|
<Back
| Home | Basics |
Departments | Get
Involved | Site Map | What's
New
Pennsylvania Raw Milk Update May 7, 2008
Trial of Mark Nolt
Mark Nolt appeared for his trial on Monday and pleaded Not Guilty
to four counts of selling milk without a permit. He will appeal the
verdict and plans to argue his
case on constitutional ground in an upcoming trial.
For the trial, the Pennsylvania Independent Farmers and Consumers Association
(PICFA) and local chapters of the Weston A. Price Foundation organized
a rally
attended by 100 supporters wearing raw milk tee shirts and carrying
placards and
signs. Farmers and WAPF consumers from NJ, NC, MD, VA and PA were there
to show their support-chapter leader Ruth Ann Foster drove all the way
from North Carolina!
A big thanks to WAPF PR wiz Kimberly Hartke who generated a huge amount
of media coverage, most of it quite favorable. WGAL Channel 8, Fox 43,
and CBS 21 were all there. Three other print journalists were there,
Philly Inquirer, The Sentinel and the Patriot News. The Inquirer article
went out on the McClatchey-Tribune News Wire and has shown up already
in Trading Markets a publication based out of Los Angeles. Dave Gumpert
the Complete Patient blogger was there. The Pittsburg Post Gazette did
a story that ran the day of the event. Kimberly did an interview on
public radio WITF, which airs at the top of each hour the day after
the rally, and will be made available to public radio stations around
the state. A print version and an audio clip is on their website in
the archives. Susquehanna Living is putting a brief and photo in their
next issue, and considering doing a longer feature story in their next
issue. World Net Daily, the largest internet news provider in the world
has done two articles, one before the event, the other reporting the
results.
Your Letters and Faxes
We have heard from many of you who reported that you have indeed sent
in your letters and faxes to Pennsylvania officials. If you have not
already done so,
please send in your letters and faxes before the end of the week. I
am including
the original email we sent out with background and contact information.
The fax
lists have been updated to include corrected fax numbers for several
lawmakers
(Kitchen, Haluska, Cohen and Myers).
Thank you all for your splendid efforts-we will keep you posted on
our progress!
Raw Milk Situation in Pennsylvania
Update and Action Alert
Dear Members,
Once generally supportive of raw milk, Pennsylvania authorities have
been making
life very difficult for raw milk farmers and consumers during the last
few weeks.
This email will provide you with details about what has been going on
and describe an action plan. As what happens in Pennsylvania affects
the raw milk situation throughout the country, we are sending it out
to all members. We ask that you PLEASE READ THIS ALERT CAREFULLY and
ALL join us in carrying out the actions proposed. (We apologize for
the length, but it is necessary to provide you with all the facts and
a careful explanation of what is going on.) Also, please forward this
alert to your own email groups.
Raid on Mark Nolt's Farm
"All truth passes through three stages," wrote Schopenhauer.
"First it is ignored,
then it is violently opposed and finally it is accepted as self evident."
Unfortunately the transition from the first to the second stage has
fallen on a
gentle Pennsylvania Mennonite raw milk farmer, Mark Nolt, described
by many as the "Rosa Parks of farmers' rights." On April 25,
Mark's farm was raided--for the
second time--and this time he was arrested, in connection with five
citations for
selling raw milk without a license. He was taken in handcuffs to a magistrate
in
Mount Holly Springs where he refused to make a plea to the criminal
charges against him. A trial has been scheduled for May 5.
The first raid occurred last August 10, when the Pennsylvania Department
of
Agriculture (PDA) seized over $25,000 worth of product, packaging equipment
and supplies. This occurred after a Commonwealth Court found Nolt in
contempt for violating an injunction prohibiting him from selling raw
milk and raw milk products without a permit.
In the second raid, the agents descended on the quiet farm, "like
Vikings,"
according to Mark, in six police cars and at least five unmarked cars,
presumably
belonging to PDA officials. The agents were personally led by Bill Chirdon,
Director
of PDA's Bureau of Food Safety and Laboratory Services. Mark tried asking
one
policeman what the state's authority was for being on the property but
the policeman kept cutting him off, seemingly trying to provoke a confrontation.
The police threatened to arrest anyone who attempted to set foot on
Nolt's property; even Nolt's father and brother who live on the same
lane were denied access.
