PART
1033—MILK IN THE
Effective: January 1, 2011
Subpart
- Order Regulating Handling
§1033.2 Mideast marketing area
§1000.18 Cooperative association
§1000.19 Commercial food processing establishment
§1000.26 Continuity and separability of provisions
§1000.27 Handler responsibility for records and facilities
§1000.28 Termination of obligations
§1033.30 Reports of receipts and utilization
§1000.40 Classes of Utilization
§1000.42 Classification of transfers and diversions
§1000.43 General classification rules
§1000.44 Classification of producer milk
§1000.45 Market administrator’s reports and announcements concerning classification
§1000.50 Class prices, component prices, and advanced pricing factors
§1033.51 Class I differential and price
§1000.52 Adjusted Class I differentials
§1000.53 Announcement of class prices, component prices, and advanced pricing factors
§1033.60 Handler’s value of milk
§1033.61 Computation of producer price differential
§1033.62 Announcement of producer prices
§1000.70 Producer-settlement fund
§1033.71 Payments to the producer-settlement fund
§1033.72 Payments from the producer-settlement fund
§1033.73 Payments to producers and to cooperative associations
§1033.75 Plant location adjustments for producer milk and nonpool milk
§1000.76 Payments by a handler operating a partially regulated distributing plant
§1000.77 Adjustment of accounts
§1000.78 Charges on overdue accounts
ADMINISTRATIVE ASSESSMENT AND MARKETING SERVICE DEDUCTION
§1000.85 Assessment for order administration
§1000.86 Deduction for marketing services
§1000.93 OMB control number assigned pursuant to the Paperwork Reduction Act
Subpart
- Order Regulating Handling
§1033.1 General provisions.
The terms, definitions, and provisions
in part 1000 of this chapter apply to this part 1033. In this part 1033, all references to sections
in part 1000 refer to part 1000 of this chapter.
§1033.2 Mideast marketing area.
The marketing area means all territory
within the bounds of the following states and political subdivisions, including
all piers, docks, and wharves connected therewith and all craft moored thereat,
and all territory occupied by government (municipal, State, or Federal)
reservations, installations, institutions, or other similar establishments if
any part thereof is within any of the listed states or political subdivisions:
Indiana
Counties
Adams, Allen, Bartholomew, Benton,
Blackford, Boone, Brown, Carroll, Cass, Clay, Clinton, Dearborn, Decatur, De
Kalb, Delaware, Elkhart, Fayette, Fountain, Franklin, Fulton, Grant, Hamilton,
Hancock, Hendricks, Henry, Howard, Huntington, Jackson, Jasper, Jay, Jefferson,
Jennings, Johnson, Kosciusko, Lagrange, Lake, La Porte, Lawrence, Madison,
Marion, Marshall, Miami, Monroe, Montgomery, Morgan, Newton, Noble, Ohio, Owen,
Parke, Porter, Pulaski, Putnam, Randolph, Ripley, Rush, Shelby, St. Joseph,
Starke, Steuben, Switzerland, Tippecanoe, Tipton, Union, Vermillion, Vigo,
Wabash, Warren, Wayne, Wells, White, and Whitley.
Kentucky
Counties
Boone, Boyd, Bracken,
Campbell, Floyd, Grant, Greenup, Harrison, Johnson, Kenton, Lawrence, Lewis,
Magoffin, Martin, Mason, Pendleton, Pike, and Robertson.
Michigan
Counties
All counties except
Delta, Dickinson, Gogebic, Iron, Menominee, and Ontonagon.
The townships of
Woodville and Madison in Sandusky County and all other counties in Ohio except
Erie, Huron, and Ottawa.
Pennsylvania
Counties
Allegheny, Armstrong,
Beaver, Butler, Crawford, Erie, Fayette, Greene, Lawrence, Mercer, Venango, and
Washington.
In Clarion County only
the townships of Ashland, Beaver, Licking, Madison, Perry, Piney, Richland,
Salem, and Toby.
All of Westmoreland County except the
townships of Cook, Donegal, Fairfield, Ligonier, and St. Clair, and the
boroughs of Bolivar, Donegal, Ligonier, New Florence, and Seward.
West
Virginia Counties
Barbour, Boone, Brooke, Cabell, Calhoun,
Doddridge, Fayette, Gilmer, Hancock, Harrison, Jackson, Kanawha, Lewis,
Lincoln, Logan, Marion, Marshall, Mason, Mingo, Monongalia, Ohio, Pleasants,
Preston, Putnam, Raleigh, Randolph, Ritchie, Roane, Taylor, Tucker, Tyler,
Upshur, Wayne, Wetzel, Wirt, Wood, and Wyoming.
§1000.3 Route disposition.
Route
disposition means a delivery to a retail or wholesale outlet (except a plant), either directly or through any distribution
facility (including disposition from a plant store, vendor, or vending machine)
of a fluid milk product in consumer-type packages or dispenser units classified
as Class I milk.
§1000.4 Plant.
(a) Except
as provided in paragraph (b) of this section, plant means the land,
buildings, facilities, and equipment constituting a single operating unit or
establishment at which milk or milk products are received, processed, or
packaged, including a facility described in paragraph (b)(2) of this section if
the facility receives the milk of more than one dairy farmer.
(b) Plant
shall not include:
(1) A separate building without stationary storage tanks that is used
only as a reload point for transferring bulk milk from one tank truck to
another or a separate building used only as a distribution point for storing
packaged fluid milk products in transit for route disposition; or
(2) An on-farm facility operated as part of a dairy farm entity for
the separation of cream and skim or the removal of water from milk.
§1000.5 Distributing plant.
Distributing plant means a plant
that is approved by a duly constituted regulatory agency for the handling of
Grade A milk at which fluid milk products are processed or packaged and from
which there is route disposition or transfers of packaged fluid milk products
to other plants.
§1000.6 Supply plant.
Supply plant means a plant
approved by a duly constituted regulatory agency for the handling of Grade A milk that receives milk directly from dairy farmers and
transfers or diverts fluid milk products to other plants or manufactures dairy
products on its premises.
§1033.7 Pool plant.
Pool plant means a plant, unit of
plants, or system of plants as specified in paragraphs (a) through (f) of this
section, or a plant specified in paragraph (j) of this section, but excluding a
plant specified in paragraph (h) of this section. The pooling standards described in paragraphs
(c) through (f) of this section are subject to modification pursuant to
paragraph (g) of this section:
(a) A
distributing plant, other than a plant qualified as a pool plant pursuant to
paragraph (b) of this section or §1000.7(b) of any other Federal milk order,
from which during the month 30 percent or more of the total quantity of
fluid milk products physically received at the plant (excluding concentrated
milk received from another plant by agreement for other than Class I use) are
disposed of as route disposition or are transferred in the form of packaged
fluid milk products to other distributing plants. At least 25 percent of such route disposition
and transfers must be to outlets in the marketing area.
(b) Any
distributing plant located in the marketing area which during the month
processed at least 30 percent of the total quantity of fluid milk products
physically received at the plant (excluding concentrated milk received from
another plant by agreement for other than Class I use) into ultra-pasteurized
or aseptically‑processed fluid milk products.
(c) A
supply plant from which the quantity of bulk fluid milk products shipped to,
received at, and physically unloaded into plants described in paragraph (a) or
(b) of this section as a percent of the Grade A milk received at the plant from
dairy farmers (except dairy farmers described in §1033.12(b)) and handlers
described in §1000.9(c), as reported in §1033.30(a), is not less than 40 percent
of the milk received from dairy farmers, including milk diverted pursuant to
§1033.13, subject to the following conditions:
(1) Qualifying shipments pursuant to this paragraph may be made to the
following plants, except whenever the authority provided in paragraph (g) of
this section is applied to increase the shipping requirements specified in this
section, only shipments to pool plants described in §1033.7(a) and (b), shall
count as qualifying shipments for the purpose of meeting the increased shipments:
(i) Pool plants described in §1033.7(a) and (b);
(ii) Plants of producer‑handlers;
(iii) Partially regulated distributing plants,
except that credit for such shipments shall be limited to the amount of such
milk classified as Class I at the transferee plant.
(2) The operator of a supply plant located within the marketing area
may include deliveries to pool distributing plants directly from farms of
producers pursuant to §1033.13(c) as up to 90 percent of the supply plant’s
qualifying shipments. Handlers may not
use shipments pursuant to §1033.13(c) to qualify plants located outside the
marketing area.
(3) Concentrated milk transferred from the supply plant to a
distributing plant for an agreed-upon use other than Class I shall be excluded from
the supply plant’s shipments in computing the supply plant’s shipping
percentage.
(4) Shipments used in determining qualifying percentages shall be milk
transferred or diverted and physically received by pool distributing plants,
less any transfers or diversions of bulk milk products from such pool
distributing plants.
(5) A supply plant that does not meet the minimum delivery
requirements specified in this paragraph to qualify for pool status in the
current month because a distributing plant to which the supply plant delivered
its fluid milk products during such month failed to qualify as a pool plant
pursuant to paragraph (a) or (b) of this section shall continue to be a pool
plant for the current month if such supply plant qualified as a pool plant in
the 3 immediately preceding months.
(d) A
plant located in the marketing area and operated by a cooperative association
if, during the months of December through July 30 percent, during the month of
August 35 percent and during the months of September through November 40
percent or more of the producer milk of members of the association is delivered
to a distributing pool plant(s) or to a nonpool plant(s) and classified as
Class I. Deliveries for qualification
purposes may be made directly from the farm or by transfer from such
association’s plant, subject to the following conditions:
(1) The cooperative requests pool status for such plant;
(2) The 30 percent delivery requirement for the months of December
through July may be met for the current month or it may be met on the basis of
deliveries during the preceding 12-month period ending with the current month.
(3) The plant is approved by a duly constituted regulatory authority
to handle milk for fluid consumption; and
(4) The plant does not qualify as a pool plant under paragraph (a),
(b), or (c) of this section or under the similar provisions of another Federal
order applicable to a distributing plant or supply plant.
(e) A
plant located inside the marketing area which has been a pool plant under this
order for twelve consecutive months, but is not otherwise qualified under this
paragraph, if it has a marketing agreement with a cooperative association and
it fulfills the following conditions:
(1) The aggregate monthly quantity supplied by all parties to such an
agreement as a percentage of the producer milk receipts included in the unit
during the months of August through November is not less than 45 percent and
during the months of December through July is not less than 35 percent;
(2) Shipments for qualification purposes shall include both transfers
from supply plants to plants described in paragraph (c)(1)
of this section, and deliveries made direct from the farm to plants qualified
under paragraph (a) of this section.
(f) A
system of supply plants may qualify for pooling if 2 or more plants operated by
one or more handlers meet the applicable percentage requirements of paragraph
(c) of this section in the same manner as a single plant subject to the
following additional requirements:
(1) Each plant in the system is located within
the marketing area, or was a pool supply plant for each of the 3 months
immediately preceding the effective date of this paragraph so long as it
continues to maintain pool status.
Cooperative associations may not use shipments pursuant to §1000.9(c) to
qualify plants located outside the marketing area;
(2) A written notification to the market administrator listing the
plants to be included in the system and the handler that is responsible for
meeting the performance requirements of this paragraph under a marketing
agreement certified to the market administrator by the designated handler and
any others included in the system, and the period during which such
consideration shall apply. Such notice,
and notice of any change in designation, shall be furnished on or before the
5th working day following the month to which the notice applies. The listed plants included in the system
shall also be in the sequence in which they shall qualify for pool plant status
based on the minimum deliveries required.
If the deliveries made are insufficient to qualify the entire system for
pooling, the last listed plant shall be excluded from the system, followed by
the plant next-to-last on the list, and continuing in this sequence until
remaining listed plants have met the minimum shipping requirements; and
(3) Each plant that qualifies as a pool plant within a system shall
continue each month as a plant in the system unless the plant subsequently
fails to qualify for pooling, or the responsible handler submits a written
notification to the market administrator prior to the first day of the month
that the plant is to be deleted from the system, or that the system is to be
discontinued. In any month of March
through August, a system shall not contain any plant which was not qualified
under this paragraph, either individually or as a member of a system, during
the previous September through February.
(g) The
applicable shipping percentages of paragraphs (c) through (f) of this section
may be increased or decreased by the market administrator if the market
administrator finds that such adjustment is necessary to encourage needed
shipments or to prevent uneconomic shipments.
Before making such a finding, the market administrator shall investigate
the need for adjustment either on the market administrator’s own initiative or
at the request of interested parties if the request is made in writing at least
15 days prior to the month for which the requested revision is desired effective. If the investigation shows that an adjustment
of the shipping percentages might be appropriate, the market administrator
shall issue a notice stating that an adjustment is being considered and invite
data, views and arguments. Any decision
to revise an applicable shipping percentage must be issued in writing at least
one day before the effective date.
(h) The term pool plant shall not apply to the
following plants:
(1) A producer-handler as defined under any Federal order;
(2) An exempt plant as defined in §1000.8(e);
(3) A plant located within the marketing area and qualified pursuant
to paragraph (a) of this section that meets the pooling requirements of another
Federal order, and from which more than 50 percent of its route disposition has
been in the other Federal order marketing area for 3 consecutive months;
(4) A plant located outside any Federal order marketing area and
qualified pursuant to paragraph (a) of this section that meets the pooling
requirements of another Federal order and has had greater route disposition in
such other Federal order’s marketing area for 3 consecutive months;
(5) A plant located in another Federal order marketing area and
qualified pursuant to paragraph (a) of this section that meets the pooling
requirements of such other Federal order and does not have a majority of its
route distribution in this marketing area for 3 consecutive months or if the
plant is required to be regulated under such other Federal order without regard
to its route disposition in any other Federal order marketing area;
(6) A plant qualified pursuant to paragraph (c) of this section that
also meets the pooling requirements of another Federal order and from which
greater qualifying shipments are made to plants regulated under the other
Federal order than are made to plants regulated under the order in this part,
or the plant has automatic pooling status under the other Federal order.
