HJM 46
Page 1
A JOINT MEMORIAL
REQUESTING THE NEW MEXICO CONGRESSIONAL DELEGATION TO HELP
RETAIN SMALL BUSINESSES IN COMMUNITIES THROUGHOUT THE STATE
AND PRESERVE TRADITIONAL PRACTICES OF NATIVE AMERICAN AND
HISPANIC COMMUNITIES BY URGING THAT CULTURAL AND TRADITIONAL
PRACTICES BE CONSIDERED BY THE UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF
AGRICULTURE IN ADOPTING REGULATIONS FOR MEAT INSPECTION AND
SLAUGHTERHOUSES.
WHEREAS, New Mexico is predominantly a rural state, with
many very small communities surrounded by great areas of open
vistas and great distances between communities; and
WHEREAS, due to the rural nature of the state, many
people still raise livestock for personal consumption, but due
to the changes faced by traditional communities, more and more
Native American and Hispanic people rely on commercial
ventures to provide them with traditional foods; and
WHEREAS, at least ten percent of the population of New
Mexico is Native American, many of whom remain living in
traditional tribal or pueblo communities that were occupied by
their ancestors as long ago as one thousand years; and
WHEREAS, close to fifty percent of the population of New
Mexico is of Spanish ancestry, and many of these people live
in the small traditional communities settled by their
ancestors over the last five hundred years; and
pg_0002
HJM 46
Page 2
WHEREAS, this large segment of the population of New
Mexico has traditions that must be preserved if the heritage,
culture and spiritual practices of the long-term residents of
New Mexico are to remain vibrant and meaningful into the
future; and
WHEREAS, food and food preparation are basic to
maintaining many belief systems and the traditional practices
of both the Hispanic population and the Native American
population of New Mexico and include rich and important
practices involving the raising, blessing, harvesting and
consumption of animals; and
WHEREAS, slaughtering of animals has for centuries been
a community activity that in the last hundred years has become
the job of a community member who knows the culturally
appropriate way to raise and prepare animals for ceremonial or
community use; and
WHEREAS, the proprietors of these community businesses
carry much of the traditional knowledge of the appropriate way
and the respectful attitude required to harvest animals for
cultural and traditional activities such as feasts,
ceremonies, matanzas and other community gatherings, and the
practices are viewed many times by regulators as conflicting
with health and safety standards for slaughtering of animals;
and
WHEREAS, the United States department of agriculture has
pg_0003
HJM 46
Page 3
specifically authorized spiritual leaders of religious
traditions such as Buddhism, Confucianism, Islam or Judaism in
regard to the preparation of kosher products to be present as
necessary during the butchering of animals, but spiritual
practices of Native Americans and traditional practices of
Hispanic communities are not recognized in these religious
tradition exemptions, in large part because the need for the
services of a slaughterhouse outside of the community or under
state or federal regulation is a recent phenomenon; and
WHEREAS, in recent years, United States department of
agriculture regulations governing the slaughter of animals
have become sophisticated and removed from the traditional
values and practices that support the cultures of New Mexico,
tending to hold those values and practices in disdain as fewer
people creating and enforcing regulations actually have
knowledge or understanding of these cultural values and
practices; and
WHEREAS, small slaughterhouses or community butchers
have found it difficult to remain in business due to the lack
of understanding expressed and exhibited by regulators and
their regulations, and traditional communities are prohibited
from obtaining animals in the way the animals are required to
be prepared by tradition, due to the regulations; and
WHEREAS, even more stringent regulations prohibit
preparation of slaughtered animals in traditional ways for
pg_0004
HJM 46
Page 4
resale, as in allowing restaurants to serve some traditional
foods; however, in some cases, parts of animals unavailable,
due to regulation, from local slaughtering businesses are
available as imported delicacies; and
WHEREAS, small butchers and slaughterhouses are
disappearing from traditional communities in many cases due to
the expense of implementing regulations and the regulators'
expectations that to remain in business a butcher will
purchase sophisticated equipment and maintain detailed records
that require sophisticated information technology; and
WHEREAS, some of the requirements that exceed a small
butcher's or slaughterhouse operator's capacity to implement
are targeted at large meatpacking operations that obtain their
animals from feedlots; and
WHEREAS, representatives of traditional communities are
willing to work with the United States department of
agriculture to develop regulations that will allow those
communities to continue their traditions, ceremonies and age-
old community practices while satisfying those necessary
health and safety concerns of the regulators, and allowing
small butchering and slaughterhouse businesses to prosper and
serve a great need in these traditional communities;
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE
STATE OF NEW MEXICO that the New Mexico congressional
delegation be urged to take action to help protect small
pg_0005
HJM 46
Page 5
businesses in New Mexico by helping the proprietors of small
slaughterhouses and butchering operations that provide meat
and slaughtered animals for consumption for traditional Native
American feasts and ceremonies, Hispanic community matanzas
and other traditional community gatherings and celebrations to
obtain relief from oppressive regulation through negotiation
with regulators of the United States department of agriculture
and implementation of regulations that take into consideration
the interests and needs of traditional people and communities;
and
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the New Mexico congressional
delegation consider requiring the United States department of
agriculture to adopt provisions in regulations that allow
Native American spiritual leaders the same liberty as other
religious leaders to participate in butchering of animals in
specified slaughterhouse operations to ensure that animals for
feasts, ceremonies or other community gatherings are prepared
as required by tradition; and
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the United States department
of agriculture be encouraged to engage in dialogue with the
leaders of traditional communities, both Native American and
Hispanic, in New Mexico to reach accord on regulatory issues
of concern to the traditional and spiritual leaders of those
communities and also to aid small community butchering and
slaughterhouse operations to remain as viable businesses and
pg_0006
HJM 46
Page 6
provide the needed services that they offer in small
traditional communities; and
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that copies of this memorial be
transmitted to the New Mexico congressional delegation, the
president of the Navajo Nation, the president of the Jicarilla
Apache Nation, the president of the Mescalero Apache Tribe,
the chair of the all Indian pueblo council, the United States
department of agriculture and the New Mexico livestock board.