[Title 7 CFR ]
[Code of Federal Regulations (annual edition) - January 1, 2012 Edition]
[From the U.S. Government Printing Office]
[[Page i]]
Title 7
Agriculture
________________________
Parts 1000 to 1199
Revised as of January 1, 2012
Containing a codification of documents of general
applicability and future effect
As of January 1, 2012
Published by the Office of the Federal Register
National Archives and Records Administration as a
Special Edition of the Federal Register
[[Page ii]]
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[[Page iii]]
Table of Contents
Page
Explanation................................................. v
Title 7:
SUBTITLE B--Regulations of the Department of Agriculture
(Continued)
Chapter X--Agricultural Marketing Service (Marketing
Agreements and Orders; Milk), Department of
Agriculture 5
Finding Aids:
Table of CFR Titles and Chapters........................ 231
Alphabetical List of Agencies Appearing in the CFR...... 251
List of CFR Sections Affected........................... 261
[[Page iv]]
----------------------------
Cite this Code: CFR
To cite the regulations in
this volume use title,
part and section number.
Thus, 7 CFR 1000.1 refers
to title 7, part 1000,
section 1.
----------------------------
[[Page v]]
EXPLANATION
The Code of Federal Regulations is a codification of the general and
permanent rules published in the Federal Register by the Executive
departments and agencies of the Federal Government. The Code is divided
into 50 titles which represent broad areas subject to Federal
regulation. Each title is divided into chapters which usually bear the
name of the issuing agency. Each chapter is further subdivided into
parts covering specific regulatory areas.
Each volume of the Code is revised at least once each calendar year
and issued on a quarterly basis approximately as follows:
Title 1 through Title 16.................................as of January 1
Title 17 through Title 27..................................as of April 1
Title 28 through Title 41...................................as of July 1
Title 42 through Title 50................................as of October 1
The appropriate revision date is printed on the cover of each
volume.
LEGAL STATUS
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HOW TO USE THE CODE OF FEDERAL REGULATIONS
The Code of Federal Regulations is kept up to date by the individual
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To determine whether a Code volume has been amended since its
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EFFECTIVE AND EXPIRATION DATES
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OMB CONTROL NUMBERS
The Paperwork Reduction Act of 1980 (Pub. L. 96-511) requires
Federal agencies to display an OMB control number with their information
collection request.
[[Page vi]]
Many agencies have begun publishing numerous OMB control numbers as
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OBSOLETE PROVISIONS
Provisions that become obsolete before the revision date stated on
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(a) The incorporation will substantially reduce the volume of
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(c) The incorporating document is drafted and submitted for
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What if the material incorporated by reference cannot be found? If
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CFR INDEXES AND TABULAR GUIDES
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that volume.
[[Page vii]]
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Director,
Office of the Federal Register.
January 1, 2012.
[[Page ix]]
THIS TITLE
Title 7--Agriculture is composed of fifteen volumes. The parts in
these volumes are arranged in the following order: Parts 1-26, 27-52,
53-209, 210-299, 300-399, 400-699, 700-899, 900-999, 1000-1199, 1200-
1599, 1600-1759, 1760-1939, 1940-1949, 1950-1999, and part 2000 to end.
The contents of these volumes represent all current regulations codified
under this title of the CFR as of January 1, 2012.
The Food and Nutrition Service current regulations in the volume
containing parts 210-299, include the Child Nutrition Programs and the
Food Stamp Program. The regulations of the Federal Crop Insurance
Corporation are found in the volume containing parts 400-699.
All marketing agreements and orders for fruits, vegetables and nuts
appear in the one volume containing parts 900-999. All marketing
agreements and orders for milk appear in the volume containing parts
1000-1199.
For this volume, Susannah C. Hurley was Chief Editor. The Code of
Federal Regulations publication program is under the direction of
Michael L. White, assisted by Ann Worley.
[[Page 1]]
TITLE 7--AGRICULTURE
(This book contains parts 1000 to 1199)
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SUBTITLE B--Regulations of the Department of Agriculture (Continued)
Part
chapter x--Agricultural Marketing Service (Marketing
Agreements and Orders; Milk), Department of Agriculture... 1000
[[Page 3]]
Subtitle B--Regulations of the Department of Agriculture (Continued)
[[Page 5]]
CHAPTER X--AGRICULTURAL MARKETING SERVICE (Marketing Agreements and
Orders; Milk), DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
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Part Page
1000 General provisions of Federal milk marketing
orders.................................. 7
1001 Milk in the Northeast marketing area........ 47
1002-1004
[Reserved]
1005 Milk in the Appalachian marketing area...... 60
1006 Milk in the Florida marketing area.......... 79
1007 Milk in the Southeast marketing area........ 91
1011-1013
[Reserved]
1030 Milk in the Upper Midwest marketing area.... 113
1032 Milk in the Central marketing area.......... 127
1033 Milk in the Mideast marketing area.......... 140
1036-1120
[Reserved]
1124 Milk in the Pacific Northwest marketing area 153
1125
[Reserved]
1126 Milk in the Southwest marketing area........ 167
1131 Milk in the Arizona marketing area.......... 178
1132-1134
[Reserved]
1135 Milk in the Western marketing area.......... 190
1136-1140
[Reserved]
1145 Dairy Forward Pricing Program............... 190
1150 Dairy Promotion Program..................... 191
1151-1159
[Reserved]
1160 Fluid Milk Promotion Program................ 209
1161-1169
[Reserved]
1170 Dairy product mandatory reporting........... 223
1171-1199
[Reserved]
[[Page 7]]
PART 1000_GENERAL PROVISIONS OF FEDERAL MILK MARKETING ORDERS--Table of
Contents
Subpart A_Scope and Purpose
Sec.
1000.1 Scope and purpose of this part 1000.
Subpart B_Definitions
1000.2 General definitions.
1000.3 Route disposition.
1000.4 Plant.
1000.5 Distributing plant.
1000.6 Supply plant.
1000.8 Nonpool plant.
1000.9 Handler.
1000.14 Other source milk.
1000.15 Fluid milk product.
1000.16 Fluid cream product.
1000.17 [Reserved]
1000.18 Cooperative association.
1000.19 Commercial food processing establishment.
Subpart C_Rules of Practice and Procedure Governing Market
Administrators
1000.25 Market administrator.
Subpart D_Rules Governing Order Provisions
1000.26 Continuity and separability of provisions.
Subpart E_Rules of Practice and Procedure Governing Handlers
1000.27 Handler responsibility for records and facilities.
1000.28 Termination of obligations.
Subpart F_Classification of Milk
1000.40 Classes of utilization.
1000.41 [Reserved]
1000.42 Classification of transfers and diversions.
1000.43 General classification rules.
1000.44 Classification of producer milk.
1000.45 Market administrator's reports and announcements concerning
classification.
Subpart G_Class Prices
1000.50 Class prices, component prices, and advanced pricing factors.
1000.51 [Reserved]
1000.52 Adjusted Class I differentials.
1000.53 Announcement of class prices, component prices, and advanced
pricing factors.
1000.54 Equivalent price.
Subpart H_Payments for Milk
1000.70 Producer-settlement fund.
1000.76 Payments by a handler operating a partially regulated
distributing plant.
1000.77 Adjustment of accounts.
1000.78 Charges on overdue accounts.
Subpart I_Administrative Assessment and Marketing Service Deduction
1000.85 Assessment for order administration.
1000.86 Deduction for marketing services.
Subpart J_Miscellaneous Provisions
1000.90 Dates.
1000.91-1000.92 [Reserved]
1000.93 OMB control number assigned pursuant to the Paperwork Reduction
Act.
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 601-674, and 7253.
Source: 64 FR 47899, Sept. 1, 1999, unless otherwise noted.
Subpart A_Scope and Purpose
Sec. 1000.1 Scope and purpose of this part 1000.
This part sets forth certain terms, definitions, and provisions
which shall be common to and apply to Federal milk marketing order in 7
CFR, chapter X, except as specifically defined otherwise, or modified,
or otherwise provided, in an individual order in 7 CFR, chapter X.
Subpart B_Definitions
Sec. 1000.2 General definitions.
(a) Act means Public Act No. 10, 73d Congress, as amended and as
reenacted and amended by the Agricultural Marketing Agreement Act of
1937, as amended (7 U.S.C. 601 et seq.).
(b) Order or Federal milk order means the applicable part of 7 CFR,
chapter X, issued pursuant to Section 8c of the Act as a Federal milk
marketing order (as amended).
(c) Department means the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
(d) Secretary means the Secretary of Agriculture of the United
States or any officer or employee of the Department to whom authority
has heretofore been delegated, or to whom authority may hereafter be
delegated, to act in his stead.
[[Page 8]]
(e) Person means any individual, partnership, corporation,
association, or other business unit.
Sec. 1000.3 Route disposition.
Route disposition means a delivery to a retail or wholesale outlet
(except a plant), either directly or through any distribution facility
(including disposition from a plant store, vendor, or vending machine)
of a fluid milk product in consumer-type packages or dispenser units
classified as Class I milk.
Sec. 1000.4 Plant.
(a) Except as provided in paragraph (b) of this section, plant means
the land, buildings, facilities, and equipment constituting a single
operating unit or establishment at which milk or milk products are
received, processed, or packaged, including a facility described in
paragraph (b)(2) of this section if the facility receives the milk of
more than one dairy farmer.
(b) Plant shall not include:
(1) A separate building without stationary storage tanks that is
used only as a reload point for transferring bulk milk from one tank
truck to another or a separate building used only as a distribution
point for storing packaged fluid milk products in transit for route
disposition; or
(2) An on-farm facility operated as part of a single dairy farm
entity for the separation of cream and skim or the removal of water from
milk.
Sec. 1000.5 Distributing plant.
Distributing plant means a plant that is approved by a duly
constituted regulatory agency for the handling of Grade A milk at which
fluid milk products are processed or packaged and from which there is
route disposition or transfers of packaged fluid milk products to other
plants.
Sec. 1000.6 Supply plant.
Supply plant means a plant approved by a duly constituted regulatory
agency for the handling of Grade A milk that receives milk directly from
dairy farmers and transfers or diverts fluid milk products to other
plants or manufactures dairy products on its premises.
Sec. 1000.8 Nonpool plant.
Nonpool plant means any milk receiving, manufacturing, or processing
plant other than a pool plant. The following categories of nonpool
plants are further defined as follows:
(a) A plant fully regulated under another Federal order means a
plant that is fully subject to the pricing and pooling provisions of
another Federal order.
(b) Producer-handler plant means a plant operated by a producer-
handler as defined under any Federal order.
(c) Partially regulated distributing plant means a nonpool plant
that is not a plant fully regulated under another Federal order, a
producer-handler plant, or an exempt plant, from which there is route
disposition in the marketing area during the month.
(d) Unregulated supply plant means a supply plant that does not
qualify as a pool supply plant and is not a plant fully regulated under
another Federal order, a producer-handler plant, or an exempt plant.
(e) An exempt plant means a plant described in this paragraph that
is exempt from the pricing and pooling provisions of any order provided
that the operator of the plant files reports as prescribed by the market
administrator of any marketing area in which the plant distributes
packaged fluid milk products to enable determination of the handler's
exempt status:
(1) A plant that is operated by a governmental agency that has no
route disposition in commercial channels;
(2) A plant that is operated by a duly accredited college or
university disposing of fluid milk products only through the operation
of its own facilities with no route disposition in commercial channels;
(3) A plant from which the total route disposition is for
individuals or institutions for charitable purposes without
remuneration; or
(4) A plant that has route disposition and packaged sales of fluid
milk products to other plants of 150,000 pounds or less during the
month.
Sec. 1000.9 Handler.
Handler means:
(a) Any person who operates a pool plant or a nonpool plant.
[[Page 9]]
(b) Any person who receives packaged fluid milk products from a
plant for resale and distribution to retail or wholesale outlets, any
person who as a broker negotiates a purchase or sale of fluid milk
products or fluid cream products from or to any pool or nonpool plant,
and any person who by purchase or direction causes milk of producers to
be picked up at the farm and/or moved to a plant. Persons who qualify as
handlers only under this paragraph under any Federal milk order are not
subject to the payment provisions of Sec. Sec. --------.70, ------
--.71, --------.72, --------.73, --------.76, and --------.85 of that
order.
(c) Any cooperative association with respect to milk that it
receives for its account from the farm of a producer and delivers to
pool plants or diverts to nonpool plants pursuant to Sec. --------.13
of the order. The operator of a pool plant receiving milk from a
cooperative association may be the handler for such milk if both parties
notify the market administrator of this agreement prior to the time that
the milk is delivered to the pool plant and the plant operator purchases
the milk on the basis of farm bulk tank weights and samples.
Sec. 1000.14 Other source milk.
Other source milk means all skim milk and butterfat contained in or
represented by:
(a) Receipts of fluid milk products and bulk fluid cream products
from any source other than producers, handlers described in Sec.
1000.9(c) and Sec. 1135.11, or pool plants;
(b) Products (other than fluid milk products, fluid cream products,
and products produced at the plant during the same month) from any
source which are reprocessed, converted into, or combined with another
product in the plant during the month; and
(c) Receipts of any milk product (other than a fluid milk product or
a fluid cream product) for which the handler fails to establish a
disposition.
Sec. 1000.15 Fluid milk product.
(a) Except as provided in paragraph (b) of this section, fluid milk
product shall mean any milk products in fluid or frozen form that are
intended to be used as beverages containing less than 9 percent
butterfat and 6.5 percent or more nonfat solids or 2.25 percent or more
true milk protein. Sources of such nonfat solids/protein include but are
not limited to: Casein, whey protein concentrate, milk protein
concentrate, dry whey, caseinates, lactose, and any similar dairy
derived ingredient. Such products include, but are not limited to: Milk,
fat-free milk, lowfat milk, light milk, reduced fat milk, milk drinks,
eggnog and cultured buttermilk, including any such beverage products
that are flavored, cultured, modified with added or reduced nonfat
solids, sterilized, concentrated, or reconstituted. As used in this
part, the term concentrated milk means milk that contains not less than
25.5 percent, and not more than 50 percent, total milk solids.
(b) The term fluid milk product shall not include:
(1) Any product that contains less than 6.5 percent nonfat milk
solids and contains less than 2.25 percent true milk protein; whey;
plain or sweetened evaporated milk/skim milk; sweetened condensed milk/
skim milk; yogurt containing beverages with 20 or more percent yogurt by
weight and kefir; products especially prepared for infant feeding or
dietary use (meal replacement) that are packaged in hermetically sealed
containers; and products that meet the compositional standards specified
in paragraph (a) of this section but contain no fluid milk products
included in paragraph (a) of this section.
(2) The quantity of skim milk equivalent in any modified product
specified in paragraph (a) of this section that is greater than an equal
volume of an unmodified product of the same nature and butterfat
content.
[64 FR 47899, Sept. 1, 1999, as amended at 75 FR 51931, Aug. 24, 2010]
Sec. 1000.16 Fluid cream product.
Fluid cream product means cream (other than plastic cream or frozen
cream), including sterilized cream, or a mixture of cream and milk or
skim milk containing 9 percent or more butterfat, with or without the
addition of other ingredients.
[[Page 10]]
Sec. 1000.17 [Reserved]
Sec. 1000.18 Cooperative association.
Cooperative association means any cooperative marketing association
of producers which the Secretary determines is qualified under the
provisions of the Capper-Volstead Act, has full authority in the sale of
milk of its members, and is engaged in marketing milk or milk products
for its members. A federation of 2 or more cooperatives incorporated
under the laws of any state will be considered a cooperative association
under any Federal milk order if all member cooperatives meet the
requirements of this section.
Sec. 1000.19 Commercial food processing establishment.
Commercial food processing establishment means any facility, other
than a milk plant, to which fluid milk products and fluid cream products
are disposed of, or producer milk is diverted, that uses such receipts
as ingredients in food products and has no other disposition of fluid
milk products other than those received in consumer-type packages (1
gallon or less). Producer milk diverted to commercial food processing
establishments shall be subject to the same provisions relating to
diversions to plants, including, but not limited to, Sec. Sec. ------
--.13 and --------.52 of each Federal milk order.
Subpart C_Rules of Practice and Procedure Governing Market
Administrators
Sec. 1000.25 Market administrator.
(a) Designation. The agency for the administration of the order
shall be a market administrator selected by the Secretary and subject to
removal at the Secretary's discretion. The market administrator shall be
entitled to compensation determined by the Secretary.
(b) Powers. The market administrator shall have the following powers
with respect to each order under his/her administration:
(1) Administer the order in accordance with its terms and
provisions;
(2) Maintain and invest funds outside of the United States
Department of the Treasury for the purpose of administering the order;
(3) Make rules and regulations to effectuate the terms and
provisions of the order;
(4) Receive, investigate, and report complaints of violations to the
Secretary; and
(5) Recommend amendments to the Secretary.
(c) Duties. The market administrator shall perform all the duties
necessary to administer the terms and provisions of each order under
his/her administration, including, but not limited to, the following:
(1) Employ and fix the compensation of persons necessary to enable
him/her to exercise the powers and perform the duties of the office;
(2) Pay out of funds provided by the administrative assessment,
except expenses associated with functions for which the order provides a
separate charge, all expenses necessarily incurred in the maintenance
and functioning of the office and in the performance of the duties of
the office, including the market administrator's compensation;
(3) Keep records which will clearly reflect the transactions
provided for in the order and upon request by the Secretary, surrender
the records to a successor or such other person as the Secretary may
designate;
(4) Furnish information and reports requested by the Secretary and
submit office records for examination by the Secretary;
(5) Announce publicly at his/her discretion, unless otherwise
directed by the Secretary, by such means as he/she deems appropriate,
the name of any handler who, after the date upon which the handler is
required to perform such act, has not:
(i) Made reports required by the order;
(ii) Made payments required by the order; or
(iii) Made available records and facilities as required pursuant to
Sec. 1000.27;
(6) Prescribe reports required of each handler under the order.
Verify such reports and the payments required by the order by examining
records (including such papers as copies of income tax
[[Page 11]]
reports, fiscal and product accounts, correspondence, contracts,
documents or memoranda of the handler, and the records of any other
persons that are relevant to the handler's obligation under the order),
by examining such handler's milk handling facilities, and by such other
investigation as the market administrator deems necessary for the
purpose of ascertaining the correctness of any report or any obligation
under the order. Reclassify skim milk and butterfat received by any
handler if such examination and investigation discloses that the
original classification was incorrect;
(7) Furnish each regulated handler a written statement of such
handler's accounts with the market administrator promptly each month.
Furnish a corrected statement to such handler if verification discloses
that the original statement was incorrect; and
(8) Prepare and disseminate publicly for the benefit of producers,
handlers, and consumers such statistics and other information concerning
operation of the order and facts relevant to the provisions thereof (or
proposed provisions) as do not reveal confidential information.
Subpart D_Rules Governing Order Provisions
Sec. 1000.26 Continuity and separability of provisions.
(a) Effective time. The provisions of the order or any amendment to
the order shall become effective at such time as the Secretary may
declare and shall continue in force until suspended or terminated.
(b) Suspension or termination. The Secretary shall suspend or
terminate any or all of the provisions of the order whenever he/she
finds that such provision(s) obstructs or does not tend to effectuate
the declared policy of the Act. The order shall terminate whenever the
provisions of the Act authorizing it cease to be in effect.
(c) Continuing obligations. If upon the suspension or termination of
any or all of the provisions of the order there are any obligations
arising under the order, the final accrual or ascertainment of which
requires acts by any handler, by the market administrator or by any
other person, the power and duty to perform such further acts shall
continue notwithstanding such suspension or termination.
(d) Liquidation. (1) Upon the suspension or termination of any or
all provisions of the order the market administrator, or such other
liquidating agent designated by the Secretary, shall, if so directed by
the Secretary, liquidate the business of the market administrator's
office, dispose of all property in his/her possession or control,
including accounts receivable, and execute and deliver all assignments
or other instruments necessary or appropriate to effectuate any such
disposition; and
(2) If a liquidating agent is so designated, all assets and records
of the market administrator shall be transferred promptly to such
liquidating agent. If, upon such liquidation, the funds on hand exceed
the amounts required to pay outstanding obligations of the office of the
market administrator and to pay necessary expenses of liquidation and
distribution, such excess shall be distributed to contributing handlers
and producers in an equitable manner.
(e) Separability of provisions. If any provision of the order or its
application to any person or circumstances is held invalid, the
application of such provision and of the remaining provisions of the
order to other persons or circumstances shall not be affected thereby.
Subpart E_Rules of Practice and Procedure Governing Handlers
Sec. 1000.27 Handler responsibility for records and facilities.
Each handler shall maintain and retain records of its operations and
make such records and its facilities available to the market
administrator. If adequate records of a handler, or of any other
persons, that are relevant to the obligation of such handler are not
maintained and made available, any skim milk and butterfat required to
be reported by such handler for which adequate records are not available
shall be considered as used in the highest-priced class.
(a) Records to be maintained. (1) Each handler shall maintain
records of its
[[Page 12]]
operations (including, but not limited to, records of purchases, sales,
processing, packaging, and disposition) as are necessary to verify
whether such handler has any obligation under the order and if so, the
amount of such obligation. Such records shall be such as to establish
for each plant or other receiving point for each month:
(i) The quantities of skim milk and butterfat contained in, or
represented by, products received in any form, including inventories on
hand at the beginning of the month, according to form, time, and source
of each receipt;
(ii) The utilization of all skim milk and butterfat showing the
respective quantities of such skim milk and butterfat in each form
disposed of or on hand at the end of the month; and
(iii) Payments to producers, dairy farmers, and cooperative
associations, including the amount and nature of any deductions and the
disbursement of money so deducted.
(2) Each handler shall keep such other specific records as the
market administrator deems necessary to verify or establish such
handler's obligation under the order.
(b) Availability of records and facilities. Each handler shall make
available all records pertaining to such handler's operations and all
facilities the market administrator finds are necessary to verify the
information required to be reported by the order and/or to ascertain
such handler's reporting, monetary, or other obligation under the order.
Each handler shall permit the market administrator to weigh, sample, and
test milk and milk products and observe plant operations and equipment
and make available to the market administrator such facilities as are
necessary to carry out his/her duties.
(c) Retention of records. All records required under the order to be
made available to the market administrator shall be retained by the
handler for a period of 3 years to begin at the end of the month to
which such records pertain. If, within such 3-year period, the market
administrator notifies the handler in writing that the retention of such
records, or of specified records, is necessary in connection with a
proceeding under section 8c(15)(A) of the Act or a court action
specified in such notice, the handler shall retain such records, or
specified records, until further written notification from the market
administrator. The market administrator shall give further written
notification to the handler promptly upon the termination of the
litigation or when the records are no longer necessary in connection
therewith.
Sec. 1000.28 Termination of obligations.
(a) Except as provided in paragraphs (b) and (c) of this section,
the obligation of any handler to pay money required to be paid under the
terms of the order shall terminate 2 years after the last day of the
month during which the market administrator receives the handler's
report of receipts and utilization on which such obligation is based,
unless within such 2-year period, the market administrator notifies the
handler in writing that such money is due and payable. Service of such
written notice shall be complete upon mailing to the handler's last
known address and it shall contain, but need not be limited to, the
following information:
(1) The amount of the obligation;
(2) The month(s) on which such obligation is based; and
(3) If the obligation is payable to one or more producers or to a
cooperative association, the name of such producer(s) or such
cooperative association, or if the obligation is payable to the market
administrator, the account for which it is to be paid.
(b) If a handler fails or refuses, with respect to any obligation
under the order, to make available to the market administrator all
records required by the order to be made available, the market
administrator may notify the handler in writing, within the 2-year
period provided for in paragraph (a) of this section, of such failure or
refusal. If the market administrator so notifies a handler, the said 2-
year period with respect to such obligation shall not begin to run until
the first day of the month following the month during which all such
records pertaining to such obligation are made available to the market
administrator.
(c) Notwithstanding the provisions of paragraphs (a) and (b) of this
section, a handler's obligation under the order to
[[Page 13]]
pay money shall not be terminated with respect to any transaction
involving fraud or willful concealment of a fact, material to the
obligation, on the part of the handler against whom the obligation is
sought to be imposed.
(d) Unless the handler files a petition pursuant to section
8c(15)(A) of the Act and the applicable rules and regulations (7 CFR
900.50 through 900.71) within the applicable 2-year period indicated
below, the obligation of the market administrator:
(1) To pay a handler any money which such handler claims is due
under the terms of the order shall terminate 2 years after the end of
the month during which the skim milk and butterfat involved in the claim
were received; or
(2) To refund any payment made by a handler (including a deduction
or offset by the market administrator) shall terminate 2 years after the
end of the month during which payment was made by the handler.
Subpart F_Classification of Milk
Sec. 1000.40 Classes of utilization.
Except as provided in Sec. 1000.42, all skim milk and butterfat
required to be reported pursuant to Sec. ----.30 of each Federal milk
order shall be classified as follows:
(a) Class I milk shall be all skim milk and butterfat:
(1) Disposed of in the form of fluid milk products, except as
otherwise provided in this section;
(2) In packaged fluid milk products in inventory at the end of the
month; and
(3) In shrinkage assigned pursuant to Sec. 1000.43(b).
(b) Class II milk shall be all skim milk and butterfat:
(1) In fluid milk products in containers larger than 1 gallon and
fluid cream products disposed of or diverted to a commercial food
processing establishment if the market administrator is permitted to
audit the records of the commercial food processing establishment for
the purpose of verification. Otherwise, such uses shall be Class I;
(2) Used to produce:
(i) Cottage cheese, lowfat cottage cheese, dry curd cottage cheese,
ricotta cheese, pot cheese, Creole cheese, and any similar soft, high-
moisture cheese resembling cottage cheese in form or use;
(ii) Milkshake and ice milk mixes (or bases), frozen desserts, and
frozen dessert mixes distributed in half-gallon containers or larger and
intended to be used in soft or semi-solid form;
(iii) Aerated cream, frozen cream, sour cream, sour half-and-half,
sour cream mixtures containing non-milk items; yogurt, including yogurt
containing beverages with 20 percent or more yogurt by weight and kefir,
and any other semi-solid product resembling a Class II product;
(iv) Custards, puddings, pancake mixes, coatings, batter, and
similar products;
(v) Buttermilk biscuit mixes and other buttermilk for baking that
contain food starch in excess of 2% of the total solids, provided that
the product is labeled to indicate the food starch content;
(vi) Products especially prepared for infant feeding or dietary use
(meal replacements) that are packaged in hermetically sealed containers
and products that meet the compositional standards of Sec. 1000.15(a)
but contain no fluid milk products included in Sec. 1000.15(a).
