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Testimony: 

Before the Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry: 

United States Senate: 

United States Government Accountability Office: 

GAO: 

For Release on Delivery Expected at 10:30 a.m. EST: 

Thursday, March 9, 2006: 

Packers and Stockyards Programs: 

Continuing Problems with GIPSA Investigations of Competitive Practices: 

Statement of Daniel Bertoni, Acting Director, Natural Resources and 
Environment: 

GAO-06-532T: 

Mr. Chairman and Members of the Committee: 

I am pleased to be here today to discuss the U.S. Department of 
Agriculture's (USDA) management and oversight of the Packers and 
Stockyards Act. Within USDA, the Grain Inspection, Packers and 
Stockyards Administration (GIPSA) is responsible for administering the 
Packers and Stockyards Act and investigating concerns about unfair and 
anticompetitive practices in the $90 billion livestock market. 

As you know, prior reports issued by the USDA Office of Inspector 
General (OIG)and our office have identified weaknesses in GIPSA's 
investigation and enforcement activities, and recommended actions to 
address them.[Footnote 1] A more recent OIG report shows that, in 
several key areas, GIPSA still has not taken sufficient steps to 
address those recommendations.[Footnote 2] My testimony today will 
focus on our prior work and discuss (1) factors that have affected 
GIPSA's ability to investigate concerns about anticompetitive 
practices, (2) GIPSA's actions to address our recommendations and areas 
where their efforts have fallen short, and (3) challenges and other 
issues we believe GIPSA should consider as it moves to further 
strengthen its capacity to address competitiveness issues. 

In summary, in 2000, we identified two critical factors that detracted 
from GIPSA's ability to investigate anticompetitive practices in 
livestock markets, and another area where improvement was needed. 
First, the agency's investigations were planned and conducted primarily 
by economists without the formal involvement of attorneys from USDA's 
Office of General Counsel (OGC). As a result, a legal perspective that 
focused on assessing potential violations was generally absent when 
investigations were initiated and conducted. Second, GIPSA's 
investigative practices were designed for traditional trade practices 
and financial issues the agency had emphasized for years and were not 
suited for the more complex competition-related concerns it was 
addressing. Finally, while not a critical concern, we noted that GIPSA 
had an important role in keeping the industry and the Congress informed 
about its monitoring of livestock markets and could have done more to 
identify market operations or activities that appeared to raise 
concerns under the Packers and Stockyards Act. In our September 2000 
report, we recommended that USDA better integrate attorneys from USDA's 
Office of General Counsel into GIPSA's investigative processes and 
develop a teamwork approach to investigations similar to that of the 
Department of Justice (DOJ) and the Federal Trade Commission (FTC). We 
also recommended that GIPSA adopt more systematic approaches for 
selecting cases and conducting investigations. 

USDA concurred with our findings and noted specific actions it planned 
to take in response to our recommendations, including (1) formalizing 
consultations between GIPSA and OGC on complex investigations, and 
integrating OGC attorneys into its investigative teams; (2) developing 
a tiered process whereby routine investigations would be reviewed and 
approved by headquarters staff, while complex investigations received 
an additional OGC review; (3) adopting relevant procedures used by DOJ 
and FTC for planning, developing, implementing, and reviewing 
investigations; and (4) reporting publicly on changing business 
practices and activities that raise fairness and competition concerns. 
Despite these plans, the January 2006 OIG report identified substantial 
ongoing weaknesses in GIPSA's investigative processes and noted that 
GIPSA's actions to respond to the prior OIG and GAO reports had fallen 
short in key areas. In particular, GIPSA had not yet developed a 
teamwork approach for investigations whereby GIPSA's economists and 
USDA's OGC attorneys could work together to identify violations of law, 
nor had it taken sufficient steps to ensure legal specialists within 
GIPSA were used most effectively. In addition, GIPSA had not followed 
through in adopting appropriate investigative guidance similar to those 
of DOJ and FTC to strengthen its ability to investigate anticompetitive 
and unfair practices. 

