125.00.06 Ark. Code R. § 004 - EIA Regulations Regarding Act 1306 of 1997
1. Testing of equidae done at approved
markets may be done by licensed, accredited, practicing veterinarians or by
Commission authorized personnel. If blood is collected by Commission personnel,
the cost will be $25.00 per animal, payable to the market by the owner. The
market shall pay the Livestock and Poultry Commission $25.00 per animal tested
by the Commission personnel by the 10th of the next month following the sale.
If blood is collected by practicing veterinarian, fees will be by private
treaty.
2. There will be a $3.00
fee assessed to Arkansas licensed, practicing veterinarians for each Arkansas
domiciled equidae tested for EIA. An equine is considered domiciled within the
state when it has been pastured, stabled, housed, or kept in any fashion in the
state more than thirty consecutive or inconsecutive days. The $3.00 fee will
also be assessed on any out-of-state equidae that is being tested at a market
to be sold in Arkansas. This fee is in addition to laboratory fees for running
the test. Failure to submit fees according to provisions of regulation will
cause test papers to be rendered invalid and in case of reactor or adjacent
herd testing the continuance of quarantine until fees are received by the
Commission. Arkansas licensed, practicing veterinarians who wish to use the
Commission's EIA ID test card for equidae owners that contains all pertinent
and necessary information may access and submit digital photographs of horse(s)
to the Commission's website. A $5 fee will be assessed for each EIA test card
issued. This is in addition to the laboratory testing fees and EIA regulatory
fee.
3. Accredited laboratories
conducting tests on samples from Arkansas equidae or samples from sales in
Arkansas shall send Part
4 of the VS Form 10-11 (or other form
approved by the Commission), or a legible copy of this form to the Arkansas
Livestock and Poultry Commission, P. O. Box 8505, Little Rock, AR 72215 by the
10th of the month following the month the test was run. (Positive samples must
still be reported within 24 hours of classification.)
4. Livestock markets must be approved by the
Commission for selling equidae. Markets that accept reactor or exposed animals
for sale, and markets that allow horses to be tested on site must have a
quarantine pen that is clearly marked with a sign or paint to keep reactors and
exposed horses in, as well as any equidae that test positive at the market.
They also must have a fly control program as described in the Code of Federal
Regulations, Part
75: "The stockyard shall have in
effect a fly control program utilizing at least one of the following; baits,
fly strips, electric bug killers ("Fly Zappers," "Fly Snappers," or similar
equipment), application of a pesticide effective against flies, applied
according to the schedule and dosage recommended by the manufacturer for fly
control.")
The quarantine pen must be far enough from the area where negative tested animals are kept that in the opinion of the inspector the negative tested equidae will not be exposed.
Markets that handle only equidae with current tests (conducted within the last six (6) months) are not required to have a quarantine pen or fly control program.
5 When a reactor
equidae is detected all equidae within the affected and adjacent herds will be
quarantined by an authorized agent of the Commission All equidae in affected
and adjacent herds will remain quarantined until all are tested negative at
least 60 days and no more than 80 days after the removal of the
reactor.
6 Deviations in testing
and quarantines are acceptable when they are made by the designated
epidemiologist.
Notes
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No prior version found.