Seen & Herd

Western United Dairies

Industry Updates for the Modern Dairy Family

  1. 6h ago

    New World Screwworm, New Field Reps, and What's Moving in Sacramento

    Western United Dairies CEO Anja Raudabaugh joins the podcast to cover three pressing topics: a confirmed New World Screwworm detection in Texas and what it means for California dairy operations, two new State Farmer Field Representatives joining the WUD team, and a quick read on the state budget and what's moving and stalling in Sacramento. New World Screwworm: What You Need to Know A confirmed case of New World Screwworm was detected in a three-week-old calf in Zavala County, Texas, on the evening of June 2nd. USDA and CDFA have activated response protocols, and while there are no confirmed cases in California, dairy farmers who move animals in and out of Texas need to act now. California movement requirements from the infected zone: A Certificate of Veterinary Inspection (CVI) must include a statement that all animals were inspected and found free of screwworm infestationA California entry permit must be requested from CDFA at least 48–72 hours before movement begins; the permit number must appear on the CVIAnimals must be individually inspected within five days of arrival by an authorized inspectorAnimals must receive treatment effective against screwworm (note: topical treatments are not an option for lactating dairy cows — talk to your herd vet)Animals must have official individual ID (premises ID from origin)Animals going to slaughter within 72 hours of inspection are exempt from treatment requirementsWhat to watch for on your operation: Inspect mucous membranes, mouth, eyes, nose, anus, mammary glands, genitalia, and any open wound sites (navels on newborns, dehorning and castration sites, tick bites)Signs of infestation: animals scratching or rubbing at wounds, foul-smelling discharge, or visible larvaeDo not move potentially infested animals without contacting CDFA firstContinue and reinforce fly control practices — sprays, fans, and minimizing wound riskWho to call: Start with your herd vet. They will contact CDFA, who will engage USDA/APHIS if needed. This situation is evolving. Check WUD's website and weekly newsletter for updates. Additional resources and CDFA's recommended actions for producers will be linked below. 🔗 Previous Screwworm Podcast Article🔗 CDFA Advisory New Faces at Western: Meet Jimmy and Andrew Western United Dairies has hired two new State Farmer Field Representatives — one for the North State and one for the South — bringing deep, on-the-ground dairy experience to the membership. Jimmy Burrows — North State Field Representative📧 Jimmy@wudairies.comAndrew Brazil — South State Field Representative📧 Andrew@wudairies.comBoth reps are currently doing outreach and getting to know the membership. Reach out, even just to say hello. Sacramento Update: Budget Tight, Decisions Delayed Governor Newsom is pushing for a more balanced budget than last year, and the pressure is real — the state is estimated to be somewhere between $9–18 billion in the negative. The statutory deadline for new legislation passed last week, and agency budget requests are facing significant pushback. Connect with WUD📧 podcast@wudairies.com🌐 wudairies.com

    21 min
  2. May 26

    Worms at Work: How Vermifiltration Is Changing the Way California Dairies Handle Wastewater