(i) Any
plant that qualifies as a pool plant in each of the immediately preceding 3
months pursuant to paragraph (a) of this section or the shipping percentages in
paragraph (c) of this section that is unable to meet such performance standards
for the current month because of unavoidable circumstances determined by the
market administrator to be beyond the control of the handler operating the
plant, such as a natural disaster (ice storm, wind storm, flood), fire,
breakdown of equipment, or work stoppage, shall be considered to have met the
minimum performance standards during the period of such unavoidable
circumstances, but such relief shall not be granted for more than 2 consecutive
months.
(j) Any
distributing plant, located within the marketing area as described on April 11,
2006, in §1033.2;
(1) From which there is route disposition and/or transfers of packaged
fluid milk products in any non-federally regulated marketing area(s) located
within one or more States that require handlers to pay minimum prices for raw
milk provided that 25 percent or more of the total quantity of fluid milk
products physically received at such plant (excluding concentrated milk
received from another plant by agreement for other than Class I use) is
disposed of as route disposition and/or is transferred in the form of packaged
fluid milk products to other plants. At
least 25 percent of such route disposition and/or transfers, in aggregate, are
in any non-federally regulated marketing area(s) located within one or more
States that require handlers to pay minimum prices for raw milk. Subject to the following exclusions:
(i) The plant is described in §1033.7(a) or (b);
(ii) The plant is subject to the pricing
provisions of a State-operated milk pricing plan which provides for the payment
of minimum class prices for raw milk;
(iii) The plant is described in §1000.8(a) or (e);
or
(iv) A producer-handler described in
§1033.10 with less than three million pounds during the month of route
disposition and/or transfers of packaged fluid milk products to other plants.
(2) [Reserved]
§1000.8 Nonpool plant.
Nonpool plant means any milk
receiving, manufacturing, or processing plant other than a pool plant. The following categories of nonpool plants
are further defined as follows:
(a) A
plant fully regulated under another Federal order means a plant that is
fully subject to the pricing and pooling provisions of another Federal order.
(b) Producer-handler
plant means a plant operated by a producer-handler as defined under any
Federal order.
(c) Partially
regulated distributing plant means a nonpool plant that is not a plant
fully regulated under another Federal order, a producer-handler plant, or an
exempt plant, from which there is route disposition in the marketing area
during the month.
(d) Unregulated
supply plant means a supply plant that does not qualify as a pool supply
plant and is not a plant fully regulated under another Federal order, a
producer-handler plant, or an exempt plant.
(e) An
exempt plant means a plant described in this paragraph that is exempt from
the pricing and pooling provisions of any order provided that the operator of
the plant files reports as prescribed by the market administrator of any
marketing area in which the plant distributes packaged fluid milk products to
enable determination of the handler’s exempt status:
(1) A
plant that is operated by a governmental agency that has no route disposition
in commercial channels;
(2) A
plant that is operated by a duly accredited college or university disposing of
fluid milk products only through the operation of its own facilities with no route
disposition in commercial channels;
(3) A
plant from which the total route disposition is for individuals or institutions
for charitable purposes without remuneration; or
(4) A plant that has route disposition and packaged sales of fluid
milk products to other plants of 150,000 pounds or less during the month.
§1000.9 Handler.
Handler means:
(a) Any
person who operates a pool plant or a nonpool plant.
(b) Any
person who receives packaged fluid milk products from a plant for resale and
distribution to retail or wholesale outlets, any person who as a broker
negotiates a purchase or sale of fluid milk products or fluid cream products
from or to any pool or nonpool plant, and any person who by purchase or
direction causes milk of producers to be picked up at the farm and/or moved to
a plant. Persons who qualify as handlers
only under this paragraph under any Federal milk order are not subject to the
payment provisions of §§1000.70, 1033.71, 1033.72, 1033.73, 1000.76, and
1000.85 of that order.
(c) Any
cooperative association with respect to milk that it receives for its account
from the farm of a producer and delivers to pool plants or diverts to nonpool
plants pursuant to §1033.13 of the order.
The operator of a pool plant receiving milk from a cooperative
association may be the handler for such milk if both parties notify the market
administrator of this agreement prior to the time that the milk is delivered to
the pool plant and the plant operator purchases the milk on the basis of farm
bulk tank weights and samples.
§1033.10 Producer-handler.
Producer-handler means a person
who:
(a) Operates
a dairy farm and a distributing plant from which there is route disposition in
the marketing area, and from which total route disposition and packaged sales
of fluid milk products to other plants during the month does not exceed 3
million pounds;
(b) Receives
fluid milk from own farm production or that is fully subject to the pricing and
pooling provisions of the order in this part or any other Federal order;
(c) Receives
at its plant or acquires for route disposition no more than 150,000 pounds of
fluid milk products from handlers fully regulated under any Federal order. This limitation shall not apply if the
producer-handler’s own farm production is less than 150,000 pounds during the
month;
(d) Disposes
of no other source milk as Class I milk except by increasing the nonfat milk
solids content of the fluid milk products; and
(e) Provides
proof satisfactory to the market administrator that the care and management of
the dairy animals and other resources necessary to produce all Class I milk
handled (excluding receipts from handlers fully regulated under any Federal
order) and the processing and packaging operations are the producer-handler’s
own enterprise and at its own risk.
(f)
Any producer-handler with Class I route dispositions and/or transfers of
packaged fluid milk products in the marketing area described in §1131.2 of this chapter shall be subject to
payments into the Order 1131 producer settlement fund on such dispositions
pursuant to §1000.76(a) and payments
into the Order 1131 administrative fund provided such dispositions are less
than three million pounds in the current month and such producer-handler had
total Class I route dispositions and/or transfer of packaged fluid milk
products from own farm production of three million pounds or more the previous
month. If the producer-handler has Class
I route dispositions and/or transfers of packaged fluid milk products into the
marketing area described in §1131.2 of
this chapter of three million pounds or more during the current month, such
producer-handler shall be subject to the provisions described in §1131.7 of this chapter or §1000.76(a).
§1033.12 Producer.
(a) Except
as provided in paragraph (b) of this section, producer means any person
who produces milk approved by a duly constituted regulatory agency for fluid
consumption as Grade A milk and whose milk is:
(1) Received at a pool plant directly from the producer or diverted by
the plant operator in accordance with §1033.13; or
(2) Received by a handler described in §1000.9(c).
(b) Producer
shall not include:
(1) A producer‑handler as defined in any Federal order;
(2) A dairy farmer whose milk is received at an exempt plant,
excluding producer milk diverted to the exempt plant pursuant to §1033.13(d);
(3) A dairy farmer whose milk is received by diversion at a pool plant from a handler regulated under
another Federal order if the other Federal order designates the dairy farmer as
a producer under that order and that milk is allocated by request to a
utilization other than Class I; and
(4) A dairy farmer whose milk is reported as diverted to a plant fully
regulated under another Federal order with respect to that portion of the milk
so diverted that is assigned to Class I under the provisions of such other
order.
§1033.13 Producer milk.
Producer milk means the skim milk
(or the skim equivalent of components of skim milk), including nonfat
components, and butterfat in milk of a producer that is:
(a) Received
by the operator of a pool plant directly from a producer or a handler described
in §1000.9(c). All milk received
pursuant to this paragraph shall be priced at the location of the plant where
it is first physically received;
(b) Received
by a handler described in §1000.9(c) in excess of the quantity delivered to
pool plants;
(c) Diverted
by a pool plant operator to another pool plant.
Milk so diverted shall be priced at the location of the plant to which
diverted; or
(d) Diverted
by the operator of a pool plant or by a cooperative association described in
§1000.9(c) to a nonpool plant, subject to the following conditions:
(1) Milk of a dairy farmer shall not be eligible for diversion until
milk of such dairy farmer has been physically received as producer milk at a
pool plant and the dairy farmer has continuously retained producer status since
that time. If a dairy farmer loses
producer status under the order in this part (except as a result of a temporary
loss of Grade A approval), the dairy farmer’s milk
shall not be eligible for diversion until milk of the dairy farmer has been
physically received as producer milk at a pool plant;
(2) The equivalent of at least two day’s milk production is caused by
the handler to be physically received at a pool plant in each of the months of
August through November;
(3) The equivalent of at least two days' milk production is caused by
the handler to be physically received at a pool plant in each of the months of
December through July if the requirement of paragraph (d)(2)
of this section (§1033.13) in each of the prior months of August through
November are not met, except in the case of a dairy farmer who marketed no
Grade A milk during each of the prior months of August through November.
(4) Of the total quantity of producer milk received during the month
(including diversions but excluding the quantity of producer milk received from
a handler described in §1000.9(c) or which is diverted to another pool plant),
the handler diverted to nonpool plants not more than 50 percent in each of the
months of August through February and 60 percent in each of the months of March
through July.
(5) Diverted milk shall be priced at the location of the plant to which
diverted;
(6) Any milk diverted in excess of the limits set forth in paragraph (d)(3) of this section shall not be producer milk. The diverting handler shall designate the
dairy farmer deliveries that shall not be producer milk. If the handler fails to designate the dairy
farmer deliveries which are ineligible, producer milk status shall be forfeited
with respect to all milk diverted to nonpool plants by such handler; and
(7) The delivery day requirement in paragraphs (d)(2) and (d)(3) of this
section and the diversion percentages in paragraph (d)(4) of this section may
be increased or decreased by the market administrator if the market
administrator finds that such revision is necessary to assure orderly marketing
and efficient handling of milk in the marketing area. Before making such a finding, the market
administrator shall investigate the need for the revision either on the market
administrator’s own initiative or at the request of interested persons if the
request is made in writing at least 15 days prior to the month for which the
requested revision is desired effective.
If the investigation shows that a revision might be appropriate, the
market administrator shall issue a notice stating that the revision is being
considered and inviting written data, views, and arguments. Any decision to revise an applicable
percentage must be issued in writing at least one day before the effective
date.
(e) Producer
milk shall not include milk of a producer that is subject to inclusion and
participation in a marketwide equalization pool under a milk classification and
pricing plan imposed under the authority of another government entity.
(f) Producer
milk of a handler shall not exceed the limits as established in §1033.13(f)(1) through §1033.13(f)(3).
(1) Producer milk for the months of April through February may not
exceed 115 percent of the producer milk receipts of the prior month. Producer milk for March may not exceed 120
percent of producer receipts of the prior month; plus
(2) Milk shipped to and physically received at pool distributing
plants and allocated to Class I use in excess of the volume allocated to Class
I in the prior month; plus
(3) If a producer did not have any milk delivered to any plant as
other than producer milk as defined under the order in this part or any other
Federal milk order for the preceding three months; and the producer had milk
qualified as producer milk on any other Federal order in the previous month,
add the lesser of the following:
(i) Any positive difference of the volume of
milk qualified as producer milk on any other Federal order in the previous
month, less the volume of milk qualified as producer milk on any other Federal
order in the current month, or
(ii) Any positive difference of the volume of milk
qualified as producer milk under the order in this part in the current month,
less the volume of milk qualified as producer milk under the order in this part
in the previous month.
(4)
Milk received at pool plants in
excess of these limits shall be classified pursuant to §1000.44(a)(3)(v) and §1000.44(b).
Milk diverted to nonpool plants reported in excess of this limit shall
not be producer milk. The handler must
designate, by producer pick-up, which milk shall not be producer milk. If the handler fails to provide this
information the provisions of §1033.13(d)(6) shall
apply.
(5)
The market administrator may waive
these limitations:
(i) For
a new handler on the order, subject to the provisions of §1033.13(f)(6), or
(ii) For
an existing handler with significantly changed milk supply conditions due to
unusual circumstances;
(6) Milk may not be considered producer milk if
the market administrator determines that handlers altered the reporting of such
milk for the purpose of evading the provisions of this paragraph.
§1000.14 Other source milk.
Other source milk means all skim
milk and butterfat contained in or represented by:
(a) Receipts
of fluid milk products and bulk fluid cream products from any source other than
producers, handlers described in §1000.9(c) and §1033.11, or pool plants;
(b) Products
(other than fluid milk products, fluid cream products, and products produced at
the plant during the same month) from any source which are reprocessed,
converted into, or combined with another product in the plant during the month;
and
(c) Receipts
of any milk product (other than a fluid milk product or a fluid cream product)
for which the handler fails to establish a disposition.
§1000.15 Fluid milk product.
(b) The term fluid milk product shall not
include:
(1) Any product that contains less than 6.5
percent nonfat milk solids and contains less than 2.25 percent true milk
protein; whey; plain or sweetened evaporated milk/skim milk; sweetened
condensed milk/skim milk; yogurt containing beverages with 20 or more percent
yogurt by weight and kefir; products especially prepared for infant feeding or
dietary use (meal replacement) that are packaged in hermetically sealed
containers; and products that meet the compositional standards specified in
paragraph (a) of this section but contain no fluid milk products included in
paragraph (a) of this section.
(2) The quantity of skim milk equivalent in any
modified product specified in paragraph (a) of this section that is greater
than an equal volume of an unmodified product of the same nature and butterfat
content.
§1000.16 Fluid cream product.
Fluid cream product means cream
(other than plastic cream or frozen cream), including sterilized cream, or a
mixture of cream and milk or skim milk containing 9 percent or more butterfat,
with or without the addition of other ingredients.
§1033.17 [Reserved]
§1000.18 Cooperative association.
Cooperative association means any
cooperative marketing association of producers which the Secretary determines
is qualified under the provisions of the Capper-Volstead Act, has full authority
in the sale of milk of its members, and is engaged in marketing milk or milk
products for its members. A federation
of 2 or more cooperatives incorporated under the laws of any state will be
considered a cooperative association under any Federal milk order if all member
cooperatives meet the requirements of this section.
§1000.19 Commercial food processing establishment.
Commercial food processing
establishment means any facility, other than a milk plant, to which fluid
milk products and fluid cream products are disposed of, or producer milk is
diverted, that uses such receipts as ingredients in food products and has no
other disposition of fluid milk products other than those received in
consumer-type packages (1 gallon or less).
