S*1013 Session 112 (1997-1998)
S*1013(Rat #0421, Act #0420 of 1998) General Bill, By Lander
Similar(H 3901)
A BILL TO AMEND TITLE 46, CODE OF LAWS OF SOUTH CAROLINA, 1976, BY ADDING
CHAPTER 50 SO AS TO ENACT THE SOUTHERN INTERSTATE DAIRY COMPACT ACT OF 1998,
TO PROVIDE THAT THE GOVERNOR MAY EXECUTE AN INTERSTATE DAIRY COMPACT WITH THE
DESIGNATED COMPACT STATES, TO PROVIDE WHEN THE COMPACT BECOMES OPERATIVE AND
EFFECTIVE, IT IS THE POLICY OF THIS STATE TO PERFORM AND CARRY OUT THE
PROVISIONS OF THE COMPACT, TO PROVIDE THAT THE COMMISSIONER OF AGRICULTURE IS
THE COMPACT ADMINISTRATOR FOR THIS STATE, TO PROVIDE FOR THE STATE'S
DELEGATION TO THE SOUTHERN INTERSTATE DAIRY COMPACT COMMISSION, AND FOR
MEMBERSHIP, APPOINTMENTS, TERMS, AND FILLING OF VACANCIES ON THE DELEGATION,
TO PROVIDE FOR PER DIEM AND REIMBURSEMENT OF TRAVEL EXPENSES FOR MEMBERS OF
THE DELEGATION, TO PROVIDE FOR FUNDING, FACILITIES, ASSISTANCE, AND ACCESS TO
INFORMATION AND DATA RELATING TO THE DAIRY INDUSTRY, FROM OTHER STATE
OFFICERS, AGENCIES, AND EMPLOYEES, AND FROM PRIVATE PERSONS, BY LAWFUL MEANS,
TO ASSIST THE DELEGATION IN CARRYING OUT THE PURPOSES OF THE COMPACT, TO
PROVIDE FOR THE ADOPTION OF REGULATIONS AS NECESSARY TO CARRY OUT THE PURPOSES
OF THE COMPACT AND THIS CHAPTER, INCLUDING PROVISIONS FOR THE REVOCATION OR
FORFEITURE OF DAIRY INDUSTRY LICENSES, AND TO PROVIDE CRIMINAL PENALTIES FOR
VIOLATIONS OF THE PROVISIONS OF THE COMPACT, RELATED REGULATIONS, OR THE
PROVISIONS OF THIS CHAPTER.-AMENDED TITLE
02/11/98 Senate Introduced and read first time SJ-4
02/11/98 Senate Referred to Committee on Agriculture and Natural
Resources SJ-4
04/08/98 Senate Recalled from Committee on Agriculture and
Natural Resources SJ-5
04/14/98 Senate Amended SJ-42
04/22/98 Senate Read second time SJ-23
04/23/98 Senate Read third time and sent to House SJ-13
04/28/98 House Introduced and read first time HJ-9
04/28/98 House Referred to Committee on Agriculture, Natural
Resources and Environmental Affairs HJ-9
05/13/98 House Committee report: Favorable Agriculture, Natural
Resources and Environmental Affairs HJ-8
05/19/98 House Read second time HJ-23
05/20/98 House Read third time and enrolled HJ-90
06/04/98 Ratified R 421
06/08/98 Signed By Governor
07/07/98 Effective date 06/08/98
07/07/98 Copies available
07/07/98 Act No. 420
(A420, R421, S1013)
AN ACT TO AMEND TITLE 46, CODE OF LAWS OF SOUTH
CAROLINA, 1976, BY ADDING CHAPTER 50 SO AS TO ENACT
THE SOUTHERN INTERSTATE DAIRY COMPACT ACT OF 1998,
TO PROVIDE THAT THE GOVERNOR MAY EXECUTE AN
INTERSTATE DAIRY COMPACT WITH THE DESIGNATED
COMPACT STATES, TO PROVIDE WHEN THE COMPACT
BECOMES OPERATIVE AND EFFECTIVE, IT IS THE POLICY OF
THIS STATE TO PERFORM AND CARRY OUT THE PROVISIONS
OF THE COMPACT, TO PROVIDE THAT THE COMMISSIONER OF
AGRICULTURE IS THE COMPACT ADMINISTRATOR FOR THIS
STATE, TO PROVIDE FOR THE STATE'S DELEGATION TO THE
SOUTHERN INTERSTATE DAIRY COMPACT COMMISSION, AND
FOR MEMBERSHIP, APPOINTMENTS, TERMS, AND FILLING OF
VACANCIES ON THE DELEGATION, TO PROVIDE FOR PER DIEM
AND REIMBURSEMENT OF TRAVEL EXPENSES FOR MEMBERS
OF THE DELEGATION, TO PROVIDE FOR FUNDING, FACILITIES,
ASSISTANCE, AND ACCESS TO INFORMATION AND DATA
RELATING TO THE DAIRY INDUSTRY, FROM OTHER STATE
OFFICERS, AGENCIES, AND EMPLOYEES, AND FROM PRIVATE
PERSONS, BY LAWFUL MEANS, TO ASSIST THE DELEGATION
IN CARRYING OUT THE PURPOSES OF THE COMPACT, TO
PROVIDE FOR THE ADOPTION OF REGULATIONS AS
NECESSARY TO CARRY OUT THE PURPOSES OF THE COMPACT
AND THIS CHAPTER, INCLUDING PROVISIONS FOR THE
REVOCATION OR FORFEITURE OF DAIRY INDUSTRY LICENSES,
AND TO PROVIDE CRIMINAL PENALTIES FOR VIOLATIONS OF
THE PROVISIONS OF THE COMPACT, RELATED REGULATIONS,
OR THE PROVISIONS OF THIS CHAPTER.
