \1\ Information regarding research on EIA transmission may be 
    obtained by contacting Dr. Tim Cordes, Senior Staff Veterinarian, 
    Equine Programs, VS, APHIS, USDA, 4700 River Road Unit 36, 
    Riverdale, MD 20737-1231; (301) 734-3279; or e-mail: 
    tcordes@aphis.usda.gov.
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        Regulations pertaining to the interstate movement of animals 
    affected with EIA are located in 9 CFR part 75. According to these 
    regulations, EIA reactors may be moved interstate only for immediate 
    slaughter, to a diagnostic or research facility, to the animal's home 
    farm, or to an approved stockyard for sale for immediate slaughter. 
    Approximately 1,600 horses in the United States test positive for EIA 
    each year. Currently, 40 percent of these animals move through 
    livestock markets on their way to slaughter.
        Section 71.20(a)(16)(ii) currently specifies that approved 
    livestock facilities must place any EIA reactor in a quarantined pen at 
    least 200 yards from all non-EIA-reactor horses and other animals, 
    unless the EIA reactor will be moving out of the facility within 24 
    hours of arrival. The purpose of quarantining the EIA reactors is to 
    prevent EIA transmission: Because the types of flies that transmit EIA 
    generally remain in the immediate vicinity of the horses with which 
    they are associated, quarantining EIA reactors at least 200 yards away 
    from healthy horses is effective in preventing EIA spread. However, as 
    described above, the regulations currently allow an EIA reactor to be 
    mixed in with healthy horses if the EIA reactor will be at the 
    livestock facility for less than 24 hours. While in the past such 
    short-term mixing of healthy and infected horses was not believed to 
    contribute significantly to EIA spread, we now believe that allowing 
    healthy horses to come into close contact with EIA reactors for any 
    length of time could allow for infection of the healthy horses. 
    Therefore, to help prevent the interstate spread of EIA, we are 
    proposing to prohibit the mixing of healthy and infected horses at 
    approved livestock facilities for any period of time. Thus, we are 
    proposing to amend the quarantine requirement in Sec. 71.20(a)(16)(ii) 
    to remove the quarantine exception for EIA reactors that will be in the 
    approved livestock facility for less than 24 hours. EIA reactors would 
    need to be quarantined at least 200 yards away from non-EIA-reactor 
    horses at all times.
        Currently, Sec. 71.20(a)(16)(ii) also requires that EIA reactors be 
    quarantined at least 200 yards away from all other animals in the 
    approved livestock facility. This requirement exists because it was 
    formerly believed that insect vectors could spread EIA to healthy 
    horses as far as 200 yards away from reactors if other animals were 
    located between the reactors and the healthy horses. We previously 
    believed that a fly could move from a reactor to feed on a nonequine 
    animal or animals located nearby and then move on to a healthy horse, 
    infecting it. However, as stated previously, we now know that EIA 
    transmission by insect vector occurs only when an insect is feeding on 
    an infected horse, is interrupted during the feeding, and then moves on 
    to feed on a healthy horse while the infected blood is still on the 
    insect's mouthparts. Horse flies are not known to feed on nonequine 
    animals when horses are available because these flies prefer the 
    relatively supple skin of horses. Moreover, the likelihood that blood 
    from an infected horse would still be on the insect's mouthparts after 
    the insect had fed on another animal is slight. For these reasons, we 
    now believe that the possibility of disease transmission occurring 
    under these circumstances is extremely unlikely. We are proposing to 
    amend Sec. 71.20(a)(16)(ii) to remove the words ``or other animals.'' 
    We believe that, in the interest of preventing EIA spread, it is only 
    necessary to require EIA reactors to be quarantined at least 200 yards 
    away from all equines that are not reactors.
    