(vii) Candy, soup, bakery products and other prepared foods which
are processed for general distribution to the public, and intermediate
products, including sweetened condensed milk, to be used in processing
such prepared food products;
(viii) A fluid cream product or any product containing artificial
fat or fat substitutes that resembles a fluid cream product, except as
otherwise provided in paragraph (c) of this section; and
(ix) Any product not otherwise specified in this section; and
(3) In shrinkage assigned pursuant to Sec. 1000.43(b).
(c) Class III milk shall be all skim milk and butterfat:
(1) Used to produce:
(i) Cream cheese and other spreadable cheeses, and hard cheese of
types that may be shredded, grated, or crumbled;
(ii) Plastic cream, anhydrous milkfat, and butteroil; and
[[Page 14]]
(2) In shrinkage assigned pursuant to Sec. 1000.43(b).
(d) Class IV milk shall be all skim milk and butterfat:
(1) Used to produce:
(i) Butter; and
(ii) Evaporated or sweetened condensed milk in a consumer-type
package; and
(iii) Any milk product in dried form;
(2) In inventory at the end of the month of fluid milk products and
fluid cream products in bulk form;
(3) In the skim milk equivalent of nonfat milk solids used to modify
a fluid milk product that has not been accounted for in Class I; and
(4) In shrinkage assigned pursuant to Sec. 1000.43(b).
(e) Other uses. Other uses include skim milk and butterfat used in
any product described in this section that is dumped, used for animal
feed, destroyed, or lost by a handler in a vehicular accident, flood,
fire, or similar occurrence beyond the handler's control. Such uses of
skim milk and butterfat shall be assigned to the lowest priced class for
the month to the extent that the quantities destroyed or lost can be
verified from records satisfactory to the market administrator.
[64 FR 47899, Sept. 1, 1999, as amended at 65 FR 82833, Dec. 28, 2000;
68 FR 7064, Feb. 12, 2003; 69 FR 21952, Apr. 23, 2004; 75 FR 51931, Aug.
24, 2010]
Sec. 1000.41 [Reserved]
Sec. 1000.42 Classification of transfers and diversions.
(a) Transfers and diversions to pool plants. Skim milk or butterfat
transferred or diverted in the form of a fluid milk product or
transferred in the form of a bulk fluid cream product from a pool plant
or a handler described in Sec. 1135.11 of this chapter to another pool
plant shall be classified as Class I milk unless the handlers both
request the same classification in another class. In either case, the
classification shall be subject to the following conditions:
(1) The skim milk and butterfat classified in each class shall be
limited to the amount of skim milk and butterfat, respectively,
remaining in such class at the receiving plant after the computations
pursuant to Sec. 1000.44(a)(9) and the corresponding step of Sec.
1000.44(b);
(2) If the transferring plant received during the month other source
milk to be allocated pursuant to Sec. 1000.44(a)(3) or the
corresponding step of Sec. 1000.44(b), the skim milk or butterfat so
transferred shall be classified so as to allocate the least possible
Class I utilization to such other source milk; and
(3) If the transferring handler received during the month other
source milk to be allocated pursuant to Sec. 1000.44(a)(8) or (9) or
the corresponding steps of Sec. 1000.44(b), the skim milk or butterfat
so transferred, up to the total of the skim milk and butterfat,
respectively, in such receipts of other source milk, shall not be
classified as Class I milk to a greater extent than would be the case if
the other source milk had been received at the receiving plant.
(b) Transfers and diversions to a plant regulated under another
Federal order. Skim milk or butterfat transferred or diverted in the
form of a fluid milk product or transferred in the form of a bulk fluid
cream product from a pool plant to a plant regulated under another
Federal order shall be classified in the following manner. Such
classification shall apply only to the skim milk or butterfat that is in
excess of any receipts at the pool plant from a plant regulated under
another Federal order of skim milk and butterfat, respectively, in fluid
milk products and bulk fluid cream products, respectively, that are in
the same category as described in paragraph (b)(1) or (2) of this
section:
(1) As Class I milk, if transferred as packaged fluid milk products;
(2) If transferred or diverted in bulk form, classification shall be
in the classes to which allocated under the other order:
(i) If the operators of both plants so request in their reports of
receipts and utilization filed with their respective market
administrators, transfers in bulk form shall be classified as other than
Class I to the extent that such utilization is available for such
classification pursuant to the allocation provisions of the other order;
(ii) If diverted, the diverting handler must request a
classification other than Class I. If the plant receiving the
[[Page 15]]
diverted milk does not have sufficient utilization available for the
requested classification and some of the diverted milk is consequently
assigned to Class I use, the diverting handler shall be given the option
of designating the entire load of diverted milk as producer milk at the
plant physically receiving the milk. Alternatively, if the diverting
handler so chooses, it may designate which dairy farmers whose milk was
diverted during the month will be designated as producers under the
order physically receiving the milk. If the diverting handler declines
to accept either of these options, the market administrator will prorate
the portion of diverted milk in excess of Class II, III, and IV use
among all the dairy farmers whose milk was received from the diverting
handler on the last day of the month, then the second-to-last day, and
continuing in that fashion until the excess diverted milk has been
assigned as producer milk under the receiving order; and
(iii) If information concerning the classes to which such transfers
or diversions were allocated under the other order is not available to
the market administrator for the purpose of establishing classification
under this paragraph, classification shall be Class I, subject to
adjustment when such information is available.
(c) Transfers and diversions to producer-handlers and to exempt
plants. Skim milk or butterfat that is transferred or diverted from a
pool plant to a producer-handler under any Federal order or to an exempt
plant shall be classified:
(1) As Class I milk if transferred or diverted to a producer-
handler;
(2) As Class I milk if transferred to an exempt plant in the form of
a packaged fluid milk product; and
(3) In accordance with the utilization assigned to it by the market
administrator if transferred or diverted in the form of a bulk fluid
milk product or transferred in the form of a bulk fluid cream product to
an exempt plant. For this purpose, the receiving handler's utilization
of skim milk and butterfat in each class, in series beginning with Class
IV, shall be assigned to the extent possible to its receipts of skim
milk and butterfat, in bulk fluid cream products, and bulk fluid milk
products, respectively, pro rata to each source.
(d) Transfers and diversions to other nonpool plants. Skim milk or
butterfat transferred or diverted in the following forms from a pool
plant to a nonpool plant that is not a plant regulated under another
order, an exempt plant, or a producer-handler plant shall be classified:
(1) As Class I milk, if transferred in the form of a packaged fluid
milk product; and
(2) As Class I milk, if transferred or diverted in the form of a
bulk fluid milk product or transferred in the form of a bulk fluid cream
product, unless the following conditions apply:
(i) If the conditions described in paragraphs (d)(2)(i)(A) and (B)
of this section are met, transfers or diversions in bulk form shall be
classified on the basis of the assignment of the nonpool plant's
utilization, excluding the milk equivalent of both nonfat milk solids
and concentrated milk used in the plant during the month, to its
receipts as set forth in paragraphs (d)(2)(ii) through (viii) of this
section:
(A) The transferring handler or diverting handler claims such
classification in such handler's report of receipts and utilization
filed pursuant to Sec. ----.30 of each Federal milk order for the month
within which such transaction occurred; and
(B) The nonpool plant operator maintains books and records showing
the utilization of all skim milk and butterfat received at such plant
which are made available for verification purposes if requested by the
market administrator;
(ii) Route disposition in the marketing area of each Federal milk
order from the nonpool plant and transfers of packaged fluid milk
products from such nonpool plant to plants fully regulated thereunder
shall be assigned to the extent possible in the following sequence:
(A) Pro rata to receipts of packaged fluid milk products at such
nonpool plant from pool plants;
(B) Pro rata to any remaining unassigned receipts of packaged fluid
milk products at such nonpool plant from plants regulated under other
Federal orders;
[[Page 16]]
(C) Pro rata to receipts of bulk fluid milk products at such nonpool
plant from pool plants; and
(D) Pro rata to any remaining unassigned receipts of bulk fluid milk
products at such nonpool plant from plants regulated under other Federal
orders;
(iii) Any remaining Class I disposition of packaged fluid milk
products from the nonpool plant shall be assigned to the extent possible
pro rata to any remaining unassigned receipts of packaged fluid milk
products at such nonpool plant from pool plants and plants regulated
under other Federal orders;
(iv) Transfers of bulk fluid milk products from the nonpool plant to
a plant regulated under any Federal order, to the extent that such
transfers to the regulated plant exceed receipts of fluid milk products
from such plant and are allocated to Class I at the receiving plant,
shall be assigned to the extent possible in the following sequence:
(A) Pro rata to receipts of fluid milk products at such nonpool
plant from pool plants; and
(B) Pro rata to any remaining unassigned receipts of fluid milk
products at such nonpool plant from plants regulated under other Federal
orders;
(v) Any remaining unassigned Class I disposition from the nonpool
plant shall be assigned to the extent possible in the following
sequence:
(A) To such nonpool plant's receipts from dairy farmers who the
market administrator determines constitute regular sources of Grade A
milk for such nonpool plant; and
(B) To such nonpool plant's receipts of Grade A milk from plants not
fully regulated under any Federal order which the market administrator
determines constitute regular sources of Grade A milk for such nonpool
plant;
(vi) Any remaining unassigned receipts of bulk fluid milk products
at the nonpool plant from pool plants and plants regulated under other
Federal orders shall be assigned, pro rata among such plants, to the
extent possible first to any remaining Class I utilization and then to
all other utilization, in sequence beginning with Class IV at such
nonpool plant;
(vii) Receipts of bulk fluid cream products at the nonpool plant
from pool plants and plants regulated under other Federal orders shall
be assigned, pro rata among such plants, to the extent possible to any
remaining utilization, in sequence beginning with Class IV at such
nonpool plant; and
(viii) In determining the nonpool plant's utilization for purposes
of this paragraph, any fluid milk products and bulk fluid cream products
transferred from such nonpool plant to a plant not fully regulated under
any Federal order shall be classified on the basis of the second plant's
utilization using the same assignment priorities at the second plant
that are set forth in this paragraph.
Sec. 1000.43 General classification rules.
In determining the classification of producer milk pursuant to Sec.
1000.44, the following rules shall apply:
(a) Each month the market administrator shall correct for
mathematical and other obvious errors all reports filed pursuant to
Sec. ----.30 of each Federal milk order and shall compute separately
for each pool plant, for each handler described in Sec. 1000.9(c) and
Sec. 1135.11 of this chapter, the pounds of skim milk and butterfat,
respectively, in each class in accordance with Sec. Sec. 1000.40 and
1000.42, and paragraph (b) of this section.
(b) Shrinkage and Overage. For purposes of classifying all milk
reported by a handler pursuant to Sec. ----.30 of each Federal milk
order the market administrator shall determine the shrinkage or overage
of skim milk and butterfat for each pool plant and each handler
described in Sec. 1000.9(c) and Sec. 1135.11 of this chapter by
subtracting total utilization from total receipts. Any positive
difference shall be shrinkage, and any negative difference shall be
overage.
(1) Shrinkage incurred by pool plants qualified pursuant to Sec. --
--.7 of any Federal milk order shall be assigned to the lowest-priced
class to the extent that such shrinkage does not exceed:
(i) Two percent of the total quantity of milk physically received at
the plant directly from producers' farms on the basis of farm weights
and tests;
(ii) Plus 1.5 percent of the quantity of bulk milk physically
received on a basis other than farm weights and
[[Page 17]]
tests, excluding concentrated milk received by agreement for other than
Class I use;
(iii) Plus .5 percent of the quantity of milk diverted by the plant
operator to another plant on a basis other than farm weights and tests;
and
(iv) Minus 1.5 percent of the quantity of bulk milk transferred to
other plants, excluding concentrated milk transferred by agreement for
other than Class I use.
(2) A handler described in Sec. 1000.9(c) or Sec. 1135.11 of this
chapter that delivers milk to plants on a basis other than farm weights
and tests shall receive a lowest-priced-class shrinkage allowance of .5
percent of the total quantity of such milk picked up at producers'
farms.
(3) Shrinkage in excess of the amounts provided in paragraphs (b)(1)
and (2) of this section shall be assigned to existing utilization in
series starting with Class I. The shrinkage assigned pursuant to this
paragraph shall be added to the handler's reported utilization and the
result shall be known as the gross utilization in each class.
(c) If any of the water but none of the nonfat solids contained in
the milk from which a product is made is removed before the product is
utilized or disposed of by the handler, the pounds of skim milk in such
product that are to be considered under this part as used or disposed of
by the handler shall be an amount equivalent to the nonfat milk solids
contained in such product plus all of the water originally associated
with such solids. If any of the nonfat solids contained in the milk from
which a product is made are removed before the product is utilized or
disposed of by the handler, the pounds of skim milk in such product that
are to be considered under this part as used or disposed of by the
handler shall be an amount equivalent to the nonfat milk solids
contained in such product plus all of the water and nonfat solids
originally associated with such solids determined on a protein
equivalent basis.
(d) Skim milk and butterfat contained in receipts of bulk
concentrated fluid milk and nonfluid milk products that are
reconstituted for fluid use shall be assigned to Class I use, up to the
reconstituted portion of labeled reconstituted fluid milk products, on a
pro rata basis (except for any Class I use of specific concentrated
receipts that is established by the handler) prior to any assignments
under Sec. 1000.44. Any remaining skim milk and butterfat in
concentrated receipts shall be assigned to uses under Sec. 1000.44 on a
pro rata basis, unless a specific use of such receipts is established by
the handler.
[64 FR 47899, Sept. 1, 1999, as amended at 75 FR 51931, Aug. 24, 2010]
Sec. 1000.44 Classification of producer milk.
For each month the market administrator shall determine for each
handler described in Sec. 1000.9(a) for each pool plant of the handler
separately and for each handler described in Sec. 1000.9(c) and Sec.
1135.11 of this chapter the classification of producer milk by
allocating the handler's receipts of skim milk and butterfat to the
handler's gross utilization of such receipts pursuant to Sec.
1000.43(b)(3) as follows:
(a) Skim milk shall be allocated in the following manner:
(1) Subtract from the pounds of skim milk in Class I the pounds of
skim milk in:
(i) Receipts of packaged fluid milk products from an unregulated
supply plant to the extent that an equivalent amount of skim milk
disposed of to such plant by handlers fully regulated under any Federal
order is classified and priced as Class I milk and is not used as an
offset for any other payment obligation under any order;
(ii) Packaged fluid milk products in inventory at the beginning of
the month. This paragraph shall apply only if the pool plant was subject
to the provisions of this paragraph or comparable provisions of another
Federal order in the immediately preceding month;
(iii) Fluid milk products received in packaged form from plants
regulated under other Federal orders; and
(iv) To the extent that the receipts described in paragraphs
(a)(1)(i) through (iii) of this section exceed the gross Class I
utilization of skim milk, the excess receipts shall be subtracted
pursuant to paragraph (a)(3)(vi) of this section.
[[Page 18]]
(2) Subtract from the pounds of skim milk in Class II the pounds of
skim milk in the receipts of skim milk in bulk concentrated fluid milk
products and in other source milk (except other source milk received in
the form of an unconcentrated fluid milk product or a fluid cream
product) that is used to produce, or added to, any product in Class II
(excluding the quantity of such skim milk that was classified as Class
IV milk pursuant to Sec. 1000.40(d)(3)). To the extent that the
receipts described in this paragraph exceed the gross Class II
utilization of skim milk, the excess receipts shall be subtracted
pursuant to paragraph (a)(3)(vi) of this section.
(3) Subtract from the pounds of skim milk remaining in each class,
in series beginning with Class IV, the pounds of skim milk in:
(i) Receipts of bulk concentrated fluid milk products and other
source milk (except other source milk received in the form of an
unconcentrated fluid milk product);
(ii) Receipts of fluid milk products and bulk fluid cream products
for which appropriate health approval is not established and from
unidentified sources;
(iii) Receipts of fluid milk products and bulk fluid cream products
from an exempt plant;
(iv) Fluid milk products and bulk fluid cream products received from
a producer-handler as defined under the order in this part, or any other
Federal order;
(v) Receipts of fluid milk products from dairy farmers for other
markets; and
(vi) The excess receipts specified in paragraphs (a)(1)(iv) and
(a)(2) of this section.
(4) Subtract from the pounds of skim milk remaining in all classes
other than Class I, in sequence beginning with Class IV, the receipts of
fluid milk products from an unregulated supply plant that were not
previously subtracted in this section for which the handler requests
classification other than Class I, but not in excess of the pounds of
skim milk remaining in these other classes combined.
(5) Subtract from the pounds of skim milk remaining in all classes
other than Class I, in sequence beginning with Class IV, receipts of
fluid milk products from an unregulated supply plant that were not
previously subtracted in this section, and which are in excess of the
pounds of skim milk determined pursuant to paragraphs (a)(5)(i) and (ii)
of this section;
(i) Multiply by 1.25 the pounds of skim milk remaining in Class I at
this allocation step; and
(ii) Subtract from the result in paragraph (a)(5)(i) the pounds of
skim milk in receipts of producer milk and fluid milk products from
other pool plants.
(6) Subtract from the pounds of skim milk remaining in all classes
other than Class I, in sequence beginning with Class IV, the pounds of
skim milk in receipts of bulk fluid milk products from a handler
regulated under another Federal order that are in excess of bulk fluid
milk products transferred or diverted to such handler, if other than
Class I classification is requested, but not in excess of the pounds of
skim milk remaining in these classes combined.
(7) Subtract from the pounds of skim milk remaining in each class,
in series beginning with Class IV, the pounds of skim milk in fluid milk
products and bulk fluid cream products in inventory at the beginning of
the month that were not previously subtracted in this section.
(8) Subtract from the pounds of skim milk remaining in each class at
the plant receipts of skim milk in fluid milk products from an
unregulated supply plant that were not previously subtracted in this
section and that were not offset by transfers or diversions of fluid
milk products to the unregulated supply plant from which fluid milk
products to be allocated at this step were received. Such subtraction
shall be pro rata to the pounds of skim milk in Class I and in Classes
II, III, and IV combined, with the quantity prorated to Classes II, III,
and IV combined being subtracted in sequence beginning with Class IV.
(9) Subtract from the pounds of skim milk remaining in each class
the pounds of skim milk in receipts of bulk fluid milk products from a
handler regulated under another Federal order that are in excess of bulk
fluid milk
[[Page 19]]
products transferred or diverted to such handler that were not
subtracted in paragraph (a)(6) of this section. Such subtraction shall
be pro rata to the pounds of skim milk in Class I and in Classes II,
III, and IV combined, with the quantity prorated to Classes II, III, and
IV combined being subtracted in sequence beginning with Class IV, with
respect to whichever of the following quantities represents the lower
proportion of Class I milk:
(i) The estimated utilization of skim milk of all handlers in each
class as announced for the month pursuant to Sec. 1000.45(a); or
(ii) The total pounds of skim milk remaining in each class at this
allocation step.
(10) Subtract from the pounds of skim milk remaining in each class
the pounds of skim milk in receipts of fluid milk products and bulk
fluid cream products from another pool plant and from a handler
described in Sec. 1135.11 of this chapter according to the
classification of such products pursuant to Sec. 1000.42(a).
(11) If the total pounds of skim milk remaining in all classes
exceed the pounds of skim milk in producer milk, subtract such excess
from the pounds of skim milk remaining in each class in series beginning
with Class IV.
(b) Butterfat shall be allocated in accordance with the procedure
outlined for skim milk in paragraph (a) of this section.
(c) The quantity of producer milk in each class shall be the
combined pounds of skim milk and butterfat remaining in each class after
the computations pursuant to paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section.
Sec. 1000.45 Market administrator's reports and announcements
concerning classification.
(a) Whenever required for the purpose of allocating receipts from
plants regulated under other Federal orders pursuant to Sec.
1000.44(a)(9) and the corresponding step of Sec. 1000.44(b), the market
administrator shall estimate and publicly announce the utilization (to
the nearest whole percentage) in Class I during the month of skim milk
and butterfat, respectively, in producer milk of all handlers. The
estimate shall be based upon the most current available data and shall
be final for such purpose.
(b) The market administrator shall report to the market
administrators of other Federal orders as soon as possible after the
handlers' reports of receipts and utilization are received, the class to
which receipts from plants regulated under other Federal orders are
allocated pursuant to Sec. Sec. 1000.43(d) and 1000.44 (including any
reclassification of inventories of bulk concentrated fluid milk
products), and thereafter any change in allocation required to correct
errors disclosed on the verification of such report.
(c) The market administrator shall furnish each handler operating a
pool plant and each handler described in Sec. 1135.11 of this chapter
who has shipped fluid milk products or bulk fluid cream products to a
plant fully regulated under another Federal order the class to which the
shipments were allocated by the market administrator of the other
Federal order on the basis of the report by the receiving handler and,
as necessary, any changes in the allocation arising from the
verification of such report.
(d) The market administrator shall report to each cooperative
association which so requests, the percentage of producer milk delivered
by members of the association that was used in each class by each
handler receiving the milk. For the purpose of this report, the milk so
received shall be prorated to each class in accordance with the total
utilization of producer milk by the handler.
Subpart G_Class Prices
Sec. 1000.50 Class prices, component prices, and advanced pricing
factors.
Class prices per hundredweight of milk containing 3.5 percent
butterfat, component prices, and advanced pricing factors shall be as
follows. The prices and pricing factors described in paragraphs (a),
(b), (c), (e), (f), and (q) of this section shall be based on a weighted
average of the most recent 2 weekly prices announced by the National
Agricultural Statistical Service (NASS) before the 24th day of the
[[Page 20]]
month. These prices shall be announced on or before the 23rd day of the
month and shall apply to milk received during the following month. The
prices described in paragraphs (g) through (p) of this section shall be
based on a weighted average for the preceding month of weekly prices
announced by NASS on or before the 5th day of the month and shall apply
to milk received during the preceding month. The price described in
paragraph (d) of this section shall be derived from the Class II skim
milk price announced on or before the 23rd day of the month preceding
the month to which it applies and the butterfat price announced on or
before the 5th day of the month following the month to which it applies.
(a) Class I price. The Class I price per hundredweight, rounded to
the nearest cent, shall be 0.965 times the Class I skim milk price plus
3.5 times the Class I butterfat price.
(b) Class I skim milk price. The Class I skim milk price per
hundredweight shall be the adjusted Class I differential specified in
Sec. 1000.52, plus the adjustment to Class I prices specified in
Sec. Sec. 1005.51(b), 1006.51(b) and 1007.51(b), plus the higher of the
advanced pricing factors computed in paragraph (q)(1) or (2) of this
section.
(c) Class I butterfat price. The Class I butterfat price per pound
shall be the adjusted Class I differential specified in Sec. 1000.52
divided by 100, plus the adjustments to Class I prices specified in
Sec. Sec. 1005.51(b), 1006.51(b) and 1007.51(b) divided by 100, plus
the advanced butterfat price computed in paragraph (q)(3) of this
section.
(d) The Class II price per hundredweight, rounded to the nearest
cent, shall be .965 times the Class II skim milk price plus 3.5 times
the Class II butterfat price.
(e) Class II skim milk price. The Class II skim milk price per
hundredweight shall be the advanced Class IV skim milk price computed in
paragraph (q)(2) of this section plus 70 cents.
(f) Class II nonfat solids price. The Class II nonfat solids price
per pound, rounded to the nearest one-hundredth cent, shall be the Class
II skim milk price divided by 9.
(g) Class II butterfat price. The Class II butterfat price per pound
shall be the butterfat price plus $0.007.
(h) Class III price. The Class III price per hundredweight, rounded
to the nearest cent, shall be 0.965 times the Class III skim milk price
plus 3.5 times the butterfat price.
(i) Class III skim milk price. The Class III skim milk price per
hundredweight, rounded to the nearest cent, shall be the protein price
per pound times 3.1 plus the other solids price per pound times 5.9.
(j) Class IV price. The Class IV price per hundredweight, rounded to
the nearest cent, shall be 0.965 times the Class IV skim milk price plus
3.5 times the butterfat price.
(k) Class IV skim milk price. The Class IV skim milk price per
hundredweight, rounded to the nearest cent, shall be the nonfat solids
price per pound times 9.
(l) Butterfat price. The butterfat price per pound, rounded to the
nearest one-hundredth cent, shall be the U.S. average NASS AA Butter
survey price reported by the Department for the month, less 17.15 cents,
with the result multiplied by 1.211.
(m) Nonfat solids price. The nonfat solids price per pound, rounded
to the nearest one-hundredth cent, shall be the U.S. average NASS nonfat
dry milk survey price reported by the Department for the month, less
16.78 cents and multiplying the result by 0.99.
(n) Protein price. The protein price per pound, rounded to the
nearest one-hundredth cent, shall be computed as follows:
(1) Compute a weighted average of the amounts described in
paragraphs (n)(1)(i) and (ii) of this section:
(i) The U.S. average NASS survey price for 40-lb. block cheese
reported by the Department for the month; and
(ii) The U.S. average NASS survey price for 500-pound barrel cheddar
cheese (38 percent moisture) reported by the Department for the month
plus 3 cents;
(2) Subtract 20.03 cents from the price computed pursuant to
paragraph (n)(1) of this section and multiply the result by 1.383;
[[Page 21]]
(3) Add to the amount computed pursuant to paragraph (n)(2) of this
section an amount computed as follows:
(i) Subtract 20.03 cents from the price computed pursuant to
paragraph (n)(1) of this section and multiply the result by 1.572; and
(ii) Subtract 0.9 times the butterfat price computed pursuant to
paragraph (l) of this section from the amount computed pursuant to
paragraph (n)(3)(i) of this section; and
(iii) Multiply the amount computed pursuant to paragraph (n)(3)(ii)
of this section by 1.17.
(o) Other solids price. The other solids price per pound, rounded to
the nearest one-hundredth cent, shall be the U.S. average NASS dry whey
survey price reported by the Department for the month minus 19.91 cents,
with the result multiplied by 1.03.
(p) Somatic cell adjustment. The somatic cell adjustment per
hundredweight of milk shall be determined as follows:
(1) Multiply 0.0005 by the weighted average price computed pursuant
to paragraph (n)(1) of this section and round to the 5th decimal place;
(2) Subtract the somatic cell count of the milk (reported in
thousands) from 350; and
(3) Multiply the amount computed in paragraph (p)(1) of this section
by the amount computed in paragraph (p)(2) of this section and round to
the nearest full cent.