Be it enacted by the General Assembly of the State of South Carolina:
Southern Interstate Dairy Compact
SECTION 1. Title 46 of the 1976 Code is amended by adding:
CHAPTER 50
Southern Interstate Dairy Compact
Section 46-50-10. This chapter may be cited as the 'Southern Interstate
Dairy Compact Act of 1998'.
Section 46-50-20. (A) The Governor on behalf of this State may
execute a compact, in substantially the form set out in Section 46-50-30,
with any two or more of the states of Alabama, Arkansas, Florida,
Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Mississippi, North Carolina,
Oklahoma, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia, and West Virginia, and the
legislature hereby signifies in advance its approval and ratification of the
compact when the compact has been enacted into law by any three of the
compact states, including South Carolina, and the consent of Congress to
the interstate compact has been obtained.
(B) When the Governor has executed the compact on behalf of this
State, and caused a verified copy to be filed with the Secretary of State,
and when the compact has been ratified by three or more of the states
named in Article VIII, Section 20 of the compact, including South
Carolina, the compact shall become operative and effective as between
this State and the states that have ratified the compact. The Governor shall
take such action as may be necessary to complete the exchange of official
documents between this State and any other state ratifying the compact,
and to otherwise carry out the provisions of this chapter.
(C) Upon the compact becoming operative and effective between this
State and other states ratifying the compact, it is hereby declared to be the
policy of this State to perform and carry out the compact and to
accomplish the purposes thereof.
Section 46-50-30. The Southern Interstate Dairy Compact is as
follows:
'ARTICLE I.
STATEMENT OF PURPOSE, FINDINGS, AND DECLARATION
OF POLICY
SECTION 1. STATEMENT OF PURPOSE, FINDINGS, AND
DECLARATION OF POLICY.
The purpose of this compact is to recognize the interstate character of
the southern dairy industry and the prerogative of the states under the
United States Constitution to form an interstate commission for the
southern region. The mission of the commission is to take such steps as
are necessary to assure the continued viability of dairy farming in the
South, and to assure consumers of an adequate, local supply of pure and
wholesome milk.
The participating states find and declare that the dairy industry is an
essential agricultural activity of the South. Dairy farms, and associated
suppliers, marketers, processors, and retailers, are an integral component
of the region's economy. Their ability to provide a stable, local supply of
pure, wholesome milk is a matter of great importance to the health and
welfare of the region.
The participating states further find that dairy farms are essential and
they are an integral part of the region's rural communities. The farms
preserve land for agricultural purposes and provide needed economic
stimuli for rural communities.
By entering into this compact, the participating states affirm that their
ability to regulate the price which southern dairy farmers receive for their
product is essential to the public interest. Assurance of a fair and equitable
price for dairy farmers ensures their ability to provide milk to the market
and the vitality of the southern dairy industry, with all the associated
benefits.
Recent dramatic price fluctuations, with a pronounced downward trend,
threaten the viability and stability of the southern dairy region.
Historically, individual state regulatory action had been an effective
emergency remedy available to farmers confronting a distressed market.
The federal order system, implemented by the Agricultural Marketing
Agreement Act of 1937, establishes only minimum prices paid to
producers for raw milk, without preempting the power of states to regulate
milk prices above the minimum levels so established.
In today's regional dairy marketplace, cooperative, rather than
individual state action, is needed to more effectively address the market
disarray. Under our constitutional system, properly authorized states
acting cooperatively may exercise more power to regulate interstate
commerce than they may assert individually without such authority. For
this reason, the participating states invoke their authority to act in
common agreement, with the consent of Congress, under the compact
clause of the Constitution.
In establishing their constitutional regulatory authority over the region's
fluid milk market by this compact, the participating states declare their
purpose that this compact neither displace the federal order system nor
encourage the merging of federal orders. Specific provisions of the
compact itself set forth this basic principle.
Designed as a flexible mechanism able to adjust to changes in a
regulated marketplace, the compact also contains a contingency provision
should the federal order system be discontinued. In that event, the
interstate commission is authorized to regulate the marketplace in
replacement of the order system. This contingent authority does not
anticipate such a change, however, and should not be so construed. It is
only provided should developments in the market other than
establishment of this compact result in discontinuance of the order system.
ARTICLE II.
DEFINITIONS AND RULES OF CONSTRUCTION
SECTION 2. DEFINITIONS.