Imagine the position of Mrs. Nolt, enduring the sight of her husband
carried away in the back seat of a police cruiser. The officers refused
to tell her where they were taking him. Then she and her ten children
had to stand by once again while the officers went through their cheese
shop and store, taking food meant to feed many families, including their
own. Fortunately, Mark was released after the hearing, and he returned
to the farm on foot rather than accept a ride in a police car.
In a supreme act of arrogance, Chirdon stole a book off Nolt's shelf-"All
I Ever
Wanted to Do is Illegal" by Joel Salatin. According to a PDA spokesman,
Chirdon will return the book at Mark's trial.
Mark let his permit drop several years ago because it did not allow
him to sell
value-added products such as butter and cream. Mark's position is that
he has a
constitutional right to enter into contractual agreements without a
permit, that is
to sell raw milk and raw milk products directly to customers.
Mark told David Gumpert that the product PDA confiscated (mostly cheese)
was worth over $30,000. They also took supplies and equipment. PDA agents
were particularly malicious, taking valves, parts to a cream separator
and pieces of cheese-making equipment so his equipment could no longer
be used. The warrant PDA received from the magistrate states that PDA
could search and seize "any equipment, containers or supplies used
to bottle or package for sale milk and products manufactured from milk."
Obviously cream separator parts and cheese-making equipment have nothing
to do with bottling or packaging products, thus making PDA guilty of
an illegal seizure.
At a time when millions of people all over the world are starving,
PDA has no qualms about throwing away perfectly good and nutritious
food-the cheese was carried away in an unrefrigerated truck. According
to the PDA website highlighting PDA's Blueprint for Hunger, "nearly
1.2 million Pennsylvanians, almost 10% of our population, live in households
at risk for hunger and about 335,000, almost 3% of all households, have
someone who has experienced hunger." The dumping of Mark Nolt's
cheese in the face of widespread hunger in the state of Pennsylvania
can only be described as obscene.
Even the legality of the product seizure can be called into question.
According to
PDA's Guidance Document (3/20/08, "Permits Allowing the Sale of
Raw Milk for Human Consumption"), the department can seize raw
milk, "Whenever, in the opinion of the Secretary of the Department,
a given supply of raw milk or illegally produced raw milk products is
considered unsafe or a menace to public health, the secretary may seize,
condemn, denature, or destroy the milk or milk products, without compensation
to the owner of the milk or milk products." In the affidavit submitted
in his application for a search warrant against Nolt, Chirdon made no
allegation that the milk was unsafe. No one from PDA has provided evidence
that Nolt's milk was a danger to the public. NO ILLNESSES HAVE BEEN
REPORTED from the consumption of Mark Nolt's cheese.
In an appearance April 30 before a magistrate at the Newville Magisterial
District
Court, Mark Nolt was informed by the judge that he was facing two additional
charges for selling raw milk without a permit. A trial has been scheduled
for Monday, June 3 in Newville.
Nolt refused to enter a plea to the charges claiming he was in court
under duress
and that he was not subject to the court's jurisdiction. The court entered
a plea
of "not guilty" on his behalf.
Nolt's May 5 trial at the Mount Holly Springs Magisterial District
Court will take
place at 9:30 a.m. He is being tried in that case for five citations
of selling raw
milk without a permit. A rally in support of Nolt will be held outside
the
courthouse that morning.
Trial for Glen Wise
Glen Wise has a dairy in Elizabethtown, Pennsylvania. He is a member
of CARE
(Communities Alliance for Responsible Eco-Farming), a private milk club
that sells
only to members. According to the citations he has received, he is accused
of
selling "milk, milk products or manufactured dairy products"
on three separate
occasions.
Apparently, PDA found out that Glen was selling raw milk without a
permit at a
farmers' market last fall. Chirdon told him at that time that he needed
to fill out
an application for a permit, but Glen never did. (More about Chirdon
below.) He
heard nothing more from PDA until April 2 when he received the three
citations all
at once. All the citations against him were for selling at his farm
store.