Given GIPSA's lack of progress in addressing prior report findings and 
recommendations dating back for almost a decade, continued vigilance 
and monitoring of its key activities and management initiatives by the 
OIG and other oversight bodies is essential. In its response to the 
OIG's 2006 report, GIPSA noted that it intends to reassess and develop 
a defined process for managing investigations, enhancing communication 
among staff and managers, appropriately dividing responsibility for its 
varied types of investigations, and developing an internal review 
function to monitor and report on corrective actions resulting from the 
OIG and GAO reviews. Consistent with our prior recommendations, GIPSA 
also plans to define the role of OGC attorneys and GIPSA legal 
specialists in investigations and to move forward in identifying and 
adopting certain techniques used by the DOJ and the FTC. As GIPSA moves 
ahead in reexamining its processes it should consider assigning lead 
roles to OGC attorneys for certain investigations involving complex 
anticompetitive practices. Finally, going forward, GIPSA's efforts to 
periodically inform the industry and the Congress about competitive 
conditions could be of further usefulness. GIPSA plans to complete a 
study on livestock and red meat marketing practices later this year. 
While potentially informative to the industry and policymakers, it 
could also help GIPSA identify current and emerging areas of 
vulnerability and better target its oversight resources. 

Background: 

The Packers and Stockyards Act was passed in 1921 in response to 
concerns that, among other things, the marketing of livestock presented 
special problems that could not be adequately addressed by existing 
antitrust laws. The provisions of the act were based, in part, on prior 
antitrust statutes including the Sherman Act and the Federal Trade 
Commission Act. The Packers and Stockyards Act prohibits packers from 
engaging in or using any unfair, unjustly discriminatory, or deceptive 
practice or device, or making or giving any undue or unreasonable 
preference or advantage to another party. The act also makes unlawful 
packer anticompetitive practices that are antitrust-type actions, 
including a packer's activities that manipulate or control prices or 
restrain trade. 

Within USDA, GIPSA is responsible for implementing the Packers and 
Stockyards Act. GIPSA initiates investigations and actions to halt 
unfair and anticompetitive practices by meatpacking companies and by 
other parties involved in livestock marketing. To prove that such an 
activity has occurred under the act, GIPSA, in most instances, must 
show that the purpose of the packer's action or its actual effect was 
to carry out the prohibited activity. GIPSA may also choose to treat 
such activity as an unfair practice, which may be easier to prove than 
a violation of the act's antitrust-type provisions. Also, while mergers 
are a concern because they can reduce competition, the act does not 
provide USDA with premerger review authority. OGC also has an 
enforcement role and, among other activities, represents USDA in 
administrative and court proceedings addressing violations of the act. 

The Packers and Stockyards Act allows GIPSA to start investigations and 
administrative actions to halt packer practices that it deems to be 
unfair or anticompetitive. When an investigation finds and develops 
evidence to show that a packer may have engaged in an anticompetitive 
or unfair practice, GIPSA may file a complaint against the packer. The 
packer has a right to a hearing, which is held before a USDA 
administrative law judge. If, after reviewing the evidence presented by 
GIPSA and the packer, the administrative law judge decides that there 
has been a violation of the act, a cease and desist order may be 
issued, and a civil fine may be levied. An administrative law judge's 
decision can be appealed to USDA's Judicial Officer, who acts on behalf 
of the Secretary of Agriculture. The packer, but not USDA, may file a 
further appeal to a Federal Circuit Court of Appeals. 

In 1996, GIPSA reported that dynamic changes had taken place in the 
cattle and hog industries, including increasing concentration and 
vertical integration--where packers own the animals. GIPSA stated that 
these changes had reduced the role of the public markets, where terms 
of a trade are visible to all. That same year, an advisory committee to 
the Secretary of Agriculture reviewed the concerns of producers and 
others about changes in livestock markets and recommended, among other 
things, a review of GIPSA's efforts to enforce the Packers and 
Stockyards Act. The Secretary then asked the OIG to review GIPSA's 
program. 