(q) Advanced pricing factors. For the purpose of computing the Class
I skim milk price, the Class II skim milk price, the Class II nonfat
solids price, and the Class I butterfat price for the following month,
the following pricing factors shall be computed using the weighted
average of the 2 most recent NASS U.S. average weekly survey prices
announced before the 24th day of the month:
(1) An advanced Class III skim milk price per hundredweight, rounded
to the nearest cent, shall be computed as follows:
(i) Following the procedure set forth in paragraphs (n) and (o) of
this section, but using the weighted average of the 2 most recent NASS
U.S. average weekly survey prices announced before the 24th day of the
month, compute a protein price and an other solids price;
(ii) Multiply the protein price computed in paragraph (q)(1)(i) of
this section by 3.1;
(iii) Multiply the other solids price per pound computed in
paragraph (q)(1)(i) of this section by 5.9; and
(iv) Add the amounts computed in paragraphs (q)(1)(ii) and (iii) of
this section.
(2) An advanced Class IV skim milk price per hundredweight, rounded
to the nearest cent, shall be computed as follows:
(i) Following the procedure set forth in paragraph (m) of this
section, but using the weighted average of the 2 most recent NASS U.S.
average weekly survey prices announced before the 24th day of the month,
compute a nonfat solids price; and
(ii) Multiply the nonfat solids price computed in paragraph
(q)(2)(i) of this section by 9.
(3) An advanced butterfat price per pound rounded to the nearest
one-hundredth cent, shall be calculated by computing a weighted average
of the 2 most recent U.S. average NASS AA Butter survey prices announced
before the 24th day of the month, subtracting 17.15 cents from this
average, and multiplying the result by 1.211.
[64 FR 47899, Sept. 1, 1999, as amended at 65 FR 82833, Dec. 28, 2000;
68 FR 7064, Feb. 12, 2003; 71 FR 78334, Dec. 29, 2006; 73 FR 14155, Mar.
17, 2008; 73 FR 44619, July 31, 2008]
Sec. 1000.51 [Reserved]
Sec. 1000.52 Adjusted Class I differentials.
The Class I differential adjusted for location to be used in Sec.
1000.50(b) and (c) shall be as follows:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class I
FIPS differential
County/parish/city State code adjusted for
location
------------------------------------------------------------------------
AUTAUGA AL............... 01001 3.30
BALDWIN AL............... 01003 3.50
BARBOUR AL............... 01005 3.45
BIBB AL............... 01007 3.10
BLOUNT AL............... 01009 3.10
BULLOCK AL............... 01011 3.30
BUTLER AL............... 01013 3.45
CALHOUN AL............... 01015 3.10
CHAMBERS AL............... 01017 3.10
CHEROKEE AL............... 01019 3.10
CHILTON AL............... 01021 3.10
CHOCTAW AL............... 01023 3.30
CLARKE AL............... 01025 3.45
[[Page 22]]
CLAY AL............... 01027 3.10
CLEBURNE AL............... 01029 3.10
COFFEE AL............... 01031 3.45
COLBERT AL............... 01033 2.90
CONECUH AL............... 01035 3.45
COOSA AL............... 01037 3.10
COVINGTON AL............... 01039 3.45
CRENSHAW AL............... 01041 3.45
CULLMAN AL............... 01043 3.10
DALE AL............... 01045 3.45
DALLAS AL............... 01047 3.30
DE KALB AL............... 01049 2.90
ELMORE AL............... 01051 3.30
ESCAMBIA AL............... 01053 3.45
ETOWAH AL............... 01055 3.10
FAYETTE AL............... 01057 3.10
FRANKLIN AL............... 01059 2.90
GENEVA AL............... 01061 3.45
GREENE AL............... 01063 3.10
HALE AL............... 01065 3.10
HENRY AL............... 01067 3.45
HOUSTON AL............... 01069 3.45
JACKSON AL............... 01071 2.90
JEFFERSON AL............... 01073 3.10
LAMAR AL............... 01075 3.10
LAUDERDALE AL............... 01077 2.90
LAWRENCE AL............... 01079 2.90
LEE AL............... 01081 3.30
LIMESTONE AL............... 01083 2.90
LOWNDES AL............... 01085 3.30
MACON AL............... 01087 3.30
MADISON AL............... 01089 2.90
MARENGO AL............... 01091 3.30
MARION AL............... 01093 3.10
MARSHALL AL............... 01095 2.90
MOBILE AL............... 01097 3.50
MONROE AL............... 01099 3.45
MONTGOMERY AL............... 01101 3.30
MORGAN AL............... 01103 2.90
PERRY AL............... 01105 3.10
PICKENS AL............... 01107 3.10
PIKE AL............... 01109 3.45
RANDOLPH AL............... 01111 3.10
RUSSELL AL............... 01113 3.30
SHELBY AL............... 01117 3.10
ST. CLAIR AL............... 01115 3.10
SUMTER AL............... 01119 3.10
TALLADEGA AL............... 01121 3.10
TALLAPOOSA AL............... 01123 3.10
TUSCALOOSA AL............... 01125 3.10
WALKER AL............... 01127 3.10
WASHINGTON AL............... 01129 3.45
WILCOX AL............... 01131 3.30
WINSTON AL............... 01133 3.10
ARKANSAS AR............... 05001 2.90
ASHLEY AR............... 05003 3.10
BAXTER AR............... 05005 2.60
BENTON AR............... 05007 2.60
BOONE AR............... 05009 2.60
BRADLEY AR............... 05011 2.90
CALHOUN AR............... 05013 2.90
CARROLL AR............... 05015 2.60
CHICOT AR............... 05017 3.10
CLARK AR............... 05019 2.90
CLAY AR............... 05021 2.60
CLEBURNE AR............... 05023 2.80
CLEVELAND AR............... 05025 2.90
COLUMBIA AR............... 05027 3.10
CONWAY AR............... 05029 2.80
CRAIGHEAD AR............... 05031 2.60
CRAWFORD AR............... 05033 2.80
CRITTENDEN AR............... 05035 2.80
CROSS AR............... 05037 2.80
DALLAS AR............... 05039 2.90
DESHA AR............... 05041 2.90
DREW AR............... 05043 2.90
FAULKNER AR............... 05045 2.80
FRANKLIN AR............... 05047 2.80
FULTON AR............... 05049 2.60
GARLAND AR............... 05051 2.80
GRANT AR............... 05053 2.90
GREENE AR............... 05055 2.60
HEMPSTEAD AR............... 05057 2.90
HOT SPRING AR............... 05059 2.90
HOWARD AR............... 05061 2.90
INDEPENDENCE AR............... 05063 2.60
IZARD AR............... 05065 2.60
JACKSON AR............... 05067 2.60
JEFFERSON AR............... 05069 2.90
JOHNSON AR............... 05071 2.80
LAFAYETTE AR............... 05073 3.10
LAWRENCE AR............... 05075 2.60
LEE AR............... 05077 2.80
LINCOLN AR............... 05079 2.90
LITTLE RIVER AR............... 05081 2.90
LOGAN AR............... 05083 2.80
LONOKE AR............... 05085 2.80
MADISON AR............... 05087 2.60
MARION AR............... 05089 2.60
MILLER AR............... 05091 3.10
MISSISSIPPI AR............... 05093 2.60
MONROE AR............... 05095 2.80
MONTGOMERY AR............... 05097 2.80
NEVADA AR............... 05099 2.90
NEWTON AR............... 05101 2.60
OUACHITA AR............... 05103 2.90
PERRY AR............... 05105 2.80
PHILLIPS AR............... 05107 2.90
PIKE AR............... 05109 2.90
POINSETT AR............... 05111 2.60
POLK AR............... 05113 2.80
POPE AR............... 05115 2.80
PRAIRIE AR............... 05117 2.80
PULASKI AR............... 05119 2.80
RANDOLPH AR............... 05121 2.60
SALINE AR............... 05125 2.80
SCOTT AR............... 05127 2.80
SEARCY AR............... 05129 2.60
SEBASTIAN AR............... 05131 2.80
SEVIER AR............... 05133 2.90
SHARP AR............... 05135 2.60
ST. FRANCIS AR............... 05123 2.80
STONE AR............... 05137 2.60
UNION AR............... 05139 3.10
VAN BUREN AR............... 05141 2.80
WASHINGTON AR............... 05143 2.60
WHITE AR............... 05145 2.80
WOODRUFF AR............... 05147 2.80
YELL AR............... 05149 2.80
APACHE AZ............... 04001 1.90
COCHISE AZ............... 04003 2.10
COCONINO AZ............... 04005 1.90
GILA AZ............... 04007 2.10
GRAHAM AZ............... 04009 2.10
GREENLEE AZ............... 04011 2.10
LA PAZ AZ............... 04012 2.10
MARICOPA AZ............... 04013 2.35
MOHAVE AZ............... 04015 1.90
NAVAJO AZ............... 04017 1.90
PIMA AZ............... 04019 2.35
PINAL AZ............... 04021 2.35
SANTA CRUZ AZ............... 04023 2.10
YAVAPAI AZ............... 04025 1.90
YUMA AZ............... 04027 2.10
[[Page 23]]
ALAMEDA CA............... 06001 1.80
ALPINE CA............... 06003 1.70
AMADOR CA............... 06005 1.70
BUTTE CA............... 06007 1.70
CALAVERAS CA............... 06009 1.70
COLUSA CA............... 06011 1.70
CONTRA COSTA CA............... 06013 1.80
DEL NORTE CA............... 06015 1.80
EL DORADO CA............... 06017 1.70
FRESNO CA............... 06019 1.60
GLENN CA............... 06021 1.70
HUMBOLDT CA............... 06023 1.80
IMPERIAL CA............... 06025 2.00
INYO CA............... 06027 1.60
KERN CA............... 06029 1.80
KINGS CA............... 06031 1.60
LAKE CA............... 06033 1.80
LASSEN CA............... 06035 1.70
LOS ANGELES CA............... 06037 2.10
MADERA CA............... 06039 1.60
MARIN CA............... 06041 1.80
MARIPOSA CA............... 06043 1.70
MENDOCINO CA............... 06045 1.80
MERCED CA............... 06047 1.70
MODOC CA............... 06049 1.70
MONO CA............... 06051 1.60
MONTEREY CA............... 06053 1.80
NAPA CA............... 06055 1.80
NEVADA CA............... 06057 1.70
ORANGE CA............... 06059 2.10
PLACER CA............... 06061 1.70
PLUMAS CA............... 06063 1.70
RIVERSIDE CA............... 06065 2.00
SACRAMENTO CA............... 06067 1.70
SAN BENITO CA............... 06069 1.80
SAN BERNARDINO CA............... 06071 1.80
SAN DIEGO CA............... 06073 2.10
SAN FRANCISCO CA............... 06075 1.80
SAN JOAQUIN CA............... 06077 1.70
SAN LUIS OBISPO CA............... 06079 1.80
SAN MATEO CA............... 06081 1.80
SANTA BARBARA CA............... 06083 1.80
SANTA CLARA CA............... 06085 1.80
SANTA CRUZ CA............... 06087 1.80
SHASTA CA............... 06089 1.70
SIERRA CA............... 06091 1.70
SISKIYOU CA............... 06093 1.80
SOLANO CA............... 06095 1.80
SONOMA CA............... 06097 1.80
STANISLAUS CA............... 06099 1.70
SUTTER CA............... 06101 1.70
TEHAMA CA............... 06103 1.70
TRINITY CA............... 06105 1.80
TULARE CA............... 06107 1.60
TUOLUMNE CA............... 06109 1.70
VENTURA CA............... 06111 1.80
YOLO CA............... 06113 1.70
YUBA CA............... 06115 1.70
ADAMS CO............... 08001 2.55
ALAMOSA CO............... 08003 1.90
ARAPAHOE CO............... 08005 2.55
ARCHULETA CO............... 08007 1.90
BACA CO............... 08009 2.35
BENT CO............... 08011 2.35
BOULDER CO............... 08013 2.45
BROOMFIELD CO............... 08014 2.45
CHAFFEE CO............... 08015 1.90
CHEYENNE CO............... 08017 2.35
CLEAR CREEK CO............... 08019 2.45
CONEJOS CO............... 08021 1.90
COSTILLA CO............... 08023 1.90
CROWLEY CO............... 08025 2.45
CUSTER CO............... 08027 2.45
DELTA CO............... 08029 2.00
DENVER CO............... 08031 2.55
DOLORES CO............... 08033 1.90
DOUGLAS CO............... 08035 2.55
EAGLE CO............... 08037 1.90
EL PASO CO............... 08041 2.55
ELBERT CO............... 08039 2.45
FREMONT CO............... 08043 2.45
GARFIELD CO............... 08045 2.00
GILPIN CO............... 08047 2.45
GRAND CO............... 08049 1.90
GUNNISON CO............... 08051 1.90
HINSDALE CO............... 08053 1.90
HUERFANO CO............... 08055 2.45
JACKSON CO............... 08057 1.90
JEFFERSON CO............... 08059 2.55
KIOWA CO............... 08061 2.35
KIT CARSON CO............... 08063 2.35
LA PLATA CO............... 08067 1.90
LAKE CO............... 08065 1.90
LARIMER CO............... 08069 2.45
LAS ANIMAS CO............... 08071 2.35
LINCOLN CO............... 08073 2.45
LOGAN CO............... 08075 2.35
MESA CO............... 08077 2.00
MINERAL CO............... 08079 1.90
MOFFAT CO............... 08081 1.90
MONTEZUMA CO............... 08083 1.90
MONTROSE CO............... 08085 2.00
MORGAN CO............... 08087 2.35
OTERO CO............... 08089 2.45
OURAY CO............... 08091 1.90
PARK CO............... 08093 2.45
PHILLIPS CO............... 08095 2.35
PITKIN CO............... 08097 1.90
PROWERS CO............... 08099 2.35
PUEBLO CO............... 08101 2.45
RIO BLANCO CO............... 08103 1.90
RIO GRANDE CO............... 08105 1.90
ROUTT CO............... 08107 1.90
SAGUACHE CO............... 08109 1.90
SAN JUAN CO............... 08111 1.90
SAN MIGUEL CO............... 08113 1.90
SEDGWICK CO............... 08115 2.35
SUMMIT CO............... 08117 1.90
TELLER CO............... 08119 2.45
WASHINGTON CO............... 08121 2.35
WELD CO............... 08123 2.45
YUMA CO............... 08125 2.35
FAIRFIELD CT............... 09001 3.15
HARTFORD CT............... 09003 3.15
LITCHFIELD CT............... 09005 3.00
MIDDLESEX CT............... 09007 3.15
NEW HAVEN CT............... 09009 3.15
NEW LONDON CT............... 09011 3.15
TOLLAND CT............... 09013 3.15
WINDHAM CT............... 09015 3.15
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA DC............... 11001 3.00
KENT DE............... 10001 3.05
NEW CASTLE DE............... 10003 3.05
SUSSEX DE............... 10005 3.05
ALACHUA FL............... 12001 3.70
BAKER FL............... 12003 3.70
BAY FL............... 12005 3.70
BRADFORD FL............... 12007 3.70
BREVARD FL............... 12009 4.00
BROWARD FL............... 12011 4.30
CALHOUN FL............... 12013 3.70
CHARLOTTE FL............... 12015 4.30
CITRUS FL............... 12017 4.00
CLAY FL............... 12019 3.70
[[Page 24]]
COLLIER FL............... 12021 4.30
COLUMBIA FL............... 12023 3.70
DADE FL............... 12025 4.30
DE SOTO FL............... 12027 4.00
DIXIE FL............... 12029 3.70
DUVAL FL............... 12031 3.70
ESCAMBIA FL............... 12033 3.45
FLAGLER FL............... 12035 4.00
FRANKLIN FL............... 12037 3.70
GADSDEN FL............... 12039 3.70
GILCHRIST FL............... 12041 3.70
GLADES FL............... 12043 4.30
GULF FL............... 12045 3.70
HAMILTON FL............... 12047 3.70
HARDEE FL............... 12049 4.00
HENDRY FL............... 12051 4.30
HERNANDO FL............... 12053 4.00
HIGHLANDS FL............... 12055 4.00
HILLSBOROUGH FL............... 12057 4.00
HOLMES FL............... 12059 3.70
INDIAN RIVER FL............... 12061 4.00
JACKSON FL............... 12063 3.70
JEFFERSON FL............... 12065 3.70
LAFAYETTE FL............... 12067 3.70
LAKE FL............... 12069 4.00
LEE FL............... 12071 4.30
LEON FL............... 12073 3.70
LEVY FL............... 12075 4.00
LIBERTY FL............... 12077 3.70
MADISON FL............... 12079 3.70
MANATEE FL............... 12081 4.00
MARION FL............... 12083 4.00
MARTIN FL............... 12085 4.30
MONROE FL............... 12087 4.30
NASSAU FL............... 12089 3.70
OKALOOSA FL............... 12091 3.45
OKEECHOBEE FL............... 12093 4.00
ORANGE FL............... 12095 4.00
OSCEOLA FL............... 12097 4.00
PALM BEACH FL............... 12099 4.30
PASCO FL............... 12101 4.00
PINELLAS FL............... 12103 4.00
POLK FL............... 12105 4.00
PUTNAM FL............... 12107 3.70
SANTA ROSA FL............... 12113 3.45
SARASOTA FL............... 12115 4.00
SEMINOLE FL............... 12117 4.00
ST. JOHNS FL............... 12109 3.70
ST. LUCIE FL............... 12111 4.00
SUMTER FL............... 12119 4.00
SUWANNEE FL............... 12121 3.70
TAYLOR FL............... 12123 3.70
UNION FL............... 12125 3.70
VOLUSIA FL............... 12127 4.00
WAKULLA FL............... 12129 3.70
WALTON FL............... 12131 3.45
WASHINGTON FL............... 12133 3.70
APPLING GA............... 13001 3.45
ATKINSON GA............... 13003 3.45
BACON GA............... 13005 3.45
BAKER GA............... 13007 3.45
BALDWIN GA............... 13009 3.10
BANKS GA............... 13011 3.10
BARROW GA............... 13013 3.10
BARTOW GA............... 13015 3.10
BEN HILL GA............... 13017 3.45
BERRIEN GA............... 13019 3.45
BIBB GA............... 13021 3.30
BLECKLEY GA............... 13023 3.30
BRANTLEY GA............... 13025 3.45
BROOKS GA............... 13027 3.45
BRYAN GA............... 13029 3.45
BULLOCH GA............... 13031 3.30
BURKE GA............... 13033 3.30
BUTTS GA............... 13035 3.10
CALHOUN GA............... 13037 3.45
CAMDEN GA............... 13039 3.45
CANDLER GA............... 13043 3.30
CARROLL GA............... 13045 3.10
CATOOSA GA............... 13047 2.80
CHARLTON GA............... 13049 3.45
CHATHAM GA............... 13051 3.45
CHATTAHOOCHEE GA............... 13053 3.30
CHATTOOGA GA............... 13055 2.80
CHEROKEE GA............... 13057 3.10
CLARKE GA............... 13059 3.10
CLAY GA............... 13061 3.45
CLAYTON GA............... 13063 3.10
CLINCH GA............... 13065 3.45
COBB GA............... 13067 3.10
COFFEE GA............... 13069 3.45
COLQUITT GA............... 13071 3.45
COLUMBIA GA............... 13073 3.10
COOK GA............... 13075 3.45
COWETA GA............... 13077 3.10
CRAWFORD GA............... 13079 3.30
CRISP GA............... 13081 3.45
DADE GA............... 13083 2.80
DAWSON GA............... 13085 3.10
DE KALB GA............... 13089 3.10
DECATUR GA............... 13087 3.45
DODGE GA............... 13091 3.45
DOOLY GA............... 13093 3.45
DOUGHERTY GA............... 13095 3.45
DOUGLAS GA............... 13097 3.10
EARLY GA............... 13099 3.45
ECHOLS GA............... 13101 3.45
EFFINGHAM GA............... 13103 3.30
ELBERT GA............... 13105 3.10
EMANUEL GA............... 13107 3.30
EVANS GA............... 13109 3.45
FANNIN GA............... 13111 2.80
FAYETTE GA............... 13113 3.10
FLOYD GA............... 13115 3.10
FORSYTH GA............... 13117 3.10
FRANKLIN GA............... 13119 3.10
FULTON GA............... 13121 3.10
GILMER GA............... 13123 3.10
GLASCOCK GA............... 13125 3.10
GLYNN GA............... 13127 3.45
GORDON GA............... 13129 3.10
GRADY GA............... 13131 3.45
GREENE GA............... 13133 3.10
GWINNETT GA............... 13135 3.10
HABERSHAM GA............... 13137 3.10
HALL GA............... 13139 3.10
HANCOCK GA............... 13141 3.10
HARALSON GA............... 13143 3.10
HARRIS GA............... 13145 3.30
HART GA............... 13147 3.10
HEARD GA............... 13149 3.10
HENRY GA............... 13151 3.10
HOUSTON GA............... 13153 3.30
IRWIN GA............... 13155 3.45
JACKSON GA............... 13157 3.10
JASPER GA............... 13159 3.10
JEFF DAVIS GA............... 13161 3.45
JEFFERSON GA............... 13163 3.30
JENKINS GA............... 13165 3.30
JOHNSON GA............... 13167 3.30
JONES GA............... 13169 3.10
LAMAR GA............... 13171 3.10
LANIER GA............... 13173 3.45
LAURENS GA............... 13175 3.30
[[Page 25]]
LEE GA............... 13177 3.45
LIBERTY GA............... 13179 3.45
LINCOLN GA............... 13181 3.10
LONG GA............... 13183 3.45
LOWNDES GA............... 13185 3.45
LUMPKIN GA............... 13187 3.10
MACON GA............... 13193 3.30
MADISON GA............... 13195 3.10
MARION GA............... 13197 3.30
MCDUFFIE GA............... 13189 3.10
MCINTOSH GA............... 13191 3.45
MERIWETHER GA............... 13199 3.10
MILLER GA............... 13201 3.45
MITCHELL GA............... 13205 3.45
MONROE GA............... 13207 3.10
MONTGOMERY GA............... 13209 3.45
MORGAN GA............... 13211 3.10
MURRAY GA............... 13213 2.80
MUSCOGEE GA............... 13215 3.30
NEWTON GA............... 13217 3.10
OCONEE GA............... 13219 3.10
OGLETHORPE GA............... 13221 3.10
PAULDING GA............... 13223 3.10
PEACH GA............... 13225 3.30
PICKENS GA............... 13227 3.10
PIERCE GA............... 13229 3.45
PIKE GA............... 13231 3.10
POLK GA............... 13233 3.10
PULASKI GA............... 13235 3.45
PUTNAM GA............... 13237 3.10
QUITMAN GA............... 13239 3.45
RABUN GA............... 13241 3.10
RANDOLPH GA............... 13243 3.45
RICHMOND GA............... 13245 3.30
ROCKDALE GA............... 13247 3.10
SCHLEY GA............... 13249 3.30
SCREVEN GA............... 13251 3.30
SEMINOLE GA............... 13253 3.45
SPALDING GA............... 13255 3.10
STEPHENS GA............... 13257 3.10
STEWART GA............... 13259 3.45
SUMTER GA............... 13261 3.45
TALBOT GA............... 13263 3.30
TALIAFERRO GA............... 13265 3.10
TATTNALL GA............... 13267 3.45
TAYLOR GA............... 13269 3.30
TELFAIR GA............... 13271 3.45
TERRELL GA............... 13273 3.45
THOMAS GA............... 13275 3.45
TIFT GA............... 13277 3.45
TOOMBS GA............... 13279 3.45
TOWNS GA............... 13281 3.10
TREUTLEN GA............... 13283 3.30
TROUP GA............... 13285 3.10
TURNER GA............... 13287 3.45
TWIGGS GA............... 13289 3.30
UNION GA............... 13291 3.10
UPSON GA............... 13293 3.10
WALKER GA............... 13295 2.80
WALTON GA............... 13297 3.10
WARE GA............... 13299 3.45
WARREN GA............... 13301 3.10
WASHINGTON GA............... 13303 3.30
WAYNE GA............... 13305 3.45
WEBSTER GA............... 13307 3.45
WHEELER GA............... 13309 3.45
WHITE GA............... 13311 3.10
WHITFIELD GA............... 13313 2.80
WILCOX GA............... 13315 3.45
WILKES GA............... 13317 3.10
WILKINSON GA............... 13319 3.30
WORTH GA............... 13321 3.45
ADAIR IA............... 19001 1.80
ADAMS IA............... 19003 1.80
ALLAMAKEE IA............... 19005 1.75
APPANOOSE IA............... 19007 1.80
AUDUBON IA............... 19009 1.80
BENTON IA............... 19011 1.80
BLACK HAWK IA............... 19013 1.75
BOONE IA............... 19015 1.80
BREMER IA............... 19017 1.75
BUCHANAN IA............... 19019 1.75
BUENA VISTA IA............... 19021 1.75
BUTLER IA............... 19023 1.75
CALHOUN IA............... 19025 1.75
CARROLL IA............... 19027 1.80
CASS IA............... 19029 1.80
CEDAR IA............... 19031 1.80
CERRO GORDO IA............... 19033 1.75
CHEROKEE IA............... 19035 1.75
CHICKASAW IA............... 19037 1.75
CLARKE IA............... 19039 1.80
CLAY IA............... 19041 1.75
CLAYTON IA............... 19043 1.75
CLINTON IA............... 19045 1.80
CRAWFORD IA............... 19047 1.80
DALLAS IA............... 19049 1.80
DAVIS IA............... 19051 1.80
DECATUR IA............... 19053 1.80
DELAWARE IA............... 19055 1.75
DES MOINES IA............... 19057 1.80
DICKINSON IA............... 19059 1.75
DUBUQUE IA............... 19061 1.75
EMMET IA............... 19063 1.75
FAYETTE IA............... 19065 1.75
FLOYD IA............... 19067 1.75
FRANKLIN IA............... 19069 1.75
FREMONT IA............... 19071 1.85
GREENE IA............... 19073 1.80
GRUNDY IA............... 19075 1.75
GUTHRIE IA............... 19077 1.80
HAMILTON IA............... 19079 1.75
HANCOCK IA............... 19081 1.75
HARDIN IA............... 19083 1.75
HARRISON IA............... 19085 1.80
HENRY IA............... 19087 1.80
HOWARD IA............... 19089 1.75
HUMBOLDT IA............... 19091 1.75
IDA IA............... 19093 1.75
IOWA IA............... 19095 1.80
JACKSON IA............... 19097 1.80
JASPER IA............... 19099 1.80
JEFFERSON IA............... 19101 1.80
JOHNSON IA............... 19103 1.80
JONES IA............... 19105 1.80
KEOKUK IA............... 19107 1.80
KOSSUTH IA............... 19109 1.75
LEE IA............... 19111 1.80
LINN IA............... 19113 1.80
LOUISA IA............... 19115 1.80