Producer milk diverted to commercial food processing establishments
shall be subject to the same provisions relating to diversions to plants,
including, but not limited to, §§1033.13 and 1000.52 of each Federal milk
order.
Subpart
C--Rules of Practice and Procedure Governing Market Administrators
§1000.25 Market administrator.
(a) Designation. The agency for the
administration of the order shall be a market administrator selected by the
Secretary and subject to removal at the Secretary’s discretion. The market
administrator shall be entitled to compensation determined by the Secretary.
(b) Powers. The market administrator
shall have the following powers with respect to each
order under
his/her administration:
Part
1000, as Amended, Effective April 1, 2003
(1) Administer the order in
accordance with its terms and provisions;
(2) Maintain and invest funds
outside of the United States Department of the Treasury for the purpose of
administering the order;
(3) Make rules and regulations
to effectuate the terms and provisions of the order;
(4) Receive, investigate, and
report complaints of violations to the Secretary; and
(5) Recommend amendments to the
Secretary.
(c) Duties. The market administrator
shall perform all the duties necessary to administer the terms and provisions
of each order under his/her administration, including, but not limited to, the
following:
(1) Employ and fix the
compensation of persons necessary to enable him/her to exercise the powers and
perform the duties of the office;
(2) Pay out of funds provided by
the administrative assessment, except expenses associated with functions for
which the order provides a separate charge, all expenses necessarily incurred
in the maintenance and functioning of the office and in the performance of the
duties of the office, including the market administrator’s compensation;
(3) Keep records which will
clearly reflect the transactions provided for in the order and upon request by
the Secretary, surrender the records to a successor or such other person as the
Secretary may designate;
(4) Furnish information and
reports requested by the Secretary and submit office records for examination by
the Secretary;
(5) Announce publicly at his/her
discretion, unless otherwise directed by the Secretary, by such means as he/she
deems appropriate, the name of any handler who, after the date upon which the
handler is required to perform such act, has not:
(i) Made reports
required by the order;
(ii) Made payments
required by the order; or
(iii) Made available
records and facilities as required pursuant to §1000.27;
(6) Prescribe reports required
of each handler under the order. Verify such reports and the payments required
by the order by examining records (including such papers as copies of income
tax reports, fiscal and product accounts, correspondence, contracts, documents
or memoranda of the handler, and the records of any other persons that are
relevant to the handler’s obligation under the order), by examining such
handler’s milk handling facilities, and by such other investigation as the
market administrator deems necessary for the purpose of ascertaining the
correctness of any report or any obligation under the order. Reclassify skim
milk and butterfat received by any handler if such examination and investigation
discloses that the original classification was incorrect; Part 1000, as
Amended, Effective April 1, 2003
(7) Furnish each regulated
handler a written statement of such handler’s accounts with the market
administrator promptly each month. Furnish a corrected statement to such
handler if verification discloses that the original statement was incorrect;
and
(8) Prepare and disseminate
publicly for the benefit of producers, handlers, and consumers such statistics
and other information concerning operation of the order and facts relevant to
the provisions thereof (or proposed provisions) as do not reveal confidential
information.
Subpart
D--Rules Governing Order Provisions
§1000.26
Continuity and separability of provisions.
(a) Effective time. The provisions of
the order or any amendment to the order shall become effective at such time as
the Secretary may declare and shall continue in force until suspended or
terminated.
(b) Suspension or termination. The
Secretary shall suspend or terminate any or all of the provisions of the order
whenever he/she finds that such provision(s) obstructs or does not tend to
effectuate the declared policy of the Act. The order shall terminate whenever
the provisions of the Act authorizing it cease to be in effect.
(c) Continuing obligations. If upon the
suspension or termination of any or all of the provisions of the order there
are any obligations arising under the order, the final accrual or ascertainment
of which requires acts by any handler, by the market administrator or by any
other person, the power and duty to perform such further acts shall continue
notwithstanding such suspension or termination.
(d) Liquidation.
(1) Upon the suspension or
termination of any or all provisions of the order the market administrator, or
such other liquidating agent designated by the Secretary, shall, if so directed
by the Secretary, liquidate the business of the market administrator's office,
dispose of all property in his/her possession or control, including accounts
receivable, and execute and deliver all assignments or other instruments
necessary or appropriate to effectuate any such disposition; and
(2) If a liquidating agent is so
designated, all assets and records of the market administrator shall be
transferred promptly to such liquidating agent. If, upon such liquidation, the
funds on hand exceed the amounts required to pay outstanding obligations of the
office of the market administrator and to pay necessary expenses of liquidation
and distribution, such excess shall be distributed to contributing handlers and
producers in an equitable manner.
(e) Separability of provisions. If any
provision of the order or its application to any person or circumstances is
held invalid, the application of such provision and of the Part 1000, as
Amended, Effective April 1, 2003 remaining provisions of the order to other
persons or circumstances shall not be affected thereby.
Subpart
E--Rules of Practice and Procedure Governing Handlers
§1000.27 Handler responsibility for records and facilities.
Each
handler shall maintain and retain records of its operations and make such
records and its facilities available to the market administrator. If adequate
records of a handler, or of any other persons, that are relevant to the
obligation of such handler are not maintained and made available,
any skim milk
and butterfat required to be reported by such handler for which adequate
records are not available shall be considered as used in the highest-priced
class.
(a) Records to be maintained.
(1) Each handler shall maintain
records of its operations (including, but not limited to, records of purchases,
sales, processing, packaging, and disposition) as are necessary to
verify whether such handler has any obligation under the order and if so, the
amount of such obligation. Such records shall be such as to establish for each
plant or other receiving point for each month:
(i) The quantities of
skim milk and butterfat contained in, or represented by, products received in
any form, including inventories on hand at the beginning of the month,
according to form, time, and source of each receipt;
(ii) The utilization of
all skim milk and butterfat showing the respective quantities of such skim milk
and butterfat in each form disposed of or on hand at the end of the month; and
(iii) Payments to
producers, dairy farmers, and cooperative associations, including the amount
and nature of any deductions and the disbursement of money so deducted.
(2) Each handler shall keep such
other specific records as the market administrator deems necessary to verify or
establish such handler's obligation under the order.
(b) Availability of records and
facilities. Each handler shall make available all records pertaining to such
handler's operations and all facilities the market administrator finds are
necessary to verify the information required to be reported by the order and/or
to ascertain such handler's reporting, monetary, or other obligation under the
order. Each handler shall permit the market administrator to weigh, sample, and
test milk and milk products and observe plant operations and equipment and make
available to the market administrator such facilities as are necessary to carry
out his/her duties.
(c) Retention of records. All records
required under the order to be made available to the market administrator shall
be retained by the handler for a period of 3 years to begin at the end of the
month to which such records pertain. If, within such 3-year period, the Part
1000, as Amended, Effective April 1, 2003 market administrator notifies the
handler in writing that the retention of such records, or of specified records,
is necessary in connection with a proceeding under section 8c(15)(A)
of the Act or a court action specified in such notice, the handler shall retain
such records, or specified records, until further written notification from the
market administrator. The market administrator shall give further written
notification to the handler promptly upon the termination of the litigation or
when the records are no longer necessary in connection therewith.
§1000.28 Termination of obligations.
(a) Except as provided in paragraphs (b)
and (c) of this section, the obligation of any handler to pay money required to
be paid under the terms of the order shall terminate 2 years after the last day
of the month during which the market administrator receives the handler's
report of receipts and utilization on which such obligation is based, unless
within such 2-year period, the market administrator notifies the handler in
writing that such money is due and payable. Service of such written notice
shall be complete upon mailing to the handler's last known address and it shall
contain, but need not be limited to, the following information:
(1) The amount of the obligation;
(2) The month(s) on which such
obligation is based; and
(3) If the obligation is payable
to one or more producers or to a cooperative association, the name of such
producer(s) or such cooperative association, or if the obligation is payable to
the market administrator, the account for which it is to be paid.
(b) If a handler fails or refuses, with
respect to any obligation under the order, to make available to the market
administrator all records required by the order to be made available, the market
administrator may notify the handler in writing, within the 2-year period
provided for in paragraph (a) of this section, of such failure or refusal. If
the market administrator so notifies a handler, the said 2-year period with
respect to such obligation shall not begin to run until the first day of the
month following the month during which all such records pertaining to such
obligation are made available to the market administrator.
(c) Notwithstanding the provisions of
paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section, a handler's obligation under the order
to pay money shall not be terminated with respect to any transaction involving
fraud or willful concealment of a fact, material to the obligation, on the part
of the handler against whom the obligation is sought to be imposed.
(d) Unless the handler files a petition
pursuant to section 8c(15)(A) of the Act and the
applicable rules and regulations (7 CFR 900.50 through 900.71) within the
applicable 2-year period indicated below, the obligation of the market
administrator:
(1) To pay a handler any money
which such handler claims is due under the terms of the order shall terminate 2
years after the end of the month during which the skim milk and butterfat
involved in the claim were received; or
(2) To refund any payment made
by a handler (including a deduction or offset by the market administrator)
shall terminate 2 years after the end of the month during which payment was
made by the handler.
§1033.30 Reports of receipts and utilization.
Each handler shall report monthly so
that the market administrator’s office receives the report on or before the 7th day after the end of the month, in
the detail and on the prescribed forms, as follows:
(a) Each
handler that operates a pool plant pursuant to §1033.7 shall report for each of
its operations the following information:
(1) Product pounds, pounds of butterfat, pounds of protein,
pounds of solids‑not‑fat
other than protein (other solids), and the value of the somatic cell adjustment
pursuant to §1000.50(p), contained in or represented by:
(i) Receipts of producer milk, including
producer milk diverted by the reporting handler, from sources other than
handlers described in §1000.9(c); and
(ii) Receipts of milk from handlers described in
§1000.9(c);
(2) Product pounds and pounds of butterfat contained in:
(i) Receipts of fluid milk products and bulk
fluid cream products from other pool plants;
(ii) Receipts of other source milk; and
(iii) Inventories at the beginning and end of the
month of fluid milk products and bulk fluid cream products;
(3) The utilization or disposition of all milk and milk products
required to be reported pursuant to this paragraph; and
(4) Such other information with respect to the receipts and utilization
of skim milk, butterfat, milk protein, other nonfat solids, and somatic cell
information as the market administrator may prescribe.
(b) Each
handler operating a partially regulated distributing plant shall report with
respect to such plant in the same manner as prescribed for reports required by
paragraph (a) of this section. Receipts
of milk that would have been producer milk if the plant had been fully
regulated shall be reported in lieu of producer milk. The report shall show also the quantity of
any reconstituted skim milk in route disposition in the marketing area.
(c) Each
handler described in §1000.9(c) shall report:
(1) The product pounds, pounds of butterfat, pounds of protein, pounds
of solids-not-fat other than protein (other solids), and the value of the
somatic cell adjustment pursuant to §1000.50(p), contained in receipts of milk
from producers; and
(2) The utilization or disposition of such receipts.
(d) Each
handler not specified in paragraphs (a) through (c) of this section shall
report with respect to its receipts and utilization of milk and milk products
in such manner as the market administrator may prescribe.
§1033.31 Payroll reports.
(a) On
or before the 22nd
day after the end of each month, each handler that operates a pool plant
pursuant to §1033.7 and each handler described in §1000.9(c) shall report to
the market administrator its producer payroll for the month, in the detail
prescribed by the market administrator, showing for each producer the
information described in §1033.73(e).
(b) Each
handler operating a partially regulated distributing plant who elects to make
payment pursuant to §1000.76(b) shall report for each dairy farmer who would
have been a producer if the plant had been fully regulated in the same manner
as prescribed for reports required by paragraph (a) of this section.
§1033.32 Other reports.
In addition to the reports required
pursuant to §§1033.30 and 1033.31, each handler shall report any information
the market administrator deems necessary to verify or establish each handler’s
obligation under the order.
§1000.40 Classes of Utilization.
Except as provided in §1000.42, all skim
milk and butterfat required to be reported pursuant to §1033.30 of each Federal
milk order shall be classified as follows:
(a) Class
I milk shall be all skim milk and butterfat:
(1) Disposed of in the form of fluid milk
products, except as otherwise provided in this section;
(2) In packaged fluid milk products in inventory at the end of the month;
and
(3) In shrinkage assigned pursuant to §1000.43(b).
(b) Class
II milk shall be all skim milk and butterfat:
(1) In fluid milk products in containers larger than 1 gallon and
fluid cream products disposed of or diverted to a commercial food processing
establishment if the market administrator is permitted to audit the records of
the commercial food processing establishment for the purpose of
verification. Otherwise, such uses shall
be Class I;
(2) Used to produce:
(i) Cottage cheese, lowfat cottage cheese, dry
curd cottage cheese, ricotta cheese, pot cheese, Creole cheese, and any similar
soft, high‑moisture cheese resembling cottage cheese in form or use;
(ii) Milkshake and ice milk mixes (or bases),
frozen desserts, and frozen dessert mixes distributed in half-gallon containers
or larger and intended to be used in soft or semi-solid form;
(iii) Aerated cream, frozen cream, sour cream, sour half‑and‑half,
sour cream mixtures containing non-milk items; yogurt, including yogurt
containing beverages with 20 percent or more yogurt by weight and kefir, and
any other semi-solid product resembling a Class II product
(iv) Custards, puddings, pancake mixes,
coatings, batter, and similar products;
(v) Buttermilk biscuit mixes and other buttermilk
for baking that contain food starch in excess of 2% of the total solids,
provided that the product is labeled to indicate the food starch content;
(vi) Products especially prepared for infant
feeding or dietary use (meal replacement) that are packaged in hermetically
sealed containers and products that meet the compositional standards of
§1000.15(a) but contain no fluid milk products included in §1000.15(a).
(vii) Candy, soup,
bakery products and other prepared foods which are processed for general
distribution to the public, and intermediate products, including sweetened
condensed milk, to be used in processing such prepared food products;
(viii) A fluid cream product or any product
containing artificial fat or fat substitutes that resembles a fluid cream
product, except as otherwise provided in paragraph (c) of this section; and
(ix) Any product not otherwise specified in this
section; and
(3) In shrinkage assigned pursuant to §1000.43(b).