Harassment of Permitted Raw Milk Farmers
While PDA insists that all raw milk farmers must have permits, the
agency is making it very difficult for those farmers who already have
permits or wish to obtain them. Its scheme is to use inappropriate testing
techniques that give false positives, then suspend permits and issue
inflammatory press releases, in what appears to be an effort to stem
the ever growing number of raw milk permits-from just a few dozen to
over 100 in the last two years. We also have reports that PDA is now
making it very difficult for farmers to obtain new raw milk permits.
The attitude is distinctly hostile, as the following cases will demonstrate.
As one farmer put it, "The raw milk permit is just a license to
be harassed." It is important to emphasize that in spite of PDA's
reports of pathogens, NO ILLNESSES HAVE BEEN REPORTED in the cases cited
below.
1.The farm of Clark and Elaine Duncan tested positive for Listeria
Monocytogenes on April 4 and PDA ran a press release naming the farm
on April 7. The milk sample had been taken on March 31. The Duncans
sent a sample to a private lab the week following their suspension and
that came back positive as well. They have not sent any samples for
testing since. The PDA Guidance Document on raw milk states that the
permit holder must refrain from selling raw milk until two consecutive
tests taken at least one day apart show that the milk is pathogen free
and the department approves of the tests that were taken. It is normally
the permit holder's responsibility to send the samples to a state-approved
lab for testing. The Duncans did not receive the paperwork from PDA
on the test results until several weeks after the department issued
the press release about the farm's positive listeria test.
2. On April 4, PDA told Arnold and Esther Diller of Piney Ridge Farm
in Western
Pennsylvania that their raw milk sales were being suspended because
their milk
tested positive for listeria. Arnold Diller subsequently sent out a
sample to an
independent lab, which came back negative (the same thing happened last
year). As a condition for resuming sales on their farm, their inspector
gave them a list of
things to be done for reinspection. After repeatedly being unable to
clean a piece
of milking equipment to the satisfaction of the inspector, the Dillers
turned in
their license to PDA. Esther Diller said that she wished they had never
obtained
the license.
Not long after their sales were suspended, the Dillers were told by
a state employee from Harrisburg that if they voluntarily gave up their
raw milk license, their problems with the state would be all cleared
up. There is a State Representative who got raw milk from the Dillers.
The night before PDA issued the press release about the Dillers' positive
test for listeria, PDA faxed a copy of the press release to that representative.
It seemed like an attempt to discourage the representative from remaining
a customer. The Dillers also had some of their customers picking up
milk at a local health food store. Shortly before the positive listeria
tests in both 2007 and 2008, a Pennsylvania food and safety inspector
witnessed the raw milk in a walk-in cooler and voiced disapproval even
though there is no law prohibiting what was being done. We have no proof
that this was related to the positive listeria test, but it does seem
that PDA wanted the Dillers out of the raw milk business. Many people
who depended on them for raw milk are now without a supplier. (There
are very few permitted raw milk farmers in Western Pennsylvania.)
3. On Monday, April 21 a preliminary test for permit holder Norman Sauder
came up positive for salmonella. The inspector had told him that even
though he was not due for his next test until December, he was being
asked to move it up to April. Norman sent a sample to the US Food &
Dairy lab and it also came back positive for salmonella. On April 28,
PDA issued a press release stating that anyone who purchased milk from
Sauder after March 31 should discard it immediately. To this date Sauder
has still not been directly informed by PDA whether the final test results
for salmonella were positive.
He said his coliform counts all winter had been slightly elevated--sometimes
150.
After he asked the inspector whether it was possible for a sample to
be contaminated between his farm and the lab, his coliform count came
back at 10 for the next four inspections. Sauder believes that sampling
tools or lab equipment could be playing a role in the slightly elevated
counts. He suspects that he is not getting accurate tests.
4. The Amos B. King Dairy in Blain sells most of its milk to Dairy
Farmers of
America for processing but distributes about 30 gallons of raw milk
a week to his
own customers. Amos' milk was tested on April 14 and the results came
back positive for campylobacter on Friday April 18. After cleaning his
equipment, Amos asked for a reinspection to be scheduled for April 21
or 22. Even though PDA told him that shouldn't be a problem, the inspector
did not arrive until April 28. Meanwhile, the news of his positive test
for campylobacter hit the press. Amos estimates he will not be cleared
to resume raw milk sales before May 10 at the earliest.