LUCAS IA............... 19117 1.80
LYON IA............... 19119 1.75
MADISON IA............... 19121 1.80
MAHASKA IA............... 19123 1.80
MARION IA............... 19125 1.80
MARSHALL IA............... 19127 1.80
MILLS IA............... 19129 1.85
MITCHELL IA............... 19131 1.75
MONONA IA............... 19133 1.80
MONROE IA............... 19135 1.80
MONTGOMERY IA............... 19137 1.80
MUSCATINE IA............... 19139 1.80
O'BRIEN IA............... 19141 1.75
OSCEOLA IA............... 19143 1.75
[[Page 26]]
PAGE IA............... 19145 1.80
PALO ALTO IA............... 19147 1.75
PLYMOUTH IA............... 19149 1.75
POCAHONTAS IA............... 19151 1.75
POLK IA............... 19153 1.80
POTTAWATTAMIE IA............... 19155 1.85
POWESHIEK IA............... 19157 1.80
RINGGOLD IA............... 19159 1.80
SAC IA............... 19161 1.75
SCOTT IA............... 19163 1.80
SHELBY IA............... 19165 1.80
SIOUX IA............... 19167 1.75
STORY IA............... 19169 1.80
TAMA IA............... 19171 1.80
TAYLOR IA............... 19173 1.80
UNION IA............... 19175 1.80
VAN BUREN IA............... 19177 1.80
WAPELLO IA............... 19179 1.80
WARREN IA............... 19181 1.80
WASHINGTON IA............... 19183 1.80
WAYNE IA............... 19185 1.80
WEBSTER IA............... 19187 1.75
WINNEBAGO IA............... 19189 1.75
WINNESHIEK IA............... 19191 1.75
WOODBURY IA............... 19193 1.75
WORTH IA............... 19195 1.75
WRIGHT IA............... 19197 1.75
ADA ID............... 16001 1.60
ADAMS ID............... 16003 1.60
BANNOCK ID............... 16005 1.60
BEAR LAKE ID............... 16007 1.60
BENEWAH ID............... 16009 1.90
BINGHAM ID............... 16011 1.60
BLAINE ID............... 16013 1.60
BOISE ID............... 16015 1.60
BONNER ID............... 16017 1.90
BONNEVILLE ID............... 16019 1.60
BOUNDARY ID............... 16021 1.90
BUTTE ID............... 16023 1.60
CAMAS ID............... 16025 1.60
CANYON ID............... 16027 1.60
CARIBOU ID............... 16029 1.60
CASSIA ID............... 16031 1.60
CLARK ID............... 16033 1.60
CLEARWATER ID............... 16035 1.60
CUSTER ID............... 16037 1.60
ELMORE ID............... 16039 1.60
FRANKLIN ID............... 16041 1.60
FREMONT ID............... 16043 1.60
GEM ID............... 16045 1.60
GOODING ID............... 16047 1.60
IDAHO ID............... 16049 1.60
JEFFERSON ID............... 16051 1.60
JEROME ID............... 16053 1.60
KOOTENAI ID............... 16055 1.90
LATAH ID............... 16057 1.90
LEMHI ID............... 16059 1.60
LEWIS ID............... 16061 1.60
LINCOLN ID............... 16063 1.60
MADISON ID............... 16065 1.60
MINIDOKA ID............... 16067 1.60
NEZ PERCE ID............... 16069 1.60
ONEIDA ID............... 16071 1.60
OWYHEE ID............... 16073 1.60
PAYETTE ID............... 16075 1.60
POWER ID............... 16077 1.60
SHOSHONE ID............... 16079 1.90
TETON ID............... 16081 1.60
TWIN FALLS ID............... 16083 1.60
VALLEY ID............... 16085 1.60
WASHINGTON ID............... 16087 1.60
ADAMS IL............... 17001 1.80
ALEXANDER IL............... 17003 2.20
BOND IL............... 17005 2.00
BOONE IL............... 17007 1.75
BROWN IL............... 17009 1.80
BUREAU IL............... 17011 1.80
CALHOUN IL............... 17013 2.00
CARROLL IL............... 17015 1.80
CASS IL............... 17017 1.80
CHAMPAIGN IL............... 17019 1.80
CHRISTIAN IL............... 17021 2.00
CLARK IL............... 17023 2.00
CLAY IL............... 17025 2.00
CLINTON IL............... 17027 2.00
COLES IL............... 17029 2.00
COOK IL............... 17031 1.80
CRAWFORD IL............... 17033 2.00
CUMBERLAND IL............... 17035 2.00
DE KALB IL............... 17037 1.80
DE WITT IL............... 17039 1.80
DOUGLAS IL............... 17041 2.00
DU PAGE IL............... 17043 1.80
EDGAR IL............... 17045 2.00
EDWARDS IL............... 17047 2.20
EFFINGHAM IL............... 17049 2.00
FAYETTE IL............... 17051 2.00
FORD IL............... 17053 1.80
FRANKLIN IL............... 17055 2.20
FULTON IL............... 17057 1.80
GALLATIN IL............... 17059 2.20
GREENE IL............... 17061 2.00
GRUNDY IL............... 17063 1.80
HAMILTON IL............... 17065 2.20
HANCOCK IL............... 17067 1.80
HARDIN IL............... 17069 2.20
HENDERSON IL............... 17071 1.80
HENRY IL............... 17073 1.80
IROQUOIS IL............... 17075 1.80
JACKSON IL............... 17077 2.20
JASPER IL............... 17079 2.00
JEFFERSON IL............... 17081 2.00
JERSEY IL............... 17083 2.00
JO DAVIESS IL............... 17085 1.75
JOHNSON IL............... 17087 2.20
KANE IL............... 17089 1.80
KANKAKEE IL............... 17091 1.80
KENDALL IL............... 17093 1.80
KNOX IL............... 17095 1.80
LA SALLE IL............... 17099 1.80
LAKE IL............... 17097 1.80
LAWRENCE IL............... 17101 2.00
LEE IL............... 17103 1.80
LIVINGSTON IL............... 17105 1.80
LOGAN IL............... 17107 1.80
MACON IL............... 17115 1.80
MACOUPIN IL............... 17117 2.00
MADISON IL............... 17119 2.00
MARION IL............... 17121 2.00
MARSHALL IL............... 17123 1.80
MASON IL............... 17125 1.80
MASSAC IL............... 17127 2.20
MCDONOUGH IL............... 17109 1.80
MCHENRY IL............... 17111 1.80
MCLEAN IL............... 17113 1.80
MENARD IL............... 17129 1.80
MERCER IL............... 17131 1.80
MONROE IL............... 17133 2.00
MONTGOMERY IL............... 17135 2.00
MORGAN IL............... 17137 1.80
MOULTRIE IL............... 17139 2.00
OGLE IL............... 17141 1.80
PEORIA IL............... 17143 1.80
PERRY IL............... 17145 2.00
[[Page 27]]
PIATT IL............... 17147 1.80
PIKE IL............... 17149 1.80
POPE IL............... 17151 2.20
PULASKI IL............... 17153 2.20
PUTNAM IL............... 17155 1.80
RANDOLPH IL............... 17157 2.00
RICHLAND IL............... 17159 2.00
ROCK ISLAND IL............... 17161 1.80
SALINE IL............... 17165 2.20
SANGAMON IL............... 17167 1.80
SCHUYLER IL............... 17169 1.80
SCOTT IL............... 17171 1.80
SHELBY IL............... 17173 2.00
ST. CLAIR IL............... 17163 2.00
STARK IL............... 17175 1.80
STEPHENSON IL............... 17177 1.75
TAZEWELL IL............... 17179 1.80
UNION IL............... 17181 2.20
VERMILION IL............... 17183 1.80
WABASH IL............... 17185 2.20
WARREN IL............... 17187 1.80
WASHINGTON IL............... 17189 2.00
WAYNE IL............... 17191 2.20
WHITE IL............... 17193 2.20
WHITESIDE IL............... 17195 1.80
WILL IL............... 17197 1.80
WILLIAMSON IL............... 17199 2.20
WINNEBAGO IL............... 17201 1.75
WOODFORD IL............... 17203 1.80
ADAMS IN............... 18001 1.80
ALLEN IN............... 18003 1.80
BARTHOLOMEW IN............... 18005 2.20
BENTON IN............... 18007 1.80
BLACKFORD IN............... 18009 1.80
BOONE IN............... 18011 2.00
BROWN IN............... 18013 2.20
CARROLL IN............... 18015 1.80
CASS IN............... 18017 1.80
CLARK IN............... 18019 2.20
CLAY IN............... 18021 2.00
CLINTON IN............... 18023 1.80
CRAWFORD IN............... 18025 2.20
DAVIESS IN............... 18027 2.20
DEKALB IN............... 18033 1.80
DEARBORN IN............... 18029 2.20
DECATUR IN............... 18031 2.20
DELAWARE IN............... 18035 2.00
DUBOIS IN............... 18037 2.20
ELKHART IN............... 18039 1.80
FAYETTE IN............... 18041 2.00
FLOYD IN............... 18043 2.20
FOUNTAIN IN............... 18045 1.80
FRANKLIN IN............... 18047 2.00
FULTON IN............... 18049 1.80
GIBSON IN............... 18051 2.20
GRANT IN............... 18053 1.80
GREENE IN............... 18055 2.20
HAMILTON IN............... 18057 2.00
HANCOCK IN............... 18059 2.00
HARRISON IN............... 18061 2.20
HENDRICKS IN............... 18063 2.00
HENRY IN............... 18065 2.00
HOWARD IN............... 18067 1.80
HUNTINGTON IN............... 18069 1.80
JACKSON IN............... 18071 2.20
JASPER IN............... 18073 1.80
JAY IN............... 18075 1.80
JEFFERSON IN............... 18077 2.20
JENNINGS IN............... 18079 2.20
JOHNSON IN............... 18081 2.00
KNOX IN............... 18083 2.20
KOSCIUSKO IN............... 18085 1.80
LA PORTE IN............... 18091 1.80
LAGRANGE IN............... 18087 1.80
LAKE IN............... 18089 1.80
LAWRENCE IN............... 18093 2.20
MADISON IN............... 18095 2.00
MARION IN............... 18097 2.00
MARSHALL IN............... 18099 1.80
MARTIN IN............... 18101 2.20
MIAMI IN............... 18103 1.80
MONROE IN............... 18105 2.20
MONTGOMERY IN............... 18107 2.00
MORGAN IN............... 18109 2.00
NEWTON IN............... 18111 1.80
NOBLE IN............... 18113 1.80
OHIO IN............... 18115 2.20
ORANGE IN............... 18117 2.20
OWEN IN............... 18119 2.00
PARKE IN............... 18121 2.00
PERRY IN............... 18123 2.20
PIKE IN............... 18125 2.20
PORTER IN............... 18127 1.80
POSEY IN............... 18129 2.20
PULASKI IN............... 18131 1.80
PUTNAM IN............... 18133 2.00
RANDOLPH IN............... 18135 2.00
RIPLEY IN............... 18137 2.20
RUSH IN............... 18139 2.00
SCOTT IN............... 18143 2.20
SHELBY IN............... 18145 2.00
SPENCER IN............... 18147 2.20
ST. JOSEPH IN............... 18141 1.80
STARKE IN............... 18149 1.80
STEUBEN IN............... 18151 1.80
SULLIVAN IN............... 18153 2.20
SWITZERLAND IN............... 18155 2.20
TIPPECANOE IN............... 18157 1.80
TIPTON IN............... 18159 1.80
UNION IN............... 18161 2.00
VANDERBURGH IN............... 18163 2.20
VERMILLION IN............... 18165 2.00
VIGO IN............... 18167 2.00
WABASH IN............... 18169 1.80
WARREN IN............... 18171 1.80
WARRICK IN............... 18173 2.20
WASHINGTON IN............... 18175 2.20
WAYNE IN............... 18177 2.00
WELLS IN............... 18179 1.80
WHITE IN............... 18181 1.80
WHITLEY IN............... 18183 1.80
ALLEN KS............... 20001 2.20
ANDERSON KS............... 20003 2.00
ATCHISON KS............... 20005 2.00
BARBER KS............... 20007 2.20
BARTON KS............... 20009 2.20
BOURBON KS............... 20011 2.20
BROWN KS............... 20013 2.00
BUTLER KS............... 20015 2.20
CHASE KS............... 20017 2.20
CHAUTAUQUA KS............... 20019 2.20
CHEROKEE KS............... 20021 2.20
CHEYENNE KS............... 20023 2.20
CLARK KS............... 20025 2.20
CLAY KS............... 20027 2.00
CLOUD KS............... 20029 2.00
COFFEY KS............... 20031 2.00
COMANCHE KS............... 20033 2.20
COWLEY KS............... 20035 2.20
CRAWFORD KS............... 20037 2.20
DECATUR KS............... 20039 2.00
DICKINSON KS............... 20041 2.00
DONIPHAN KS............... 20043 2.00
DOUGLAS KS............... 20045 2.00
[[Page 28]]
EDWARDS KS............... 20047 2.20
ELK KS............... 20049 2.20
ELLIS KS............... 20051 2.00
ELLSWORTH KS............... 20053 2.00
FINNEY KS............... 20055 2.20
FORD KS............... 20057 2.20
FRANKLIN KS............... 20059 2.00
GEARY KS............... 20061 2.00
GOVE KS............... 20063 2.20
GRAHAM KS............... 20065 2.00
GRANT KS............... 20067 2.20
GRAY KS............... 20069 2.20
GREELEY KS............... 20071 2.20
GREENWOOD KS............... 20073 2.20
HAMILTON KS............... 20075 2.20
HARPER KS............... 20077 2.20
HARVEY KS............... 20079 2.20
HASKELL KS............... 20081 2.20
HODGEMAN KS............... 20083 2.20
JACKSON KS............... 20085 2.00
JEFFERSON KS............... 20087 2.00
JEWELL KS............... 20089 2.00
JOHNSON KS............... 20091 2.00
KEARNY KS............... 20093 2.20
KINGMAN KS............... 20095 2.20
KIOWA KS............... 20097 2.20
LABETTE KS............... 20099 2.20
LANE KS............... 20101 2.20
LEAVENWORTH KS............... 20103 2.00
LINCOLN KS............... 20105 2.00
LINN KS............... 20107 2.00
LOGAN KS............... 20109 2.20
LYON KS............... 20111 2.00
MARION KS............... 20115 2.20
MARSHALL KS............... 20117 2.00
MCPHERSON KS............... 20113 2.20
MEADE KS............... 20119 2.20
MIAMI KS............... 20121 2.00
MITCHELL KS............... 20123 2.00
MONTGOMERY KS............... 20125 2.20
MORRIS KS............... 20127 2.00
MORTON KS............... 20129 2.20
NEMAHA KS............... 20131 2.00
NEOSHO KS............... 20133 2.20
NESS KS............... 20135 2.20
NORTON KS............... 20137 2.00
OSAGE KS............... 20139 2.00
OSBORNE KS............... 20141 2.00
OTTAWA KS............... 20143 2.00
PAWNEE KS............... 20145 2.20
PHILLIPS KS............... 20147 2.00
POTTAWATOMIE KS............... 20149 2.00
PRATT KS............... 20151 2.20
RAWLINS KS............... 20153 2.00
RENO KS............... 20155 2.20
REPUBLIC KS............... 20157 2.00
RICE KS............... 20159 2.20
RILEY KS............... 20161 2.00
ROOKS KS............... 20163 2.00
RUSH KS............... 20165 2.20
RUSSELL KS............... 20167 2.00
SALINE KS............... 20169 2.00
SCOTT KS............... 20171 2.20
SEDGWICK KS............... 20173 2.20
SEWARD KS............... 20175 2.20
SHAWNEE KS............... 20177 2.00
SHERIDAN KS............... 20179 2.00
SHERMAN KS............... 20181 2.20
SMITH KS............... 20183 2.00
STAFFORD KS............... 20185 2.20
STANTON KS............... 20187 2.20
STEVENS KS............... 20189 2.20
SUMNER KS............... 20191 2.20
THOMAS KS............... 20193 2.00
TREGO KS............... 20195 2.20
WABAUNSEE KS............... 20197 2.00
WALLACE KS............... 20199 2.20
WASHINGTON KS............... 20201 2.00
WICHITA KS............... 20203 2.20
WILSON KS............... 20205 2.20
WOODSON KS............... 20207 2.20
WYANDOTTE KS............... 20209 2.00
ADAIR KY............... 21001 2.40
ALLEN KY............... 21003 2.40
ANDERSON KY............... 21005 2.20
BALLARD KY............... 21007 2.40
BARREN KY............... 21009 2.40
BATH KY............... 21011 2.20
BELL KY............... 21013 2.40
BOONE KY............... 21015 2.20
BOURBON KY............... 21017 2.20
BOYD KY............... 21019 2.20
BOYLE KY............... 21021 2.20
BRACKEN KY............... 21023 2.20
BREATHITT KY............... 21025 2.20
BRECKINRIDGE KY............... 21027 2.20
BULLITT KY............... 21029 2.20
BUTLER KY............... 21031 2.40
CALDWELL KY............... 21033 2.40
CALLOWAY KY............... 21035 2.40
CAMPBELL KY............... 21037 2.20
CARLISLE KY............... 21039 2.40
CARROLL KY............... 21041 2.20
CARTER KY............... 21043 2.20
CASEY KY............... 21045 2.40
CHRISTIAN KY............... 21047 2.40
CLARK KY............... 21049 2.20
CLAY KY............... 21051 2.40
CLINTON KY............... 21053 2.40
CRITTENDEN KY............... 21055 2.40
CUMBERLAND KY............... 21057 2.40
DAVIESS KY............... 21059 2.20
EDMONSON KY............... 21061 2.40
ELLIOTT KY............... 21063 2.20
ESTILL KY............... 21065 2.20
FAYETTE KY............... 21067 2.20
FLEMING KY............... 21069 2.20
FLOYD KY............... 21071 2.20
FRANKLIN KY............... 21073 2.20
FULTON KY............... 21075 2.40
GALLATIN KY............... 21077 2.20
GARRARD KY............... 21079 2.20
GRANT KY............... 21081 2.20
GRAVES KY............... 21083 2.40
GRAYSON KY............... 21085 2.40
GREEN KY............... 21087 2.40
GREENUP KY............... 21089 2.20
HANCOCK KY............... 21091 2.20
HARDIN KY............... 21093 2.20
HARLAN KY............... 21095 2.40
HARRISON KY............... 21097 2.20
HART KY............... 21099 2.40
HENDERSON KY............... 21101 2.20
HENRY KY............... 21103 2.20
HICKMAN KY............... 21105 2.40
HOPKINS KY............... 21107 2.40
JACKSON KY............... 21109 2.20
JEFFERSON KY............... 21111 2.20
JESSAMINE KY............... 21113 2.20
JOHNSON KY............... 21115 2.20
KENTON KY............... 21117 2.20
KNOTT KY............... 21119 2.40
KNOX KY............... 21121 2.40
LARUE KY............... 21123 2.20
[[Page 29]]
LAUREL KY............... 21125 2.40
LAWRENCE KY............... 21127 2.20
LEE KY............... 21129 2.20
LESLIE KY............... 21131 2.40
LETCHER KY............... 21133 2.40
LEWIS KY............... 21135 2.20
LINCOLN KY............... 21137 2.20
LIVINGSTON KY............... 21139 2.40
LOGAN KY............... 21141 2.40
LYON KY............... 21143 2.40
MADISON KY............... 21151 2.20
MAGOFFIN KY............... 21153 2.20
MARION KY............... 21155 2.20
MARSHALL KY............... 21157 2.40
MARTIN KY............... 21159 2.20
MASON KY............... 21161 2.20
MCCRACKEN KY............... 21145 2.40
MCCREARY KY............... 21147 2.40
MCLEAN KY............... 21149 2.20
MEADE KY............... 21163 2.20
MENIFEE KY............... 21165 2.20
MERCER KY............... 21167 2.20
METCALFE KY............... 21169 2.40
MONROE KY............... 21171 2.40
MONTGOMERY KY............... 21173 2.20
MORGAN KY............... 21175 2.20
MUHLENBERG KY............... 21177 2.40
NELSON KY............... 21179 2.20
NICHOLAS KY............... 21181 2.20
OHIO KY............... 21183 2.40
OLDHAM KY............... 21185 2.20
OWEN KY............... 21187 2.20
OWSLEY KY............... 21189 2.20
PENDLETON KY............... 21191 2.20
PERRY KY............... 21193 2.40
PIKE KY............... 21195 2.40
POWELL KY............... 21197 2.20
PULASKI KY............... 21199 2.40
ROBERTSON KY............... 21201 2.20
ROCKCASTLE KY............... 21203 2.20
ROWAN KY............... 21205 2.20
RUSSELL KY............... 21207 2.40
SCOTT KY............... 21209 2.20
SHELBY KY............... 21211 2.20
SIMPSON KY............... 21213 2.40
SPENCER KY............... 21215 2.20
TAYLOR KY............... 21217 2.40
TODD KY............... 21219 2.40
TRIGG KY............... 21221 2.40
TRIMBLE KY............... 21223 2.20
UNION KY............... 21225 2.20
WARREN KY............... 21227 2.40
WASHINGTON KY............... 21229 2.20
WAYNE KY............... 21231 2.40
WEBSTER KY............... 21233 2.40
WHITLEY KY............... 21235 2.40
WOLFE KY............... 21237 2.20
WOODFORD KY............... 21239 2.20
ACADIA LA............... 22001 3.50
ALLEN LA............... 22003 3.50
ASCENSION LA............... 22005 3.60
ASSUMPTION LA............... 22007 3.60
AVOYELLES LA............... 22009 3.40
BEAUREGARD LA............... 22011 3.50
BIENVILLE LA............... 22013 3.30
BOSSIER LA............... 22015 3.10
CADDO LA............... 22017 3.10
CALCASIEU LA............... 22019 3.50
CALDWELL LA............... 22021 3.30
CAMERON LA............... 22023 3.60
CATAHOULA LA............... 22025 3.40
CLAIBORNE LA............... 22027 3.10
CONCORDIA LA............... 22029 3.40
DE SOTO LA............... 22031 3.30
EAST BATON ROUGE LA............... 22033 3.60
EAST CARROLL LA............... 22035 3.10
EAST FELICIANA LA............... 22037 3.50
EVANGELINE LA............... 22039 3.50
FRANKLIN LA............... 22041 3.30
GRANT LA............... 22043 3.40
IBERIA LA............... 22045 3.60
IBERVILLE LA............... 22047 3.60
JACKSON LA............... 22049 3.30
JEFFERSON LA............... 22051 3.60
JEFFERSON DAVIS LA............... 22053 3.50
LA SALLE LA............... 22059 3.40
LAFAYETTE LA............... 22055 3.60
LAFOURCHE LA............... 22057 3.60
LINCOLN LA............... 22061 3.10
LIVINGSTON LA............... 22063 3.60
MADISON LA............... 22065 3.30
MOREHOUSE LA............... 22067 3.10
NATCHITOCHES LA............... 22069 3.30
ORLEANS LA............... 22071 3.60
OUACHITA LA............... 22073 3.10
PLAQUEMINES LA............... 22075 3.60
POINTE COUPEE LA............... 22077 3.50
RAPIDES LA............... 22079 3.40
RED RIVER LA............... 22081 3.30
RICHLAND LA............... 22083 3.10
SABINE LA............... 22085 3.30
ST. BERNARD LA............... 22087 3.60
ST. CHARLES LA............... 22089 3.60
ST. HELENA LA............... 22091 3.50
ST. JAMES LA............... 22093 3.60
ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST LA............... 22095 3.60
ST. LANDRY LA............... 22097 3.50
ST. MARTIN LA............... 22099 3.60
ST. MARY LA............... 22101 3.60
ST. TAMMANY LA............... 22103 3.50
TANGIPAHOA LA............... 22105 3.60
TENSAS LA............... 22107 3.30
TERREBONNE LA............... 22109 3.60
UNION LA............... 22111 3.10
VERMILION LA............... 22113 3.60
VERNON LA............... 22115 3.40
WASHINGTON LA............... 22117 3.50
WEBSTER LA............... 22119 3.10
WEST BATON ROUGE LA............... 22121 3.60
WEST CARROLL LA............... 22123 3.10
WEST FELICIANA LA............... 22125 3.50
WINN LA............... 22127 3.30
BARNSTABLE MA............... 25001 3.25
BERKSHIRE MA............... 25003 2.80
BRISTOL MA............... 25005 3.25
DUKES MA............... 25007 3.25
ESSEX MA............... 25009 3.25
FRANKLIN MA............... 25011 3.00
HAMPDEN MA............... 25013 3.00
HAMPSHIRE MA............... 25015 3.00
MIDDLESEX MA............... 25017 3.25
NANTUCKET MA............... 25019 3.25
NORFOLK MA............... 25021 3.25
PLYMOUTH MA............... 25023 3.25
SUFFOLK MA............... 25025 3.25
WORCESTER MA............... 25027 3.10
ALLEGANY MD............... 24001 2.60
ANNE ARUNDEL MD............... 24003 3.00
BALTIMORE MD............... 24005 3.00
BALTIMORE CITY MD............... 24510 3.00
CALVERT MD............... 24009 3.00
CAROLINE MD............... 24011 3.00
CARROLL MD............... 24013 2.90
CECIL MD............... 24015 3.05
[[Page 30]]
CHARLES MD............... 24017 3.00
DORCHESTER MD............... 24019 3.00
FREDERICK MD............... 24021 2.90
GARRETT MD............... 24023 2.60
HARFORD MD............... 24025 3.00
HOWARD MD............... 24027 3.00
KENT MD............... 24029 3.00
MONTGOMERY MD............... 24031 3.00
PRINCE GEORGE'S MD............... 24033 3.00
QUEEN ANNE'S MD............... 24035 3.00
SOMERSET MD............... 24039 3.00
ST. MARY'S MD............... 24037 3.00
TALBOT MD............... 24041 3.00
WASHINGTON MD............... 24043 2.80
WICOMICO MD............... 24045 3.00
WORCESTER MD............... 24047 3.00
ANDROSCOGGIN ME............... 23001 2.80
AROOSTOOK ME............... 23003 2.60
CUMBERLAND ME............... 23005 3.00
FRANKLIN ME............... 23007 2.60
HANCOCK ME............... 23009 2.80
KENNEBEC ME............... 23011 2.80
KNOX ME............... 23013 2.80
LINCOLN ME............... 23015 2.80
OXFORD ME............... 23017 2.80
PENOBSCOT ME............... 23019 2.80
PISCATAQUIS ME............... 23021 2.60
SAGADAHOC ME............... 23023 2.80
SOMERSET ME............... 23025 2.60
WALDO ME............... 23027 2.80
WASHINGTON ME............... 23029 2.80
YORK ME............... 23031 3.00
ALCONA MI............... 26001 1.80
ALGER MI............... 26003 1.80
ALLEGAN MI............... 26005 1.80
ALPENA MI............... 26007 1.80
ANTRIM MI............... 26009 1.80
ARENAC MI............... 26011 1.80
BARAGA MI............... 26013 1.70
BARRY MI............... 26015 1.80
BAY MI............... 26017 1.80
BENZIE MI............... 26019 1.80
BERRIEN MI............... 26021 1.80
BRANCH MI............... 26023 1.80
CALHOUN MI............... 26025 1.80
CASS MI............... 26027 1.80