(c) Class
III milk shall be all skim milk and butterfat:
(1) Used to produce:
(i) Cream cheese and other spreadable cheeses,
and hard cheese of types that may be shredded, grated, or crumbled;
(ii) Plastic cream, anhydrous milkfat, and
butteroil; and
(2) In shrinkage assigned pursuant to §1000.43(b).
(d) Class
IV milk shall be all skim milk and butterfat:
(1) Used to produce:
(i) Butter; and
(ii) Evaporated or sweetened condensed milk in a
consumer‑type package; and
(iii) Any milk product in dried form;
(2) In inventory at the end of the month of fluid milk products and
fluid cream products in bulk form;
(3) In the skim milk equivalent of nonfat milk solids used to modify a
fluid milk product that has not been accounted for in Class I; and
(4) In shrinkage assigned pursuant to §1000.43(b).
(e) Other
uses. Other uses include skim milk
and butterfat used in any product described in this section that is dumped,
used for animal feed, destroyed, or lost by a handler in a vehicular accident,
flood, fire, or similar occurrence beyond the handler’s control. Such uses of skim milk and butterfat shall be
assigned to the lowest priced class for the month to the extent that the
quantities destroyed or lost can be verified from records satisfactory to the
market administrator.
§1033.41 [Reserved]
§1000.42 Classification of transfers and diversions.
(a) Transfers
and diversions to pool plants. Skim
milk or butterfat transferred or diverted in the form of a fluid milk product
or transferred in the form of a bulk fluid cream product from a pool plant or a
handler described in §1033.11 of this chapter to another pool plant shall be
classified as Class I milk unless the handlers both request the same
classification in another class. In
either case, the classification shall be subject to the following conditions:
(1) The skim milk and butterfat classified in each class shall be
limited to the amount of skim milk and butterfat, respectively, remaining in
such class at the receiving plant after the computations pursuant to
§1000.44(a)(9) and the corresponding step of §1000.44(b);
(2) If the transferring plant received during the month other source
milk to be allocated pursuant to §1000.44(a)(3) or the corresponding step of
§1000.44(b), the skim milk or butterfat so transferred shall be classified so
as to allocate the least possible Class I utilization to such other source
milk; and
(3) If the transferring handler received during the month other source
milk to be allocated pursuant to §1000.44(a)(8) or (9) or the corresponding
steps of §1000.44(b), the skim milk or butterfat so transferred, up to the
total of the skim milk and butterfat, respectively, in such receipts of other
source milk, shall not be classified as Class I milk to a greater extent than
would be the case if the other source milk had been received at the receiving
plant.
(b) Transfers
and diversions to a plant regulated under another Federal order. Skim milk or butterfat transferred or
diverted in the form of a fluid milk product or transferred in the form of a
bulk fluid cream product from a pool plant to a plant regulated under another
Federal order shall be classified in the following manner. Such classification shall apply only to the
skim milk or butterfat that is in excess of any receipts at the pool plant from
a plant regulated under another Federal order of skim milk and butterfat,
respectively, in fluid milk products and bulk fluid cream products,
respectively, that are in the same category as described in paragraph (b)(1) or (2) of this section:
(1) As Class I milk, if transferred as packaged fluid milk products;
(2) If transferred or diverted in bulk form, classification shall be
in the classes to which allocated under the other order:
(i) If the operators of both plants so request
in their reports of receipts and utilization filed with their respective market
administrators, transfers in bulk form shall be classified as other than Class
I to the extent that such utilization is available for such classification
pursuant to the allocation provisions of the other order;
(ii) If diverted, the diverting handler must
request a classification other than Class I.
If the plant receiving the diverted milk does not have sufficient
utilization available for the requested classification and some of the diverted
milk is consequently assigned to Class I use, the diverting handler shall be
given the option of designating the entire load of diverted milk as producer
milk at the plant physically receiving the milk. Alternatively, if the diverting handler so
chooses, it may designate which dairy farmers whose milk was diverted during
the month will be designated as producers under the order physically receiving
the milk. If the diverting handler
declines to accept either of these options, the market administrator will
prorate the portion of diverted milk in excess of Class II, III, and IV use
among all the dairy farmers whose milk was received from the diverting handler
on the last day of the month, then the second-to-last day, and continuing in
that fashion until the excess diverted milk has been assigned as producer milk
under the receiving order; and
(iii) If information concerning the classes to which
such transfers or diversions were allocated under the other order is not
available to the market administrator for the purpose of establishing
classification under this paragraph, classification shall be Class I, subject
to adjustment when such information is available.
(c) Transfers
and diversions to producer-handlers and to exempt plants. Skim milk or butterfat that is transferred or
diverted from a pool plant to a producer-handler under any Federal order or to
an exempt plant shall be classified:
(1) As Class I milk if transferred or diverted to a producer-handler;
(2) As
Class I milk if transferred to an exempt plant in the form of a packaged fluid
milk product; and
(3) In accordance with the utilization assigned to it by the market
administrator if transferred or diverted in the form of a bulk fluid milk
product or transferred in the form of a bulk fluid cream product to an exempt
plant. For this purpose, the receiving
handler’s utilization of skim milk and butterfat in each class, in series
beginning with Class IV, shall be assigned to the extent possible to its
receipts of skim milk and butterfat, in bulk fluid cream products, and bulk
fluid milk products, respectively, pro rata to each source.
(d) Transfers
and diversions to other nonpool plants.
Skim milk or butterfat transferred or diverted in the following forms
from a pool plant to a nonpool plant that is not a plant regulated under
another order, an exempt plant, or a producer‑handler plant shall be
classified:
(1) As Class I milk, if transferred in the form of a packaged fluid
milk product; and
(2) As Class I milk, if transferred or diverted in the form of a bulk
fluid milk product or transferred in the form of a bulk fluid cream product,
unless the following conditions apply:
(i) If the conditions described in paragraphs (d)(2)(i)(A) and (B) of this section are met, transfers or
diversions in bulk form shall be classified on the basis of the assignment of
the nonpool plant’s utilization, excluding the milk equivalent of both nonfat
milk solids and concentrated milk used in the plant during the month, to its
receipts as set forth in paragraphs (d)(2)(ii) through (viii) of this section:
(A) The transferring handler or diverting handler
claims such classification in such handler’s report of receipts and utilization
filed pursuant to § 1033.30 of each Federal milk order for the month within
which such transaction occurred; and
(B) The nonpool plant operator maintains books
and records showing the utilization of all skim milk and butterfat received at
such plant which are made available for verification purposes if requested by
the market administrator;
(ii) Route disposition in the marketing area of
each Federal milk order from the nonpool plant and transfers of packaged fluid
milk products from such nonpool plant to plants fully regulated thereunder
shall be assigned to the extent possible in the following sequence:
(A) Pro rata to receipts of packaged fluid milk
products at such nonpool plant from pool plants;
(B) Pro rata to any remaining unassigned receipts
of packaged fluid milk products at such nonpool plant from plants regulated
under other Federal orders;
(C) Pro rata to receipts of bulk fluid milk
products at such nonpool plant from pool plants; and
(D) Pro rata to any remaining unassigned receipts
of bulk fluid milk products at such nonpool plant from plants regulated under
other Federal orders;
(iii) Any remaining Class I disposition of packaged
fluid milk products from the nonpool plant shall be assigned to the extent
possible pro rata to any remaining unassigned receipts of packaged fluid milk
products at such nonpool plant from pool plants and plants regulated under
other Federal orders;
(iv) Transfers of bulk fluid milk products
from the nonpool plant to a plant regulated under any Federal order, to the
extent that such transfers to the regulated plant exceed receipts of fluid milk
products from such plant and are allocated to Class I at the receiving plant,
shall be assigned to the extent possible in the following sequence:
(A) Pro rata to receipts of fluid milk products at
such nonpool plant from pool plants; and
(B) Pro rata to any remaining unassigned receipts
of fluid milk products at such nonpool plant from plants regulated under other
Federal orders;
(v) Any remaining unassigned Class I disposition
from the nonpool plant shall be assigned to the extent possible in the
following sequence:
(A) To such nonpool plant’s receipts from dairy
farmers who the market administrator determines constitute regular sources of
Grade A milk for such nonpool plant; and
(B) To such nonpool plant’s receipts of Grade A milk from plants not fully regulated under any Federal
order which the market administrator determines constitute regular sources of
Grade A milk for such nonpool plant;
(vi) Any remaining unassigned receipts of bulk
fluid milk products at the nonpool plant from pool plants and plants regulated
under other Federal orders shall be assigned, pro rata among such plants, to
the extent possible first to any remaining Class I utilization and then to all
other utilization, in sequence beginning with Class IV at such nonpool plant;
(vii) Receipts of bulk fluid cream products at the
nonpool plant from pool plants and plants regulated under other Federal orders
shall be assigned, pro rata among such plants, to the extent possible to any
remaining utilization, in sequence beginning with Class IV at such nonpool
plant; and
(viii) In determining the nonpool plant’s
utilization for purposes of this paragraph, any fluid milk products and bulk
fluid cream products transferred from such nonpool plant to a plant not fully
regulated under any Federal order shall be classified on the basis of the
second plant’s utilization using the same assignment priorities at the second
plant that are set forth in this paragraph.
§1000.43 General classification rules.
In determining the classification of
producer milk pursuant to §1000.44, the following rules shall apply:
(a) Each
month the market administrator shall correct for mathematical and other obvious
errors all reports filed pursuant to §1033.30 of each Federal milk order and
shall compute separately for each pool plant, for each handler described in
§1000.9(c) and §1033.11 of this chapter, the pounds of skim milk and butterfat,
respectively, in each class in accordance with §§1000.40 and 1000.42, and
paragraph (b) of this section.
(b) Shrinkage
and Overage. For purposes of
classifying all milk reported by a handler pursuant to §1033.30 of each Federal
milk order the market administrator shall determine the shrinkage or overage of
skim milk and butterfat for each pool plant and each handler described in
§1000.9(c) and §1033.11 of this chapter by subtracting total utilization from
total receipts. Any positive difference
shall be shrinkage, and any negative difference shall be overage.
(1) Shrinkage incurred by pool plants qualified pursuant to §1033.7 of
any Federal milk order shall be assigned to the lowest-priced class to the
extent that such shrinkage does not exceed:
(i) Two percent of the total quantity of milk
physically received at the plant directly from producers’ farms on the basis of
farm weights and tests;
(ii) Plus 1.5 percent of the quantity of bulk milk
physically received on a basis other than farm weights and tests, excluding concentrated
milk received by agreement for other than Class I use;
(iii) Plus .5 percent of the quantity of milk
diverted by the plant operator to another plant on a basis other than farm
weights and tests; and
(iv) Minus 1.5 percent of the quantity of bulk milk
transferred to other plants, excluding concentrated milk transferred by
agreement for other than Class I use.
(2) A handler described in §1000.9(c) or §1033.11 of this chapter that
delivers milk to plants on a basis other than farm weights and tests shall
receive a lowest-priced-class shrinkage allowance of .5 percent of the total
quantity of such milk picked up at producers’ farms.
(3) Shrinkage in excess of the amounts provided in paragraphs (b)(1) and (2) of this section shall be assigned to existing
utilization in series starting with Class I.
The shrinkage assigned pursuant to this paragraph shall be added to the
handler’s reported utilization and the result shall be known as the gross
utilization in each class.
(c) If
any of the water but none of the nonfat solids contained in the milk from which
a product is made is removed before the product is utilized or disposed of by
the handler, the pounds of skim milk in such product that are to be considered
under this part as used or disposed of by the handler shall be an amount
equivalent to the nonfat milk solids contained in such product plus all of the
water originally associated with such solids.
If any of the nonfat solids contained in the milk from which a product
is made are removed before the products is utilized or disposed of by the
handler, the pounds of skim milk in such product that are to be considered
under this part as used or disposed of by the handler shall be an amount
equivalent to the nonfat milk solids contained in such product plus all of the
water and nonfat solids originally associated with such solids determined on a
protein equivalent basis.
(d) Skim
milk and butterfat contained in receipts of bulk concentrated fluid milk and
nonfluid milk products that are reconstituted for fluid use shall be assigned
to Class I use, up to the reconstituted portion of labeled reconstituted fluid
milk products, on a pro rata basis (except for any Class I use of specific
concentrated receipts that is established by the handler) prior to any
assignments under §1000.44 of this chapter.
Any remaining skim milk and butterfat in concentrated receipts shall be
assigned to uses under §1000.44 on a pro rata basis, unless a specific use of
such receipts is established by the handler.
§1000.44 Classification of producer milk.
For each month the market administrator
shall determine for each handler described in §1000.9(a) for each pool
plant of the handler separately and for each handler described in §1000.9(c)
and §1033.11 the classification of producer milk by allocating the handler’s
receipts of skim milk and butterfat to the handler’s gross utilization of such
receipts pursuant to §1000.43(b)(3) as follows:
(a) Skim
milk shall be allocated in the following manner:
(1) Subtract from the pounds of skim milk in Class I the pounds of
skim milk in:
(i) Receipts of packaged fluid milk products
from an unregulated supply plant to the extent that an equivalent amount of
skim milk disposed of to such plant by handlers fully regulated under any
Federal order is classified and priced as Class I milk and is not used as an
offset for any other payment obligation under any order;
(ii) Packaged fluid milk products in inventory at
the beginning of the month. This
paragraph shall apply only if the pool plant was subject to the provisions of
this paragraph or comparable provisions of another Federal order in the
immediately preceding month;
(iii) Fluid milk products received in packaged form
from plants regulated under other Federal orders; and
(iv) To the extent that the receipts described in
paragraphs (a)(1)(i) through (iii) of this section
exceed the gross Class I utilization of skim milk, the excess receipts shall be
subtracted pursuant to paragraph (a)(3)(vi) of this section.