For the purposes of this compact, and of any supplemental or
concurring legislation enacted pursuant thereto, except as may be
otherwise required by the context:
(1) 'Class I milk' means milk disposed of in fluid form or as a fluid
milk product, subject to further definition in accordance with the
principles expressed in subdivision (b) of section three.
(2) 'Commission' means the Southern Dairy Compact Commission
established by this compact.
(3) 'Commission marketing order' means regulations adopted by the
commission pursuant to sections nine and ten of this compact in place of
a terminated federal marketing order or state dairy regulation. Such order
may apply throughout the region or in any part or parts thereof as defined
in the regulations of the commission. Such order may establish minimum
prices for any or all classes of milk.
(4) 'Compact' means this interstate compact.
(5) 'Compact over-order price' means a minimum price required to be
paid to producers for Class I milk established by the commission in
regulations adopted pursuant to sections nine and ten of this compact,
which is above the price established in federal marketing orders or by
state farm price regulation in the regulated area. Such price may apply
throughout the region or in any part or parts thereof as defined in the
regulations of the commission.
(6) 'Milk' means the lacteal secretion of cows and includes all skim,
butterfat, or other constituents obtained from separation or any other
process. The term is used in its broadest sense and may be further defined
by the commission for regulatory purposes.
(7) 'Partially regulated plant' means a milk plant not located in a
regulated area but having Class I distribution within such area.
Commission regulations may exempt plants having such distribution or
receipts in amounts less than the limits defined therein.
(8) 'Participating state' means a state which has become a party to this
compact by the enactment of concurring legislation.
(9) 'Pool plant' means any milk plant located in a regulated area.
(10) 'Region' means the territorial limits of the states which are parties
to this compact.
(11) 'Regulated area' means any area within the region governed by and
defined in regulations establishing a compact over-order price or
commission marketing order.
(12) 'State dairy regulation' means any state regulation of dairy prices,
and associated assessments, whether by statute, marketing order, or
otherwise.
SECTION 3. RULES OF CONSTRUCTION.
(a) This compact shall not be construed to displace existing federal
milk marketing orders or state dairy regulation in the region but to
supplement them. In the event some or all federal orders in the region are
discontinued, the compact shall be construed to provide the commission
the option to replace them with one or more commission marketing orders
pursuant to this compact.
(b) This compact shall be construed liberally in order to achieve the
purposes and intent enunciated in section one. It is the intent of this
compact to establish a basic structure by which the commission may
achieve those purposes through the application, adaptation, and
development of the regulatory techniques historically associated with milk
marketing and to afford the commission broad flexibility to devise
regulatory mechanisms to achieve the purposes of this compact. In
accordance with this intent, the technical terms which are associated with
market order regulation and which have acquired commonly understood
general meanings are not defined herein but the commission may further
define the terms used in this compact and develop additional concepts and
define additional terms as it may find appropriate to achieve its purposes.
ARTICLE III.
COMMISSION ESTABLISHED
SECTION 4. COMMISSION ESTABLISHED.
There is hereby created a commission to administer the compact,
composed of delegations from each state in the region. The commission
shall be known as the Southern Dairy Compact Commission. A delegation
shall include not less than three nor more than five persons. Each
delegation shall include at least one dairy farmer who is engaged in the
production of milk at the time of appointment or reappointment, and one
consumer representative. Delegation members shall be residents and
voters of, and subject to such confirmation process as is provided for in
the appointing state. Delegation members shall serve no more than three
consecutive terms with no single term of more than four years and be
subject to removal for cause. In all other respects, delegation members
shall serve in accordance with the laws of the state represented. The
compensation, if any, of the members of a state delegation shall be
determined and paid by each state, but their expenses shall be paid by the
commission.
SECTION 5. VOTING REQUIREMENTS.
All actions taken by the commission, except for the establishment or
termination of an over-order price or commission marketing order, and the
adoption, amendment, or rescission of the commission's bylaws shall be
by majority vote of the delegations present. Each state delegation shall be
entitled to one vote in the conduct of the commission's affairs.
Establishment or termination of an over-order price or commission
marketing order shall require at least a two-thirds vote of the delegations
present. The establishment of a regulated area which covers all or part of
a participating state shall require also the affirmative vote of that state's
delegation. A majority of the delegations from the participating states
shall constitute a quorum for the conduct of the commission's business.
SECTION 6. ADMINISTRATION AND MANAGEMENT.
(a) The commission shall elect annually from among the members of
the participating state delegations a chairperson, a vice-chairperson, and
a treasurer. The commission shall appoint an executive director and fix his
or her duties and compensation. The executive director shall serve at the
pleasure of the commission, and, together with the treasurer, shall be
bonded in an amount determined by the commission. The commission
may establish through its by-laws an executive committee composed of
one member elected by each delegation.
(b) The commission shall adopt by-laws for the conduct of its business
by a two-thirds vote, and shall have the power by the same vote to amend
and rescind these by-laws. The commission shall publish its by-laws in
convenient form with the appropriate agency or officer in each of the
participating states. The by-laws shall provide for appropriate notice to
the delegations of all commission meetings and hearings and of the
business to be transacted at such meetings or hearings. Notice also shall
be given to other agencies or officers of participating states as provided
by the laws of those states.