CHARLEVOIX MI............... 26029 1.80
CHEBOYGAN MI............... 26031 1.80
CHIPPEWA MI............... 26033 1.80
CLARE MI............... 26035 1.80
CLINTON MI............... 26037 1.80
CRAWFORD MI............... 26039 1.80
DELTA MI............... 26041 1.70
DICKINSON MI............... 26043 1.70
EATON MI............... 26045 1.80
EMMET MI............... 26047 1.80
GENESEE MI............... 26049 1.80
GLADWIN MI............... 26051 1.80
GOGEBIC MI............... 26053 1.70
GRAND TRAVERSE MI............... 26055 1.80
GRATIOT MI............... 26057 1.80
HILLSDALE MI............... 26059 1.80
HOUGHTON MI............... 26061 1.70
HURON MI............... 26063 1.80
INGHAM MI............... 26065 1.80
IONIA MI............... 26067 1.80
IOSCO MI............... 26069 1.80
IRON MI............... 26071 1.70
ISABELLA MI............... 26073 1.80
JACKSON MI............... 26075 1.80
KALAMAZOO MI............... 26077 1.80
KALKASKA MI............... 26079 1.80
KENT MI............... 26081 1.80
KEWEENAW MI............... 26083 1.70
LAKE MI............... 26085 1.80
LAPEER MI............... 26087 1.80
LEELANAU MI............... 26089 1.80
LENAWEE MI............... 26091 1.80
LIVINGSTON MI............... 26093 1.80
LUCE MI............... 26095 1.80
MACKINAC MI............... 26097 1.80
MACOMB MI............... 26099 1.80
MANISTEE MI............... 26101 1.80
MARQUETTE MI............... 26103 1.80
MASON MI............... 26105 1.80
MECOSTA MI............... 26107 1.80
MENOMINEE MI............... 26109 1.70
MIDLAND MI............... 26111 1.80
MISSAUKEE MI............... 26113 1.80
MONROE MI............... 26115 1.80
MONTCALM MI............... 26117 1.80
MONTMORENCY MI............... 26119 1.80
MUSKEGON MI............... 26121 1.80
NEWAYGO MI............... 26123 1.80
OAKLAND MI............... 26125 1.80
OCEANA MI............... 26127 1.80
OGEMAW MI............... 26129 1.80
ONTONAGON MI............... 26131 1.70
OSCEOLA MI............... 26133 1.80
OSCODA MI............... 26135 1.80
OTSEGO MI............... 26137 1.80
OTTAWA MI............... 26139 1.80
PRESQUE ISLE MI............... 26141 1.80
ROSCOMMON MI............... 26143 1.80
SAGINAW MI............... 26145 1.80
SANILAC MI............... 26151 1.80
SCHOOLCRAFT MI............... 26153 1.80
SHIAWASSEE MI............... 26155 1.80
ST. CLAIR MI............... 26147 1.80
ST. JOSEPH MI............... 26149 1.80
TUSCOLA MI............... 26157 1.80
VAN BUREN MI............... 26159 1.80
WASHTENAW MI............... 26161 1.80
WAYNE MI............... 26163 1.80
WEXFORD MI............... 26165 1.80
AITKIN MN............... 27001 1.65
ANOKA MN............... 27003 1.70
BECKER MN............... 27005 1.65
BELTRAMI MN............... 27007 1.65
BENTON MN............... 27009 1.70
BIG STONE MN............... 27011 1.70
BLUE EARTH MN............... 27013 1.70
BROWN MN............... 27015 1.70
CARLTON MN............... 27017 1.65
CARVER MN............... 27019 1.70
CASS MN............... 27021 1.65
CHIPPEWA MN............... 27023 1.70
CHISAGO MN............... 27025 1.70
CLAY MN............... 27027 1.65
CLEARWATER MN............... 27029 1.65
COOK MN............... 27031 1.65
COTTONWOOD MN............... 27033 1.70
CROW WING MN............... 27035 1.65
DAKOTA MN............... 27037 1.70
DODGE MN............... 27039 1.70
DOUGLAS MN............... 27041 1.70
FARIBAULT MN............... 27043 1.70
FILLMORE MN............... 27045 1.70
FREEBORN MN............... 27047 1.70
GOODHUE MN............... 27049 1.70
GRANT MN............... 27051 1.70
HENNEPIN MN............... 27053 1.70
HOUSTON MN............... 27055 1.70
HUBBARD MN............... 27057 1.65
[[Page 31]]
ISANTI MN............... 27059 1.70
ITASCA MN............... 27061 1.65
JACKSON MN............... 27063 1.70
KANABEC MN............... 27065 1.70
KANDIYOHI MN............... 27067 1.70
KITTSON MN............... 27069 1.60
KOOCHICHING MN............... 27071 1.65
LAC QUI PARLE MN............... 27073 1.70
LAKE MN............... 27075 1.65
LAKE OF THE WOODS MN............... 27077 1.60
LE SUEUR MN............... 27079 1.70
LINCOLN MN............... 27081 1.70
LYON MN............... 27083 1.70
MAHNOMEN MN............... 27087 1.65
MARSHALL MN............... 27089 1.65
MARTIN MN............... 27091 1.70
MCLEOD MN............... 27085 1.70
MEEKER MN............... 27093 1.70
MILLE LACS MN............... 27095 1.70
MORRISON MN............... 27097 1.70
MOWER MN............... 27099 1.70
MURRAY MN............... 27101 1.70
NICOLLET MN............... 27103 1.70
NOBLES MN............... 27105 1.70
NORMAN MN............... 27107 1.65
OLMSTED MN............... 27109 1.70
OTTER TAIL MN............... 27111 1.65
PENNINGTON MN............... 27113 1.65
PINE MN............... 27115 1.70
PIPESTONE MN............... 27117 1.70
POLK MN............... 27119 1.65
POPE MN............... 27121 1.70
RAMSEY MN............... 27123 1.70
RED LAKE MN............... 27125 1.65
REDWOOD MN............... 27127 1.70
RENVILLE MN............... 27129 1.70
RICE MN............... 27131 1.70
ROCK MN............... 27133 1.70
ROSEAU MN............... 27135 1.60
SCOTT MN............... 27139 1.70
SHERBURNE MN............... 27141 1.70
SIBLEY MN............... 27143 1.70
ST. LOUIS MN............... 27137 1.65
STEARNS MN............... 27145 1.70
STEELE MN............... 27147 1.70
STEVENS MN............... 27149 1.70
SWIFT MN............... 27151 1.70
TODD MN............... 27153 1.70
TRAVERSE MN............... 27155 1.70
WABASHA MN............... 27157 1.70
WADENA MN............... 27159 1.65
WASECA MN............... 27161 1.70
WASHINGTON MN............... 27163 1.70
WATONWAN MN............... 27165 1.70
WILKIN MN............... 27167 1.65
WINONA MN............... 27169 1.70
WRIGHT MN............... 27171 1.70
YELLOW MEDICINE MN............... 27173 1.70
ADAIR MO............... 29001 1.80
ANDREW MO............... 29003 1.80
ATCHISON MO............... 29005 1.80
AUDRAIN MO............... 29007 2.00
BARRY MO............... 29009 2.20
BARTON MO............... 29011 2.20
BATES MO............... 29013 2.00
BENTON MO............... 29015 2.00
BOLLINGER MO............... 29017 2.20
BOONE MO............... 29019 2.00
BUCHANAN MO............... 29021 1.80
BUTLER MO............... 29023 2.20
CALDWELL MO............... 29025 1.80
CALLAWAY MO............... 29027 2.00
CAMDEN MO............... 29029 2.00
CAPE GIRARDEAU MO............... 29031 2.20
CARROLL MO............... 29033 1.80
CARTER MO............... 29035 2.20
CASS MO............... 29037 2.00
CEDAR MO............... 29039 2.20
CHARITON MO............... 29041 1.80
CHRISTIAN MO............... 29043 2.20
CLARK MO............... 29045 1.80
CLAY MO............... 29047 1.80
CLINTON MO............... 29049 1.80
COLE MO............... 29051 2.00
COOPER MO............... 29053 2.00
CRAWFORD MO............... 29055 2.00
DADE MO............... 29057 2.20
DALLAS MO............... 29059 2.20
DAVIESS MO............... 29061 1.80
DE KALB MO............... 29063 1.80
DENT MO............... 29065 2.00
DOUGLAS MO............... 29067 2.20
DUNKLIN MO............... 29069 2.20
FRANKLIN MO............... 29071 2.00
GASCONADE MO............... 29073 2.00
GENTRY MO............... 29075 1.80
GREENE MO............... 29077 2.20
GRUNDY MO............... 29079 1.80
HARRISON MO............... 29081 1.80
HENRY MO............... 29083 2.00
HICKORY MO............... 29085 2.00
HOLT MO............... 29087 1.80
HOWARD MO............... 29089 2.00
HOWELL MO............... 29091 2.20
IRON MO............... 29093 2.00
JACKSON MO............... 29095 2.00
JASPER MO............... 29097 2.20
JEFFERSON MO............... 29099 2.00
JOHNSON MO............... 29101 2.00
KNOX MO............... 29103 1.80
LACLEDE MO............... 29105 2.20
LAFAYETTE MO............... 29107 2.00
LAWRENCE MO............... 29109 2.20
LEWIS MO............... 29111 1.80
LINCOLN MO............... 29113 2.00
LINN MO............... 29115 1.80
LIVINGSTON MO............... 29117 1.80
MACON MO............... 29121 1.80
MADISON MO............... 29123 2.20
MARIES MO............... 29125 2.00
MARION MO............... 29127 1.80
MCDONALD MO............... 29119 2.20
MERCER MO............... 29129 1.80
MILLER MO............... 29131 2.00
MISSISSIPPI MO............... 29133 2.20
MONITEAU MO............... 29135 2.00
MONROE MO............... 29137 1.80
MONTGOMERY MO............... 29139 2.00
MORGAN MO............... 29141 2.00
NEW MADRID MO............... 29143 2.20
NEWTON MO............... 29145 2.20
NODAWAY MO............... 29147 1.80
OREGON MO............... 29149 2.20
OSAGE MO............... 29151 2.00
OZARK MO............... 29153 2.20
PEMISCOT MO............... 29155 2.20
PERRY MO............... 29157 2.20
PETTIS MO............... 29159 2.00
PHELPS MO............... 29161 2.00
PIKE MO............... 29163 2.00
PLATTE MO............... 29165 1.80
POLK MO............... 29167 2.20
PULASKI MO............... 29169 2.20
PUTNAM MO............... 29171 1.80
[[Page 32]]
RALLS MO............... 29173 2.00
RANDOLPH MO............... 29175 1.80
RAY MO............... 29177 1.80
REYNOLDS MO............... 29179 2.20
RIPLEY MO............... 29181 2.20
SALINE MO............... 29195 2.00
SCHUYLER MO............... 29197 1.80
SCOTLAND MO............... 29199 1.80
SCOTT MO............... 29201 2.20
SHANNON MO............... 29203 2.20
SHELBY MO............... 29205 1.80
ST. CHARLES MO............... 29183 2.00
ST. CLAIR MO............... 29185 2.00
ST. FRANCOIS MO............... 29187 2.00
ST. LOUIS MO............... 29189 2.00
ST. LOUIS CITY MO............... 29510 2.00
STE. GENEVIEVE MO............... 29186 2.00
STODDARD MO............... 29207 2.20
STONE MO............... 29209 2.20
SULLIVAN MO............... 29211 1.80
TANEY MO............... 29213 2.20
TEXAS MO............... 29215 2.20
VERNON MO............... 29217 2.20
WARREN MO............... 29219 2.00
WASHINGTON MO............... 29221 2.00
WAYNE MO............... 29223 2.20
WEBSTER MO............... 29225 2.20
WORTH MO............... 29227 1.80
WRIGHT MO............... 29229 2.20
ADAMS MS............... 28001 3.40
ALCORN MS............... 28003 2.90
AMITE MS............... 28005 3.40
ATTALA MS............... 28007 3.10
BENTON MS............... 28009 2.90
BOLIVAR MS............... 28011 3.10
CALHOUN MS............... 28013 3.10
CARROLL MS............... 28015 3.10
CHICKASAW MS............... 28017 3.10
CHOCTAW MS............... 28019 3.10
CLAIBORNE MS............... 28021 3.30
CLARKE MS............... 28023 3.30
CLAY MS............... 28025 3.10
COAHOMA MS............... 28027 2.90
COPIAH MS............... 28029 3.30
COVINGTON MS............... 28031 3.40
DE SOTO MS............... 28033 2.90
FORREST MS............... 28035 3.40
FRANKLIN MS............... 28037 3.40
GEORGE MS............... 28039 3.40
GREENE MS............... 28041 3.40
GRENADA MS............... 28043 3.10
HANCOCK MS............... 28045 3.50
HARRISON MS............... 28047 3.50
HINDS MS............... 28049 3.30
HOLMES MS............... 28051 3.10
HUMPHREYS MS............... 28053 3.10
ISSAQUENA MS............... 28055 3.10
ITAWAMBA MS............... 28057 2.90
JACKSON MS............... 28059 3.50
JASPER MS............... 28061 3.30
JEFFERSON MS............... 28063 3.40
JEFFERSON DAVIS MS............... 28065 3.40
JONES MS............... 28067 3.40
KEMPER MS............... 28069 3.10
LAFAYETTE MS............... 28071 2.90
LAMAR MS............... 28073 3.40
LAUDERDALE MS............... 28075 3.30
LAWRENCE MS............... 28077 3.40
LEAKE MS............... 28079 3.10
LEE MS............... 28081 2.90
LEFLORE MS............... 28083 3.10
LINCOLN MS............... 28085 3.40
LOWNDES MS............... 28087 3.10
MADISON MS............... 28089 3.10
MARION MS............... 28091 3.40
MARSHALL MS............... 28093 2.90
MONROE MS............... 28095 3.10
MONTGOMERY MS............... 28097 3.10
NESHOBA MS............... 28099 3.10
NEWTON MS............... 28101 3.30
NOXUBEE MS............... 28103 3.10
OKTIBBEHA MS............... 28105 3.10
PANOLA MS............... 28107 2.90
PEARL RIVER MS............... 28109 3.40
PERRY MS............... 28111 3.40
PIKE MS............... 28113 3.40
PONTOTOC MS............... 28115 2.90
PRENTISS MS............... 28117 2.90
QUITMAN MS............... 28119 2.90
RANKIN MS............... 28121 3.30
SCOTT MS............... 28123 3.30
SHARKEY MS............... 28125 3.10
SIMPSON MS............... 28127 3.30
SMITH MS............... 28129 3.30
STONE MS............... 28131 3.40
SUNFLOWER MS............... 28133 3.10
TALLAHATCHIE MS............... 28135 3.10
TATE MS............... 28137 2.90
TIPPAH MS............... 28139 2.90
TISHOMINGO MS............... 28141 2.90
TUNICA MS............... 28143 2.90
UNION MS............... 28145 2.90
WALTHALL MS............... 28147 3.40
WARREN MS............... 28149 3.30
WASHINGTON MS............... 28151 3.10
WAYNE MS............... 28153 3.40
WEBSTER MS............... 28155 3.10
WILKINSON MS............... 28157 3.40
WINSTON MS............... 28159 3.10
YALOBUSHA MS............... 28161 3.10
YAZOO MS............... 28163 3.10
BEAVERHEAD MT............... 30001 1.60
BIG HORN MT............... 30003 1.60
BLAINE MT............... 30005 1.60
BROADWATER MT............... 30007 1.60
CARBON MT............... 30009 1.60
CARTER MT............... 30011 1.65
CASCADE MT............... 30013 1.60
CHOUTEAU MT............... 30015 1.60
CUSTER MT............... 30017 1.60
DANIELS MT............... 30019 1.60
DAWSON MT............... 30021 1.60
DEER LODGE MT............... 30023 1.60
FALLON MT............... 30025 1.65
FERGUS MT............... 30027 1.60
FLATHEAD MT............... 30029 1.60
GALLATIN MT............... 30031 1.60
GARFIELD MT............... 30033 1.60
GLACIER MT............... 30035 1.60
GOLDEN VALLEY MT............... 30037 1.60
GRANITE MT............... 30039 1.60
HILL MT............... 30041 1.60
JEFFERSON MT............... 30043 1.60
JUDITH BASIN MT............... 30045 1.60
LAKE MT............... 30047 1.60
LEWIS AND CLARK MT............... 30049 1.60
LIBERTY MT............... 30051 1.60
LINCOLN MT............... 30053 1.80
MADISON MT............... 30057 1.60
MCCONE MT............... 30055 1.60
MEAGHER MT............... 30059 1.60
MINERAL MT............... 30061 1.80
MISSOULA MT............... 30063 1.60
MUSSELSHELL MT............... 30065 1.60
[[Page 33]]
PARK MT............... 30067 1.60
PETROLEUM MT............... 30069 1.60
PHILLIPS MT............... 30071 1.60
PONDERA MT............... 30073 1.60
POWDER RIVER MT............... 30075 1.60
POWELL MT............... 30077 1.60
PRAIRIE MT............... 30079 1.60
RAVALLI MT............... 30081 1.60
RICHLAND MT............... 30083 1.60
ROOSEVELT MT............... 30085 1.60
ROSEBUD MT............... 30087 1.60
SANDERS MT............... 30089 1.80
SHERIDAN MT............... 30091 1.60
SILVER BOW MT............... 30093 1.60
STILLWATER MT............... 30095 1.60
SWEET GRASS MT............... 30097 1.60
TETON MT............... 30099 1.60
TOOLE MT............... 30101 1.60
TREASURE MT............... 30103 1.60
VALLEY MT............... 30105 1.60
WHEATLAND MT............... 30107 1.60
WIBAUX MT............... 30109 1.60
YELLOWSTONE MT............... 30111 1.60
YELLOWSTONE NAT. PARK MT............... 30113 1.60
ALAMANCE NC............... 37001 3.10
ALEXANDER NC............... 37003 2.95
ALLEGHANY NC............... 37005 2.95
ANSON NC............... 37007 3.10
ASHE NC............... 37009 2.95
AVERY NC............... 37011 2.95
BEAUFORT NC............... 37013 3.20
BERTIE NC............... 37015 3.20
BLADEN NC............... 37017 3.30
BRUNSWICK NC............... 37019 3.30
BUNCOMBE NC............... 37021 2.95
BURKE NC............... 37023 2.95
CABARRUS NC............... 37025 3.10
CALDWELL NC............... 37027 2.95
CAMDEN NC............... 37029 3.20
CARTERET NC............... 37031 3.20
CASWELL NC............... 37033 3.10
CATAWBA NC............... 37035 3.10
CHATHAM NC............... 37037 3.10
CHEROKEE NC............... 37039 2.95
CHOWAN NC............... 37041 3.20
CLAY NC............... 37043 2.95
CLEVELAND NC............... 37045 3.10
COLUMBUS NC............... 37047 3.30
CRAVEN NC............... 37049 3.20
CUMBERLAND NC............... 37051 3.30
CURRITUCK NC............... 37053 3.20
DARE NC............... 37055 3.20
DAVIDSON NC............... 37057 3.10
DAVIE NC............... 37059 3.10
DUPLIN NC............... 37061 3.30
DURHAM NC............... 37063 3.10
EDGECOMBE NC............... 37065 3.20
FORSYTH NC............... 37067 3.10
FRANKLIN NC............... 37069 3.10
GASTON NC............... 37071 3.10
GATES NC............... 37073 3.20
GRAHAM NC............... 37075 2.95
GRANVILLE NC............... 37077 3.10
GREENE NC............... 37079 3.20
GUILFORD NC............... 37081 3.10
HALIFAX NC............... 37083 3.10
HARNETT NC............... 37085 3.30
HAYWOOD NC............... 37087 2.95
HENDERSON NC............... 37089 2.95
HERTFORD NC............... 37091 3.20
HOKE NC............... 37093 3.30
HYDE NC............... 37095 3.20
IREDELL NC............... 37097 3.10
JACKSON NC............... 37099 2.95
JOHNSTON NC............... 37101 3.20
JONES NC............... 37103 3.20
LEE NC............... 37105 3.10
LENOIR NC............... 37107 3.20
LINCOLN NC............... 37109 3.10
MACON NC............... 37113 2.95
MADISON NC............... 37115 2.95
MARTIN NC............... 37117 3.20
MCDOWELL NC............... 37111 2.95
MECKLENBURG NC............... 37119 3.10
MITCHELL NC............... 37121 2.95
MONTGOMERY NC............... 37123 3.10
MOORE NC............... 37125 3.10
NASH NC............... 37127 3.10
NEW HANOVER NC............... 37129 3.30
NORTHAMPTON NC............... 37131 3.10
ONSLOW NC............... 37133 3.30
ORANGE NC............... 37135 3.10
PAMLICO NC............... 37137 3.20
PASQUOTANK NC............... 37139 3.20
PENDER NC............... 37141 3.30
PERQUIMANS NC............... 37143 3.20
PERSON NC............... 37145 3.10
PITT NC............... 37147 3.20
POLK NC............... 37149 3.10
RANDOLPH NC............... 37151 3.10
RICHMOND NC............... 37153 3.10
ROBESON NC............... 37155 3.30
ROCKINGHAM NC............... 37157 2.95
ROWAN NC............... 37159 3.10
RUTHERFORD NC............... 37161 3.10
SAMPSON NC............... 37163 3.30
SCOTLAND NC............... 37165 3.30
STANLY NC............... 37167 3.10
STOKES NC............... 37169 2.95
SURRY NC............... 37171 2.95
SWAIN NC............... 37173 2.95
TRANSYLVANIA NC............... 37175 2.95
TYRRELL NC............... 37177 3.20
UNION NC............... 37179 3.10
VANCE NC............... 37181 3.10
WAKE NC............... 37183 3.10
WARREN NC............... 37185 3.10
WASHINGTON NC............... 37187 3.20
WATAUGA NC............... 37189 2.95
WAYNE NC............... 37191 3.20
WILKES NC............... 37193 2.95
WILSON NC............... 37195 3.20
YADKIN NC............... 37197 3.10
YANCEY NC............... 37199 2.95
ADAMS ND............... 38001 1.65
BARNES ND............... 38003 1.65
BENSON ND............... 38005 1.60
BILLINGS ND............... 38007 1.60
BOTTINEAU ND............... 38009 1.60
BOWMAN ND............... 38011 1.65
BURKE ND............... 38013 1.60
BURLEIGH ND............... 38015 1.65
CASS ND............... 38017 1.65
CAVALIER ND............... 38019 1.60
DICKEY ND............... 38021 1.65
DIVIDE ND............... 38023 1.60
DUNN ND............... 38025 1.60
EDDY ND............... 38027 1.65
EMMONS ND............... 38029 1.65
FOSTER ND............... 38031 1.65
GOLDEN VALLEY ND............... 38033 1.60
GRAND FORKS ND............... 38035 1.65
GRANT ND............... 38037 1.65
GRIGGS ND............... 38039 1.65
[[Page 34]]
HETTINGER ND............... 38041 1.65
KIDDER ND............... 38043 1.65
LA MOURE ND............... 38045 1.65
LOGAN ND............... 38047 1.65
MCHENRY ND............... 38049 1.60
MCINTOSH ND............... 38051 1.65
MCKENZIE ND............... 38053 1.60
MCLEAN ND............... 38055 1.60
MERCER ND............... 38057 1.60
MORTON ND............... 38059 1.65
MOUNTRAIL ND............... 38061 1.60
NELSON ND............... 38063 1.65
OLIVER ND............... 38065 1.60
PEMBINA ND............... 38067 1.60
PIERCE ND............... 38069 1.60
RAMSEY ND............... 38071 1.60
RANSOM ND............... 38073 1.65
RENVILLE ND............... 38075 1.60
RICHLAND ND............... 38077 1.65
ROLETTE ND............... 38079 1.60
SARGENT ND............... 38081 1.65
SHERIDAN ND............... 38083 1.60
SIOUX ND............... 38085 1.65
SLOPE ND............... 38087 1.65
STARK ND............... 38089 1.60
STEELE ND............... 38091 1.65
STUTSMAN ND............... 38093 1.65
TOWNER ND............... 38095 1.60
TRAILL ND............... 38097 1.65
WALSH ND............... 38099 1.60
WARD ND............... 38101 1.60
WELLS ND............... 38103 1.65
WILLIAMS ND............... 38105 1.60
ADAMS NE............... 31001 1.80
ANTELOPE NE............... 31003 1.75
ARTHUR NE............... 31005 1.80
BANNER NE............... 31007 1.80
BLAINE NE............... 31009 1.75
BOONE NE............... 31011 1.80
BOX BUTTE NE............... 31013 1.80
BOYD NE............... 31015 1.75
BROWN NE............... 31017 1.75
BUFFALO NE............... 31019 1.80
BURT NE............... 31021 1.80
BUTLER NE............... 31023 1.80
CASS NE............... 31025 1.85
CEDAR NE............... 31027 1.75
CHASE NE............... 31029 1.80
CHERRY NE............... 31031 1.75
CHEYENNE NE............... 31033 1.80
CLAY NE............... 31035 1.80
COLFAX NE............... 31037 1.80
CUMING NE............... 31039 1.80
CUSTER NE............... 31041 1.80
DAKOTA NE............... 31043 1.75
DAWES NE............... 31045 1.80
DAWSON NE............... 31047 1.80
DEUEL NE............... 31049 1.80
DIXON NE............... 31051 1.75
DODGE NE............... 31053 1.80
DOUGLAS NE............... 31055 1.85
DUNDY NE............... 31057 1.80
FILLMORE NE............... 31059 1.80
FRANKLIN NE............... 31061 1.80
FRONTIER NE............... 31063 1.80
FURNAS NE............... 31065 1.80
GAGE NE............... 31067 1.85
GARDEN NE............... 31069 1.80
GARFIELD NE............... 31071 1.75
GOSPER NE............... 31073 1.80
GRANT NE............... 31075 1.75
GREELEY NE............... 31077 1.80
HALL NE............... 31079 1.80
HAMILTON NE............... 31081 1.80
HARLAN NE............... 31083 1.80
HAYES NE............... 31085 1.80
HITCHCOCK NE............... 31087 1.80
HOLT NE............... 31089 1.75
HOOKER NE............... 31091 1.75
HOWARD NE............... 31093 1.80
JEFFERSON NE............... 31095 1.80
JOHNSON NE............... 31097 1.85
KEARNEY NE............... 31099 1.80
KEITH NE............... 31101 1.80
KEYA PAHA NE............... 31103 1.75
KIMBALL NE............... 31105 1.80
KNOX NE............... 31107 1.75
LANCASTER NE............... 31109 1.85
LINCOLN NE............... 31111 1.80
LOGAN NE............... 31113 1.80
LOUP NE............... 31115 1.75
MADISON NE............... 31119 1.80
MCPHERSON NE............... 31117 1.80
MERRICK NE............... 31121 1.80
MORRILL NE............... 31123 1.80
NANCE NE............... 31125 1.80
NEMAHA NE............... 31127 1.85
NUCKOLLS NE............... 31129 1.80
OTOE NE............... 31131 1.85
PAWNEE NE............... 31133 1.85
PERKINS NE............... 31135 1.80
PHELPS NE............... 31137 1.80
PIERCE NE............... 31139 1.75
PLATTE NE............... 31141 1.80
POLK NE............... 31143 1.80
RED WILLOW NE............... 31145 1.80
RICHARDSON NE............... 31147 1.85
ROCK NE............... 31149 1.75
SALINE NE............... 31151 1.80