5. The most egregious example of biased PDA policy involves the Beulah
Land Jersey Farm, owned by Dennis and Joanne Wenger. The Wengers sell
milk for pasteurization to Dairylea and also have a raw milk permit.
On April 8, both US Dairy (a state-approved independent lab) and PDA
took samples from the bulk tank. The next day, the milk hauler for Dairylea
picked up milk. On April 11, PDA informed the Wengers that their test
was "presumptive positive" for listeria and requested they
discontinue selling raw milk. Additionally, the PDA test results showed
a somatic cell count (SCC) of over one million. On April 14, the PDA
called to say that the test had confirmed "positive" for listeria
and that they would have to discontinue raw milk sales. By this time
the Wengers had received the results from both US Dairy and Dairylea
showing SCC under 200,000. The Wengers faxed copies of these test results
to PDA.
On April 15, 16 and 17 MicroBac (another state-approved independent
lab) came to the farm to take samples from the bulk tank for listeria
testing. On April 16, Dennis called Senators Mike Brubaker and Mike
Folmer to inform them about the large discrepancy in somatic cell counts
between PDA's test results and those of US Dairy and Dairylea. Later
that day, Dennis received a call from Bill Chirdon of PDA. After some
discussion, Chirdon offered to retest the Beulah Land Jersey Farm milk.
The next day, on April 17, the state came to take samples (the SCC test
results for this sample were considerably lower than the first PDA test
but still much higher than those obtained by the other two labs).
On Saturday, April 19, the Wengers received the test results from the
first sample taken by MicroBac-negative for listeria. On the following
Monday, the state lab made a highly unusual call to MicroBac to find
out the results of the Wenger's samples. MicroBac refused to release
the information without the Wenger's consent. The state then called
the Wengers to inform them that their sample was negative. This was
followed by a call from MicroBac saying that the second and third samples
had also tested negative. PDA reinstated the Wenger's raw milk permit
on April 22.
This incident creates the strong suspicion that PDA is not being honest
about their test results, or that their testing techniques are not accurate
and are giving false positives. In fact, this incident and the others
above create a strong suspicion that the PDA is not taking milk samples
properly and may even be tampering with them. Dennis has demanded an
apology from PDA for its actions.
About PDA'S Testing Procedures
PDA uses the same testing methods for raw and pasteurized milk. They
get preliminary results using the VIDAS 30 rapid testing system. If
the preliminary results are positive, such as for listeria, the agency
then uses a culturing technique intended to suppress the growth of anything
in the culture other than listeria. This is a fair test if the milk
is pasteurized because pasteurized milk is a dead food with no good
bacteria to out-compete pathogens. Australian Microbiologist Ron Hull,
PhD, has carried out tests showing that in raw milk, the threat of listeria
goes away with time because good bacteria gradually increase and eventually
render listeria harmless. Raw milk is not the same product as pasteurized
milk; so it is neither fair nor good science to use the same testing
protocol for raw and pasteurized milk.
Comparing raw milk to pasteurized milk is comparing a fresh product
with a cooked product. For this reason there should be zero tolerance
for pasteurized milk but not for raw milk, because raw milk contains
good bacteria present to overwhelm any listeria present. What's needed
are studies to quantify how high the infectious dose would have to be
before it would cause illness in humans that consume the product. USDA
publishes a universal infectious dose for a particular pathogen even
though they acknowledge that it is unlikely to be the same in all foods.
The agency has never conducted studies to determine what the infectious
dose for pathogens would be in fresh raw milk intended for human consumption.
The current zero tolerance standard for listeria in raw milk is not
appropriate
because, as the experience in Pennsylvania has shown, people are consuming
raw milk that has tested positive for listeria and are not getting sick.
As the press releases in these cases admit, "NO ILLNESSES HAVE
BEEN REPORTED . . . ." The standard is causing economic hardship
for raw milk producers and supply
interruptions for consumers. The fact that PDA did not until recently
pull raw milk
when the first test was positive shows a fundamental acceptance of this
concept-that the tolerance levels for listeria and other pathogens in
raw milk is not zero.