    Executive Order 12866 and Regulatory Flexibility Act
    
        This proposed rule has been reviewed under Executive Order 12866. 
    The rule has been determined to be not
    
    [[Page 3851]]
    
    significant for the purposes of Executive Order 12866 and, therefore, 
    has not been reviewed by the Office of Management and Budget.
        The regulations in 9 CFR part 71 require that any horses classified 
    as EIA reactors and accepted by a facility for sale are to be placed in 
    quarantined pens at least 200 yards from all non-EIA-reactor horses or 
    other animals, unless moving out of the facility within 24 hours of 
    arrival. The proposed rule would remove the ``less-than-24-hours'' 
    exemption: Quarantine would be required regardless of the length of 
    time between an EIA reactor's arrival and departure from a facility. 
    The proposed rule would also amend the regulations by requiring that 
    EIA reactors be quarantined at least 200 yards away from all equines 
    that are not reactors, rather than at least 200 yards away from all 
    other animals.
        Facilities that buy and sell horses are included in the Small 
    Business Administration's SIC (Standard Industrial Classification) 
    category ``Livestock Services, Except Veterinary.'' Firms in this 
    category with annual receipts of less than $5 million are considered 
    small entities. It is likely that most, if not all, of the 
    approximately 200 facilities that buy and sell horses are ``small'' 
    under this definition.
        Most facilities that buy and sell horses already have quarantine 
    pens, in accordance with current regulations. The estimated 20 percent 
    that do not have quarantine pens could build or modify existing pens 
    for quarantine use at a relatively minor cost: APHIS estimates that, at 
    most, construction of a quarantine pen would cost about $1,000.
        However, costs of quarantine pen construction are not attributable 
    to this proposed rule because quarantine, per se, is not a new 
    requirement. Only those facilities that accept EIA reactors and that 
    always move all EIA reactors within 24 hours of arrival would need to 
    construct or modify pens for quarantine purposes as a consequence of 
    this proposed rule. As no facility can always be certain of movement of 
    EIA reactors within 24 hours, no costs should be incurred strictly 
    because of this proposed rule. Moreover, by requiring all EIA reactors 
    at approved livestock facilities to be quarantined, the horse industry 
    in general would benefit from a further reduction in the risk of EIA 
    transmission.
        Under these circumstances, the Administrator of the Animal and 
    Plant Health Inspection Service has determined that this action would 
    not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small 
    entities.
    
    Executive Order 12372
    
        This program/activity is listed in the Catalog of Federal Domestic 
    Assistance under No. 10.025 and is subject to Executive Order 12372, 
    which requires intergovernmental consultation with State and local 
    officials. (See 7 CFR part 3015, subpart V.)
    
    Executive Order 12988
    
        This proposed rule has been reviewed under Executive Order 12988, 
    Civil Justice Reform. If this proposed rule is adopted: (1) All State 
    and local laws and regulations that are in conflict with this rule will 
    be preempted; (2) no retroactive effect will be given to this rule; and 
    (3) administrative proceedings will not be required before parties may 
    file suit in court challenging this rule.
    
    Paperwork Reduction Act
    
        This proposed rule contains no information collection or 
    recordkeeping requirements under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 
    (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.).
    
    List of Subjects in 9 CFR Part 71
    
        Animal diseases, Livestock, Poultry and poultry products, 
    Quarantine, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Transportation.
    
        Accordingly, 9 CFR part 71 is proposed to be amended as follows:
    
    PART 71--GENERAL PROVISIONS
    
        1. The authority citation for part 71 would continue to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 21 U.S.C. 111-113, 114a, 114a-1, 115-117, 120-126, 
    134b, and 134f; 7 CFR 2.22, 2.80, and 371.2(d).
    
    
    Sec. 71.20  [AMENDED]
    
        2. In Sec. 71.20, paragraph (a) would be amended in paragraph 
    (16)(ii) of the sample agreement by removing the words ``or other 
    animals, unless moving out of the facility within 24 hours of 
    arrival''.
    
        Done in Washington, DC, this 20th day of January 1998.
    Terry L. Medley,
    Administrator, Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service.
    [FR Doc. 98-1778 Filed 1-26-98; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 3410-34-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
01/27/1998
Department:
Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service
Entry Type:
Proposed Rule
Action:
Proposed rule.
Document Number:
98-1778
Dates:
Consideration will be given only to comments received on or before March 30, 1998.
Pages:
3849-3851 (3 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Docket No. 97-099-1
PDF File:
98-1778.pdf
CFR: (1)
9 CFR 71.20