SARPY NE............... 31153 1.85
SAUNDERS NE............... 31155 1.85
SCOTTS BLUFF NE............... 31157 1.80
SEWARD NE............... 31159 1.80
SHERIDAN NE............... 31161 1.80
SHERMAN NE............... 31163 1.80
SIOUX NE............... 31165 1.80
STANTON NE............... 31167 1.80
THAYER NE............... 31169 1.80
THOMAS NE............... 31171 1.75
THURSTON NE............... 31173 1.75
VALLEY NE............... 31175 1.80
WASHINGTON NE............... 31177 1.85
WAYNE NE............... 31179 1.75
WEBSTER NE............... 31181 1.80
WHEELER NE............... 31183 1.75
YORK NE............... 31185 1.80
BELKNAP NH............... 33001 2.80
CARROLL NH............... 33003 2.80
CHESHIRE NH............... 33005 2.80
COOS NH............... 33007 2.60
GRAFTON NH............... 33009 2.60
HILLSBOROUGH NH............... 33011 3.00
MERRIMACK NH............... 33013 3.00
ROCKINGHAM NH............... 33015 3.00
STRAFFORD NH............... 33017 3.00
SULLIVAN NH............... 33019 2.80
ATLANTIC NJ............... 34001 3.05
BERGEN NJ............... 34003 3.15
BURLINGTON NJ............... 34005 3.05
CAMDEN NJ............... 34007 3.05
CAPE MAY NJ............... 34009 3.05
CUMBERLAND NJ............... 34011 3.05
ESSEX NJ............... 34013 3.15
GLOUCESTER NJ............... 34015 3.05
[[Page 35]]
HUDSON NJ............... 34017 3.15
HUNTERDON NJ............... 34019 3.10
MERCER NJ............... 34021 3.10
MIDDLESEX NJ............... 34023 3.10
MONMOUTH NJ............... 34025 3.10
MORRIS NJ............... 34027 3.10
OCEAN NJ............... 34029 3.10
PASSAIC NJ............... 34031 3.15
SALEM NJ............... 34033 3.05
SOMERSET NJ............... 34035 3.10
SUSSEX NJ............... 34037 3.10
UNION NJ............... 34039 3.15
WARREN NJ............... 34041 3.10
BERNALILLO NM............... 35001 2.35
CATRON NM............... 35003 2.10
CHAVES NM............... 35005 2.10
CIBOLA NM............... 35006 1.90
COLFAX NM............... 35007 2.35
CURRY NM............... 35009 2.10
DE BACA NM............... 35011 2.10
DONA ANA NM............... 35013 2.10
EDDY NM............... 35015 2.10
GRANT NM............... 35017 2.10
GUADALUPE NM............... 35019 2.35
HARDING NM............... 35021 2.35
HIDALGO NM............... 35023 2.10
LEA NM............... 35025 2.10
LINCOLN NM............... 35027 2.10
LOS ALAMOS NM............... 35028 2.35
LUNA NM............... 35029 2.10
MCKINLEY NM............... 35031 1.90
MORA NM............... 35033 2.35
OTERO NM............... 35035 2.10
QUAY NM............... 35037 2.35
RIO ARRIBA NM............... 35039 1.90
ROOSEVELT NM............... 35041 2.10
SAN JUAN NM............... 35045 1.90
SAN MIGUEL NM............... 35047 2.35
SANDOVAL NM............... 35043 2.35
SANTA FE NM............... 35049 2.35
SIERRA NM............... 35051 2.10
SOCORRO NM............... 35053 2.10
TAOS NM............... 35055 1.90
TORRANCE NM............... 35057 2.35
UNION NM............... 35059 2.35
VALENCIA NM............... 35061 2.35
CARSON CITY NV............... 32510 1.70
CHURCHILL NV............... 32001 1.70
CLARK NV............... 32003 2.00
DOUGLAS NV............... 32005 1.70
ELKO NV............... 32007 1.90
ESMERALDA NV............... 32009 1.60
EUREKA NV............... 32011 1.70
HUMBOLDT NV............... 32013 1.70
LANDER NV............... 32015 1.70
LINCOLN NV............... 32017 1.60
LYON NV............... 32019 1.70
MINERAL NV............... 32021 1.60
NYE NV............... 32023 1.60
PERSHING NV............... 32027 1.70
STOREY NV............... 32029 1.70
WASHOE NV............... 32031 1.70
WHITE PINE NV............... 32033 1.90
ALBANY NY............... 36001 2.70
ALLEGANY NY............... 36003 2.30
BRONX NY............... 36005 3.15
BROOME NY............... 36007 2.70
CATTARAUGUS NY............... 36009 2.10
CAYUGA NY............... 36011 2.30
CHAUTAUQUA NY............... 36013 2.10
CHEMUNG NY............... 36015 2.50
CHENANGO NY............... 36017 2.50
CLINTON NY............... 36019 2.30
COLUMBIA NY............... 36021 2.70
CORTLAND NY............... 36023 2.50
DELAWARE NY............... 36025 2.70
DUTCHESS NY............... 36027 2.80
ERIE NY............... 36029 2.20
ESSEX NY............... 36031 2.30
FRANKLIN NY............... 36033 2.30
FULTON NY............... 36035 2.50
GENESEE NY............... 36037 2.20
GREENE NY............... 36039 2.70
HAMILTON NY............... 36041 2.50
HERKIMER NY............... 36043 2.50
JEFFERSON NY............... 36045 2.30
KINGS NY............... 36047 3.15
LEWIS NY............... 36049 2.30
LIVINGSTON NY............... 36051 2.30
MADISON NY............... 36053 2.50
MONROE NY............... 36055 2.30
MONTGOMERY NY............... 36057 2.70
NASSAU NY............... 36059 3.15
NEW YORK NY............... 36061 3.15
NIAGARA NY............... 36063 2.20
ONEIDA NY............... 36065 2.50
ONONDAGA NY............... 36067 2.50
ONTARIO NY............... 36069 2.30
ORANGE NY............... 36071 3.00
ORLEANS NY............... 36073 2.20
OSWEGO NY............... 36075 2.30
OTSEGO NY............... 36077 2.50
PUTNAM NY............... 36079 3.00
QUEENS NY............... 36081 3.15
RENSSELAER NY............... 36083 2.70
RICHMOND NY............... 36085 3.15
ROCKLAND NY............... 36087 3.15
SARATOGA NY............... 36091 2.70
SCHENECTADY NY............... 36093 2.70
SCHOHARIE NY............... 36095 2.70
SCHUYLER NY............... 36097 2.30
SENECA NY............... 36099 2.30
ST. LAWRENCE NY............... 36089 2.30
STEUBEN NY............... 36101 2.30
SUFFOLK NY............... 36103 3.15
SULLIVAN NY............... 36105 2.80
TIOGA NY............... 36107 2.50
TOMPKINS NY............... 36109 2.50
ULSTER NY............... 36111 2.80
WARREN NY............... 36113 2.50
WASHINGTON NY............... 36115 2.60
WAYNE NY............... 36117 2.30
WESTCHESTER NY............... 36119 3.15
WYOMING NY............... 36121 2.20
YATES NY............... 36123 2.30
ADAMS OH............... 39001 2.20
ALLEN OH............... 39003 2.00
ASHLAND OH............... 39005 2.00
ASHTABULA OH............... 39007 2.00
ATHENS OH............... 39009 2.00
AUGLAIZE OH............... 39011 2.00
BELMONT OH............... 39013 2.00
BROWN OH............... 39015 2.20
BUTLER OH............... 39017 2.00
CARROLL OH............... 39019 2.00
CHAMPAIGN OH............... 39021 2.00
CLARK OH............... 39023 2.00
CLERMONT OH............... 39025 2.20
CLINTON OH............... 39027 2.00
COLUMBIANA OH............... 39029 2.00
COSHOCTON OH............... 39031 2.00
CRAWFORD OH............... 39033 2.00
CUYAHOGA OH............... 39035 2.00
DARKE OH............... 39037 2.00
[[Page 36]]
DEFIANCE OH............... 39039 1.80
DELAWARE OH............... 39041 2.00
ERIE OH............... 39043 2.00
FAIRFIELD OH............... 39045 2.00
FAYETTE OH............... 39047 2.00
FRANKLIN OH............... 39049 2.00
FULTON OH............... 39051 1.80
GALLIA OH............... 39053 2.20
GEAUGA OH............... 39055 2.00
GREENE OH............... 39057 2.00
GUERNSEY OH............... 39059 2.00
HAMILTON OH............... 39061 2.20
HANCOCK OH............... 39063 2.00
HARDIN OH............... 39065 2.00
HARRISON OH............... 39067 2.00
HENRY OH............... 39069 1.80
HIGHLAND OH............... 39071 2.20
HOCKING OH............... 39073 2.00
HOLMES OH............... 39075 2.00
HURON OH............... 39077 2.00
JACKSON OH............... 39079 2.20
JEFFERSON OH............... 39081 2.00
KNOX OH............... 39083 2.00
LAKE OH............... 39085 2.00
LAWRENCE OH............... 39087 2.20
LICKING OH............... 39089 2.00
LOGAN OH............... 39091 2.00
LORAIN OH............... 39093 2.00
LUCAS OH............... 39095 1.80
MADISON OH............... 39097 2.00
MAHONING OH............... 39099 2.00
MARION OH............... 39101 2.00
MEDINA OH............... 39103 2.00
MEIGS OH............... 39105 2.00
MERCER OH............... 39107 2.00
MIAMI OH............... 39109 2.00
MONROE OH............... 39111 2.00
MONTGOMERY OH............... 39113 2.00
MORGAN OH............... 39115 2.00
MORROW OH............... 39117 2.00
MUSKINGUM OH............... 39119 2.00
NOBLE OH............... 39121 2.00
OTTAWA OH............... 39123 2.00
PAULDING OH............... 39125 1.80
PERRY OH............... 39127 2.00
PICKAWAY OH............... 39129 2.00
PIKE OH............... 39131 2.20
PORTAGE OH............... 39133 2.00
PREBLE OH............... 39135 2.00
PUTNAM OH............... 39137 1.80
RICHLAND OH............... 39139 2.00
ROSS OH............... 39141 2.00
SANDUSKY OH............... 39143 2.00
SCIOTO OH............... 39145 2.20
SENECA OH............... 39147 2.00
SHELBY OH............... 39149 2.00
STARK OH............... 39151 2.00
SUMMIT OH............... 39153 2.00
TRUMBULL OH............... 39155 2.00
TUSCARAWAS OH............... 39157 2.00
UNION OH............... 39159 2.00
VAN WERT OH............... 39161 1.80
VINTON OH............... 39163 2.00
WARREN OH............... 39165 2.00
WASHINGTON OH............... 39167 2.00
WAYNE OH............... 39169 2.00
WILLIAMS OH............... 39171 1.80
WOOD OH............... 39173 2.00
WYANDOT OH............... 39175 2.00
ADAIR OK............... 40001 2.60
ALFALFA OK............... 40003 2.40
ATOKA OK............... 40005 2.80
BEAVER OK............... 40007 2.40
BECKHAM OK............... 40009 2.40
BLAINE OK............... 40011 2.40
BRYAN OK............... 40013 2.80
CADDO OK............... 40015 2.60
CANADIAN OK............... 40017 2.60
CARTER OK............... 40019 2.80
CHEROKEE OK............... 40021 2.60
CHOCTAW OK............... 40023 2.80
CIMARRON OK............... 40025 2.40
CLEVELAND OK............... 40027 2.60
COAL OK............... 40029 2.80
COMANCHE OK............... 40031 2.60
COTTON OK............... 40033 2.80
CRAIG OK............... 40035 2.40
CREEK OK............... 40037 2.60
CUSTER OK............... 40039 2.40
DELAWARE OK............... 40041 2.40
DEWEY OK............... 40043 2.40
ELLIS OK............... 40045 2.40
GARFIELD OK............... 40047 2.40
GARVIN OK............... 40049 2.60
GRADY OK............... 40051 2.60
GRANT OK............... 40053 2.40
GREER OK............... 40055 2.60
HARMON OK............... 40057 2.60
HARPER OK............... 40059 2.40
HASKELL OK............... 40061 2.80
HUGHES OK............... 40063 2.60
JACKSON OK............... 40065 2.60
JEFFERSON OK............... 40067 2.80
JOHNSTON OK............... 40069 2.80
KAY OK............... 40071 2.40
KINGFISHER OK............... 40073 2.40
KIOWA OK............... 40075 2.60
LATIMER OK............... 40077 2.80
LE FLORE OK............... 40079 2.80
LINCOLN OK............... 40081 2.60
LOGAN OK............... 40083 2.40
LOVE OK............... 40085 2.80
MAJOR OK............... 40093 2.40
MARSHALL OK............... 40095 2.80
MAYES OK............... 40097 2.40
MCCLAIN OK............... 40087 2.60
MCCURTAIN OK............... 40089 2.80
MCINTOSH OK............... 40091 2.60
MURRAY OK............... 40099 2.80
MUSKOGEE OK............... 40101 2.60
NOBLE OK............... 40103 2.40
NOWATA OK............... 40105 2.40
OKFUSKEE OK............... 40107 2.60
OKLAHOMA OK............... 40109 2.60
OKMULGEE OK............... 40111 2.60
OSAGE OK............... 40113 2.40
OTTAWA OK............... 40115 2.40
PAWNEE OK............... 40117 2.40
PAYNE OK............... 40119 2.40
PITTSBURG OK............... 40121 2.80
PONTOTOC OK............... 40123 2.80
POTTAWATOMIE OK............... 40125 2.60
PUSHMATAHA OK............... 40127 2.80
ROGER MILLS OK............... 40129 2.40
ROGERS OK............... 40131 2.40
SEMINOLE OK............... 40133 2.60
SEQUOYAH OK............... 40135 2.80
STEPHENS OK............... 40137 2.80
TEXAS OK............... 40139 2.40
TILLMAN OK............... 40141 2.60
TULSA OK............... 40143 2.60
WAGONER OK............... 40145 2.60
WASHINGTON OK............... 40147 2.40
WASHITA OK............... 40149 2.40
[[Page 37]]
WOODS OK............... 40151 2.40
WOODWARD OK............... 40153 2.40
BAKER OR............... 41001 1.60
BENTON OR............... 41003 1.90
CLACKAMAS OR............... 41005 1.90
CLATSOP OR............... 41007 1.90
COLUMBIA OR............... 41009 1.90
COOS OR............... 41011 1.90
CROOK OR............... 41013 1.75
CURRY OR............... 41015 1.90
DESCHUTES OR............... 41017 1.75
DOUGLAS OR............... 41019 1.90
GILLIAM OR............... 41021 1.75
GRANT OR............... 41023 1.60
HARNEY OR............... 41025 1.60
HOOD RIVER OR............... 41027 1.90
JACKSON OR............... 41029 1.90
JEFFERSON OR............... 41031 1.75
JOSEPHINE OR............... 41033 1.90
KLAMATH OR............... 41035 1.75
LAKE OR............... 41037 1.75
LANE OR............... 41039 1.90
LINCOLN OR............... 41041 1.90
LINN OR............... 41043 1.90
MALHEUR OR............... 41045 1.60
MARION OR............... 41047 1.90
MORROW OR............... 41049 1.75
MULTNOMAH OR............... 41051 1.90
POLK OR............... 41053 1.90
SHERMAN OR............... 41055 1.75
TILLAMOOK OR............... 41057 1.90
UMATILLA OR............... 41059 1.75
UNION OR............... 41061 1.60
WALLOWA OR............... 41063 1.60
WASCO OR............... 41065 1.75
WASHINGTON OR............... 41067 1.90
WHEELER OR............... 41069 1.75
YAMHILL OR............... 41071 1.90
ADAMS PA............... 42001 2.80
ALLEGHENY PA............... 42003 2.10
ARMSTRONG PA............... 42005 2.30
BEAVER PA............... 42007 2.10
BEDFORD PA............... 42009 2.30
BERKS PA............... 42011 2.80
BLAIR PA............... 42013 2.30
BRADFORD PA............... 42015 2.50
BUCKS PA............... 42017 3.05
BUTLER PA............... 42019 2.10
CAMBRIA PA............... 42021 2.30
CAMERON PA............... 42023 2.30
CARBON PA............... 42025 2.80
CENTRE PA............... 42027 2.50
CHESTER PA............... 42029 3.05
CLARION PA............... 42031 2.30
CLEARFIELD PA............... 42033 2.30
CLINTON PA............... 42035 2.50
COLUMBIA PA............... 42037 2.70
CRAWFORD PA............... 42039 2.10
CUMBERLAND PA............... 42041 2.80
DAUPHIN PA............... 42043 2.80
DELAWARE PA............... 42045 3.05
ELK PA............... 42047 2.30
ERIE PA............... 42049 2.10
FAYETTE PA............... 42051 2.30
FOREST PA............... 42053 2.30
FRANKLIN PA............... 42055 2.80
FULTON PA............... 42057 2.70
GREENE PA............... 42059 2.10
HUNTINGDON PA............... 42061 2.30
INDIANA PA............... 42063 2.30
JEFFERSON PA............... 42065 2.30
JUNIATA PA............... 42067 2.70
LACKAWANNA PA............... 42069 2.70
LANCASTER PA............... 42071 2.90
LAWRENCE PA............... 42073 2.10
LEBANON PA............... 42075 2.80
LEHIGH PA............... 42077 2.80
LUZERNE PA............... 42079 2.70
LYCOMING PA............... 42081 2.50
MCKEAN PA............... 42083 2.30
MERCER PA............... 42085 2.10
MIFFLIN PA............... 42087 2.70
MONROE PA............... 42089 2.80
MONTGOMERY PA............... 42091 3.05
MONTOUR PA............... 42093 2.70
NORTHAMPTON PA............... 42095 2.80
NORTHUMBERLAND PA............... 42097 2.70
PERRY PA............... 42099 2.70
PHILADELPHIA PA............... 42101 3.05
PIKE PA............... 42103 2.80
POTTER PA............... 42105 2.50
SCHUYLKILL PA............... 42107 2.80
SNYDER PA............... 42109 2.70
SOMERSET PA............... 42111 2.30
SULLIVAN PA............... 42113 2.50
SUSQUEHANNA PA............... 42115 2.50
TIOGA PA............... 42117 2.50
UNION PA............... 42119 2.70
VENANGO PA............... 42121 2.10
WARREN PA............... 42123 2.10
WASHINGTON PA............... 42125 2.10
WAYNE PA............... 42127 2.70
WESTMORELAND PA............... 42129 2.30
WYOMING PA............... 42131 2.50
YORK PA............... 42133 2.90
BRISTOL RI............... 44001 3.25
KENT RI............... 44003 3.25
NEWPORT RI............... 44005 3.25
PROVIDENCE RI............... 44007 3.25
WASHINGTON RI............... 44009 3.25
ABBEVILLE SC............... 45001 3.10
AIKEN SC............... 45003 3.30
ALLENDALE SC............... 45005 3.30
ANDERSON SC............... 45007 3.10
BAMBERG SC............... 45009 3.30
BARNWELL SC............... 45011 3.30
BEAUFORT SC............... 45013 3.30
BERKELEY SC............... 45015 3.30
CALHOUN SC............... 45017 3.30
CHARLESTON SC............... 45019 3.30
CHEROKEE SC............... 45021 3.10
CHESTER SC............... 45023 3.10
CHESTERFIELD SC............... 45025 3.30
CLARENDON SC............... 45027 3.30
COLLETON SC............... 45029 3.30
DARLINGTON SC............... 45031 3.30
DILLON SC............... 45033 3.30
DORCHESTER SC............... 45035 3.30
EDGEFIELD SC............... 45037 3.30
FAIRFIELD SC............... 45039 3.30
FLORENCE SC............... 45041 3.30
GEORGETOWN SC............... 45043 3.30
GREENVILLE SC............... 45045 3.10
GREENWOOD SC............... 45047 3.10
HAMPTON SC............... 45049 3.30
HORRY SC............... 45051 3.30
JASPER SC............... 45053 3.30
KERSHAW SC............... 45055 3.30
LANCASTER SC............... 45057 3.10
LAURENS SC............... 45059 3.10
LEE SC............... 45061 3.30
LEXINGTON SC............... 45063 3.30
MARION SC............... 45067 3.30
MARLBORO SC............... 45069 3.30
[[Page 38]]
MCCORMICK SC............... 45065 3.10
NEWBERRY SC............... 45071 3.30
OCONEE SC............... 45073 3.10
ORANGEBURG SC............... 45075 3.30
PICKENS SC............... 45077 3.10
RICHLAND SC............... 45079 3.30
SALUDA SC............... 45081 3.30
SPARTANBURG SC............... 45083 3.10
SUMTER SC............... 45085 3.30
UNION SC............... 45087 3.10
WILLIAMSBURG SC............... 45089 3.30
YORK SC............... 45091 3.10
AURORA SD............... 46003 1.70
BEADLE SD............... 46005 1.70
BENNETT SD............... 46007 1.70
BON HOMME SD............... 46009 1.75
BROOKINGS SD............... 46011 1.70
BROWN SD............... 46013 1.70
BRULE SD............... 46015 1.70
BUFFALO SD............... 46017 1.70
BUTTE SD............... 46019 1.65
CAMPBELL SD............... 46021 1.65
CHARLES MIX SD............... 46023 1.75
CLARK SD............... 46025 1.70
CLAY SD............... 46027 1.75
CODINGTON SD............... 46029 1.70
CORSON SD............... 46031 1.65
CUSTER SD............... 46033 1.80
DAVISON SD............... 46035 1.70
DAY SD............... 46037 1.70
DEUEL SD............... 46039 1.70
DEWEY SD............... 46041 1.65
DOUGLAS SD............... 46043 1.75
EDMUNDS SD............... 46045 1.70
FALL RIVER SD............... 46047 1.80
FAULK SD............... 46049 1.70
GRANT SD............... 46051 1.70
GREGORY SD............... 46053 1.75
HAAKON SD............... 46055 1.70
HAMLIN SD............... 46057 1.70
HAND SD............... 46059 1.70
HANSON SD............... 46061 1.70
HARDING SD............... 46063 1.65
HUGHES SD............... 46065 1.70
HUTCHINSON SD............... 46067 1.75
HYDE SD............... 46069 1.70
JACKSON SD............... 46071 1.70
JERAULD SD............... 46073 1.70
JONES SD............... 46075 1.70
KINGSBURY SD............... 46077 1.70
LAKE SD............... 46079 1.70
LAWRENCE SD............... 46081 1.80
LINCOLN SD............... 46083 1.75
LYMAN SD............... 46085 1.70
MARSHALL SD............... 46091 1.70
MCCOOK SD............... 46087 1.70
MCPHERSON SD............... 46089 1.70
MEADE SD............... 46093 1.65
MELLETTE SD............... 46095 1.70
MINER SD............... 46097 1.70
MINNEHAHA SD............... 46099 1.70
MOODY SD............... 46101 1.70
PENNINGTON SD............... 46103 1.80
PERKINS SD............... 46105 1.65
POTTER SD............... 46107 1.70
ROBERTS SD............... 46109 1.70
SANBORN SD............... 46111 1.70
SHANNON SD............... 46113 1.80
SPINK SD............... 46115 1.70
STANLEY SD............... 46117 1.70
SULLY SD............... 46119 1.70
TODD SD............... 46121 1.70
TRIPP SD............... 46123 1.70
TURNER SD............... 46125 1.75
UNION SD............... 46127 1.75
WALWORTH SD............... 46129 1.70
YANKTON SD............... 46135 1.75
ZIEBACH SD............... 46137 1.65
ANDERSON TN............... 47001 2.80
BEDFORD TN............... 47003 2.60
BENTON TN............... 47005 2.60
BLEDSOE TN............... 47007 2.60
BLOUNT TN............... 47009 2.80
BRADLEY TN............... 47011 2.80
CAMPBELL TN............... 47013 2.80
CANNON TN............... 47015 2.60
CARROLL TN............... 47017 2.60
CARTER TN............... 47019 2.80
CHEATHAM TN............... 47021 2.60
CHESTER TN............... 47023 2.80
CLAIBORNE TN............... 47025 2.80
CLAY TN............... 47027 2.60
COCKE TN............... 47029 2.80
COFFEE TN............... 47031 2.60
CROCKETT TN............... 47033 2.60
CUMBERLAND TN............... 47035 2.80
DAVIDSON TN............... 47037 2.60
DE KALB TN............... 47041 2.60
DECATUR TN............... 47039 2.60
DICKSON TN............... 47043 2.60
DYER TN............... 47045 2.60
FAYETTE TN............... 47047 2.80
FENTRESS TN............... 47049 2.60
FRANKLIN TN............... 47051 2.80
GIBSON TN............... 47053 2.60
GILES TN............... 47055 2.80
GRAINGER TN............... 47057 2.80
GREENE TN............... 47059 2.80
GRUNDY TN............... 47061 2.60
HAMBLEN TN............... 47063 2.80
HAMILTON TN............... 47065 2.80
HANCOCK TN............... 47067 2.80
HARDEMAN TN............... 47069 2.80
HARDIN TN............... 47071 2.80
HAWKINS TN............... 47073 2.80
HAYWOOD TN............... 47075 2.60
HENDERSON TN............... 47077 2.60
HENRY TN............... 47079 2.60
HICKMAN TN............... 47081 2.60
HOUSTON TN............... 47083 2.60
HUMPHREYS TN............... 47085 2.60
JACKSON TN............... 47087 2.60
JEFFERSON TN............... 47089 2.80
JOHNSON TN............... 47091 2.80
KNOX TN............... 47093 2.80
LAKE TN............... 47095 2.60
LAUDERDALE TN............... 47097 2.60
LAWRENCE TN............... 47099 2.80
LEWIS TN............... 47101 2.60
LINCOLN TN............... 47103 2.80
LOUDON TN............... 47105 2.80
MACON TN............... 47111 2.60
MADISON TN............... 47113 2.60
MARION TN............... 47115 2.80
MARSHALL TN............... 47117 2.60
MAURY TN............... 47119 2.60
MCMINN TN............... 47107 2.80
MCNAIRY TN............... 47109 2.80
MEIGS TN............... 47121 2.80
MONROE TN............... 47123 2.80
MONTGOMERY TN............... 47125 2.60
MOORE TN............... 47127 2.80
MORGAN TN............... 47129 2.80
OBION TN............... 47131 2.60
[[Page 39]]
OVERTON TN............... 47133 2.60
PERRY TN............... 47135 2.60
PICKETT TN............... 47137 2.60
POLK TN............... 47139 2.80
PUTNAM TN............... 47141 2.60
RHEA TN............... 47143 2.80
ROANE TN............... 47145 2.80
ROBERTSON TN............... 47147 2.60
RUTHERFORD TN............... 47149 2.60
SCOTT TN............... 47151 2.80
SEQUATCHIE TN............... 47153 2.80
SEVIER TN............... 47155 2.80
SHELBY TN............... 47157 2.80
SMITH TN............... 47159 2.60
STEWART TN............... 47161 2.60
SULLIVAN TN............... 47163 2.80
SUMNER TN............... 47165 2.60
TIPTON TN............... 47167 2.80
TROUSDALE TN............... 47169 2.60
UNICOI TN............... 47171 2.80
UNION TN............... 47173 2.80
VAN BUREN TN............... 47175 2.60
WARREN TN............... 47177 2.60
WASHINGTON TN............... 47179 2.80
WAYNE TN............... 47181 2.80
WEAKLEY TN............... 47183 2.60
WHITE TN............... 47185 2.60