Furthermore, state regulators are operating under the mistaken belief
that milk
right out of the teat is sterile so that all bacteria found in milk
comes from
environmental contamination. We now know that raw milk-in humans as
well as
animals-contains bacteria from the milk ducts and surfaces of the teat,
so these
bacteria are a natural and beneficial component of the milk and not
a result of
contamination. (The exception is milk from a cow with mastitis, which
is an
infection in the udder itself.) The regulators' goal of getting rid
of all bacteria
is hazardous to human health because bacteria aids in digestion and
immunity; and good bacteria are needed to protect against pathogenic
bacteria.
Current research has produced enough evidence that the Pennsylvania
Legislature should be convinced that raw milk and pasteurized milk are
two different products requiring different testing and safety standards
for each. The two should not be treated the same in terms of regulatory
policy.
The Bill Chirdon Era
The hostile attitude against raw milk farmers began when Bill Chirdon
took over as Director of PDA's Bureau of Food Safety and Laboratory
Services in the fall of 2006. Chirdon formerly worked five years as
a plant manager for Dean Foods, one of the nation's largest industrial
dairy companies, and 20 years as a plant manager for Hershey. Obviously
he is totally unqualified to be in charge of raw milk regulation. With
his industry background, he has absolutely no understanding of raw milk
nor sympathy for the position of raw milk farmers and consumers.
Before Chirdon took over, PDA would not suspend a farm's sales of raw
milk for
pathogens until there had been two positive tests. Now PDA is suspending
sales and issuing harmful press releases after one positive test.
Before Chirdon, PDA viewed labor contracts between raw milk licensees
and consumers as legal. Under the labor contracts, the farmer would
process the raw milk the consumer had purchased into other dairy products
such as cream, butter, yogurt or kefir. Under Chirdon, PDA considers
the labor contracts illegal.
PDA used to test raw milk licensees once a year for pathogens. Now
it tests twice.
Since Chirdon, it has become standard practice for undercover PDA employees
to buy from unlicensed dairy producers in an effort to trap farmers
into getting cited for selling raw milk without a permit. PDA employees
made at least eight purchases from Mark Nolt and another three from
Glen Wise. (It is important to remind CARE farmers not to sell to any
customers unless they show their membership cards; and it is noteworthy
that PDA has not tried to stop private milk club arrangements such as
CARE in over a year now.)
During Chirdon's tenure, PDA has issued press releases when farms tested
positive for pathogens even though in almost all cases NO ILLNESSES
HAVE BEEN REPORTED. (PDA asserts that some people got sick consuming
milk from one dairy in 2007, although the dairy does not know of any
customers that got sick.)
In March of this year Fisher's Dairy in Porterville tested positive
for salmonella.
Because of that positive test at that one farm, Chirdon required that
all licensed
dairies in the state send in raw milk samples. Since the statewide testing
began,
five other farms have had their raw milk sales suspended (three for
listeria, one
for campylobacter and one for salmonella),
Farmers seeking new raw milk permits are now reporting that the PDA
is using
pathogen testing to hinder and revoke raw milk permits. Of interest
is the fact that there is not one reference to pathogen testing in the
Milk Sanitation Law or the Pennsylvania Code, which PDA acknowledges
supersedes their Raw Milk Permit Guidelines. PDA recently and arbitrarily
changed the guidelines, requiring more pathogen tests and making it
more difficult to obtain a permit. The authority of PDA to dictate the
guidelines needs to be challenged.
Action to Take- Pennsylvania Residents
We can use this situation to accomplish a huge victory for raw milk
if we ALL work together in creating a huge public outcry!
We are asking all Pennsylvania residents concerned about raw milk and
farm freedom to set aside one quiet hour on Saturday May 3. Use this
hour to compose a letter that you will send by regular mail to your
state senator, state representative, the heads of the senate and house
agriculture committees, Mr. Dennis Wolff, Secretary of Agriculture,
and Governor Edward Rendell. A letter sent by regular mail carries much
more clout than an email or fax, and now is the time to make our voices
heard.
We then ask that you mail your six letters on Monday morning, May 5.
(Optionally, you may also send your letters to local media.) We want
our elected officials to receive an avalanche of mail on this subject
on Raw Milk D-Day, May 6.
In your own words, write a brief testimonial about how raw milk has
benefitted you and your family and then request the following:
1. The resignation of Bill Chirdon and his replacement with someone
who is
knowledgeable about the science and health benefits of raw milk. We
must send a strong message to the other states that raw milk consumers
will not tolerate
department of agriculture hostility and bias against raw milk.