(c) The commission shall file an annual report with the Secretary of
Agriculture of the United States, and with each of the participating states
by submitting copies to the governor, both houses of the legislature, and
the head of the state department having responsibilities for agriculture.
(d) In addition to the powers and duties elsewhere prescribed in this
compact, the commission shall have the power:
(1) to sue and be sued in any state or federal court;
(2) to have a seal and alter the same at pleasure;
(3) to acquire, hold, and dispose of real and personal property by
gift, purchase, lease, license, or other similar manner, for its corporate
purposes;
(4) to borrow money and to issue notes, to provide for the rights of
the holders thereof and to pledge the revenue of the commission as
security therefore, subject to the provisions of section eighteen of this
compact;
(5) to appoint such officers, agents, and employees as it may deem
necessary, prescribe their powers, duties, and qualifications; and
(6) to create and abolish such offices, employments, and positions
as it deems necessary for the purposes of the compact and provide for the
removal, term, tenure, compensation, fringe benefits, pension, and
retirement rights of its officers and employees. The commission may also
retain personal services on a contract basis.
SECTION 7. RULEMAKING POWER.
In addition to the power to promulgate a compact over-order price or
commission marketing orders as provided by this compact, the
commission is further empowered to make and enforce such additional
rules and regulations as it deems necessary to implement any provisions
of this compact, or to effectuate in any other respect the purposes of this
compact.
ARTICLE IV.
POWERS OF THE COMMISSION
SECTION 8. POWERS TO PROMOTE REGULATORY
UNIFORMITY, SIMPLICITY, AND INTERSTATE COOPERATION.
The commission is hereby empowered to:
(1) Investigate or provide for investigations or research projects
designed to review the existing laws and regulations of the participating
states, to consider their administration and costs, to measure their impact
on the production and marketing of milk and their effects on the shipment
of milk and milk products within the region.
(2) Study and recommend to the participating states joint or
cooperative programs for the administration of the dairy marketing laws
and regulations and to prepare estimates of cost savings and benefits of
such programs.
(3) Encourage the harmonious relationships between the various
elements in the industry for the solution of their material problems.
Conduct symposia or conferences designed to improve industry relations
or a better understanding of problems.
(4) Prepare and release periodic reports on activities and results of the
commission's efforts to the participating states.
(5) Review the existing marketing system for milk and milk products
and recommend changes in the existing structure for assembly and
distribution of milk which may assist, improve, or promote more efficient
assembly and distribution of milk.
(6) Investigate costs and charges for producing, hauling, handling,
processing, distributing, selling, and for all other services performed with
respect to milk.
(7) Examine current economic forces affecting producers, probable
trends in production and consumption, the level of dairy farm prices in
relation to costs, the financial conditions of dairy farmers, and the need
for an emergency order to relieve critical conditions on dairy farms.
SECTION 9. EQUITABLE FARM PRICES.
(a) The powers granted in this section and section ten shall apply only
to the establishment of a compact over-order price, so long as federal milk
marketing orders remain in effect in the region. In the event that any or all
such orders are terminated, this article shall authorize the commission to
establish one or more commission marketing orders, as herein provided,
in the region or parts thereof as defined in the order.
(b) A compact over-order price established pursuant to this section
shall apply only to Class I milk. Such compact over-order price shall not
exceed one dollar and fifty cents per gallon at Atlanta, Georgia; however,
this compact over-order price shall be adjusted upward or downward at
other locations in the region to reflect differences in minimum federal
order prices. Beginning in nineteen hundred ninety, and using that year as
a base, the foregoing one dollar fifty cents per gallon maximum shall be
adjusted annually by the rate of change in the Consumer Price Index as
reported by the Bureau of Labor Statistics of the United States
Department of Labor. For purposes of the pooling and equalization of an
over-order price, the value of milk used in other use classifications shall
be calculated at the appropriate class price established pursuant to the
applicable federal order or state dairy regulation, and the value of
unregulated milk shall be calculated in relation to the nearest prevailing
class price in accordance with and subject to such adjustments as the
commission may prescribe in regulations.
(c) A commission marketing order shall apply to all classes and uses
of milk.
(d) The commission is hereby empowered to establish a compact
over-order price for milk to be paid by pool plants and partially regulated
plants. The commission is also empowered to establish a compact
over-order price to be paid by all other handlers receiving milk from
producers located in a regulated area. This price shall be established either
as a compact over-order price or by one or more commission marketing
orders. Whenever such a price has been established by either type of
regulation, the legal obligation to pay such price shall be determined
solely by the terms and purpose of the regulation without regard to the
situs of the transfer of title, possession, or any other factors not related to
the purposes of the regulation and this compact. Producer-handlers as
defined in an applicable federal market order shall not be subject to a
compact over-order price. The commission shall provide for similar
treatment of producer-handlers under commission marketing orders.
(e) In determining the price, the commission shall consider the
balance between production and consumption of milk and milk products
in the regulated area, the costs of production including, but not limited to,
the price of feed, the cost of labor, including the reasonable value of the
producer's own labor and management, machinery expense, and interest
expense, the prevailing price for milk outside the regulated area, the
purchasing power of the public, and the price necessary to yield a
reasonable return to the producer and distributor.
