Bovine TB buyout program will remove 6,800 cattle

Loading infected cattle
When TB is found in cattle, the entire herd is purchased by the federal government and slaughtered.
MPR Photo/Dan Gunderson

The Minnesota Board of Animal Health says 6,800 cattle will be slaughtered or removed from a region in the northwestern part of the state that has been infected with bovine tuberculosis.

The agency says it received 45 buyout contracts from cattle producers who will get $500 per animal to slaughter their herd, plus $75 annually for each animal until the area regains its TB-free status.

The cattle must be slaughtered or removed from the area by the end of January. Those that are removed must meet specific testing requirements.

Record keeping
Accurate records help track the spread of bovine TB from one cattle herd to another. It's much more difficult to track the spread from wild deer to cattle.
MPR Photo/Dan Gunderson

Assistant Agriculture Commissioner Joe Martin says the buyout is a "significant step" toward eradicating bovine TB from the area.

But he also says it's "bittersweet" because some producers might not continue in the cattle business. -

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