The subsequent OIG report noted that while GIPSA had a credible record 
in certain areas, it (1) did not have the capability to perform 
effective anticompetitive practice investigations and (2) faced 
formidable obstacles to become effective in performing such 
investigations. The OIG found that GIPSA had not been organized, 
operated, or staffed for that purpose and stated that GIPSA should 
employ an approach similar to that used by DOJ and FTC, and integrate 
attorneys and economists from the beginning of the investigative 
process. In response, GIPSA completed a major restructuring of its 
headquarters and field offices in 1999 and hired staff to strengthen 
its investigations of alleged anticompetitive practices. GIPSA now has 
regional offices in Denver, Colorado, for its work on the cattle 
industry; in Des Moines, Iowa, for handling work on the hog industry; 
and in Atlanta, Georgia, for its work on the poultry industry. Along 
with those changes there were relocations of staff and the addition of 
economists and legal specialists to assist with investigations of 
competitive practices. 

Because of continued concerns about whether GIPSA was taking sufficient 
action to protect competition in livestock markets, GAO was requested 
to review USDA's efforts to implement the Packers and Stockyards Act. 
We issued our final report and recommendations for improvement in 
September 2000. Subsequently, the OIG completed a follow-up review on 
GIPSA's administration and oversight of the Packers and Stockyards 
Programs in January 2006. It too issued a report with recommendations. 

2000 GAO Review Identified Critical Factors Detracting From GIPSA's 
Investigative Capabilities: 

We identified two critical factors that detracted from GIPSA's 
investigative capability, as well as areas where GIPSA could improve 
its efforts to develop and share key information. First, the agency's 
investigations were planned and conducted primarily by economists 
without the formal involvement of attorneys from OGC. Second, GIPSA's 
investigative practices were designed for traditional trade practices 
and financial issues the agency had emphasized for years and were not 
suited for the more complex competition-related concerns it was 
addressing. While not of a critical nature, we also found that despite 
prior dynamic changes in the livestock markets, GIPSA's efforts to 
periodically update the industry and Congress on competitive conditions 
and emerging fairness and equity issues were lacking. 

Attorney's Participation in Investigations: 

At the time of our review, OGC attorneys did not usually participate at 
the start or throughout the agency's investigations. Assignment of OGC 
attorneys typically occurred after GIPSA performed an investigation and 
forwarded a developed case file to them for review and action. Thus, 
the agency's investigations were planned and conducted primarily by 
economists, most of whom had limited investigative experience. GIPSA 
relied on OGC attorneys mainly for legal advice, and its OGC reviewed 
the results of GIPSA's investigations to determine if violations of law 
might have occurred. In contrast, we noted that DOJ and FTC utilized 
integrated teams of attorneys and economists to perform investigations 
of anticompetitive practices. Attorneys were assigned to lead and 
conduct investigations from the outset so that officials with a legal 
perspective focused on assessing potential violations of law. 
Economists were routinely assigned as an integral part of the 
investigation teams. This approach ensured that a legal perspective was 
brought to bear on the interpretation of law, development of evidence, 
and preparation of cases for presentation in administrative and 
judicial proceedings. 

We also reported that OGC officials provided GIPSA with only limited 
informal assistance which had declined over the years as the number of 
OGC attorneys assigned to assist GIPSA decreased. In fact, the number 
of OGC attorneys assigned to GIPSA cases had decreased from eight to 
five because of budget constraints, according to USDA's General 
Counsel. These attorneys were also not all assigned full-time to 
GIPSA's financial, trade practice, and competition cases; some had 
responsibilities in other USDA areas as well. 

We concluded that GIPSA's program needed additional steps to become 
more effective and efficient in performing investigations and 
recommended that GIPSA develop a teamwork approach for investigations 
with GIPSA's economists and OGC's attorneys working together to 
identify violations of the law. We also recommended that the Secretary 
reassess current OGC staffing needs relative to current GIPSA 
investigations, assign attorneys to lead or participate in more complex 
investigations, and increase the effectiveness of legal specialists by 
providing them with leadership opportunities and better supervision. 

Processes and Practices For Anticompetitive Practice Investigations: 

We also found that GIPSA's basic investigative processes and practices 
were not designed for addressing the complex anticompetitive practices 
it had begun to encounter in recent years--instead they were designed 
for the more traditional trade practice and financial issues that the 
agency had emphasized for years. In comparison, DOJ and FTC had 
processes and practices specifically designed for guiding 
investigations of similarly complex competition-related issues. 