2. That PDA immediately return to their pre-Chirdon testing and permitting
policies and cease the strong-arm tactics against Pennsylvania raw milk
farmers.
3. That the Pennsylvania legislature hold hearings and immediately
pass legislation allowing an exemption from licensing and regulation
for farmers selling raw milk and raw milk products direct to consumers,
whether it be at the farm, through delivery or at farmers' markets.
(Farmers selling raw milk through stores could be subject to the pre-Chirdon
testing and permitting policies.)
4. That PDA drop all charges against Mark Nolt and Glenn Wise or suspend
charges pending hearings before the legislature regarding an exemption
from licensing and regulation for raw milk producers selling direct
to consumers.
5. That PDA immediately return all supplies and equipment seized from
Mark Nolt's
farm on April 25 (much of the equipment is old so the parts PDA took
are not
replaceable) and compensate him for the theft of his cheese.
For names and addresses of your state senators and representatives,
go to
http://www.legis.state.pa.us/index.cfm,
where you can search your elected officials by zip code and county.
Ag & Rural Affairs - Senate Chairman
Hon. Michael W. Brubaker
Chairman, Ag & Rural Affairs
Senate Box 203036
Harrisburg, PA 17120-3036
Ag & Rural Affairs - House Chairman
Hon. Michael K. Hanna
Chairman, Ag & Rural Affairs
302 Main Capitol Building
PO Box 202076
Harrisburg, PA 17120-2076
Mr. Dennis C. Wolff
Secretary, Department of Agriculture
2301 N. Cameron St.
Harrisburg, PA 17110
Governor Edward G. Rendell
225 Main Capitol Building
Harrisburg, PA 17120
Action to Take-- Non-Pennsylvania Residents
Please also spend one quiet hour on Saturday May 5 composing your
letter along the guidelines given above. On May 6, Raw Milk D-Day, email
or fax your letter to the following:
Ag & Rural Affairs - Senate Chairman
Hon. Michael W. Brubaker
Chairman, Ag & Rural Affairs
mbrubaker@pasen.gov
(717) 787-4420
FAX: (717) 783-3156
Ag & Rural Affairs - House Chairman
Hon. Michael K. Hanna
Chairman, Ag & Rural Affairs
mhanna@pahouse.net
(717)772-2283
FAX: (717) 787-4137
Governor Edward G. Rendell
Phone: (717) 787-2500
Fax: (717) 772-8284
http://sites.state.pa.us/PA_Exec/Governor/govmail.html
Secretary Dennis Wolff
Phone: (717) 772-2853
Fax: (717) 705-8402
DWOLFF@STATE.PA.US
Extra Credit for Residents and Non-Residents
of Pennsylvania
Fax and email your letter to all the members of the Agriculture and
Rural Affairs
committees
SENATE COMMITTEE
Chairman, Hon. Michael Brubaker mbrubaker@pasen.gov (717) 787-4420 FAX:(717)
783-3156
Michael Waugh mwaugh@pasen.gov (717) 787-3817 FAX: (717) 783-1900
Michael O'Pake opake@pasenate.com((717) 787-8925 FAX: (717) 772-0578
Joseph Scarnati jscarnati@pasen.gov (717) 787-7084 FAX: (717) 772-2755
Michael Eichelberger jeichelberger@pasen.gov(717) 787-5490 FAX: (717)783-5192
Mike Folmer mfolmer@pasen.gov 717) 787-5708 FAX: (717) 787-3455
Roger Madigan rmadigan@pasen.gov (717) 787-3280 FAX: (717) 772-0575
Terry Punt tpunt@pasen.gov (717) 787-4651 FAX: (717) 772-2753
Shirley Kitchen skitchen@pasen.gov (717) 787-6735 FAX: (717) 772-0581
Sean Logan slogan@pasen.gov (717) 787-5580 FAX: (717) 772-3588
John Wozniak wozniak@pasenate.com (717) 787-5400 FAX: (717) 772-0573
