Sedgwick, Maine has done what no other town in the United States has done. The town unanimously passed an ordinance giving its citizens the right to produce, process, sell, purchase, and consume local foods of their choosing. This includes raw milk, locally slaughtered meats, and just about anything else you can imagine. It's also a decided bucking of state and federal laws.
gleam wrote:like marijuana, just because your city/state decides it's OK for you to do something doesn't mean the federal government can't/won't arrest you for it.
kl1191 wrote:gleam wrote:like marijuana, just because your city/state decides it's OK for you to do something doesn't mean the federal government can't/won't arrest you for it.
To my knowledge, meat, milk and cheese are not controlled substances.
jesteinf wrote:kl1191 wrote:gleam wrote:like marijuana, just because your city/state decides it's OK for you to do something doesn't mean the federal government can't/won't arrest you for it.
To my knowledge, meat, milk and cheese are not controlled substances.
Doesn't matter. As far as I understand, you can't have state or local laws that "overrule" federal laws. If you do, the ghost of Andrew Jackson comes to get you.
kl1191 wrote:Which Federal law does this town's law supposedly overrule? Read the FDA FAQ on raw milk and you'll see that they say it's illegal for it to be sold via inter-state commerce. That's the Commerce Clause effect that I was referencing above. I know of no legitimate means for the Federal government to stop a person in this town selling raw milk to another person in this town. The Tenth Amendment reserves Rights not enumerated in the Constitution for the states or the people.
chitrader wrote:kl1191 wrote:Which Federal law does this town's law supposedly overrule? Read the FDA FAQ on raw milk and you'll see that they say it's illegal for it to be sold via inter-state commerce. That's the Commerce Clause effect that I was referencing above. I know of no legitimate means for the Federal government to stop a person in this town selling raw milk to another person in this town. The Tenth Amendment reserves Rights not enumerated in the Constitution for the states or the people.
Oh dear, you really want to get into Commerce Clause issues here?![]()
If the feds can say that you MUST buy health insurance, they can do anything. We'll see what the USSC says, but basically modern Commerce Clause jurisprudence would crush the locality. Wickard v. Filburn (1942) is actually fairly on-point, as it regulated clearly "local" activity.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wickard_v._Filburn
kl1191 wrote:chitrader wrote:kl1191 wrote:Which Federal law does this town's law supposedly overrule? Read the FDA FAQ on raw milk and you'll see that they say it's illegal for it to be sold via inter-state commerce. That's the Commerce Clause effect that I was referencing above. I know of no legitimate means for the Federal government to stop a person in this town selling raw milk to another person in this town. The Tenth Amendment reserves Rights not enumerated in the Constitution for the states or the people.
Oh dear, you really want to get into Commerce Clause issues here?![]()
If the feds can say that you MUST buy health insurance, they can do anything. We'll see what the USSC says, but basically modern Commerce Clause jurisprudence would crush the locality. Wickard v. Filburn (1942) is actually fairly on-point, as it regulated clearly "local" activity.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wickard_v._Filburn
I think there's a compelling way to distinguish Wickard, in that the governments interest in banning raw milk is in no way related to economics, but rather is about health. Thus, while I would argue strenuously against the idea that allowing two Sedgwickians to sell raw milk to each other "exerts a substantial economic effect on interstate commerce," even if you took it as a given, the government's interest in trying to regulate what type of milk the habitant of Sedgwick might buy has absolutely nothing to do with that effect, whereas in Wickard it was the entire purpose of the law at hand to try and manipulate the price of a commodity.
chitrader wrote:kl1191 wrote:chitrader wrote:Oh dear, you really want to get into Commerce Clause issues here?![]()
If the feds can say that you MUST buy health insurance, they can do anything. We'll see what the USSC says, but basically modern Commerce Clause jurisprudence would crush the locality. Wickard v. Filburn (1942) is actually fairly on-point, as it regulated clearly "local" activity.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wickard_v._Filburn
I think there's a compelling way to distinguish Wickard, in that the governments interest in banning raw milk is in no way related to economics, but rather is about health. Thus, while I would argue strenuously against the idea that allowing two Sedgwickians to sell raw milk to each other "exerts a substantial economic effect on interstate commerce," even if you took it as a given, the government's interest in trying to regulate what type of milk the habitant of Sedgwick might buy has absolutely nothing to do with that effect, whereas in Wickard it was the entire purpose of the law at hand to try and manipulate the price of a commodity.
It's a nice argument, but I think it would lose 9-0. There's no "economics/health" distinction in commerce clause cases. There is "interstate/intrastate" and possibly "activity/passivity", but the Feds have long used the CC to regulate health, safety, and welfare.
I wish you were right, but I don't think that is the case. The next big CC case is challenging Obamacare, we'll see how the Court handles it.
EDIT: And Lopez really doesn't apply here, since this is regulating actual economic activity (buying and selling of raw milk) as opposed to the ridiculous arguments for a national "gun-free" school zone.
kl1191 wrote:
While milk and wheat are both agricultural products, it can be argued that from an interstate economic standpoint, raw milk is almost more akin to the handguns of Lopez than the wheat of Wickard. Raw milk is highly unlikely to enter the interstate market because of its perishability.
chitrader wrote:kl1191 wrote:
While milk and wheat are both agricultural products, it can be argued that from an interstate economic standpoint, raw milk is almost more akin to the handguns of Lopez than the wheat of Wickard. Raw milk is highly unlikely to enter the interstate market because of its perishability.
Except that in Wickard, his wheat was stipulated by both parties to have never entered interstate commerce either, since he grew it for his own consumption. The Court still said that because he was using wheat that otherwise would have been in interstate commerce, the CC could reach the activity.
The fact is, right now, the Feds can do whatever they want.
[S]ome states do permit the intrastate sale of raw milk intended for human consumption.