(2) Subtract from the pounds of skim milk in Class II the pounds of
skim milk in the receipts of skim milk in bulk concentrated fluid milk products
and in other source milk (except other source milk received in the form of an
unconcentrated fluid milk product or a fluid cream product) that is used to
produce, or added to, any product in Class II (excluding the quantity of such
skim milk that was classified as Class IV milk pursuant to §1000.40(d)(3)). To the extent
that the receipts described in this paragraph exceed the gross Class II
utilization of skim milk, the excess receipts shall be subtracted pursuant to
paragraph (a)(3)(vi) of this section.
(3) Subtract from the pounds of skim milk remaining in each class, in
series beginning with Class IV, the pounds of skim milk in:
(i) Receipts of bulk concentrated fluid milk
products and other source milk (except other source milk received in the form
of an unconcentrated fluid milk product);
(ii) Receipts of fluid milk products and bulk
fluid cream products for which appropriate health approval is not established
and from unidentified sources;
(iii) Receipts of fluid milk products and bulk fluid
cream products from an exempt plant;
(iv) Fluid milk products and bulk fluid cream
products received from a producer-handler as defined under the order in this
part or any other Federal order;
(v) Receipts of fluid milk products from dairy
farmers for other markets; and
(vi) The excess receipts specified in paragraphs (a)(1)(iv) and (a)(2) of this section.
(4) Subtract from the pounds of skim milk remaining in all classes
other than Class I, in sequence beginning with Class IV, the receipts of fluid
milk products from an unregulated supply plant that were not previously
subtracted in this section for which the handler requests classification other
than Class I, but not in excess of the pounds of skim milk remaining in these
other classes combined.
(5) Subtract from the pounds of skim milk remaining in all classes
other than Class I, in sequence beginning with Class IV, receipts of fluid milk
products from an unregulated supply plant that were not previously subtracted
in this section, and which are in excess of the pounds of skim milk determined
pursuant to paragraphs (a)(5)(i) and (ii) of this
section;
(i) Multiply by 1.25 the pounds of skim milk
remaining in Class I at this allocation step; and
(ii) Subtract from the result in paragraph (a)(5)(i) the pounds of skim milk in receipts of producer milk
and fluid milk products from other pool plants.
(6) Subtract from the pounds of skim milk remaining in all classes
other than Class I, in sequence beginning with Class IV, the pounds of skim
milk in receipts of bulk fluid milk products from a handler regulated under
another Federal order that are in excess of bulk fluid milk products
transferred or diverted to such handler, if other than Class I classification
is requested, but not in excess of the pounds of skim milk remaining in these
classes combined.
(7) Subtract from the pounds of skim milk remaining in each class, in
series beginning with Class IV, the pounds of skim milk in fluid milk products
and bulk fluid cream products in inventory at the beginning of the month that
were not previously subtracted in this section.
(8) Subtract from the pounds of skim milk remaining in each class
at the plant receipts of skim milk in fluid milk products from an unregulated
supply plant that were not previously subtracted in this section and that were
not offset by transfers or diversions of fluid milk products to the unregulated
supply plant from which fluid milk products to be allocated at this step were
received. Such subtraction shall be pro
rata to the pounds of skim milk in Class I and in Classes II, III, and IV
combined, with the quantity prorated to Classes II, III, and IV combined being
subtracted in sequence beginning with Class IV.
(9) Subtract from the pounds of skim milk remaining in each class the
pounds of skim milk in receipts of bulk fluid milk products from a handler
regulated under another Federal order that are in excess of bulk fluid milk
products transferred or diverted to such handler that were not subtracted in
paragraph (a)(6) of this section. Such
subtraction shall be pro rata to the pounds of skim milk in Class I and in
Classes II, III, and IV combined, with the quantity prorated to Classes II,
III, and IV combined being subtracted in sequence beginning with Class IV, with
respect to whichever of the following quantities represents the lower
proportion of Class I milk:
(i) The estimated utilization of skim milk of
all handlers in each class as announced for the month pursuant to §1000.45(a);
or
(ii) The total pounds of skim milk remaining in
each class at this allocation step.
(10) Subtract from the pounds of skim milk remaining in each class the
pounds of skim milk in receipts of fluid milk products and bulk fluid cream
products from another pool plant and from a handler described in §1033.11 of
this chapter according to the classification of such products pursuant to §1000.42(a).
(11) If the total pounds of skim milk remaining in all classes exceed the
pounds of skim milk in producer milk, subtract such excess from the pounds of
skim milk remaining in each class in series beginning with Class IV.
(b) Butterfat
shall be allocated in accordance with the procedure outlined for skim milk in
paragraph (a) of this section.
(c) The
quantity of producer milk in each class shall be the combined pounds of skim
milk and butterfat remaining in each class after the computations pursuant to
paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section.
§1000.45 Market administrator’s reports and
announcements concerning classification.
(a) Whenever
required for the purpose of allocating receipts from plants regulated under
other Federal orders pursuant to §1000.44(a)(9) and
the corresponding step of §1000.44(b), the market administrator shall estimate
and publicly announce the utilization (to the nearest whole percentage) in
Class I during the month of skim milk and butterfat, respectively, in producer
milk of all handlers. The estimate shall
be based upon the most current available data and shall be final for such
purpose.
(b) The
market administrator shall report to the market administrators of other Federal
orders as soon as possible after the handlers’ reports of receipts and
utilization are received, the class to which receipts from plants regulated
under other Federal orders are allocated pursuant to §§1000.43(d) and 1000.44
(including any reclassification of inventories of bulk concentrated fluid milk
products), and thereafter any change in allocation required to correct errors
disclosed on the verification of such report.
(c) The
market administrator shall furnish each handler operating a pool plant and each
handler described in §1033.11 of this chapter who has shipped fluid milk
products or bulk fluid cream products to a plant fully regulated under another
Federal order the class to which the shipments were allocated by the market
administrator of the other Federal order on the basis of the report by the
receiving handler and, as necessary, any changes in the allocation arising from
the verification of such report.
(d) The
market administrator shall report to each cooperative association which so
requests, the percentage of producer milk delivered by members of the
association that was used in each class by each handler receiving the
milk. For the purpose of this report,
the milk so received shall be prorated to each class in accordance with
the total utilization of producer milk by the handler.
§1000.50 Class prices, component prices, and
advanced pricing factors.
Class
prices per hundredweight of milk containing 3.5 percent butterfat, component
prices, and advanced pricing factors shall be as follows. The prices and pricing factors described in
paragraphs (a), (b), (c), (e), (f), and (q) of this section shall be based on a
weighted average of the most recent 2 weekly prices announced by the National
Agricultural Statistical Service (NASS) before the 24th day of the month. These prices shall be announced on or before
the 23rd
day of the month and shall apply to milk received during the following
month. The prices described in
paragraphs (g) through (p) of this section shall be based on a weighted average
for the preceding month of weekly prices announced by NASS on or before the 5th day of the month and shall apply to
milk received during the preceding month.
The price described in paragraph (d) of this section shall be derived
from the Class II skim milk price announced on or before the 23rd day of the month preceding
the month to which it applies and the butterfat price announced on or before
the 5th
day of the month following the month to which it applies.
(a) Class
I price. The Class I price per
hundredweight, rounded to the nearest cent, shall be 0.965 times the Class I
skim milk price plus 3.5 times the Class I butterfat price.
(b) Class
I skim milk price. The Class I skim
milk price per hundredweight shall be the adjusted Class I differential
specified in §1000.52, plus the adjustment to Class I prices specified in
§1005.51(b), §1006.51(b) and §1007.51(b), plus the higher of the advanced
pricing factors computed in paragraph (q)(1) or (2) of
this section.
(c) Class
I butterfat price. The Class I butterfat
price per pound shall be the adjusted Class I differential specified in
§1000.52 divided by 100, plus the adjustments to Class I prices specified in
§1005.51(b), §1006.51(b) and §1007.51(b) divided by 100, plus the advanced
butterfat price computed in paragraph (q)(3) of this
section.
(d) The
Class II price per hundredweight, rounded to the nearest cent, shall be
0.965 times the Class II skim milk price plus 3.5 times the Class II butterfat
price.
(e) Class
II skim milk price. The Class II
skim milk price per hundredweight shall be the advanced Class IV skim milk
price computed in paragraph (q)(2) of this section plus 70 cents.
(f) Class
II nonfat solids price. The Class II
nonfat solids price per pound, rounded to the nearest one-hundredth cent, shall
be the Class II skim milk price divided by 9.
(g) Class
II butterfat price. The Class II
butterfat price per pound shall be the butterfat price plus $0.007.
(h) Class
III price. The Class III price per
hundredweight, rounded to the nearest cent, shall be 0.965 times the Class III
skim milk price plus 3.5 times the butterfat price.
(i) Class
III skim milk price. The Class III
skim milk price per hundredweight, rounded to the nearest cent, shall be the
protein price per pound times 3.1 plus the other solids price per pound times
5.9.
(j) Class
IV price. The Class IV price per
hundredweight, rounded to the nearest cent, shall be 0.965 times the Class IV
skim milk price plus 3.5 times the butterfat price.
(k) Class
IV skim milk price. The Class IV
skim milk price per hundredweight, rounded to the nearest cent, shall be the
nonfat solids price per pound times 9.
(l) Butterfat
price. The butterfat price per pound, rounded to the nearest one-hundredth
cent, shall be the
(m) Nonfat
solids price. The nonfat solids
price per pound, rounded to the nearest one-hundredth cent, shall be the
(n) Protein
price. The protein price per pound,
rounded to the nearest one-hundredth cent, shall be computed as follows:
(1) Compute a weighted average of the amounts described in paragraphs
(n)(1)(i) and (ii) of this section:
(i) The
(ii) The
(2) Subtract 20.03 cents from the price computed pursuant to paragraph
(n)(1) of this section and multiply the result by
1.383;
(3) Add to the amount computed pursuant to paragraph (n)(2) of this section an amount computed as follows:
(i) Subtract 20.03 cents from the price computed
pursuant to paragraph (n)(1) of this section and
multiply the result by 1.572; and
(ii) Subtract 0.9 times the butterfat price
computed pursuant to paragraph (l) of this section from the amount computed
pursuant to paragraph (n)(3)(i) of this section; and
(iii) Multiply the amount computed pursuant to
paragraph (n)(3)(ii) of this section by 1.17.
(o) Other
solids price. The other solids price
per pound, rounded to the nearest one-hundredth cent, shall be the
(p) Somatic cell adjustment. The somatic
cell adjustment per hundredweight of milk shall be determined as follows:
(1) Multiply 0.0005 by the weighted average price computed pursuant to
paragraph (n)(1) of this section and round to the 5th decimal place;
(2) Subtract the somatic cell count of the milk (reported in
thousands) from 350; and
(3) Multiply the amount computed in paragraph (p)(1)
of this section by the amount computed in paragraph (p)(2) of this section and
round to the nearest full cent.
(q) Advanced pricing factors. For the purpose of computing the Class I skim
milk price, the Class II skim milk price, the Class II nonfat solids price, and
the Class I butterfat price for the following month, the following pricing
factors shall be computed using the weighted average of the 2 most recent NASS
U.S. average weekly survey prices announced before the 24th day of the month:
(1) An advanced Class III skim milk price per hundredweight, rounded
to the nearest cent, shall be computed as follows:
(i) Following the procedure set forth in
paragraphs (n) and (o) of this section, but using the weighted average of the 2
most recent NASS U.S. average weekly survey prices announced before the 24th day of the month, compute a protein
price and an other solids price;
(ii) Multiply the protein price computed in
paragraph (q)(1)(i) of this section by 3.1;
(iii) Multiply the other solids price per pound
computed in paragraph (q)(1)(i) of this section by
5.9; and
(iv) Add the amounts computed in paragraphs (q)(1)(ii) and (iii) of this section.
(2) An advanced Class IV skim
milk price per hundredweight, rounded to the nearest cent, shall be computed as
follows:
(i) Following the procedure set forth in
paragraph (m) of this section, but using the weighted average of the 2 most
recent NASS U.S. average weekly survey prices announced before the 24th day of the month, compute a nonfat
solids price; and
(ii) Multiply the nonfat solids price computed in
paragraph (q)(2)(i) of this section by 9.
(3) An advanced butterfat price per pound, rounded to the nearest
one-hundredth cent, shall be calculated by computing a weighted average of the
2 most recent U.S. average NASS AA Butter survey prices announced before the 24th day of the month, subtracting 17.15
cents from this average, and multiplying the result by 1.211.
§1033.51 Class I differential and price.
The Class I differential shall be the
differential established for
§1000.52 Adjusted Class I differentials.