    BioFiltro is back on Seen & Herd, and a lot has changed since their last conversation with Paul Sousa, Western's Director of Environmental Services and Regulatory Affairs. Steve Rowe, BioFiltro's board chairman, and Sanjar Taromi, their livestock lead, return to give a ground-level update on where vermifiltration stands in California's Central Valley and why the timing of this episode matters. The short version: Vermifiltration uses worm beds to treat dairy wastewater. The longer version is why it's worth paying attention to right now. What you'll hear in this episode: Where BioFiltro stands today: 4 operating systems in California, 4 under construction (including a 10,000-head open lot dairy in Pixley), and 6 more in permittingHow the economics actually work: BioFiltro covers nearly all CapEx and 90% of OpEx under 20-year agreements funded through carbon credit arrangements; dairies primarily cover ongoing electrical costsPost-digester applications: BioFiltro's first post-digester vermifiltration system is up and running in Chowchilla, opening the door for dairies dealing with higher ammonia and nutrient loads on the back end of digestionThe regulatory landscape: CV Salts, the State Water Board remand order, CARB's SB 1383 rulemaking on livestock methane, and whole-farm nitrogen balance requirements are all converging; this system addresses multiple pressure points at onceThe numbers: 90% reduction in manure methane, 75–90% reduction in nitrogen load, early data showing up to a 60% reduction in hospital pen time on some dairies, and real-world reports of reduced groundwater pumpingDairy Plus grant applications: expected to open in June, with a 90-day window; this is the final round of the $85M USDA-funded program administered through CDPHE; vermifiltration is a fundable practiceWhat to do right now: reach out to BioFiltro or Paul at Western before the application window opens, not afterGuests: Steve Rowe, Board Chairman, BioFiltroSandra Taromi, Livestock Lead, BioFiltroResources & Contacts: BioFiltro: Website | Contact Sanjar at staromi@biofiltro.comWestern United Dairies: podcast@wudairies.comQuestions about Dairy Plus applications? Contact Paul Sousa at Western United at paul@wudairies.comSeen & Herd is brought to you by Western United Dairies.

    36 min
  3. May 11

    From CARB to Dairy Plus: The Environmental Issues Shaping Your Operation

    Amanda sits down with Paul Sousa, WUD's Director of Environmental Services and Regulatory Affairs, to review the environmental presentation delivered at the recent Board of Directors meeting. California Air Resources Board (CARB) & Dairy MethaneCARB is now actively developing dairy-specific methane regulations. Rule development begins in 2025, with regulations coming to the board by 2028 and implementation targeted around 2030. CARB is currently seeking stakeholder input on emissions measurement, mitigation strategies, and regulatory structure. The comment deadline has been extended to May 29th. WUD is preparing comments and encourages member input. SB 1383: Passed in 2016, SB 1383 requires dairies to reduce manure methane emissions 40% from a 2013 baseline by 2030. According to Paul, California dairies have already met that target.External Pressure: A recent Stanford Law School paper critiqued water quality regulation implementation for dairies statewide. Paul's take: largely recycled findings, low media traction. The message for producers isn't panic. It's making sure your operation stays in compliance.Water Quality UpdatesNorth Coast: WUD submitted a draft groundwater work plan in September and is awaiting feedback from the regional board. A formal extension request is being filed. Central Valley: The CV Salts program is moving forward in the Modesto Groundwater Sub-basin, offering a 35-year extension on nitrate limits. A board vote is expected in June. State Water Board Remand Order: Still no update. Use this time to get your dairy in order, especially around whole-farm nitrogen balance. Research Funding: Funds remaining from the former state pooling and marketing branches may be directed to the California Dairy Research Foundation via a grant process. An industry panel may be created to guide project selection. Priority areas include water quality, greenhouse gas emissions, and technologies that address both. AB 411: Carcass Composting: CDPHE is developing BMPs required before dairies can begin on-farm carcass composting. Their initial framing raised concerns; WUD has pushed back and is making progress toward ensuring the BMPs reflect the law's actual intent. Tricolored Blackbird Funding: It's nesting season. If Tricolored Blackbirds are nesting in your silage fields, you may need to delay harvest. NRCS is offering $945 per acre in compensation this year. Paul is doing outreach directly to affected producers. Dairy Plus Program: Final RoundDairy Plus is expected to open in June with a 90-day application window, funding weeping walls, vermin filtration, and advanced manure separation technologies. This is the last round. Start now: identify your challenge, research the right technology, and talk to vendors before the window opens. Questions? Reach out to Paul Souza directly by email or phone. Contact info: paul@wudairies.com Resources:Dairy Plus: Opening approx. June 2025NRCS Blackbird Funding: $945/acre, contact Paul for details

    24 min
5
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Industry Updates for the Modern Dairy Family

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