WILLIAMSON TN............... 47187 2.60
WILSON TN............... 47189 2.60
ANDERSON TX............... 48001 3.15
ANDREWS TX............... 48003 2.40
ANGELINA TX............... 48005 3.15
ARANSAS TX............... 48007 3.65
ARCHER TX............... 48009 2.80
ARMSTRONG TX............... 48011 2.40
ATASCOSA TX............... 48013 3.45
AUSTIN TX............... 48015 3.60
BAILEY TX............... 48017 2.40
BANDERA TX............... 48019 3.30
BASTROP TX............... 48021 3.30
BAYLOR TX............... 48023 2.60
BEE TX............... 48025 3.65
BELL TX............... 48027 3.15
BEXAR TX............... 48029 3.45
BLANCO TX............... 48031 3.30
BORDEN TX............... 48033 2.40
BOSQUE TX............... 48035 3.15
BOWIE TX............... 48037 3.00
BRAZORIA TX............... 48039 3.60
BRAZOS TX............... 48041 3.30
BREWSTER TX............... 48043 2.40
BRISCOE TX............... 48045 2.40
BROOKS TX............... 48047 3.65
BROWN TX............... 48049 2.80
BURLESON TX............... 48051 3.30
BURNET TX............... 48053 3.30
CALDWELL TX............... 48055 3.45
CALHOUN TX............... 48057 3.65
CALLAHAN TX............... 48059 2.80
CAMERON TX............... 48061 3.65
CAMP TX............... 48063 3.00
CARSON TX............... 48065 2.40
CASS TX............... 48067 3.00
CASTRO TX............... 48069 2.40
CHAMBERS TX............... 48071 3.60
CHEROKEE TX............... 48073 3.15
CHILDRESS TX............... 48075 2.40
CLAY TX............... 48077 2.80
COCHRAN TX............... 48079 2.40
COKE TX............... 48081 2.60
COLEMAN TX............... 48083 2.80
COLLIN TX............... 48085 3.00
COLLINGSWORTH TX............... 48087 2.40
COLORADO TX............... 48089 3.60
COMAL TX............... 48091 3.45
COMANCHE TX............... 48093 2.80
CONCHO TX............... 48095 2.80
COOKE TX............... 48097 3.00
CORYELL TX............... 48099 3.15
COTTLE TX............... 48101 2.40
CRANE TX............... 48103 2.40
CROCKETT TX............... 48105 2.60
CROSBY TX............... 48107 2.40
CULBERSON TX............... 48109 2.40
DALLAM TX............... 48111 2.40
DALLAS TX............... 48113 3.00
DAWSON TX............... 48115 2.40
DE WITT TX............... 48123 3.60
DEAF SMITH TX............... 48117 2.40
DELTA TX............... 48119 3.00
DENTON TX............... 48121 3.00
DICKENS TX............... 48125 2.40
DIMMIT TX............... 48127 3.45
DONLEY TX............... 48129 2.40
DUVAL TX............... 48131 3.65
EASTLAND TX............... 48133 2.80
ECTOR TX............... 48135 2.40
EDWARDS TX............... 48137 2.80
EL PASO TX............... 48141 2.25
ELLIS TX............... 48139 3.00
ERATH TX............... 48143 3.00
FALLS TX............... 48145 3.15
FANNIN TX............... 48147 3.00
FAYETTE TX............... 48149 3.60
FISHER TX............... 48151 2.60
FLOYD TX............... 48153 2.40
FOARD TX............... 48155 2.60
FORT BEND TX............... 48157 3.60
FRANKLIN TX............... 48159 3.00
FREESTONE TX............... 48161 3.15
FRIO TX............... 48163 3.45
GAINES TX............... 48165 2.40
GALVESTON TX............... 48167 3.60
GARZA TX............... 48169 2.40
GILLESPIE TX............... 48171 3.30
GLASSCOCK TX............... 48173 2.60
GOLIAD TX............... 48175 3.65
GONZALES TX............... 48177 3.45
GRAY TX............... 48179 2.40
GRAYSON TX............... 48181 3.00
GREGG TX............... 48183 3.00
GRIMES TX............... 48185 3.30
GUADALUPE TX............... 48187 3.45
HALE TX............... 48189 2.40
HALL TX............... 48191 2.40
HAMILTON TX............... 48193 3.15
HANSFORD TX............... 48195 2.40
HARDEMAN TX............... 48197 2.60
HARDIN TX............... 48199 3.60
HARRIS TX............... 48201 3.60
HARRISON TX............... 48203 3.00
HARTLEY TX............... 48205 2.40
HASKELL TX............... 48207 2.60
HAYS TX............... 48209 3.45
HEMPHILL TX............... 48211 2.40
HENDERSON TX............... 48213 3.00
HIDALGO TX............... 48215 3.65
HILL TX............... 48217 3.15
HOCKLEY TX............... 48219 2.40
HOOD TX............... 48221 3.00
HOPKINS TX............... 48223 3.00
HOUSTON TX............... 48225 3.15
HOWARD TX............... 48227 2.40
HUDSPETH TX............... 48229 2.25
[[Page 40]]
HUNT TX............... 48231 3.00
HUTCHINSON TX............... 48233 2.40
IRION TX............... 48235 2.60
JACK TX............... 48237 2.80
JACKSON TX............... 48239 3.60
JASPER TX............... 48241 3.30
JEFF DAVIS TX............... 48243 2.40
JEFFERSON TX............... 48245 3.60
JIM HOGG TX............... 48247 3.65
JIM WELLS TX............... 48249 3.65
JOHNSON TX............... 48251 3.00
JONES TX............... 48253 2.60
KARNES TX............... 48255 3.65
KAUFMAN TX............... 48257 3.00
KENDALL TX............... 48259 3.30
KENEDY TX............... 48261 3.65
KENT TX............... 48263 2.60
KERR TX............... 48265 3.30
KIMBLE TX............... 48267 2.80
KING TX............... 48269 2.60
KINNEY TX............... 48271 3.30
KLEBERG TX............... 48273 3.65
KNOX TX............... 48275 2.60
LA SALLE TX............... 48283 3.45
LAMAR TX............... 48277 3.00
LAMB TX............... 48279 2.40
LAMPASAS TX............... 48281 3.15
LAVACA TX............... 48285 3.60
LEE TX............... 48287 3.30
LEON TX............... 48289 3.15
LIBERTY TX............... 48291 3.60
LIMESTONE TX............... 48293 3.15
LIPSCOMB TX............... 48295 2.40
LIVE OAK TX............... 48297 3.65
LLANO TX............... 48299 3.30
LOVING TX............... 48301 2.40
LUBBOCK TX............... 48303 2.40
LYNN TX............... 48305 2.40
MADISON TX............... 48313 3.30
MARION TX............... 48315 3.00
MARTIN TX............... 48317 2.40
MASON TX............... 48319 2.80
MATAGORDA TX............... 48321 3.60
MAVERICK TX............... 48323 3.30
MCCULLOCH TX............... 48307 2.80
MCLENNAN TX............... 48309 3.15
MCMULLEN TX............... 48311 3.45
MEDINA TX............... 48325 3.30
MENARD TX............... 48327 2.80
MIDLAND TX............... 48329 2.40
MILAM TX............... 48331 3.30
MILLS TX............... 48333 2.80
MITCHELL TX............... 48335 2.60
MONTAGUE TX............... 48337 2.80
MONTGOMERY TX............... 48339 3.60
MOORE TX............... 48341 2.40
MORRIS TX............... 48343 3.00
MOTLEY TX............... 48345 2.40
NACOGDOCHES TX............... 48347 3.15
NAVARRO TX............... 48349 3.15
NEWTON TX............... 48351 3.30
NOLAN TX............... 48353 2.60
NUECES TX............... 48355 3.65
OCHILTREE TX............... 48357 2.40
OLDHAM TX............... 48359 2.40
ORANGE TX............... 48361 3.60
PALO PINTO TX............... 48363 2.80
PANOLA TX............... 48365 3.00
PARKER TX............... 48367 3.00
PARMER TX............... 48369 2.40
PECOS TX............... 48371 2.40
POLK TX............... 48373 3.30
POTTER TX............... 48375 2.40
PRESIDIO TX............... 48377 2.40
RAINS TX............... 48379 3.00
RANDALL TX............... 48381 2.40
REAGAN TX............... 48383 2.60
REAL TX............... 48385 3.30
RED RIVER TX............... 48387 3.00
REEVES TX............... 48389 2.40
REFUGIO TX............... 48391 3.65
ROBERTS TX............... 48393 2.40
ROBERTSON TX............... 48395 3.30
ROCKWALL TX............... 48397 3.00
RUNNELS TX............... 48399 2.80
RUSK TX............... 48401 3.00
SABINE TX............... 48403 3.15
SAN AUGUSTINE TX............... 48405 3.15
SAN JACINTO TX............... 48407 3.30
SAN PATRICIO TX............... 48409 3.65
SAN SABA TX............... 48411 2.80
SCHLEICHER TX............... 48413 2.80
SCURRY TX............... 48415 2.60
SHACKELFORD TX............... 48417 2.80
SHELBY TX............... 48419 3.15
SHERMAN TX............... 48421 2.40
SMITH TX............... 48423 3.00
SOMERVELL TX............... 48425 3.00
STARR TX............... 48427 3.65
STEPHENS TX............... 48429 2.80
STERLING TX............... 48431 2.60
STONEWALL TX............... 48433 2.60
SUTTON TX............... 48435 2.80
SWISHER TX............... 48437 2.40
TARRANT TX............... 48439 3.00
TAYLOR TX............... 48441 2.60
TERRELL TX............... 48443 2.60
TERRY TX............... 48445 2.40
THROCKMORTON TX............... 48447 2.80
TITUS TX............... 48449 3.00
TOM GREEN TX............... 48451 2.80
TRAVIS TX............... 48453 3.30
TRINITY TX............... 48455 3.30
TYLER TX............... 48457 3.30
UPSHUR TX............... 48459 3.00
UPTON TX............... 48461 2.40
UVALDE TX............... 48463 3.30
VAL VERDE TX............... 48465 2.80
VAN ZANDT TX............... 48467 3.00
VICTORIA TX............... 48469 3.65
WALKER TX............... 48471 3.30
WALLER TX............... 48473 3.60
WARD TX............... 48475 2.40
WASHINGTON TX............... 48477 3.30
WEBB TX............... 48479 3.45
WHARTON TX............... 48481 3.60
WHEELER TX............... 48483 2.40
WICHITA TX............... 48485 2.80
WILBARGER TX............... 48487 2.60
WILLACY TX............... 48489 3.65
WILLIAMSON TX............... 48491 3.30
WILSON TX............... 48493 3.45
WINKLER TX............... 48495 2.40
WISE TX............... 48497 3.00
WOOD TX............... 48499 3.00
YOAKUM TX............... 48501 2.40
YOUNG TX............... 48503 2.80
ZAPATA TX............... 48505 3.65
ZAVALA TX............... 48507 3.30
BEAVER UT............... 49001 1.60
BOX ELDER UT............... 49003 1.90
CACHE UT............... 49005 1.90
CARBON UT............... 49007 1.90
DAGGETT UT............... 49009 1.90
[[Page 41]]
DAVIS UT............... 49011 1.90
DUCHESNE UT............... 49013 1.90
EMERY UT............... 49015 1.90
GARFIELD UT............... 49017 1.60
GRAND UT............... 49019 1.90
IRON UT............... 49021 1.60
JUAB UT............... 49023 1.90
KANE UT............... 49025 1.60
MILLARD UT............... 49027 1.90
MORGAN UT............... 49029 1.90
PIUTE UT............... 49031 1.60
RICH UT............... 49033 1.90
SALT LAKE UT............... 49035 1.90
SAN JUAN UT............... 49037 1.60
SANPETE UT............... 49039 1.90
SEVIER UT............... 49041 1.90
SUMMIT UT............... 49043 1.90
TOOELE UT............... 49045 1.90
UINTAH UT............... 49047 1.90
UTAH UT............... 49049 1.90
WASATCH UT............... 49051 1.90
WASHINGTON UT............... 49053 1.60
WAYNE UT............... 49055 1.60
WEBER UT............... 49057 1.90
ACCOMACK VA............... 51001 3.00
ALBEMARLE VA............... 51003 2.80
ALEXANDRIA CITY VA............... 51510 3.00
ALLEGHANY VA............... 51005 2.80
AMELIA VA............... 51007 3.10
AMHERST VA............... 51009 2.80
APPOMATTOX VA............... 51011 2.80
ARLINGTON VA............... 51013 3.00
AUGUSTA VA............... 51015 2.80
BATH VA............... 51017 2.80
BEDFORD VA............... 51019 2.80
BEDFORD CITY VA............... 51515 2.80
BLAND VA............... 51021 2.80
BOTETOURT VA............... 51023 2.80
BRISTOL CITY VA............... 51520 2.80
BRUNSWICK VA............... 51025 3.10
BUCHANAN VA............... 51027 2.80
BUCKINGHAM VA............... 51029 2.80
BUENA VISTA CITY VA............... 51530 2.80
CAMPBELL VA............... 51031 2.80
CAROLINE VA............... 51033 3.10
CARROLL VA............... 51035 2.80
CHARLES CITY VA............... 51036 3.10
CHARLOTTE VA............... 51037 3.10
CHARLOTTESVILLE CITY VA............... 51540 2.80
CHESAPEAKE CITY VA............... 51550 3.20
CHESTERFIELD VA............... 51041 3.10
CLARKE VA............... 51043 2.80
CLIFTON FORGE CITY VA............... 51560 2.80
COLONIAL HEIGHTS CITY VA............... 51570 3.10
COVINGTON CITY VA............... 51580 2.80
CRAIG VA............... 51045 2.80
CULPEPER VA............... 51047 2.80
CUMBERLAND VA............... 51049 2.80
DANVILLE CITY VA............... 51590 2.80
DICKENSON VA............... 51051 2.80
DINWIDDIE VA............... 51053 3.10
EMPORIA CITY VA............... 51595 3.10
ESSEX VA............... 51057 3.10
FAIRFAX VA............... 51059 3.00
FAIRFAX CITY VA............... 51600 3.00
FALLS CHURCH CITY VA............... 51610 3.00
FAUQUIER VA............... 51061 3.00
FLOYD VA............... 51063 2.80
FLUVANNA VA............... 51065 2.80
FRANKLIN VA............... 51067 2.80
FRANKLIN CITY VA............... 51620 3.10
FREDERICK VA............... 51069 2.80
FREDERICKSBURG CITY VA............... 51630 2.80
GALAX CITY VA............... 51640 2.80
GILES VA............... 51071 2.80
GLOUCESTER VA............... 51073 3.20
GOOCHLAND VA............... 51075 3.10
GRAYSON VA............... 51077 2.80
GREENE VA............... 51079 2.80
GREENSVILLE VA............... 51081 3.10
HALIFAX VA............... 51083 3.10
HAMPTON CITY VA............... 51650 3.20
HANOVER VA............... 51085 3.10
HARRISONBURG CITY VA............... 51660 2.80
HENRICO VA............... 51087 3.10
HENRY VA............... 51089 2.80
HIGHLAND VA............... 51091 2.80
HOPEWELL CITY VA............... 51670 3.10
ISLE OF WIGHT VA............... 51093 3.20
JAMES CITY VA............... 51095 3.10
KING AND QUEEN VA............... 51097 3.10
KING GEORGE VA............... 51099 3.10
KING WILLIAM VA............... 51101 3.10
LANCASTER VA............... 51103 3.10
LEE VA............... 51105 2.80
LEXINGTON CITY VA............... 51678 2.80
LOUDOUN VA............... 51107 3.00
LOUISA VA............... 51109 2.80
LUNENBURG VA............... 51111 3.10
LYNCHBURG CITY VA............... 51680 2.80
MADISON VA............... 51113 2.80
MANASSAS CITY VA............... 51683 3.00
MANASSAS PARK CITY VA............... 51685 3.00
MARTINSVILLE CITY VA............... 51690 2.80
MATHEWS VA............... 51115 3.20
MECKLENBURG VA............... 51117 3.10
MIDDLESEX VA............... 51119 3.10
MONTGOMERY VA............... 51121 2.80
NELSON VA............... 51125 2.80
NEW KENT VA............... 51127 3.10
NEWPORT NEWS CITY VA............... 51700 3.20
NORFOLK CITY VA............... 51710 3.20
NORTHAMPTON VA............... 51131 3.00
NORTHUMBERLAND VA............... 51133 3.10
NORTON CITY VA............... 51720 2.80
NOTTOWAY VA............... 51135 3.10
ORANGE VA............... 51137 2.80
PAGE VA............... 51139 2.80
PATRICK VA............... 51141 2.80
PETERSBURG CITY VA............... 51730 3.10
PITTSYLVANIA VA............... 51143 2.80
POQUOSON CITY VA............... 51735 3.20
PORTSMOUTH CITY VA............... 51740 3.20
POWHATAN VA............... 51145 3.10
PRINCE EDWARD VA............... 51147 3.10
PRINCE GEORGE VA............... 51149 3.10
PRINCE WILLIAM VA............... 51153 3.00
PULASKI VA............... 51155 2.80
RADFORD CITY VA............... 51750 2.80
RAPPAHANNOCK VA............... 51157 2.80
RICHMOND VA............... 51159 3.10
RICHMOND CITY VA............... 51760 3.10
ROANOKE VA............... 51161 2.80
ROANOKE CITY VA............... 51770 2.80
ROCKBRIDGE VA............... 51163 2.80
ROCKINGHAM VA............... 51165 2.80
RUSSELL VA............... 51167 2.80
SALEM CITY VA............... 51775 2.80
SCOTT VA............... 51169 2.80
SHENANDOAH VA............... 51171 2.80
SMYTH VA............... 51173 2.80
SOUTHAMPTON VA............... 51175 3.10
SPOTSYLVANIA VA............... 51177 2.80
STAFFORD VA............... 51179 3.00
[[Page 42]]
STAUNTON CITY VA............... 51790 2.80
SUFFOLK CITY VA............... 51800 3.20
SURRY VA............... 51181 3.10
SUSSEX VA............... 51183 3.10
TAZEWELL VA............... 51185 2.80
VIRGINIA BEACH CITY VA............... 51810 3.20
WARREN VA............... 51187 2.80
WASHINGTON VA............... 51191 2.80
WAYNESBORO CITY VA............... 51820 2.80
WESTMORELAND VA............... 51193 3.10
WILLIAMSBURG CITY VA............... 51830 3.10
WINCHESTER CITY VA............... 51840 2.80
WISE VA............... 51195 2.80
WYTHE VA............... 51197 2.80
YORK VA............... 51199 3.20
ADDISON VT............... 50001 2.60
BENNINGTON VT............... 50003 2.80
CALEDONIA VT............... 50005 2.60
CHITTENDEN VT............... 50007 2.50
ESSEX VT............... 50009 2.40
FRANKLIN VT............... 50011 2.40
GRAND ISLE VT............... 50013 2.40
LAMOILLE VT............... 50015 2.50
ORANGE VT............... 50017 2.60
ORLEANS VT............... 50019 2.40
RUTLAND VT............... 50021 2.60
WASHINGTON VT............... 50023 2.60
WINDHAM VT............... 50025 2.80
WINDSOR VT............... 50027 2.80
ADAMS WA............... 53001 1.75
ASOTIN WA............... 53003 1.75
BENTON WA............... 53005 1.75
CHELAN WA............... 53007 1.75
CLALLAM WA............... 53009 1.90
CLARK WA............... 53011 1.90
COLUMBIA WA............... 53013 1.75
COWLITZ WA............... 53015 1.90
DOUGLAS WA............... 53017 1.75
FERRY WA............... 53019 1.90
FRANKLIN WA............... 53021 1.75
GARFIELD WA............... 53023 1.75
GRANT WA............... 53025 1.75
GRAYS HARBOR WA............... 53027 1.90
ISLAND WA............... 53029 1.90
JEFFERSON WA............... 53031 1.90
KING WA............... 53033 1.90
KITSAP WA............... 53035 1.90
KITTITAS WA............... 53037 1.75
KLICKITAT WA............... 53039 1.75
LEWIS WA............... 53041 1.90
LINCOLN WA............... 53043 1.90
MASON WA............... 53045 1.90
OKANOGAN WA............... 53047 1.75
PACIFIC WA............... 53049 1.90
PEND OREILLE WA............... 53051 1.90
PIERCE WA............... 5303 1.90
SAN JUAN WA............... 53055 1.90
SKAGIT WA............... 53057 1.90
SKAMANIA WA............... 53059 1.90
SNOHOMISH WA............... 53061 1.90
SPOKANE WA............... 53063 1.90
STEVENS WA............... 53065 1.90
THURSTON WA............... 53067 1.90
WAHKIAKUM WA............... 53069 1.90
WALLA WALLA WA............... 53071 1.75
WHATCOM WA............... 53073 1.90
WHITMAN WA............... 53075 1.90
YAKIMA WA............... 53077 1.75
ADAMS WI............... 55001 1.70
ASHLAND WI............... 55003 1.70
BARRON WI............... 55005 1.70
BAYFIELD WI............... 55007 1.70
BROWN WI............... 55009 1.75
BUFFALO WI............... 55011 1.70
BURNETT WI............... 55013 1.70
CALUMET WI............... 55015 1.75
CHIPPEWA WI............... 55017 1.70
CLARK WI............... 55019 1.70
COLUMBIA WI............... 55021 1.75
CRAWFORD WI............... 55023 1.75
DANE WI............... 55025 1.75
DODGE WI............... 55027 1.75
DOOR WI............... 55029 1.75
DOUGLAS WI............... 55031 1.70
DUNN WI............... 55033 1.70
EAU CLAIRE WI............... 55035 1.70
FLORENCE WI............... 55037 1.70
FOND DU LAC WI............... 55039 1.75
FOREST WI............... 55041 1.70
GRANT WI............... 55043 1.75
GREEN WI............... 55045 1.75
GREEN LAKE WI............... 55047 1.70
IOWA WI............... 55049 1.75
IRON WI............... 55051 1.70
JACKSON WI............... 55053 1.70
JEFFERSON WI............... 55055 1.75
JUNEAU WI............... 55057 1.70
KENOSHA WI............... 55059 1.75
KEWAUNEE WI............... 55061 1.75
LA CROSSE WI............... 55063 1.70
LAFAYETTE WI............... 55065 1.75
LANGLADE WI............... 55067 1.70
LINCOLN WI............... 55069 1.70
MANITOWOC WI............... 55071 1.75
MARATHON WI............... 55073 1.70
MARINETTE WI............... 55075 1.70
MARQUETTE WI............... 55077 1.70
MENOMINEE WI............... 55078 1.70
MILWAUKEE WI............... 55079 1.75
MONROE WI............... 55081 1.70
OCONTO WI............... 55083 1.70
ONEIDA WI............... 55085 1.70
OUTAGAMIE WI............... 55087 1.75
OZAUKEE WI............... 55089 1.75
PEPIN WI............... 55091 1.70
PIERCE WI............... 55093 1.70
POLK WI............... 55095 1.70
PORTAGE WI............... 55097 1.70
PRICE WI............... 55099 1.70
RACINE WI............... 55101 1.75
RICHLAND WI............... 55103 1.75
ROCK WI............... 55105 1.75
RUSK WI............... 55107 1.70
SAUK WI............... 55111 1.75
SAWYER WI............... 55113 1.70
SHAWANO WI............... 55115 1.70
SHEBOYGAN WI............... 55117 1.75
ST. CROIX WI............... 55109 1.70
TAYLOR WI............... 55119 1.70
TREMPEALEAU WI............... 55121 1.70
VERNON WI............... 55123 1.75
VILAS WI............... 55125 1.70
WALWORTH WI............... 55127 1.75
WASHBURN WI............... 55129 1.70
WASHINGTON WI............... 55131 1.75
WAUKESHA WI............... 55133 1.75
WAUPACA WI............... 55135 1.75
WAUSHARA WI............... 55137 1.70
WINNEBAGO WI............... 55139 1.75
WOOD WI............... 55141 1.70
BARBOUR WV............... 54001 2.30
BERKELEY WV............... 54003 2.60
BOONE WV............... 54005 2.20
BRAXTON WV............... 54007 2.20
[[Page 43]]
BROOKE WV............... 54009 2.10
CABELL WV............... 54011 2.20
CALHOUN WV............... 54013 2.20
CLAY WV............... 54015 2.20
DODDRIDGE WV............... 54017 2.10
FAYETTE WV............... 54019 2.20
GILMER WV............... 54021 2.20
GRANT WV............... 54023 2.60
GREENBRIER WV............... 54025 2.20
HAMPSHIRE WV............... 54027 2.60
HANCOCK WV............... 54029 2.10
HARDY WV............... 54031 2.60
HARRISON WV............... 54033 2.10
JACKSON WV............... 54035 2.20
JEFFERSON WV............... 54037 2.60
KANAWHA WV............... 54039 2.20
LEWIS WV............... 54041 2.10
LINCOLN WV............... 54043 2.20
LOGAN WV............... 54045 2.20
MARION WV............... 54049 2.10
MARSHALL WV............... 54051 2.10
MASON WV............... 54053 2.20
MCDOWELL WV............... 54047 2.80
MERCER WV............... 54055 2.80
MINERAL WV............... 54057 2.60
MINGO WV............... 54059 2.20
MONONGALIA WV............... 54061 2.10
MONROE WV............... 54063 2.20
MORGAN WV............... 54065 2.60
NICHOLAS WV............... 54067 2.20
OHIO WV............... 54069 2.10
PENDLETON WV............... 54071 2.60
PLEASANTS WV............... 54073 2.20
POCAHONTAS WV............... 54075 2.20
PRESTON WV............... 54077 2.30
PUTNAM WV............... 54079 2.20
RALEIGH WV............... 54081 2.20
RANDOLPH WV............... 54083 2.30
RITCHIE WV............... 54085 2.20
ROANE WV............... 54087 2.20
SUMMERS WV............... 54089 2.20
TAYLOR WV............... 54091 2.30
TUCKER WV............... 54093 2.30
TYLER WV............... 54095 2.10
UPSHUR WV............... 54097 2.30
WAYNE WV............... 54099 2.20
WEBSTER WV............... 54101 2.20
WETZEL WV............... 54103 2.10
WIRT WV............... 54105 2.20
WOOD WV............... 54107 2.20
WYOMING WV............... 54109 2.20
ALBANY WY............... 56001 1.90
BIG HORN WY............... 56003 1.60
CAMPBELL WY............... 56005 1.65
CARBON WY............... 56007 1.90
CONVERSE WY............... 56009 1.70
CROOK WY............... 56011 1.65
FREMONT WY............... 56013 1.60
GOSHEN WY............... 56015 1.90
HOT SPRINGS WY............... 56017 1.60
JOHNSON WY............... 56019 1.65
LARAMIE WY............... 56021 2.45
LINCOLN WY............... 56023 1.60
NATRONA WY............... 56025 1.70
NIOBRARA WY............... 56027 1.70
PARK WY............... 56029 1.60
PLATTE WY............... 56031 1.90
SHERIDAN WY............... 56033 1.60
SUBLETTE WY............... 56035 1.60
SWEETWATER WY............... 56037 1.90
TETON WY............... 56039 1.60
UINTA WY............... 56041 1.90
WASHAKIE WY............... 56043 1.60
WESTON WY............... 56045 1.70
------------------------------------------------------------------------
[64 FR 70869, Dec. 17, 1999; 64 FR 73386, Dec. 30, 1999, as amended at
68 FR 48771, Aug. 15, 2003]
Sec. 1000.53 Announcement of class prices, component prices, and
advanced pricing factors.