The Class I differential adjusted for
location to be used in §1000.50(b) and (c) shall be as follows:
|
|
|
|
CLASS I DIFFERENTIAL |
|
COUNTY/ |
|
|
ADJUSTED FOR |
|
PARISH / CITY |
STATE |
FIPS_CODE |
LOCATION |
|
|
IN |
18001 |
1.80 |
|
ALLEN |
IN |
18003 |
1.80 |
|
BARTHOLOMEW |
IN |
18005 |
2.20 |
|
|
IN |
18007 |
1.80 |
|
BLACKFORD |
IN |
18009 |
1.80 |
|
BOONE |
IN |
18011 |
2.00 |
|
BROWN |
IN |
18013 |
2.20 |
|
CARROLL |
IN |
18015 |
1.80 |
|
CASS |
IN |
18017 |
1.80 |
|
CLAY |
IN |
18021 |
2.00 |
|
|
IN |
18023 |
1.80 |
|
DE KALB |
IN |
18033 |
1.80 |
|
|
IN |
18029 |
2.20 |
|
|
IN |
18031 |
2.20 |
|
|
IN |
18035 |
2.00 |
|
|
IN |
18039 |
1.80 |
|
FAYETTE |
IN |
18041 |
2.00 |
|
FOUNTAIN |
IN |
18045 |
1.80 |
|
|
IN |
18047 |
2.00 |
|
|
IN |
18049 |
1.80 |
|
GRANT |
IN |
18053 |
1.80 |
|
|
IN |
18057 |
2.00 |
|
HANCOCK |
IN |
18059 |
2.00 |
|
HENDRICKS |
IN |
18063 |
2.00 |
|
HENRY |
IN |
18065 |
2.00 |
|
HOWARD |
IN |
18067 |
1.80 |
|
|
IN |
18069 |
1.80 |
|
|
IN |
18071 |
2.20 |
|
JASPER |
IN |
18073 |
1.80 |
|
JAY |
IN |
18075 |
1.80 |
|
|
IN |
18077 |
2.20 |
|
|
IN |
18079 |
2.20 |
|
JOHNSON |
IN |
18081 |
2.00 |
|
KOSCIUSKO |
IN |
18085 |
1.80 |
|
|
IN |
18091 |
1.80 |
|
LAGRANGE |
IN |
18087 |
1.80 |
|
|
IN |
18089 |
1.80 |
|
|
IN |
18093 |
2.20 |
|
|
IN |
18095 |
2.00 |
|
|
IN |
18097 |
2.00 |
|
|
IN |
18099 |
1.80 |
|
|
IN |
18103 |
1.80 |
|
|
IN |
18105 |
2.20 |
|
|
IN |
18107 |
2.00 |
|
MORGAN |
IN |
18109 |
2.00 |
|
|
IN |
18111 |
1.80 |
|
NOBLE |
IN |
18113 |
1.80 |
|
|
IN |
18115 |
2.20 |
|
OWEN |
IN |
18119 |
2.00 |
|
PARKE |
IN |
18121 |
2.00 |
|
PORTER |
IN |
18127 |
1.80 |
|
PULASKI |
IN |
18131 |
1.80 |
|
PUTNAM |
IN |
18133 |
2.00 |
|
|
IN |
18135 |
2.00 |
|
RIPLEY |
IN |
18137 |
2.20 |
|
RUSH |
IN |
18139 |
2.00 |
|
|
IN |
18145 |
2.00 |
|
ST. JOSEPH |
IN |
18141 |
1.80 |
|
STARKE |
IN |
18149 |
1.80 |
|
STEUBEN |
IN |
18151 |
1.80 |
|
|
IN |
18155 |
2.20 |
|
|
IN |
18157 |
1.80 |
|
TIPTON |
IN |
18159 |
1.80 |
|
|
IN |
18161 |
2.00 |
|
VERMILLION |
IN |
18165 |
2.00 |
|
|
IN |
18167 |
2.00 |
|
|
IN |
18169 |
1.80 |
|
|
IN |
18171 |
1.80 |
|
|
IN |
18177 |
2.00 |
|
WELLS |
IN |
18179 |
1.80 |
|
WHITE |
IN |
18181 |
1.80 |
|
WHITLEY |
IN |
18183 |
1.80 |
|
BOONE |
KY |
21015 |
2.20 |
|
BOYD |
KY |
21019 |
2.20 |
|
BRACKEN |
KY |
21023 |
2.20 |
|
|
KY |
21037 |
2.20 |
|
FLOYD |
KY |
21071 |
2.20 |
|
GRANT |
KY |
21081 |
2.20 |
|
GREENUP |
KY |
21089 |
2.20 |
|
|
KY |
21097 |
2.20 |
|
JOHNSON |
KY |
21115 |
2.20 |
|
KENTON |
KY |
21117 |
2.20 |
|
|
KY |
21127 |
2.20 |
|
LEWIS |
KY |
21135 |
2.20 |
|
MAGOFFIN |
KY |
21153 |
2.20 |
|
MARTIN |
KY |
21159 |
2.20 |
|
MASON |
KY |
21161 |
2.20 |
|
PENDLETON |
KY |
21191 |
2.20 |
|
PIKE |
KY |
21195 |
2.40 |
|
ROBERTSON |
KY |
21201 |
2.20 |
|
ALCONA |
MI |
26001 |
1.80 |
|
ALGER |
MI |
26003 |
1.80 |
|
ALLEGAN |
MI |
26005 |
1.80 |
|
ALPENA |
MI |
26007 |
1.80 |
|
ANTRIM |
MI |
26009 |
1.80 |
|
ARENAC |
MI |
26011 |
1.80 |
|
BARAGA |
MI |
26013 |
1.70 |
|
BARRY |
MI |
26015 |
1.80 |
|
BAY |
MI |
26017 |
1.80 |
|
BENZIE |
MI |
26019 |
1.80 |
|
BERRIEN |
MI |
26021 |
1.80 |
|
BRANCH |
MI |
26023 |
1.80 |
|
CALHOUN |
MI |
26025 |
1.80 |
|
CASS |
MI |
26027 |
1.80 |
|
CHARLEVOIX |
MI |
26029 |
1.80 |
|
CHEBOYGAN |
MI |
26031 |
1.80 |
|
CHIPPEWA |
MI |
26033 |
1.80 |
|
CLARE |
MI |
26035 |
1.80 |
|
|
MI |
26037 |
1.80 |
|
CRAWFORD |
MI |
26039 |
1.80 |
|
EATON |
MI |
26045 |
1.80 |
|
EMMET |
MI |
26047 |
1.80 |
|
|
MI |
26049 |
1.80 |
|
GLADWIN |
MI |
26051 |
1.80 |
|
GRAND TRAVERSE |
MI |
26055 |
1.80 |
|
GRATIOT |
MI |
26057 |
1.80 |
|
HILLSDALE |
MI |
26059 |
1.80 |
|
HOUGHTON |
MI |
26061 |
1.70 |
|
HURON |
MI |
26063 |
1.80 |
|
INGHAM |
MI |
26065 |
1.80 |
|
|
MI |
26067 |
1.80 |
|
IOSCO |
MI |
26069 |
1.80 |
|
ISABELLA |
MI |
26073 |
1.80 |
|
|
MI |
26075 |
1.80 |
|
|
MI |
26077 |
1.80 |
|
KALKASKA |
MI |
26079 |
1.80 |
|
|
MI |
26081 |
1.80 |
|
KEWEENAW |
MI |
26083 |
1.70 |
|
|
MI |
26085 |
1.80 |
|
LAPEER |
MI |
26087 |
1.80 |
|
LEELANAU |
MI |
26089 |
1.80 |
|
LENAWEE |
MI |
26091 |
1.80 |
|
|
MI |
26093 |
1.80 |
|
LUCE |
MI |
26095 |
1.80 |
|
MACKINAC |
MI |
26097 |
1.80 |
|
|
MI |
26099 |
1.80 |
|
MANISTEE |
MI |
26101 |
1.80 |
|
|
MI |
26103 |
1.80 |
|
MASON |
MI |
26105 |
1.80 |
|
MECOSTA |
MI |
26107 |
1.80 |
|
|
MI |
26111 |
1.80 |
|
MISSAUKEE |
MI |
26113 |
1.80 |
|
|
MI |
26115 |
1.80 |
|
MONTCALM |
MI |
26117 |
1.80 |
|
MONTMORENCY |
MI |
26119 |
1.80 |
|
|
MI |
26121 |
1.80 |
|
NEWAYGO |
MI |
26123 |
1.80 |
|
|
MI |
26125 |
1.80 |
|
OCEANA |
MI |
26127 |
1.80 |
|
OGEMAW |
MI |
26129 |
1.80 |
|
OSCEOLA |
MI |
26133 |
1.80 |
|
OSCODA |
MI |
26135 |
1.80 |
|
OTSEGO |
MI |
26137 |
1.80 |
|
|
MI |
26139 |
1.80 |
|
PRESQUE ISLE |
MI |
26141 |
1.80 |
|
ROSCOMMON |
MI |
26143 |
1.80 |
|
|
MI |
26145 |
1.80 |
|
SANILAC |
MI |
26151 |
1.80 |
|
SCHOOLCRAFT |
MI |
26153 |
1.80 |
|
SHIAWASSEE |
MI |
26155 |
1.80 |
|
ST. CLAIR |
MI |
26147 |
1.80 |
|
ST. JOSEPH |
MI |
26149 |
1.80 |
|
TUSCOLA |
MI |
26157 |
1.80 |
|
VAN BUREN |
MI |
26159 |
1.80 |
|
WASHTENAW |
MI |
26161 |
1.80 |
|
|
MI |
26163 |
1.80 |
|
WEXFORD |
MI |
26165 |
1.80 |
|
|
OH |
39001 |
2.20 |
|
ALLEN |
OH |
39003 |
2.00 |
|
|
OH |
39005 |
2.00 |
|
|
OH |
39007 |
2.00 |
|
|
OH |
39009 |
2.00 |
|
AUGLAIZE |
OH |
39011 |
2.00 |
|
|
OH |
39013 |
2.00 |
|
BROWN |
OH |
39015 |
2.20 |
|
|
OH |
39017 |
2.00 |
|
CARROLL |
OH |
39019 |
2.00 |
|
|
OH |
39021 |
2.00 |
|
|
OH |
39023 |
2.00 |
|
CLERMONT |
OH |
39025 |
2.20 |
|
|
OH |
39027 |
2.00 |
|
COLUMBIANA |
OH |
39029 |
2.00 |
|
COSHOCTON |
OH |
39031 |
2.00 |
|
CRAWFORD |
OH |
39033 |
2.00 |
|
CUYAHOGA |
OH |
39035 |
2.00 |
|
DARKE |
OH |
39037 |
2.00 |
|
|
OH |
39039 |
1.80 |
|
|
OH |
39041 |
2.00 |
|
|
OH |
39045 |
2.00 |
|
FAYETTE |
OH |
39047 |
2.00 |
|
|
OH |
39049 |
2.00 |
|
|
OH |
39051 |
1.80 |
|
|
OH |
39053 |
2.20 |
|
GEAUGA |
OH |
39055 |
2.00 |
|
GREENE |
OH |
39057 |
2.00 |
|
|
OH |
39059 |
2.00 |
|
|
OH |
39061 |
2.20 |
|
HANCOCK |
OH |
39063 |
2.00 |
|
HARDIN |
OH |
39065 |
2.00 |
|
|
OH |
39067 |
2.00 |
|
HENRY |
OH |
39069 |
1.80 |
|
|
OH |
39071 |
2.20 |
|
HOCKING |
OH |
39073 |
2.00 |
|
HOLMES |
OH |
39075 |
2.00 |
|
|
OH |
39079 |
2.20 |
|
|
OH |
39081 |
2.00 |
|
KNOX |
OH |
39083 |
2.00 |
|
|
OH |
39085 |
2.00 |
|
|
OH |
39087 |
2.20 |
|
LICKING |
OH |
39089 |
2.00 |
|
|
OH |
39091 |
2.00 |
|
|
OH |
39093 |
2.00 |
|
LUCAS |
OH |
39095 |
1.80 |
|
|
OH |
39097 |
2.00 |
|
MAHONING |
OH |
39099 |
2.00 |
|
|
OH |
39101 |
2.00 |
|
|
OH |
39103 |
2.00 |
|
MEIGS |
OH |
39105 |
2.00 |
|
MERCER |
OH |
39107 |
2.00 |
|
|
OH |
39109 |
2.00 |
|
|
OH |
39111 |
2.00 |
|
|
OH |
39113 |
2.00 |
|
MORGAN |
OH |
39115 |
2.00 |
|
MORROW |
OH |
39117 |
2.00 |
|
MUSKINGUM |
OH |
39119 |
2.00 |
|
NOBLE |
OH |
39121 |
2.00 |
|
PAULDING |
OH |
39125 |
1.80 |
|
PERRY |
OH |
39127 |
2.00 |
|
PICKAWAY |
OH |
39129 |
2.00 |
|
PIKE |
OH |
39131 |
2.20 |
|
|
OH |
39133 |
2.00 |
|
PREBLE |
OH |
39135 |
2.00 |
|
PUTNAM |
OH |
39137 |
1.80 |
|
|
OH |
39139 |
2.00 |
|
ROSS |
OH |
39141 |
2.00 |
|
|
OH |
39143 |
2.00 |
|
|
OH |
39145 |
2.20 |
|
SENECA |
OH |
39147 |
2.00 |
|
|
OH |
39149 |
2.00 |
|
STARK |
OH |
39151 |
2.00 |
|
|
OH |
39153 |
2.00 |
|
|
OH |
39155 |
2.00 |
|
TUSCARAWAS |
OH |
39157 |
2.00 |
|
|
OH |
39159 |
2.00 |
|
VAN WERT |
OH |
39161 |
1.80 |
|
VINTON |
OH |
39163 |
2.00 |
|
|
OH |
39165 |
2.00 |
|
|
OH |
39167 |
2.00 |
|
|
OH |
39169 |
2.00 |
|
WILLIAMS |
OH |
39171 |
1.80 |
|
WOOD |
OH |
39173 |
2.00 |
|
WYANDOT |
OH |
39175 |
2.00 |
|
ALLEGHENY |
PA |
42003 |
2.10 |
|
ARMSTRONG |
PA |
42005 |
2.30 |
|
BEAVER |
PA |
42007 |
2.10 |
|
|
PA |
42019 |
2.10 |
|
CLARION |
PA |
42031 |
2.30 |
|
CRAWFORD |
PA |
42039 |
2.10 |
|
|
PA |
42049 |
2.10 |
|
FAYETTE |
PA |
42051 |
2.30 |
|
GREENE |
PA |
42059 |
2.10 |
|
|
PA |
42073 |
2.10 |
|
MERCER |
PA |
42085 |
2.10 |
|
VENANGO |
PA |
42121 |
2.10 |
|
|
PA |
42125 |
2.10 |
|
WESTMORELAND |
PA |
42129 |
2.30 |
|
BARBOUR |
WV |
54001 |
2.30 |
|
BOONE |
WV |
54005 |
2.20 |
|
BROOKE |
WV |
54009 |
2.10 |
|
CABELL |
WV |
54011 |
2.20 |
|
CALHOUN |
WV |
54013 |
2.20 |
|
DODDRIDGE |
WV |
54017 |
2.10 |
|
FAYETTE |
WV |
54019 |
2.20 |
|
GILMER |
WV |
54021 |
2.20 |
|
HANCOCK |
WV |
54029 |
2.10 |
|
|
WV |
54033 |
2.10 |
|
|
WV |
54035 |
2.20 |
|
KANAWHA |
WV |
54039 |
2.20 |
|
LEWIS |
WV |
54041 |
2.10 |
|
|
WV |
54043 |
2.20 |
|
|
WV |
54045 |
2.20 |
|
|
WV |
54049 |
2.10 |
|
|
WV |
54051 |
2.10 |
|
MASON |
WV |
54053 |
2.20 |
|
MINGO |
WV |
54059 |
2.20 |
|
MONONGALIA |
WV |
54061 |
2.10 |
|
|
WV |
54069 |
2.10 |
|
PLEASANTS |
WV |
54073 |
2.20 |
|
|
WV |
54077 |
2.30 |
|
PUTNAM |
WV |
54079 |
2.20 |
|
|
WV |
54081 |
2.20 |
|
|
WV |
54083 |
2.30 |
|
RITCHIE |
WV |
54085 |
2.20 |
|
ROANE |
WV |
54087 |
2.20 |
|
|
WV |
54091 |
2.30 |
|
TUCKER |
WV |
54093 |
2.30 |
|
|
WV |
54095 |
2.10 |
|
UPSHUR |
WV |
54097 |
2.30 |
|
|
WV |
54099 |
2.20 |
|
WETZEL |
WV |
54103 |
2.10 |
|
WIRT |
WV |
54105 |
2.20 |
|
WOOD |
WV |
54107 |
2.20 |
|
|
WV |
54109 |
2.20 |
§1000.53 Announcement of class prices, component prices,
and advanced pricing factors.