(f) When establishing a compact over-order price, the commission
shall take such other action as is necessary and feasible to help ensure that
the over-order price does not cause or compensate producers so as to
generate local production of milk in excess of those quantities necessary
to assure consumers of an adequate supply for fluid purposes.
(g) The commission shall whenever possible enter into agreements
with state or federal agencies for exchange of information or services for
the purpose of reducing regulatory burden and cost of administering the
compact. The commission may reimburse other agencies for the
reasonable cost of providing these services.
SECTION 10. OPTIONAL PROVISIONS FOR PRICING ORDER.
Regulations establishing a compact over-order price or a commission
marketing order may contain, but shall not be limited to, any of the
following:
(1) provisions classifying milk in accordance with the form in which
or purpose for which it is used, or creating a flat pricing program;
(2) with respect to a commission marketing order only, provisions
establishing or providing a method for establishing separate minimum
prices for each use classification prescribed by the commission, or a
single minimum price for milk purchased from producers or associations
of producers;
(3) with respect to an over-order minimum price, provisions
establishing or providing a method for establishing such minimum price
for Class I milk;
(4) provisions for establishing either an over-order price or a
commission marketing order may make use of any reasonable method for
establishing such price or prices including flat pricing and formula
pricing. Provision may also be made for location adjustments,
zone differentials, and for competitive credits with respect to regulated
handlers who market outside the regulated area;
(5) provisions for the payment to all producers and associations of
producers delivering milk to all handlers of uniform prices for all milk so
delivered, irrespective of the uses made of such milk by the individual
handler to whom it is delivered, or for the payment of producers
delivering milk to the same handler of uniform prices for all milk
delivered by them;
(A) With respect to regulations establishing a compact over-order
price, the commission may establish one equalization pool within the
regulated area for the sole purpose of equalizing returns to producers
throughout the regulated area.
(B) With respect to any commission marketing order, as defined in
section two, subdivision nine, which replaces one or more terminated
federal orders or state dairy regulation, the marketing area of now separate
state or federal orders shall not be merged without the affirmative consent
of each state, voting through its delegation, which is partly or wholly
included within any such new marketing area.
(6) provisions requiring persons who bring Class I milk into the
regulated area to make compensatory payments with respect to all such
milk to the extent necessary to equalize the cost of milk purchased by
handlers subject to a compact over-order price or commission marketing
order. No such provisions shall discriminate against milk producers
outside the regulated area. The provisions for compensatory payments
may require payment of the difference between the Class I price required
to be paid for such milk in the state of production by a federal milk
marketing order or state dairy regulation and the Class I price established
by the compact over-order price or commission marketing order.
(7) provisions specially governing the pricing and pooling of milk
handled by partially regulated plants;
(8) provisions requiring that the account of any person regulated under
the compact over-order price shall be adjusted for any payments made to
or received by such persons with respect to a producer settlement fund of
any federal or state milk marketing order or other state dairy regulation
within the regulated area;
(9) provision requiring the payment by handlers of an assessment to
cover the costs of the administration and enforcement of such order
pursuant to Article VII, Section 18(a);
(10) provisions for reimbursement to participants of the Women,
Infants and Children Special Supplemental Food Program of the United
States Child Nutrition Act of 1966;
(11) other provisions and requirements as the commission may find are
necessary or appropriate to effectuate the purposes of this compact and to
provide for the payment of fair and equitable minimum prices to
producers.
ARTICLE V.
RULEMAKING PROCEDURE
SECTION 11. RULEMAKING PROCEDURE.
Before promulgation of any regulations establishing a compact
over-order price or commission marketing order, including any provision
with respect to milk supply under subsection 9(f), or amendment thereof,
as provided in Article IV, the commission shall conduct an informal
rulemaking proceeding to provide interested persons with an opportunity
to present data and views. Such rulemaking proceeding shall be governed
by Section four of the Federal Administrative Procedure Act, as amended
(5 U.S.C. Section 553). In addition, the commission shall, to the extent
practicable, publish notice of rulemaking proceedings in the official
register of each participating state. Before the initial adoption of
regulations establishing a compact over-order price or a commission
marketing order and thereafter before any amendment with regard to
prices or assessments, the commission shall hold a public hearing. The
commission may commence a rulemaking proceeding on its own initiative
or may in its sole discretion act upon the petition of any person including
individual milk producers, any organization of milk producers or
handlers, general farm organizations, consumer or public interest groups,
and local, state or federal officials.
SECTION 12. FINDINGS AND REFERENDUM.
(a) In addition to the concise general statement of basis and purpose
required by Section 4(b) of the Federal Administrative Procedure Act, as
amended (5 U.S.C. Section 553 (c)), the commission shall make findings
of fact with respect to:
(1) whether the public interest will be served by the establishment
of minimum milk prices to dairy farmers under Article IV;
(2) what level of prices will assure that producers receive a price
sufficient to cover their costs of production and will elicit an adequate
supply of milk for the inhabitants of the regulated area and for
manufacturing purposes;
(3) whether the major provisions of the order, other than those
fixing minimum milk prices, are in the public interest and are reasonably
designed to achieve the purposes of the order;
(4) whether the terms of the proposed regional order or amendment
are approved by producers as provided in section thirteen.