HOUSE COMMITTEE
Honorable Michael Hanna, Chairman mhanna@pahouse.net (717)772-2283 FAX:
(717) 787-4137
Gary Haluska ghaluska@pahouse.net (717) 787-3532 FAX: (717)783-7548
Mike Carroll mcarroll@pahouse.net (717) 787-3589 FAX: (717) 780-4763
Mark Cohen mcohen@pahouse.net (717) 787-4117 FAX: (717) 787-6650
H. Scott Conklin sconklin@pahouse.net (717) 787-9473 FAX: (717) 780-4764
Peter Daley pdaley@pahouse.net (717) 783-9333 FAX: (717) 783-7558
Richard Grucela rgrucela@pahouse.net (717) 705-1878 FAX: (717) 783-3180
Harold James hjames@pahouse.net (717) 787-9477 FAX: (717) 787-7517
Babette Josephs bjosephs@pahouse.net (717) 787-8529 FAX: (717) 787-5066
Tim Mahoney tmahoney@pahouse.net (717) 772-2174 FAX: (717) 780-4786
John Myers jmyers@pahouse.net (717) 787-3181 FAX: (717) 772-4038
Frank Louis Oliver foliver@pahouse.net, arucker@pahouse.net (717) 787-3480
FAX: (717) 783-0684
Timothy J. Solobay tsolobay@pahouse.net (717) 787-1188 FAX: (717) 705-1887
Tom Yewcic tyewcic@pahouse.net (717) 783-0248 FAX: (717) 787-4922
Rosita C. Youngblood ryoungbl@pahouse.net (717) 787-7727 FAX: (717)
772-1313
Art Hershey ahershey@pahousegop.com (717) 783-6435 FAX: (717) 705-1868
Bob Bastian bbastian@pahousegop.com (717) 783-8756 FAX: (717) 783-3899
Mike Fleck mfleck@pahousegop.com (717) 787-3335 FAX: (717) 260-6504
Karen Boback kboback@pahousegop.com (717) 787-1117 FAX: (717) 705-1889
Michele Brooks mbrooks@pahousegop.com (717) 783-5008 FAX: (717) 705-1948
Jim Cox jcox@pahousegop.com (717) 772-2435 FAX: (717) 260-6516
Gordon Denlinger gdenling@pahousegop.com (717) 787-3531 FAX: (717) 705-1951
David S. Hickernell dhickern@pahousegop.com (717) 783-2076 FAX: (717)
705-1946
Rob Kauffman rkauffma@pahousegop.com (717) 705-2004 FAX: (717) 705-1951
Mark Keller mkeller@pahousegop.com (717) 783-1593 FAX: (717) 705-7012
David Millard dmillard@pahousegop.com (717) 783-1102 FAX: (717) 772-0094
Dan Moul dmoul@pahousegop.com (717) 783-5217 FAX: Fax: (717) 334-8426
Tina Pickett tpickett@pahousegop.com (717) 783-8238 FAX: (717) 705-1949
Other Events--We Need You There!
May 5: Hearing and Rally for Mark Nolt
9:30 am
229 Mill Street
Mount Holly, Pennsylvania 17065
May 6: Trial of Glen Wise
Magisterial District Court
920 South Spruce Street
Elizabethtown, Pennsylvania
WRITE A LETTER AND WRITE A CHECK!
To support the Nolts in this time of hardship, you may send donations
directly to
Mark and Maryann Nolt
P.O. Box 136
Blain, Pennsylvania 17006
The Farm-to-Consumer Foundation provides compassionate relief funds
to farmers who have endured a farm raid or other urgent financial hardship
related to their direct-to-consumer sales. Donations to the Farm-to-Consumer
Foundation are tax-deductible to the full extent of the law.
ONLINE: http://www.ptfassociates.com/secure/ftcldf/donation_form_compassion.asp
BY PHONE: 703-208-FARM (3276) (10 a.m. - 6:00 p.m. EST)
BY MAIL: Check payable to FTCF - Compassionate Relief Fund, 8116
Arlington Blvd., #263, Falls Church, VA 22042.
PLEASE JOIN ME!
I will be composing my own letters on Saturday, May 5. Please join me
in this
sacred act of communication, support and activism.
Sincerely,
Sally Fallon, President
The Weston A. Price Foundation
<Back
| Home | Tour
| Calendar | Contact
Us | Funding | Join
Now
|