DOJ and FTC emphasized establishing the theory of each case and the 
elements necessary to prove the case. At each stage of an 
investigation, including selecting the case, planning, and conducting 
the investigation, regular reviews by senior officials-attorneys and 
economists--focused on developing sound cases. For example, DOJ and FTC 
required their attorneys, with the assistance of economists, to 
establish a theory explaining how a company's (or companies') behavior 
may be a violation of the law. The case theory and evidence were 
reviewed early on by senior officials, and periodically as the factual 
underpinnings of the case came into focus. In contrast to DOJ and FTC, 
GIPSA does not require investigations to be (1) planned and developed 
on the basis of how a company's actions may have violated the law and 
(2) periodically reviewed as they progress by senior officials with 
anticompetitive practice experience. 

GIPSA also did not have specific requirements for approving an 
investigation or an investigation plan. These conditions were reflected 
in the comments of GIPSA's regional office managers and economists, who 
said that they often had questions about how to interpret the law and 
how best to scope and perform investigations. Also, OGC officials told 
us that anticompetitive practice cases that GIPSA had forwarded often 
had weaknesses that needed to be addressed before they could determine 
whether a violation had occurred. Both OGC and GIPSA officials said 
that OGC's reviews of GIPSA's cases led to disagreements about the 
interpretation of the act and the sufficiency of evidence. Finally, we 
found that GIPSA's investigative guidance manual had not been revised 
since the agency's reorganization and did not contain specific guidance 
for anticompetitive practice investigations, such as the contents of an 
investigative plan, the information needed for approval of an 
investigation, or the frequency of reviews of the investigations. 

Developing and Sharing Information on Competitive Conditions With Key 
Stakeholders: 

GIPSA periodically made educational outreach efforts and shared 
information via its Web site and annual reports. GIPSA also held and 
participated in numerous town hall meetings and conferences with 
producers and state and industry officials. Even so, GIPSA officials 
said they could do more to inform the industry and others on 
competitive conditions. In fact, at the time of our review, it had been 
several years since GIPSA had last reported on conditions in livestock 
markets, despite previous dramatic changes in industry concentration 
and vertical integration. 

GIPSA officials also recognized that it would be helpful if producers 
had a more current understanding of the Packers and Stockyards Act and 
how the act applies to market activities. They also agreed that GIPSA 
could report on market activities and identify those that may raise 
concerns about fairness and competition, as FTC had done. In our 
report, we recommended that GIPSA provide industry participants and the 
Congress with clarifications of GIPSA's views on competitive activities 
by reporting publicly on changing business practices in the cattle and 
hog industries and identifying market operations or activities that 
raised concerns under the Packers and Stockyards Act. GIPSA has 
published four such assessments from 2000 to 2004.[Footnote 3] 

GIPSA's Actions To Address GAO's Recommendations Fell Short in Several 
Areas: 

USDA's General Counsel and the Under Secretary for Marketing and 
Regulatory Programs concurred with our recommendations and provided 
encouraging details about their planned implementation. Among other 
things, they stated that GIPSA and OGC would formalize their 
relationship for complex investigations to ensure that all 
investigative, economic, and legal issues were carefully considered 
before embarking on complex investigations. As part of that process, 
they stated that they were examining the procedures of the Antitrust 
Division of DOJ and the FTC and would adopt relevant portions for 
investigation planning, development, implementation, and review. They 
also stated that GIPSA and OGC senior management would review plans for 
complex investigations to ensure the effective use of investigative 
resources and facilitate successful litigation if evidence demonstrates 
that the Packers and Stockyards Act has been violated. 

The General Counsel and Under Secretary also stated that they would 
increase the integration of OGC attorneys into GIPSA's investigative 
teams early in the investigative process. They noted that OGC attorneys 
would work closely with GIPSA's economists, legal specialists, and 
other technical specialists to ensure that investigative plans had a 
sound basis and to address critical legal issues throughout the conduct 
of an investigation. In addition, the effectiveness of legal 
specialists was also to be enhanced. However, they stated that GIPSA's 
legal specialists would not act as attorneys for either GIPSA or the 
Department, but would provide front-line legal advice on 
investigations. Legal specialists would also be trained by OGC 
attorneys and consult with them regularly. 