SECTION 13. PRODUCER REFERENDUM.
(a) For the purpose of ascertaining whether the issuance or
amendment of regulations establishing a compact over-order price or a
commission marketing order, including any provision with respect to milk
supply under subsection 9(f), is approved by producers, the commission
shall conduct a referendum among producers. The referendum shall be
held in a timely manner, as determined by regulation of the commission.
The terms and conditions of the proposed order or amendment shall be
described by the commission in the ballot used in the conduct of the
referendum, but the nature, content, or extent of such description shall not
be a basis for attacking the legality of the order or any action relating
thereto.
(b) An order or amendment shall be deemed approved by producers
if the commission determines that it is approved by at least two-thirds of
the voting producers who, during a representative period determined by
the commission, have been engaged in the production of milk, the price
of which would be regulated under the proposed order or amendment.
(c) For purposes of any referendum, the commission shall consider the
approval or disapproval by any cooperative association of producers,
qualified under the provisions of the Act of Congress of February 18,
1922, as amended, known as the Capper-Volstead Act, bona fide engaged
in marketing milk, or in rendering services for or advancing the interests
of producers of such commodity, as the approval or disapproval of the
producers who are members or stockholders in, or under contract with,
such cooperative association of producers, except as provided in
subdivision (1) hereof and subject to the provisions of subdivisions (2)
through (5) hereof.
(1) No cooperative which has been formed to act as a common
marketing agency for both cooperatives and individual producers shall be
qualified to block vote for either.
(2) Any cooperative which is qualified to block vote shall, before
submitting its approval or disapproval in any referendum, give prior
written notice to each of its members as to whether and how it intends to
cast its vote. The notice shall be given in a timely manner as established
and in the form prescribed by the commission.
(3) Any producer may obtain a ballot from the commission in order
to register approval or disapproval of the proposed order.
(4) A producer who is a member of a cooperative which has
provided notice of its intent to approve or not to approve a proposed
order, and who obtains a ballot and with such ballot expresses his
approval or disapproval of the proposed order, shall notify the
commission as to the name of the cooperative of which he or she is a
member, and the commission shall remove such producer's name from the
list certified by such cooperative with its corporate vote.
(5) In order to ensure that all milk producers are informed regarding
a proposed order, the commission shall notify all milk producers that an
order is being considered and that each producer may register his approval
or disapproval with the commission either directly or through his or her
cooperative.
SECTION 14. TERMINATION OF OVER-ORDER PRICE OR
MARKETING ORDER.
(a) The commission shall terminate any regulations establishing an
over-order price or commission marketing order issued under this article
whenever it finds that such order or price obstructs or does not tend to
effectuate the declared policy of this compact.
(b) The commission shall terminate any regulations establishing an
over-order price or a commission marketing order issued under this article
whenever it finds that such termination is favored by a majority of the
producers who, during a representative period determined by the
commission, have been engaged in the production of milk, the price of
which is regulated by such order; but such termination shall be effective
only if announced on or before such date as may be specified in such
marketing agreement or order.
(c) The termination or suspension of any order or provision thereof
shall not be considered an order within the meaning of this article and
shall require no hearing but shall comply with the requirements for
informal rulemaking prescribed by Section four of the Federal
Administrative Procedure Act, as amended (5 U.S.C. Section 553).
ARTICLE VI.
ENFORCEMENT
SECTION 15. RECORDS, REPORTS, ACCESS TO PREMISES.
(a) The commission may by rule and regulation prescribe
recordkeeping and reporting requirements for all regulated persons. For
purposes of the administration and enforcement of this compact, the
commission is authorized to examine the books and records of any
regulated person relating to his or her milk business and for that purpose,
the commission's properly designated officers, employees, or agents shall
have full access during normal business hours to the premises and records
of all regulated persons.
(b) Information furnished to or acquired by the commission officers,
employees, or its agents pursuant to this section shall be confidential and
not subject to disclosure except to the extent that the commission deems
disclosure to be necessary in any administrative or judicial proceeding
involving the administration or enforcement of this compact, an
over-order price, a compact marketing order, or other regulations of the
commission. The commission may promulgate regulations further
defining the confidentiality of information pursuant to this section.
Nothing in this section shall be deemed to prohibit (i) the issuance of
general statements based upon the reports of a number of handlers which
do not identify the information furnished by any person, or (ii) the
publication by direction of the commission of the name of any person
violating any regulation of the commission, together with a statement of
the particular provisions violated by such person.
(c) No officer, employee, or agent of the commission shall
intentionally disclose information, by inference or otherwise, which is
made confidential pursuant to this section. Any person violating the
provisions of this section shall, upon conviction, be subject to a fine of not
more than one thousand dollars or to imprisonment for not more than one
year, or both, and shall be removed from office. The commission shall
refer any allegation of a violation of this section to the appropriate state
enforcement authority or the United States Attorney.