(a) On
or before the 5th
day of the month, the market administrator for each Federal milk marketing
order shall announce the following prices (as applicable to that order) for the
preceding month:
(1) The Class II price;
(2) The Class II butterfat price;
(3) The Class III price;
(4) The Class III skim milk price;
(5) The Class IV price;
(6) The Class IV skim milk price;
(7) The butterfat price;
(8) The nonfat solids
price;
(9) The protein price;
(10) The other solids price; and
(11) The somatic cell adjustment rate.
(b) On
or before the 23rd
day of the month, the market administrator for each Federal milk marketing
order shall announce the following prices and pricing factors for the following
month:
(1) The Class I price;
(2) The Class I skim milk price;
(3) The Class I butterfat price;
(4) The Class II skim milk price;
(5) The Class II nonfat solids price; and
(6) The advanced pricing factors described in §1000.50(q).
§1000.54 Equivalent price.
If for any reason a price or pricing
constituent required for computing the prices described in §1000.50 is not
available, the market administrator shall use a price or pricing constituent
determined by the Deputy Administrator, Dairy Programs, Agricultural Marketing
Service, to be equivalent to the price or pricing constituent that is required.
§1033.60 Handler’s value of milk.
For the purpose of computing a handler’s
obligation for producer milk, the market administrator shall determine for each
month the value of milk of each handler with respect to each of the handler’s
pool plants and of each handler described in §1000.9(c) with respect to milk
that was not received at a pool plant by adding the amounts computed in
paragraphs (a) through (i) of this section and subtracting from that total
amount the value computed in paragraph (j) of this section. Unless otherwise specified, the skim milk,
butterfat, and the combined pounds of skim milk and butterfat referred to in
this section shall result from the steps set forth in §1000.44(a), (b), and
(c), respectively, and the nonfat components of producer milk in each class
shall be based upon the proportion of such components in producer skim
milk. Receipts of nonfluid milk products
that are distributed as labeled reconstituted milk for which payments are made
to the producer-settlement fund of another Federal order under §1000.76(a)(4)
or (d) shall be excluded from pricing under this section.
(a) Class
I value.
(1) Multiply the pounds of skim milk in Class I by the Class I skim
milk price; and
(2) Add an amount obtained by multiplying the pounds of butterfat in
Class I by the Class I butterfat price.
(b) Class
II value.
(1) Multiply the pounds of nonfat solids in Class II skim milk by the
Class II nonfat solids price; and
(2) Add an amount obtained by multiplying the pounds of butterfat in
Class II times the Class II butterfat price.
(c) Class
III value.
(1) Multiply the pounds of protein in Class III skim milk by the
protein price;
(2) Add an amount obtained by multiplying the pounds of other solids
in Class III skim milk by the other solids price; and
(3) Add an amount obtained by multiplying the pounds of butterfat in
Class III by the butterfat price.
(d) Class
IV value.
(1) Multiply the pounds of nonfat solids in Class IV skim milk by the
nonfat solids price; and
(2) Add an amount obtained by multiplying the pounds of butterfat in
Class IV by the butterfat price.
(e) Compute
an adjustment for the somatic cell content of producer milk by multiplying the
values reported pursuant to § 1033.30(a)(1) and (c)(1) by the percentage
of total producer milk allocated to Class II, Class III, and
Class IV pursuant to §1000.44(c);
(f) Multiply
the pounds of skim milk and butterfat overage assigned to each class pursuant
to §1000.44(a)(11) and the corresponding step of
§1000.44(b) by the skim milk prices and butterfat prices applicable to each
class.
(g) Multiply
the difference between the current month’s Class I, II, or III price, as the
case may be, and the Class IV price for the preceding month by the
hundredweight of skim milk and butterfat subtracted from Class I, II, or III,
respectively, pursuant to §1000.44(a)(7) and the corresponding step of
§1000.44(b);
(h) Multiply
the difference between the Class I price applicable at the location of the pool
plant and the Class IV price by the hundredweight of skim milk and butterfat
assigned to Class I pursuant to §1000.43(d) and the hundredweight of skim milk
and butterfat subtracted from Class I pursuant to §1000.44(a)(3)(i) through
(vi) and the corresponding step of §1000.44(b), excluding receipts of bulk
fluid cream products from a plant regulated under other Federal orders and bulk
concentrated fluid milk products from pool plants, plants regulated under other
Federal orders, and unregulated supply plants.
(i) Multiply
the difference between the Class I price applicable at the location of the
nearest unregulated supply plants from which an equivalent volume was received
and the Class III price by the pounds of skim milk and butterfat in receipts of
concentrated fluid milk products assigned to Class I pursuant to §1000.43(d)
and §1000.44(a)(3)(i) and the corresponding step of §1000.44(b) and the pounds
of skim milk and butterfat subtracted from Class I pursuant to §1000.44(a)(8)
and the corresponding step of §1000.44(b), excluding such skim milk and
butterfat in receipts of fluid milk products from an unregulated supply plant
to the extent that an equivalent amount of skim milk or butterfat disposed of
to such plant by handlers fully regulated under any Federal milk order is
classified and priced as Class I milk and is not used as an offset for any
other payment obligation under any order.
(j) For
reconstituted milk made from receipts of nonfluid milk products, multiply $1.00
(but not more than the difference between the Class I price applicable at the
location of the pool plant and the Class IV price) by the hundredweight of skim
milk and butterfat contained in receipts of nonfluid milk products that are
allocated to Class I use pursuant to §1000.43(d).
§1033.61 Computation of producer price differential.
For each month the market administrator
shall compute a producer price differential per hundredweight. The report of any handler who has not made
payments required pursuant to §1033.71 for the preceding month shall not be
included in the computation of the producer price differential, and such
handler’s report shall not be included in the computation for succeeding months
until the handler has made full payment of outstanding monthly
obligations. Subject to the conditions
of this paragraph, the market administrator shall compute the producer price
differential in the following manner:
(a) Combine
into one total the values computed pursuant to §1033.60 for all handlers
required to file reports prescribed in §1033.30;
(b) Subtract
the total values obtained by multiplying each handler’s total pounds of
protein, other solids, and butterfat contained in the milk for which an
obligation was computed pursuant to §1033.60 by the protein price, the other
solids price, and the butterfat price, respectively, and the total value of the
somatic cell adjustment pursuant to §1033.30(a)(1) and
(c)(1);
(c) Add
an amount equal to the minus location adjustments and subtract an amount equal
to the plus location adjustments computed pursuant to §1033.75;
(d) Add
an amount equal to not less than one‑half of the unobligated balance in
the producer‑settlement fund;
(e) Divide
the resulting amount by the sum of the following for all handlers included in
these computations:
(1) The total hundredweight of producer milk; and
(2) The total hundredweight for which a value is computed pursuant to
§1033.60(i); and
(f) Subtract
not less than 4 cents nor more than 5 cents from the
price computed pursuant to paragraph (e) of this section. The result shall be known as the producer
price differential for the month.
§1033.62 Announcement of producer prices.
On or before the 13th day after the end of each month,
the market administrator shall announce publicly the following prices and
information:
(a) The
producer price differential;
(b) The
protein price;
(c) The
nonfat solids price;
(d) The
other solids price;
(e) The
butterfat price;
(f) The
somatic cell adjustment rate;
(g) The
average butterfat, protein, nonfat solids, and other solids content of producer
milk; and
(h) The
statistical uniform price for milk containing 3.5 percent butterfat, computed
by combining the Class III price and the producer price differential.
§1000.70 Producer-settlement fund.
The market administrator shall
establish and maintain a separate fund known as the
producer-settlement fund into which the market administrator shall deposit all
payments made by handlers pursuant to §§1033.71, 1000.76, and 1000.77 of each
Federal milk order and out of which the market administrator shall make all
payments pursuant to §§1033.72 and 1000.77 of each Federal milk order. Payments due any handler shall be offset by
any payments due from that handler.
§1033.71 Payments to the producer-settlement fund.
Each handler shall make payment to the
producer‑settlement fund in a manner that provides receipt of the funds
by the market administrator no later than the 15th day after the end of the month (except as provided in
§1000.90). Payment shall be the amount,
if any, by which the amount specified in paragraph (a) of
this section exceeds the amount specified in paragraph (b) of this
section:
(a) The
total value of milk to the handler for the month as determined pursuant to
§1033.60.
(b) The
sum of:
(1) An amount obtained by multiplying the total hundredweight of
producer milk as determined pursuant to §1000.44(c) by the producer price
differential as adjusted pursuant to §1033.75;
(2) An amount obtained by multiplying the total pounds of protein,
other solids, and butterfat contained in producer milk by the protein, other
solids, and butterfat prices, respectively;
(3) The total value of the somatic cell adjustment to producer milk;
and
(4) An amount obtained by multiplying the pounds of skim milk and
butterfat for which a value was computed pursuant to §1033.60(i) by the
producer price differential as adjusted pursuant to §1033.75 for the location
of the plant from which received.
§1033.72 Payments from the producer-settlement fund.
No later than the 16th day after the end of each month
(except as provided in §1000.90), the market administrator shall pay to each
handler the amount, if any, by which the amount computed pursuant to
§1033.71(b) exceeds the amount computed pursuant to §1033.71(a). If, at such time, the balance in the
producer-settlement fund is insufficient to make all payments pursuant to this
section, the market administrator shall reduce uniformly such payments and
shall complete the payments as soon as the funds are available.
§1033.73 Payments to producers and to cooperative
associations.
(a) Each
handler shall pay each producer for producer milk for which payment is not made
to a cooperative association pursuant to paragraph (b) of this section, as
follows:
(1) Partial payment. For
each producer who has not discontinued shipments as of the date of this partial
payment, payment shall be made so that it is received by each producer on or
before the 26th
day of the month (except as provided in §1000.90) for milk received during the
first 15 days of the month from the producer at not less than the lowest
announced class price for the preceding month, less proper deductions
authorized in writing by the producer.
(2) Final payment. For
milk received during the month, payment shall be made so that it is received by
each producer no later than the 17th day after the end of the month (except as provided in
§1000.90) in an amount equal to not less than the sum of:
(i) The hundredweight of producer milk received
times the producer price differential for the month as adjusted pursuant to §1033.75;
(ii) The pounds of butterfat received times the
butterfat price for the month;
(iii) The pounds of protein received times the
protein price for the month;
(iv) The pounds of other solids received
times the other solids price for the month;
(v) The hundredweight of milk received times the
somatic cell adjustment for the month;
(vi) Less any payment made pursuant to paragraph (a)(1) of this section;
(vii) Less proper deductions authorized in writing by
such producer and plus or minus adjustments for errors in previous payments to
such producer; and
(viii) Less deductions for marketing services
pursuant to §1000.86.
(b) Payments
for milk received from cooperative associations. On or before the day prior to the dates
specified in paragraphs (a)(1) and (a)(2) of this
section (except as provided in §1000.90), each handler shall pay to a
cooperative association for milk received as follows:
(1) Partial payment to a cooperative association. For bulk fluid milk/skimmed milk received during
the first 15 days of the month from a cooperative association in any capacity,
except as the operator of a pool plant, the partial payment shall be equal to
the hundredweight of milk received multiplied by the lowest announced class
price for the preceding month.
(2) Partial payment to a cooperative association for milk
transferred from its pool plant. For
bulk fluid milk/skimmed milk products received during the first 15 days of the
month from a cooperative association in its capacity as the operator of a pool
plant, the partial payment shall be at the pool plant operator’s estimated use
value of the milk using the most recent class prices available at the receiving
plant’s location.
(3) Final payment to a cooperative association for milk transferred
from its pool plant. Following the classification of bulk fluid milk
products and bulk fluid cream products received during the month from a
cooperative association in its capacity as the operator of a pool plant, the
final payment for such receipts shall be determined as follows:
(i) The hundredweight of Class I skim milk
times the Class I skim milk price for the month plus the pounds of
Class I butterfat times the Class I butterfat price for the
month. The Class I prices to be used
shall be the prices effective at the location of the receiving plant;
(ii) The pounds of nonfat solids in Class II skim
milk by the Class II nonfat solids price;
(iii) The pounds of butterfat in Class II times the Class II butterfat price;
(iv) The pounds of nonfat solids in Class IV times the nonfat solids price;
(v) The pounds of butterfat in Class III and
Class IV milk times the butterfat price;
(vi) The pounds of protein in Class III
milk times the protein price;
(vii) The pounds of other solids in Class III
milk times the other solids price;
(viii) The hundredweight of Class II,
Class III, and Class IV milk times the somatic cell adjustment; and
(ix) Add together the amounts computed in
paragraphs (b)(3)(i) through (viii) of this section and from that sum deduct
any payment made pursuant to paragraph (b)(2) of this section; and
(4) Final payment to a cooperative association for bulk milk
received directly from producers’ farms.