It is troubling that these plans, which appeared to be carefully laid 
out by USDA in late 2000, were never wholly or effectively implemented 
as noted in the OIG's 2006 follow-up report. Unfortunately, as the 
report makes clear, GIPSA's senior management review panel became a log 
jam to the progress of investigations. Investigations were thwarted by 
management delays in providing policy and investigative guidance and by 
inaction on on-going investigations when they required management 
concurrence or direction. Further, GIPSA and OGC apparently have not 
effectively implemented a team approach to the investigation of complex 
competition related investigations. Overall, it appears that as GIPSA 
officials responded to the prior OIG and GAO reports, they did so in a 
manner that prevented, rather than facilitated the desired actions and 
results. 

Challenges and Other Issues Associated With Addressing Longstanding 
Weaknesses: 

Given GIPSA's lack of progress in addressing prior report findings and 
recommendations dating back almost a decade, continued vigilance and 
monitoring of its key activities and management initiatives by the OIG 
and other oversight bodies is essential. 

In response to the most recent OIG report GIPSA has stated that, among 
other things, it is: 

* developing a defined process for managing investigations, including 
controls for preliminary investigations to obtain sufficient facts to 
decide whether to proceed with further investigation; 

* revising its organizational structure to appropriately divide 
management responsibility for work plans, managing investigations, and 
the reporting of results; 

* developing an internal review function to monitor and report on the 
progress of corrective actions resulting from external reviewers, such 
as the OIG and GAO; 

* moving forward in identifying techniques used by DOJ and FTC that are 
most appropriate under the Packers and Stockyards Act. 

GIPSA also stated that it will enable its legal specialists to consult 
with OGC and will integrate attorneys into complex competition 
investigations earlier in the process. 

Beyond increased monitoring, GIPSA's success in fully implementing the 
above initiatives will require sustained management attention and 
commitment that has, thus far, been elusive. However, we continue to 
believe that such a focus is needed and will ultimately result in a 
more vigilant and skillful federal presence. It will also instill 
greater public confidence that concerns about the industry will be 
investigated fairly and diligently. Finally, as GIPSA moves forward in 
developing its processes, it should consider the feasibility of 
assigning lead roles to OGC attorneys for investigations that involve 
more complex anticompetitive practices--an approach we have recommended 
that is also consistent with DOJ and FTC practices. Going forward, it 
is also possible that GIPSA's efforts to periodically inform the 
industry and the Congress about its monitoring efforts, as well as 
changing competitive conditions could be of further usefulness. GIPSA 
has issued reports on the cattle, hog, and poultry industries from 2000 
through 2004, and has initiated a broad study on livestock and red meat 
marketing practices. While informative to the industry and policy 
makers, such analyses could also be internally valuable to GIPSA as a 
tool for identifying current and emerging areas of vulnerability and 
better targeting its oversight resources and activities. 

Mr. Chairman, this concludes my formal statement. If you or other 
Members of the Committee have any questions, I will be pleased to 
respond to them. 

For future questions about this testimony, please contact me at (202) 
512-5988. Charles M. Adams made key contributions to this testimony. 

FOOTNOTES 

[1] U.S. Department of Agriculture, Office of Inspector General, Agency 
Efforts to Monitor and Investigate Anti-competitive Practices in the 
Meatpacking Industry, Report No. 30801-01-Ch (Washington, D.C.: 
February 26, 1997) and GAO, Packers and Stockyards Programs: Actions 
Needed to Improve Investigations of Competitive Practices (Washington, 
D.C.: September 21, 2000). 

[2] U.S. Department of Agriculture, Office of Inspector General, Grain 
Inspection, Packers and Stockyards Administration's Management and 
Oversight of the Packers and Stockyards Programs, Report No. 30601-01- 
Hy (Washington, D.C.: January 10, 2006). 

[3] GIPSA's report for 2004 was issued in April 2005. U.S. Department 
of Agriculture, Grain Inspection, Packers and Stockyards 
Administration, Assessment of Cattle, Hog, and Poultry Industries 
(Washington, D.C.: April 2005).