Bird flu response in Michigan sparks COVID-era worry on farms
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[July 10, 2024]
By Tom Polansek, P.J. Huffstutter and Leah Douglas
MARTIN, Michigan (Reuters) - Some dairy farmers are resisting Michigan's
nation-leading efforts to stop the spread of bird flu for fear their
incomes will suffer from added costs and hurt rural America.
The government's restrictions, which include tracking who comes and goes
from farms, are rekindling unwanted memories of COVID-19 in Martin and
other small towns in central Michigan.
The state has two of the four known cases in humans, all dairy workers,
since federal authorities confirmed the world's first case in U.S.
cattle in late March. The state has tested more people than any of the
12 states with confirmed cases in cows, according to a Reuters survey of
state health departments. Testing policies vary by state.
Public health experts fear the disease has the potential to turn into
another pandemic just a few years after COVID-19. As those worries
mount, the acceptance and success or failure of Michigan's proactive
response is being watched by other states looking for a roadmap that
goes beyond federal containment recommendations.
More than a dozen interviews with Michigan producers, state health
officials, researchers and industry groups, along with preliminary data,
so far show limited dairy farmer participation in efforts to stem and
study the virus. In some cases, calls from local health officials go
unanswered, money for dairy farm research is left unclaimed, and workers
still milk cows without extra protective gear.
Brian DeMann, a dairy farmer from Martin, Michigan, said the outbreak
and state's response recalls COVID-19. The 37-year-old believes
Michigan's rules to contain bird flu would be more widely accepted if
they came as recommendations rather than requirements for farmers.
"Nobody knows if these things that we're being told to do are going to
stop it," said DeMann, who echoed an uncertain view shared by other
farmers. "Just like 2020, people didn't like to be told what to do."
This spring many U.S. dairy owners did not heed federal recommendations
to offer more protective equipment to employees, according to farmers
and workers. DeMann said he did not invest in new protective gear, such
as masks, for his workers because it is unclear how the virus is
spreading.
NO EXTRA GEAR
About 900 permitted dairy farms dot Michigan's countryside, with cows in
open-air barns and piles of feed covered with protective tarps and old
tires used as weights.
Tim Boring, Michigan's agriculture director, said social stigma and
economic concerns around infections have discouraged farmers from
testing cows for bird flu in the nation's sixth biggest milk producer.
"There's a lot of factors that go into the concerns about farms coming
forward with positive operations," he said. "We know this has been a
challenge in Michigan."
The state last reported an infected dairy herd on July 9, its 26th to
test positive. Five other states have also confirmed cases in the past
month, and about 140 herds have been infected nationally since March,
according to U.S. Department of Agriculture data.
Michigan is offering farms up to $28,000 to entice those with infected
herds to participate in research. More than a dozen farms have so far
expressed interest, the state said.
Separately, the federal government is offering financial assistance.
Twelve of 21 herds enrolled in financial support from USDA are from
Michigan, according to the agency.
To boost testing, USDA launched a voluntary program in which U.S.
farmers can test tanks of milk weekly for bird flu. Six farmers in six
states have enrolled one herd each, but a Michigan farmer is not among
them yet.
"I really would like to see that in every single herd," said Zelmar
Rodriguez, a Michigan State University dairy veterinarian studying
infections.
'NEW THREAT'
Michigan's agriculture department said it has up to 200 people
responding to bird flu cases in poultry and cattle, including
coordinating with USDA on outbreak investigations. Veterinarians in
other states said they tracked Michigan's cases to assess the risks for
transmission.
"Michigan is doing a good job with their diagnostics and trying to
identify where the disease is," said Mike Martin, North Carolina's state
veterinarian.
Michigan's outbreak in cows began after an infected Texas farm shipped
cattle to Michigan in March before the virus was detected, according to
USDA. Weeks later, a Michigan poultry farm also reported symptoms and
tested positive. Whole genome sequencing suggested the virus spilled
over from the dairy farm to the poultry flock.
USDA now thinks the virus has spread indirectly through people and
vehicles moving on and off infected farms.
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Brian DeMann is seen on his dairy farm in Martin, Michigan, U.S., on
June 6, 2024. REUTERS/Tom Polansek
Chickens owned by Michigan's largest
egg producer, Herbruck's Poultry Ranch, were infected because the
virus spread from cattle, said Nancy Barr, executive director of
Michigan Allied Poultry Industries, an industry group. Reuters is
first to report the link to Herbruck's from dairy cow transmission.
"It's a new threat to us," Barr said.
Herbruck's told the state in May it was laying off about 400 workers
after bird flu decimated flocks in Ionia County. The company said in
a public notice it planned to rehire employees as it rebuilds its
flocks, a process that can take six months.
As of late June, Ionia County poultry farmers received $73.2 million
in indemnity payments from the U.S. government for bird-flu losses,
the most of any county in the country that had to cull infected
flocks since February 2022, according to data Reuters obtained from
the USDA.
MAIN STREET
The layoffs struck fear in Ionia, a city of about 13,000 people in
central Michigan with a brick-paved Main Street and mural of the
Mona Lisa. Business owners said unemployed workers have less money
to spend at time when local stores already struggle to compete with
Walmart and Meijer.
"I just thought, 'Oh great, here goes the store,'" said Jennifer
Loudenbeck, owner of the Downtown Vintage Resale shop.
Alex Hanulcik, who owns a fresh fruit stand, said he knows a
Herbruck's employee who left town to find work in the southern U.S.
after being terminated.
"I really feel for the employees," Hanulcik said. "They were
blindsided."
Herbruck's declined to comment.
Dairy farmers said they are constantly worrying their cows may be
the next to become infected, yet they are unsure exactly how to
protect them.
Doug Chapin, a dairy farmer in Remus, Michigan, said he held
meetings with employees to inform them of the risks of the virus. He
is trying to make workers wear protective eye gear, though they
objected in the past because glasses must be cleaned if milk sprays
on them.
"You're thinking about it all the time," he said about the virus.
Michigan has plans to test dairy workers for signs of prior
infections with first-in-the-nation blood testing.
The state has already monitored thousands of people for bird flu
symptoms using a complex contact tracing system that texts them
three times daily, said Chad Shaw, health officer for the Ionia
County Health Department.
Some farmers remain reluctant to engage with local health
authorities, though.
The Branch-Hillsdale-St. Joseph Community Health Agency began
reaching out to farms generally to offer medical care for seasonal
workers because of bird flu cases, said health officer Rebecca
Burns. There has been little interest, she said.
"These guys aren't used to us calling them," Burns said.
HARD HIT
Michigan has detected the third most infected dairy herds of any
state, after Idaho and Colorado, and lost 6.5 million chickens in
April alone from outbreaks on poultry farms, USDA data show.
The Biden administration in late April began requiring lactating
cows to test negative before being shipped over state lines.
Michigan went further and in May started requiring farms to keep
logs of visitors, disinfect delivery trucks that could carry the
virus, and take other safety steps. The state this month began
requiring negative tests for non-lactating cows to be shown at
fairs.
Colorado reported the nation's fourth human case on July 3. The U.S.
government awarded $176 million to Moderna to advance development of
its bird flu vaccine for humans.
Two dozen companies are working on a vaccine for cattle, U.S
Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack said, as about 140 herds
nationally have tested positive.
"Michigan's been the forefront on providing information, providing
access to information that really is helpful," Vilsack told Reuters.
(Reporting by Tom Polansek in Martin, Michigan; PJ Huffsutter in
Chicago; and Leah Douglas in Washington. Additional reporting by
Heather Schlitz in Chicago. Editing by Caroline Stauffer and Anna
Driver)
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