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Oregon commercial dairy farms will start weekly testing for bird flu

The milking parlor at a Polk County farm in Oregon, April 11,2018.
Courtesy Oregon Department of Agriculture
The milking parlor at a Polk County farm in Oregon, April 11,2018.

Oregon agriculture regulators will test the milk of every commercial dairy across the state weekly, amid rising concerns over bird flu in dairy cattle.

Oregon is not among the dairy-producing states that have reported a positive case of avian influenza on dairy cattle, but as outbreak concerns continue to rise, state agriculture regulators said they are taking a cautious measure.

The highly pathogenic avian influenza, or H5N1, virus has made its way across commercial and backyard poultry farms throughout the nation since around 2022. It wasn鈥檛 until March when it was detected for the first time at a Texas dairy farm.

Since then, over 700 herds across 16 states have tested positive for the virus, including herds in Nevada and Idaho. California, the nation鈥檚 largest dairy-producing state, has had the highest concentration of positive cases with over 500 confirmed cases. As of early December, Oregon has not had a case in cattle, although in November the first-ever case of avian flu in the U.S. on a pig at a Central Oregon farm.

There is the H5N1 virus is mainly spreading from cow to cow, unlike in commercial or backyard poultry farms. Those birds usually catch the virus from wild migratory waterfowl.

Though there are no known active cases in Oregon, officials don鈥檛 want to have to play catch up if or when there is one, said Ryan Scholz, the state veterinarian for the Oregon Department of Agriculture.

鈥淲e want to have a surveillance program in place before we have a case so that if we ever do have a case, if it is introduced, we can catch it before we鈥檙e weeks on to it and hopefully catch it at the first cow on the first farm and stop it there,鈥 he said.

Tami Kerr, the executive director of the Oregon Dairy Farmers Association, a dairy lobbying group, told OPB the group supports the state鈥檚 decision.

鈥淲hile pasteurization effectively eliminates pathogens from milk, our farmers recognize the importance of taking additional steps to protect herd health and prevent potential risks,鈥 Kerr wrote in a statement

Oregon has over 140 commercial Grade A milk producers. That鈥檚 a designation given by the federal Food and Drug Administration, it essentially refers to the type of milk that can usually be found on grocery store shelves.

This announcement comes after the U.S. Department of Agriculture on Friday requiring milk producers and processors to share milk samples when requested, in an effort to test the nation鈥檚 milk supply for bird flu and put a halt to outbreaks.

Officials with the federal government say that federal policy will help them 鈥渟wiftly identify which states, and specific herds within them, are affected with H5N1.鈥 And that it will give farmers and farmworkers the ability to better protect themselves from getting sick.

California, Oregon, Colorado, Michigan, Mississippi and Pennsylvania will be among the first states brought into the program for testing.

Health officials maintain the nation鈥檚 milk is safe to drink so long it鈥檚 been pasteurized, though they do warn people against drinking raw milk. Although scientists are still working to understand how drinking raw milk could make people sick with bird flu, some of the of raw milk could include E. Coli or salmonella sickness.

In Oregon, people can only buy raw cow鈥檚 milk directly from a farm, it鈥檚 not sold at traditional grocery stores. Scholz said there is currently no plan to test milk from raw dairy farms. That鈥檚 because those farms don鈥檛 tend to have the same high-level risk as larger commercial farms.

鈥淭hey tend to be smaller operations that are typically fairly disconnected with the traditional Grade A dairy world,鈥 he said. 鈥淎nd they don鈥檛 tend to have a lot of the same high-risk activities that are associated with transmission of this virus from farm to farm and into new areas.鈥

The agency could later regulate that segment of the industry, but they are focusing on the high risk facilities first, Scholz said.

Alejandro Figueroa is a reporter for Oregon Public Broadcasting, a JPR news partner. His reporting comes to JPR through the Northwest News Network, a collaboration between public media organizations in Oregon and Washington.