SECTION 16. SUBPOENA, HEARINGS, AND JUDICIAL REVIEW.
(a) The commission is hereby authorized and empowered by its
members and its properly designated officers to administer oaths and issue
subpoenas throughout all signatory states to compel the attendance of
witnesses and the giving of testimony and the production of other
evidence.
(b) Any handler subject to an order may file a written petition with the
commission stating that any such order or any provision of any such order
or any obligation imposed in connection therewith is not in accordance
with law and praying for a modification thereof or to be exempted
therefrom. He shall thereupon be given an opportunity for a hearing upon
such petition, in accordance with regulations made by the commission.
After such hearing, the commission shall make a ruling upon the prayer
of such petition which shall be final, if in accordance with law.
(c) The district courts of the United States in any district in which
such handler is an inhabitant, or has his principal place of business, are
hereby vested with jurisdiction to review such ruling, provided a
complaint for that purpose is filed within thirty days from the date of the
entry of such ruling. Service of process in such proceedings may be had
upon the commission by delivering to it a copy of the complaint. If the
court determines that such ruling is not in accordance with law, it shall
remand such proceedings to the commission with directions either (1) to
make such ruling as the court shall determine to be in accordance with
law, or (2) to take such further proceedings as, in its opinion, the law
requires. The pendency of proceedings instituted pursuant to this
subdivision shall not impede, hinder, or delay the commission from
obtaining relief pursuant to section seventeen. Any proceedings brought
pursuant to section seventeen, except where brought by way of
counterclaim in proceedings instituted pursuant to this section, shall abate
whenever a final decree has been rendered in proceedings between the
same parties, and covering the same subject matter, instituted pursuant to
this section.
SECTION 17. ENFORCEMENT WITH RESPECT TO HANDLERS.
(a) Any violation by a handler of the provisions of regulations
establishing an over-order price or a commission marketing order, or other
regulations adopted pursuant to this compact shall:
(1) Constitute a violation of the laws of each of the signatory states.
Such violation shall render the violator subject to a civil penalty in an
amount as may be prescribed by the laws of each of the participating
states, recoverable in any state or federal court of competent jurisdiction.
Each day such violation continues shall constitute a separate violation.
(2) Constitute grounds for the revocation of license or permit to
engage in the milk business under the applicable laws of the participating
states.
(b) With respect to handlers, the commission shall enforce the
provisions of this compact, regulations establishing an over-order price,
a commission marketing order or other regulations adopted hereunder by:
(1) Commencing an action for legal or equitable relief brought in
the name of the commission in any state or federal court of competent
jurisdiction; or
(2) Referral to the state agency for enforcement by judicial or
administrative remedy with the agreement of the appropriate state agency
of a participating state.
(c) With respect to handlers, the commission may bring an action for
injunction to enforce the provisions of this compact or the order or
regulations adopted thereunder without being compelled to allege or
prove that an adequate remedy of law does not exist.
ARTICLE VII.
FINANCE
SECTION 18. FINANCE OF START-UP AND REGULAR COSTS.
(a) To provide for its start-up costs, the commission may borrow
money pursuant to its general power under section six, subdivision (d),
paragraph four. In order to finance the costs of administration and
enforcement of this compact, including payback of start-up costs, the
commission is hereby empowered to collect an assessment from each
handler who purchases milk from producers within the region. If imposed,
this assessment shall be collected on a monthly basis for up to one year
from the date the commission convenes, in an amount not to exceed $.015
per hundredweight of milk purchased from producers during the period
of the assessment. The initial assessment may apply to the projected
purchases of handlers for the two-month period following the date the
commission convenes. In addition, if regulations establishing an
over-order price or a compact marketing order are adopted, they may
include an assessment for the specific purpose of their administration.
These regulations shall provide for establishment of a reserve for the
commission's ongoing operating expenses.
(b) The commission shall not pledge the credit of any participating
state or of the United States. Notes issued by the commission and all other
financial obligations incurred by it shall be its sole responsibility and no
participating state or the United States shall be liable therefor.
SECTION 19. AUDIT AND ACCOUNTS.
(a) The commission shall keep accurate accounts of all receipts and
disbursements, which shall be subject to the audit and accounting
procedures established under its rules. In addition, all receipts and
disbursements of funds handled by the commission shall be audited yearly
by a qualified public accountant and the report of the audit shall be
included in and become part of the annual report of the commission.
(b) The accounts of the commission shall be open at any reasonable
time for inspection by duly constituted officers of the participating states
and by any persons authorized by the commission.
(c) Nothing contained in this article shall be construed to prevent
commission compliance with laws relating to audit or inspection of
accounts by or on behalf of any participating state or of the United States.
ARTICLE VIII.
ENTRY INTO FORCE;
ADDITIONAL MEMBERS AND WITHDRAWAL.
SECTION 20. ENTRY INTO FORCE; ADDITIONAL MEMBERS.
The compact shall enter into force effective when enacted into law by
any three states of the group of states composed of Alabama, Arkansas,
Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Mississippi, North
Carolina, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia, and
West Virginia and when the consent of Congress has been obtained.
SECTION 21. WITHDRAWAL FROM COMPACT.