For bulk milk received from a cooperative association during the month,
including the milk of producers who are not members of such association and who
the market administrator determines have authorized the cooperative association
to collect payment for their milk, the final payment for such milk shall be an
amount equal to the sum of the individual payments otherwise payable for such
milk pursuant to paragraph (a)(2) of this section.
(c) If
a handler has not received full payment from the market administrator pursuant
to §1033.72 by the payment date specified in paragraph (a) or (b) of this
section, the handler may reduce payments pursuant to paragraphs (a) and (b) of
this section, but not by more than the amount of the underpayment. The payments shall be completed on the next
scheduled payment date after receipt of the balance due from the market
administrator.
(d) If
a handler claims that a required payment to a producer cannot be made because
the producer is deceased or cannot be located, or because the cooperative
association or its lawful successor or assignee is no longer in existence, the
payment shall be made to the producer-settlement fund, and in the event that
the handler subsequently locates and pays the producer or a lawful claimant, or
in the event that the handler no longer exists and a lawful claim is later
established, the market administrator shall make the required payment from the
producer-settlement fund to the handler or to the lawful claimant, as the case
may be.
(e) In
making payments to producers pursuant to this section, each handler shall furnish
each producer, except a producer whose milk was received from a cooperative
association handler described in §1000.9(a) or (c), a supporting statement in a
form that may be retained by the recipient which shall show:
(1) The name, address, Grade A
identifier assigned by a duly constituted regulatory agency, and payroll number
of the producer;
(2) The daily and total pounds, and the month and dates such milk was
received from that producer;
(3) The total pounds of butterfat, protein, and other solids contained
in the producer’s milk;
(4) The somatic cell count of the producer’s milk;
(5) The minimum rate or rates at which payment to the producer is
required pursuant to the order in this part;
(6) The rate used in making payment if the rate is other than the
applicable minimum rate;
(7) The amount, or rate per hundredweight, or rate per pound of
component, and the nature of each deduction claimed by the handler; and
(8) The net amount of payment to the producer or cooperative
association.
§1033.74 [Reserved]
§1033.75 Plant location adjustments for producer
milk and nonpool milk.
For purposes of making payments for
producer milk and nonpool milk, a plant location adjustment shall be determined
by subtracting the Class I price specified in §1033.51 from the Class I price
at the plant’s location. The difference,
plus or minus as the case may be, shall be used to adjust the payments required
pursuant to §§1033.73 and 1000.76.
§1000.76 Payments by a handler operating a partially
regulated distributing plant.
On or before the 25th day after the end of the
month (except as provided in §1000.90), the operator of a partially regulated
distributing plant, other than a plant that is subject to marketwide pooling of
producer returns under a State government’s milk classification and pricing
program, shall pay to the market administrator for the producer-settlement fund
the amount computed pursuant to paragraph (a) of this section or, if the
handler submits the information specified in §§1033.30(b) and 1033.31(b) of the
order, the handler may elect to pay the amount computed pursuant to paragraph
(b) of this section. A partially
regulated distributing plant that is subject to marketwide pooling of producer
returns under a State government’s milk classification and pricing program
shall pay the amount computed pursuant to paragraph (c) of this section.
(a) The
payment under this paragraph shall be an amount resulting from the following
computations:
(1) From the plant’s route disposition in the marketing area:
(i) Subtract receipts of fluid milk products
classified as Class I milk from pool plants, plants fully regulated under other
Federal orders, and handlers described in §1000.9(c) and §1033.11 of this
chapter, except those receipts subtracted under a similar provision of another
Federal milk order;
(ii) Subtract receipts of fluid milk products from
another nonpool plant that is not a plant fully regulated under another Federal
order to the extent that an equivalent amount of fluid milk products disposed
of to the nonpool plant by handlers fully regulated under any Federal order is
classified and priced as Class I milk and is not used as an offset for any
payment obligation under any order; and
(iii) Subtract the pounds of reconstituted milk made
from nonfluid milk products which are disposed of as route disposition in the
marketing area;
(2) For orders with multiple component
pricing, compute a Class I differential price by subtracting Class III price
from the current month’s Class I price.
Multiply the pounds remaining after the computation in paragraph (a)(1)(iii) of this section by the amount by which the Class I
differential price exceeds the producer price differential, both prices to be
applicable at the location of the partially regulated distributing plant except
that neither the adjusted Class I differential price nor the adjusted producer
price differential shall be less than zero;
(3) For orders with skim milk and butterfat pricing, multiply the
remaining pounds by the amount by which the Class I price exceeds the uniform
price, both prices to be applicable at the location of the partially regulated
distributing plant except that neither the adjusted Class I price nor the
adjusted uniform price differential shall be less than the lowest announced
class price; and
(4) Unless the payment option described in paragraph (d) is selected,
add the amount obtained from multiplying the pounds of labeled reconstituted
milk included in paragraph (a)(1)(iii) of this section
by any positive difference between the Class I price applicable at the location
of the partially regulated distributing plant (less $1.00 if the reconstituted
milk is labeled as such) and the Class IV price.
(b) The
payment under this paragraph shall be the amount resulting from the following
computations:
(1) Determine the value that would have been computed pursuant to
§1033.60 of the order for the partially regulated distributing plant if the
plant had been a pool plant, subject to the following modifications:
(i) Fluid milk products and bulk fluid cream
products received at the plant from a pool plant, a plant fully regulated under
another Federal order, and handlers described in §1000.9(c) and §1033.11 of
this chapter shall be allocated at the partially regulated distributing plant
to the same class in which such products were classified at the fully regulated
plant;
(ii) Fluid milk products and bulk fluid cream
products transferred from the partially regulated distributing plant to a pool
plant or a plant fully regulated under another Federal order shall be
classified at the partially regulated distributing plant in the class to which
allocated at the fully regulated plant.
Such transfers shall be allocated to the extent possible to those
receipts at the partially regulated distributing plant from the pool plant and
plants fully regulated under other Federal orders that are classified in the
corresponding class pursuant to paragraph (b)(1)(i) of this section. Any such transfers remaining after the above
allocation which are in Class I and for which a value is computed pursuant to
§1033.60 of the order for the partially regulated distributing plant shall be
priced at the statistical uniform price or uniform price, whichever is
applicable, of the respective order regulating the handling of milk at the
receiving plant, with such statistical uniform price or uniform price adjusted
to the location of the nonpool plant (but not to be less than the lowest
announced class price of the respective order); and
(iii) If the operator of the partially regulated
distributing plant so requests, the handler’s value of milk determined pursuant
to §1033.60 of the order shall include a value of milk determined for each
nonpool plant that is not a plant fully regulated under another Federal order
which serves as a supply plant for the partially regulated distributing plant
by making shipments to the partially regulated distributing plant during the
month equivalent to the requirements of §1033.7(c) of the order subject to the
following conditions:
(A) The operator of the partially regulated
distributing plant submits with its reports filed pursuant to §§1033.30(b) and
1033.31(b) of the order similar reports for each such nonpool supply plant;
(B) The operator of the nonpool plant maintains
books and records showing the utilization of all skim milk and butterfat
received at the plant which are made available if requested by the market
administrator for verification purposes; and
(C) The value of milk determined pursuant to
§1033.60 for the unregulated supply plant shall be determined in the same
manner prescribed for computing the obligation of the partially regulated
distributing plant; and
(2) From the partially regulated distributing plant’s value of milk
computed pursuant to paragraph (b)(1) of this section,
subtract:
(i) The gross payments that were made for milk
that would have been producer milk had the plant been fully regulated;
(ii) If paragraph (b)(1)(iii) of this section
applies, the gross payments by the operator of the nonpool supply plant for
milk received at the plant during the month that would have been producer milk
if the plant had been fully regulated; and
(iii) The payments by the operator of the partially
regulated distributing plant to the producer-settlement fund of another Federal
order under which the plant is also a partially regulated distributing plant
and, if paragraph (b)(1)(iii) of this section applies, payments made by the
operator of the nonpool supply plant to the producer-settlement fund of any
order.
(c) The
operator of a partially regulated distributing plant that is subject to
marketwide pooling of returns under a milk classification and pricing program
that is imposed under the authority of a State government shall pay on or
before the 25th
day after the end of the month (except as provided in §1000.90) to the market
administrator for the producer‑settlement fund an amount computed as
follows: After completing the
computations described in paragraphs (a)(1)(i) and (ii) of this section,
determine the value of the remaining pounds of fluid milk products disposed of
as route disposition in the marketing area by multiplying the hundredweight of
such pounds by the amount, if greater than zero, that remains after subtracting
the State program’s class prices applicable to such products at the plant’s
location from the Federal order Class I price applicable at the location of the
plant.
(d) Any
handler may elect partially regulated distributing plant status for any plant
with respect to receipts of nonfluid milk ingredients that are reconstituted
for fluid use. Payments may be made to
the producer-settlement fund of the order regulating the producer milk used to
produce the nonfluid milk ingredients at the positive difference between the
Class I price applicable under the other order at the location of the plant
where the nonfluid milk ingredients were processed and the Class IV price. This payment option shall apply only if a
majority of the total milk received at the plant that processed the nonfluid
milk ingredients is regulated under one or more Federal orders and payment may
only be made to the producer-settlement fund of the order pricing a plurality
of the milk used to produce the nonfluid milk ingredients. This payment option shall not apply if the
source of the nonfluid ingredients used in reconstituted fluid milk products
cannot be determined by the market administrator.
§1000.77 Adjustment of accounts.
Whenever audit by the market
administrator of any handler’s reports, books, records, or accounts, or other
verification discloses errors resulting in money due the market administrator
from a handler, or due a handler from the market administrator, or due a
producer or cooperative association from a handler, the market administrator
shall promptly notify such handler of any amount so due and payment thereof
shall be made on or before the next date for making payments as set forth in
the provisions under which the error(s) occurred.
§1000.78 Charges on overdue accounts.
Any unpaid obligation due the market
administrator, producers, or cooperative associations from a handler pursuant
to the provisions of the order shall be increased 1.0 percent each month
beginning with the day following the date such obligation was due under the
order. Any remaining amount due shall be
increased at the same rate on the corresponding day of each succeeding month
until paid. The amounts payable pursuant
to this section shall be computed monthly on each unpaid obligation and shall
include any unpaid charges previously computed pursuant to this section. The late charges shall accrue to the
administrative assessment fund. For the
purpose of this section, any obligation that was determined at a date later
than prescribed by the order because of a handler’s failure to submit a report
to the market administrator when due shall be considered to have been payable
by the date it would have been due if the report had been filed when due.
ADMINISTRATIVE ASSESSMENT AND
MARKETING SERVICE DEDUCTION
§1000.85 Assessment for order administration.
On or before the payment receipt date
specified under §1033.71 of each Federal milk order each handler shall pay to
the market administrator its pro rata share of the expense of administration of
the order at a rate specified by the market administrator that is no more than
5 cents per hundredweight with respect to:
(a) Receipts
of producer milk (including the handler’s own production) other than such
receipts by a handler described in §1000.9(c) that were delivered to pool
plants of other handlers;
(b) Receipts
from a handler described in §1000.9(c);
(c) Receipts
of concentrated fluid milk products from unregulated supply plants and receipts
of nonfluid milk products assigned to Class I use pursuant to §1000.43(d) and
other source milk allocated to Class I pursuant to §1000.44(a)(3) and (8) and
the corresponding steps of §1000.44(b), except other source milk that is
excluded from the computations pursuant to §1033.60(d) and (e) of Parts 1005,
1006, and 1007 of this chapter or §1033.60(h) and (i) of Parts 1001, 1030,
1032, 1033, 1124, 1126, 1131, and 1135 of this chapter; and
(d) Route
disposition in the marketing area from a partially regulated distributing plant
that exceeds the skim milk and butterfat subtracted pursuant to §1000.76(a)(1)(i)and (ii).
§1000.86 Deduction for marketing services.
(a) Except
as provided in paragraph (b) of this section, each handler in making payments
to producers for milk (other than milk of such handler’s own production)
pursuant to §1033.73 of each Federal milk order shall deduct an amount
specified by the market administrator that is no more than 7 cents per
hundredweight and shall pay the amount deducted to the market administrator not
later than the payment receipt date specified under §1033.71 of each Federal
milk order. The money shall be used by
the market administrator to verify or establish weights, samples and tests of
producer milk and provide market information for producers who are not
receiving such services from a cooperative association. The services shall be performed in whole or
in part by the market administrator or an agent engaged by and responsible to
the market administrator.
(b) In
the case of producers for whom the market administrator has determined that a
cooperative association is actually performing the services set forth in
paragraph (a) of this section, each handler shall make deductions from the
payments to be made to producers as may be authorized by the membership
agreement or marketing contract between the cooperative association and the
producers. On or before the 15th day after the end of the month (except as
provided in §1000.90), such deductions shall be paid to the cooperative
association rendering the services accompanied by a statement showing the
amount of any deductions and the amount of milk for which the deduction was
computed for each producer. These deductions shall be made in lieu of the
deduction specified in paragraph (a) of this section.
§1000.90 Dates.
If a date required for a payment
contained in a Federal milk order falls on a Saturday, Sunday, or national
holiday, such payment will be due on the next day that the market
administrator’s office is open for public business.
§1000.91 [Reserved]
§1000.92 [Reserved]
§1000.93 OMB control number assigned pursuant to
the Paperwork Reduction Act.
The information collection requirements
contained in this part have been approved by the Office of Management and
Budget (OMB) under the provisions of Title 44 U.S.C. chapter 35 and have been
assigned OMB control number 0581‑0032.