Any participating state may withdraw from this compact by enacting
a statute repealing the same, but no such withdrawal shall take effect until
one year after notice in writing of the withdrawal is given to the
commission and the governors of all other participating states. No
withdrawal shall affect any liability already incurred by or chargeable to
a participating state prior to the time of such withdrawal.
SECTION 22. SEVERABILITY.
If any part or provision of this compact is adjudged invalid by any
court, such judgment shall be confined in its operation to the part or
provision directly involved in the controversy in which such judgment
shall have been rendered and shall not affect or impair the validity of the
remainder of this compact. In the event Congress consents to this compact
subject to conditions, said conditions shall not impair the validity of this
compact when said conditions are accepted by three or more compacting
states. A compacting state may accept the conditions of Congress by
implementation of this compact.'
Section 46-50-40. The State Commissioner of Agriculture shall act as
compact administrator for the State of South Carolina, and shall also be
a member and serve as chairman of the state's delegation to the Southern
Interstate Dairy Compact Commission. With the advice and consent of
the Senate, the Governor shall appoint four additional delegates to
represent the State on the Southern Dairy Compact Commission provided
for in Article III of the compact. The four additional delegates must
include two dairy producers actually engaged in the production of milk at
the time of their appointment or reappointment, one milk processor
actually engaged in the processing of milk in this State into milk products
or public consumption at the time of his appointment or reappointment,
and one consumer representative from the public at large. Each delegate
appointed by the Governor shall serve for a term of four years and shall
diligently and conscientiously strive to achieve the purposes of the
Southern Dairy Compact. Vacancies in the state's delegation shall be filled
in the same manner as the original appointments for the unexpired term.
Delegates whose expenses are not paid or reimbursed by the Southern
Interstate Dairy Compact Commission may submit claims for travel and
per diem to the Department of Agriculture. Upon approval of the claims
by the Compact Administrator, or his designee, delegates shall receive per
diem not to exceed thirty-five dollars for each day of service plus
reimbursement at the prevailing state rate for travel expenses incurred in
the performance of their duties as delegates. The Commissioner of
Agriculture may provide funding and facilities as necessary to support and
enable the delegation to perform its mission under the compact from funds
appropriated to the Department of Agriculture.
Section 46-50-50. The Commissioner of Agriculture, as compact
administrator or acting through the Department of Agriculture, may adopt
rules and regulations pursuant to the Administrative Procedures Act as are
necessary to carry out the purposes of the Southern Interstate Dairy
Compact, to provide for the revocation or forfeiture of dairy industry
licenses issued by any agency of the government of South Carolina held
by persons violating the compact and related rules and regulations, and to
otherwise enforce the provisions of this chapter. In addition, there is
hereby granted to the Commissioner of Agriculture, as compact
administrator and chairman of the state delegation to the Southern
Interstate Dairy Compact Commission, and to the appointed members of
the delegation, all powers provided for in the compact and all powers
necessary or incidental to carrying out the compact in every particular.
All officers of this State shall do all things falling within their respective
provinces and jurisdiction necessary or incidental to assist the
Commissioner of Agriculture, as compact administrator, and the state's
delegation to the compact, in carrying out the compact in every particular.
Upon request of the compact administrator on behalf of the state's
delegation to the compact, all officers, departments, employees, and other
persons of and in the executive branch of the state government shall, at
convenient times, furnish available information and data relating to the
purposes of the compact possessed by them to the compact administrator
or the delegation. They may further aid the compact administrator or the
delegation to the compact by loan of personnel, equipment, or other
means, in carrying out the purposes of the compact and this chapter. In
addition, the Commissioner of Agriculture, as compact administrator, may
obtain any information, not privileged, which he considers necessary to
carry out the purposes of the Southern Interstate Dairy Compact and the
provisions of this chapter from the federal government, other state
governments, and, by lawful means, from private persons having
information or data relating to the dairy industry or to the purposes of the
compact. Such information may be utilized by the Commissioner of
Agriculture, as compact administrator, the delegates, and the Southern
Dairy Compact Commission for the purposes of carrying out the
provisions of the compact. Any powers granted in this chapter to the
Commissioner of Agriculture, the Department of Agriculture, or any other
agency or employee of the state government, shall be regarded as in aid
of and supplemental to, and in no case a limitation upon, any of the
powers vested in the Commissioner of Agriculture, the Department of
Agriculture, or any other agency or employee of the state government, by
other laws of the State of South Carolina or by the laws of Congress or of
any state ratifying the Southern Interstate Dairy Compact, or by the terms
of the compact itself.
Section 46-50-60. A person violating any provision of this chapter, or
the provisions of the Southern Interstate Dairy Compact, or any rule or
regulation adopted pursuant to either this chapter or the compact, is guilty
of a misdemeanor and, upon conviction, may be punished by a fine of not
less than one thousand dollars nor more than five thousand dollars or by
imprisonment for a term of not more than one year, or both, for each
separate offense. Each day upon which a violation occurs or continues
constitutes a separate offense.
Time effective
SECTION 2. This act takes effect upon approval by the Governor.
Approved the 8th day of June, 1998. |