(a) On or before the 5th day of the month, the market administrator
for each Federal milk marketing order shall announce the following
prices (as applicable to that order) for the preceding month:
(1) The Class II price;
(2) The Class II butterfat price;
(3) The Class III price;
(4) The Class III skim milk price;
(5) The Class IV price;
(6) The Class IV skim milk price;
(7) The butterfat price;
(8) The nonfat solids price;
(9) The protein price;
(10) The other solids price; and
(11) The somatic cell adjustment rate.
(b) On or before the 23rd day of the month, the market administrator
for each Federal milk marketing order shall announce the following
prices and pricing factors for the following month:
(1) The Class I price;
(2) The Class I skim milk price;
(3) The Class I butterfat price;
(4) The Class II skim milk price;
(5) The Class II nonfat solids price; and
(6) The advanced pricing factors described in Sec. 1000.50(q).
Sec. 1000.54 Equivalent price.
If for any reason a price or pricing constituent required for
computing the prices described in Sec. 1000.50 is not available, the
market administrator shall use a price or pricing constituent determined
by the Deputy Administrator, Dairy Programs, Agricultural Marketing
Service, to be equivalent to the price or pricing constituent that is
required.
[[Page 44]]
Subpart H_Payments for Milk
Sec. 1000.70 Producer-settlement fund.
The market administrator shall establish and maintain a separate
fund known as the producer-settlement fund into which the market
administrator shall deposit all payments made by handlers pursuant to
Sec. Sec. --------.71, --------.76, and --------.77 of each Federal
milk order and out of which the market administrator shall make all
payments pursuant to Sec. Sec. --------.72 and --------.77 of each
Federal milk order. Payments due any handler shall be offset by any
payments due from that handler.
Sec. 1000.76 Payments by a handler operating a partially regulated
distributing plant.
On or before the 25th day after the end of the month (except as
provided in Sec. 1000.90), the operator of a partially regulated
distributing plant, other than a plant that is subject to marketwide
pooling of producer returns under a State government's milk
classification and pricing program, shall pay to the market
administrator for the producer-settlement fund the amount computed
pursuant to paragraph (a) of this section or, if the handler submits the
information specified in Sec. Sec. --------.30(b) and --------.31(b) of
the order, the handler may elect to pay the amount computed pursuant to
paragraph (b) of this section. A partially regulated distributing plant
that is subject to marketwide pooling of producer returns under a State
government's milk classification and pricing program shall pay the
amount computed pursuant to paragraph (c) of this section.
(a) The payment under this paragraph shall be an amount resulting
from the following computations:
(1) From the plant's route disposition in the marketing area:
(i) Subtract receipts of fluid milk products classified as Class I
milk from pool plants, plants fully regulated under other Federal
orders, and handlers described in Sec. 1000.9(c) and Sec. 1135.11 of
this chapter, except those receipts subtracted under a similar provision
of another Federal milk order;
(ii) Subtract receipts of fluid milk products from another nonpool
plant that is not a plant fully regulated under another Federal order to
the extent that an equivalent amount of fluid milk products disposed of
to the nonpool plant by handlers fully regulated under any Federal order
is classified and priced as Class I milk and is not used as an offset
for any payment obligation under any order; and
(iii) Subtract the pounds of reconstituted milk made from nonfluid
milk products which are disposed of as route disposition in the
marketing area;
(2) For orders with multiple component pricing, compute a Class I
differential price by subtracting Class III price from the current
month's Class I price. Multiply the pounds remaining after the
computation in paragraph (a)(1)(iii) of this section by the amount by
which the Class I differential price exceeds the producer price
differential, both prices to be applicable at the location of the
partially regulated distributing plant except that neither the adjusted
Class I differential price nor the adjusted producer price differential
shall be less than zero;
(3) For orders with skim milk and butterfat pricing, multiply the
remaining pounds by the amount by which the Class I price exceeds the
uniform price, both prices to be applicable at the location of the
partially regulated distributing plant except that neither the adjusted
Class I price nor the adjusted uniform price differential shall be less
than the lowest announced class price; and
(4) Unless the payment option described in paragraph (d) is
selected, add the amount obtained from multiplying the pounds of labeled
reconstituted milk included in paragraph (a)(1)(iii) of this section by
any positive difference between the Class I price applicable at the
location of the partially regulated distributing plant (less $1.00 if
the reconstituted milk is labeled as such) and the Class IV price.
(b) The payment under this paragraph shall be the amount resulting
from the following computations:
(1) Determine the value that would have been computed pursuant to
Sec. --------.60 of the order for the partially regulated distributing
plant if
[[Page 45]]
the plant had been a pool plant, subject to the following modifications:
(i) Fluid milk products and bulk fluid cream products received at
the plant from a pool plant, a plant fully regulated under another
Federal order, and handlers described in Sec. 1000.9(c) and Sec.
1135.11 of this chapter shall be allocated at the partially regulated
distributing plant to the same class in which such products were
classified at the fully regulated plant;
(ii) Fluid milk products and bulk fluid cream products transferred
from the partially regulated distributing plant to a pool plant or a
plant fully regulated under another Federal order shall be classified at
the partially regulated distributing plant in the class to which
allocated at the fully regulated plant. Such transfers shall be
allocated to the extent possible to those receipts at the partially
regulated distributing plant from the pool plant and plants fully
regulated under other Federal orders that are classified in the
corresponding class pursuant to paragraph (b)(1)(i) of this section. Any
such transfers remaining after the above allocation which are in Class I
and for which a value is computed pursuant to Sec. --------.60 of the
order for the partially regulated distributing plant shall be priced at
the statistical uniform price or uniform price, whichever is applicable,
of the respective order regulating the handling of milk at the receiving
plant, with such statistical uniform price or uniform price adjusted to
the location of the nonpool plant (but not to be less than the lowest
announced class price of the respective order); and
(iii) If the operator of the partially regulated distributing plant
so requests, the handler's value of milk determined pursuant to Sec. --
------.60 of the order shall include a value of milk determined for each
nonpool plant that is not a plant fully regulated under another Federal
order which serves as a supply plant for the partially regulated
distributing plant by making shipments to the partially regulated
distributing plant during the month equivalent to the requirements of
Sec. --------. 7(c) of the order subject to the following conditions:
(A) The operator of the partially regulated distributing plant
submits with its reports filed pursuant to Sec. Sec. --------.30(b) and
--------.31(b) of the order similar reports for each such nonpool supply
plant;
(B) The operator of the nonpool plant maintains books and records
showing the utilization of all skim milk and butterfat received at the
plant which are made available if requested by the market administrator
for verification purposes; and
(C) The value of milk determined pursuant to Sec. --------.60 for
the unregulated supply plant shall be determined in the same manner
prescribed for computing the obligation of the partially regulated
distributing plant; and
(2) From the partially regulated distributing plant's value of milk
computed pursuant to paragraph (b)(1) of this section, subtract:
(i) The gross payments that were made for milk that would have been
producer milk had the plant been fully regulated;
(ii) If paragraph (b)(1)(iii) of this section applies, the gross
payments by the operator of the nonpool supply plant for milk received
at the plant during the month that would have been producer milk if the
plant had been fully regulated; and
(iii) The payments by the operator of the partially regulated
distributing plant to the producer-settlement fund of another Federal
order under which the plant is also a partially regulated distributing
plant and, if paragraph (b)(1)(iii) of this section applies, payments
made by the operator of the nonpool supply plant to the producer-
settlement fund of any order.
(c) The operator of a partially regulated distributing plant that is
subject to marketwide pooling of returns under a milk classification and
pricing program that is imposed under the authority of a State
government shall pay on or before the 25th day after the end of the
month (except as provided in Sec. 1000.90) to the market administrator
for the producer-settlement fund an amount computed as follows:
After completing the computations described in paragraphs (a)(1)(i)
and (ii) of this section, determine the value of the remaining pounds of
fluid milk
[[Page 46]]
products disposed of as route disposition in the marketing area by
multiplying the hundredweight of such pounds by the amount, if greater
than zero, that remains after subtracting the State program's class
prices applicable to such products at the plant's location from the
Federal order Class I price applicable at the location of the plant.
(d) Any handler may elect partially regulated distributing plant
status for any plant with respect to receipts of nonfluid milk
ingredients that are reconstituted for fluid use. Payments may be made
to the producer-settlement fund of the order regulating the producer
milk used to produce the nonfluid milk ingredients at the positive
difference between the Class I price applicable under the other order at
the location of the plant where the nonfluid milk ingredients were
processed and the Class IV price. This payment option shall apply only
if a majority of the total milk received at the plant that processed the
nonfluid milk ingredients is regulated under one or more Federal orders
and payment may only be made to the producer-settlement fund of the
order pricing a plurality of the milk used to produce the nonfluid milk
ingredients. This payment option shall not apply if the source of the
nonfluid ingredients used in reconstituted fluid milk products cannot be
determined by the market administrator.
Sec. 1000.77 Adjustment of accounts.
Whenever audit by the market administrator of any handler's reports,
books, records, or accounts, or other verification discloses errors
resulting in money due the market administrator from a handler, or due a
handler from the market administrator, or due a producer or cooperative
association from a handler, the market administrator shall promptly
notify such handler of any amount so due and payment thereof shall be
made on or before the next date for making payments as set forth in the
provisions under which the error(s) occurred.
Sec. 1000.78 Charges on overdue accounts.
Any unpaid obligation due the market administrator, producers, or
cooperative associations from a handler pursuant to the provisions of
the order shall be increased 1.0 percent each month beginning with the
day following the date such obligation was due under the order. Any
remaining amount due shall be increased at the same rate on the
corresponding day of each succeeding month until paid. The amounts
payable pursuant to this section shall be computed monthly on each
unpaid obligation and shall include any unpaid charges previously
computed pursuant to this section. The late charges shall accrue to the
administrative assessment fund. For the purpose of this section, any
obligation that was determined at a date later than prescribed by the
order because of a handler's failure to submit a report to the market
administrator when due shall be considered to have been payable by the
date it would have been due if the report had been filed when due.
Subpart I_Administrative Assessment and Marketing Service Deduction
Sec. 1000.85 Assessment for order administration.
On or before the payment receipt date specified under Sec. ------
--.71 of each Federal milk order each handler shall pay to the market
administrator its pro rata share of the expense of administration of the
order at a rate specified by the market administrator that is no more
than 5 cents per hundredweight with respect to:
(a) Receipts of producer milk (including the handler's own
production) other than such receipts by a handler described in Sec.
1000.9(c) that were delivered to pool plants of other handlers;
(b) Receipts from a handler described in Sec. 1000.9(c);
(c) Receipts of concentrated fluid milk products from unregulated
supply plants and receipts of nonfluid milk products assigned to Class I
use pursuant to Sec. 1000.43(d) and other source milk allocated to
Class I pursuant to
[[Page 47]]
Sec. 1000.44(a) (3) and (8) and the corresponding steps of Sec.
1000.44(b), except other source milk that is excluded from the
computations pursuant to Sec. --------.60 (d) and (e) of parts 1005,
1006, and 1007 of this chapter or Sec. --------.60 (h) and (i) of parts
1001, 1030, 1032, 1033, 1124, 1126, 1131, and 1135 of this chapter; and
(d) Route disposition in the marketing area from a partially
regulated distributing plant that exceeds the skim milk and butterfat
subtracted pursuant to Sec. 1000.76(a)(1) (i) and (ii).
Sec. 1000.86 Deduction for marketing services.
(a) Except as provided in paragraph (b) of this section, each
handler in making payments to producers for milk (other than milk of
such handler's own production) pursuant to Sec. --------.73 of each
Federal milk order shall deduct an amount specified by the market
administrator that is no more than 7 cents per hundredweight and shall
pay the amount deducted to the market administrator not later than the
payment receipt date specified under Sec. --------.71 of each Federal
milk order. The money shall be used by the market administrator to
verify or establish weights, samples and tests of producer milk and
provide market information for producers who are not receiving such
services from a cooperative association. The services shall be performed
in whole or in part by the market administrator or an agent engaged by
and responsible to the market administrator.
(b) In the case of producers for whom the market administrator has
determined that a cooperative association is actually performing the
services set forth in paragraph (a) of this section, each handler shall
make deductions from the payments to be made to producers as may be
authorized by the membership agreement or marketing contract between the
cooperative association and the producers. On or before the 15th day
after the end of the month (except as provided in Sec. 1000.90), such
deductions shall be paid to the cooperative association rendering the
services accompanied by a statement showing the amount of any deductions
and the amount of milk for which the deduction was computed for each
producer. These deductions shall be made in lieu of the deduction
specified in paragraph (a) of this section.
Subpart J_Miscellaneous Provisions
Sec. 1000.90 Dates.
If a date required for a payment contained in a Federal milk order
falls on a Saturday, Sunday, or national holiday, such payment will be
due on the next day that the market administrator's office is open for
public business.
Sec. Sec. 1000.91-1000.92 [Reserved]
Sec. 1000.93 OMB control number assigned pursuant to the Paperwork
Reduction Act.
The information collection requirements contained in this part have
been approved by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) under the
provisions of Title 44 U.S.C. chapter 35 and have been assigned OMB
control number 0581-0032.
PART 1001_MILK IN THE NORTHEAST MARKETING AREA--Table of Contents
Subpart_Order Regulating Handling
General Provisions
Sec.
1001.1 General provisions.
Definitions
1001.2 Northeast marketing area.
1001.3 Route disposition.
1001.4 Plant.
1001.5 Distributing plant.
1001.6 Supply plant.
1001.7 Pool plant.
1001.8 Nonpool plant.
1001.9 Handler.
1001.10 Producer-handler.
1001.11 [Reserved]
1001.12 Producer.
1001.13 Producer milk.
1001.14 Other source milk.
1001.15 Fluid milk product.
1001.16 Fluid cream product.
1001.17 [Reserved]
1001.18 Cooperative association.
1001.19 Commercial food processing establishment.
Handler Reports
1001.30 Reports of receipts and utilization.
[[Page 48]]
1001.31 Payroll reports.
1001.32 Other reports.
Classification of Milk
1001.40 Classes of utilization.
1001.41 [Reserved]
1001.42 Classification of transfers and diversions.
1001.43 General classification rules.
1001.44 Classification of producer milk.
1001.45 Market administrator's reports and announcements concerning
classification.
Class Prices
1001.50 Class prices, component prices, and advanced pricing factors.
1001.51 Class I differential and price.
1001.52 Adjusted Class I differentials.
1001.53 Announcement of class prices, component prices, and advanced
pricing factors.
1001.54 Equivalent price.
Producer Price Differential
1001.60 Handler's value of milk.
1001.61 Computation of producer price differential.
1001.62 Announcement of producer prices.
Payments for Milk
1001.70 Producer-settlement fund.
1001.71 Payments to the producer-settlement fund.
1001.72 Payments from the producer--settlement fund.
1001.73 Payments to producers and to cooperative associations.
1001.74 [Reserved]
1001.75 Plant location adjustments for producer milk and nonpool milk.
1001.76 Payments by a handler operating a partially regulated
distributing plant.
1001.77 Adjustment of accounts.
1001.78 Charges on overdue accounts.
Administrative Assessment and Marketing Service Deduction
1001.85 Assessment for order administration.
1001.86 Deduction for marketing services.
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 601-674, and 7253.
Source: 64 FR 47954, Sept. 1, 1999, unless otherwise noted.
Subpart_Order Regulating Handling
General Provisions
Sec. 1001.1 General provisions.
The terms, definitions, and provisions in part 1000 of this chapter
apply to this part 1001. In this part 1001, all references to sections
in part 1000 refer to part 1000 of this chapter.
Definitions
Sec. 1001.2 Northeast marketing area.
The marketing area means all the territory within the bounds of the
following states and political subdivisions, including all piers, docks
and wharves connected therewith and all craft moored thereat, and all
territory occupied by government (municipal, State or Federal)
reservations, installations, institutions, or other similar
establishments if any part thereof is within any of the listed states or
political subdivisions:
Connecticut, Delaware, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, Rhode
Island, Vermont and District of Columbia
All of the States of Connecticut, Delaware, Massachusetts, New
Hampshire, New Jersey, Rhode Island, Vermont and the District of
Columbia.
Maryland Counties
All of the State of Maryland except the counties of Allegany and
Garrett.
New York Counties, Cities, and Townships
All counties within the State of New York except Allegany,
Cattaraugus, Chatauqua, Erie, Genessee, Livingston, Monroe, Niagara,
Ontario, Orleans, Seneca, Wayne, and Wyoming; the townships of Conquest,
Montezuma, Sterling and Victory in Cayuga County; the city of Hornell,
and the townships of Avoca, Bath, Bradford, Canisteo, Cohocton,
Dansville, Fremont, Pulteney, Hartsville, Hornellsville, Howard,
Prattsburg, Urbana, Wayland, Wayne and Wheeler in Steuben County; and
the townships of Italy, Middlesex, and Potter in Yates County.
Pennsylvania Counties
Adams, Bucks, Chester, Cumberland, Dauphin, Delaware, Franklin,
Fulton, Juniata, Lancaster, Lebanon, Montgomery, Perry, Philadelphia,
and York.
Virginia Counties and Cities
Arlington, Fairfax, Loudoun, and Prince William, and the cities of
Alexandria, Fairfax, Falls Church, Manassas, and Manassas Park.
Sec. 1001.3 Route disposition.
See Sec. 1000.3.
[[Page 49]]
Sec. 1001.4 Plant.
(a) Except as provided in paragraph (b) of this section, plant means
the land, buildings, facilities, and equipment constituting a single
operating unit or establishment at which milk or milk products are
received, processed, or packaged, including a facility described in
paragraph (b)(2) of this section if the facility receives the milk of
more than one dairy farmer.
(b) Plant shall not include:
(1) A separate building without stationary storage tanks that is
used only as a reload point for transferring bulk milk from one tank
truck to another or a separate building used only as a distribution
point for storing packaged fluid milk products in transit for route
disposition;
(2) An on-farm facility operated as part of a single dairy farm
entity for the separation of cream and skim milk or the removal of water
from milk; or
(3) Bulk reload points where milk is transferred from one tank truck
to another while en route from dairy farmers' farms to a plant. If
stationary storage tanks are used for transferring milk at the premises,
the operator of the facility shall make an advance written request to
the market administrator that the facility shall be treated as a reload
point. The cooling of milk, collection of samples, and washing and
sanitizing of tank trucks at the premises shall not disqualify it as a
bulk reload point.
Sec. 1001.5 Distributing plant.
See Sec. 1000.5.
Sec. 1001.6 Supply plant.
See Sec. 1000.6.
Sec. 1001.7 Pool plant.
Pool plant means a plant, unit of plants, or system of plants as
specified in paragraphs (a) through (f) of this section, but excluding a
plant described in paragraph (h) of this section. The pooling standards
described in paragraphs (c) and (f) of this section are subject to
modification pursuant to paragraph (g) of this section.
(a) A distributing plant, other than a plant qualified as a pool
plant pursuant to paragraph (b) of this section or Sec. --------.7(b)
of any other Federal milk order, from which during the month 25 percent
or more of the total quantity of fluid milk products physically received
at the plant (excluding concentrated milk received from another plant by
agreement for other than Class I use) are disposed of as route
disposition or are transferred in the form of packaged fluid milk
products to other distributing plants. At least 25 percent of such route
disposition and transfers must be to outlets in the marketing area.
(b) Any distributing plant located in the marketing area which
during the month processed at least 25 percent of the total quantity of
fluid milk products physically received at the plant (excluding
concentrated milk received from another plant by agreement for other
than Class I use) into ultra-pasteurized or aseptically-processed fluid
milk products.
(c) A supply plant from which fluid milk products are transferred or
diverted to plants described in paragraph (a) or (b) of this section
subject to the additional conditions described in this paragraph. In the
case of a supply plant operated by a cooperative association handler
described in Sec. 1000.9(c), fluid milk products that the cooperative
delivers to pool plants directly from producers' farms shall be treated
as if transferred from the cooperative association's plant for the
purpose of meeting the shipping requirements of this paragraph.
(1) In each of the months of January through August and December,
such shipments and transfers to distributing plants must not equal less
than 10 percent of the total quantity of milk (except the milk of a
producer described in Sec. 1001.12(b)) that is received at the plant or
diverted from it pursuant to Sec. 1001.13 during the month;
(2) In each of the months of September through November, such
shipments and transfers to distributing plants must equal not less than
20 percent of the total quantity of milk (except the milk of a producer
described in Sec. 1001.12(b)) that is received at the plant or diverted
from it pursuant to Sec. 1001.13 during the month;
[[Page 50]]
(3) If milk is delivered directly from producers' farms that are
located outside of the states included in the marketing area or outside
Maine or West Virginia, such producers must be grouped by state into
reporting units and each reporting unit must independently meet the
shipping requirements of this paragraph; and
(4) Concentrated milk transferred from the supply plant to a
distributing plant for an agreed-upon use other than Class I shall be
excluded from the supply plant's shipments in computing the percentages
in paragraphs (c)(1) and (2) of this section.
(d) Any distributing plant, located within the marketing area as
described on May 1, 2006, in Sec. 1001.2;
(1) From which there is route disposition and/or transfers of
packaged fluid milk products in any non-Federally regulated marketing
area(s) located within one or more States that require handlers to pay
minimum prices for raw milk provided that 25 percent or more of the
total quantity of fluid milk products physically received at such plant
(excluding concentrated milk received from another plant by agreement
for other than Class I use) is disposed of as route disposition and/or
is transferred in the form of packaged fluid milk products to other
plants. At least 25 percent of such route disposition and/or transfers,
in aggregate, are in any non-Federally regulated marketing area(s)
located within one or more States that require handlers to pay minimum
prices for raw milk. Subject to the following exclusions:
(i) The plant is described in Sec. 1001.7(a), (b), or (e);
(ii) The plant is subject to the pricing provisions of a State-
operated milk pricing plan which provides for the payment of minimum
class prices for raw milk;
(iii) The plant is described in Sec. 1000.8(a) or (e); or
(iv) A producer-handler described in Sec. 1001.10 with less than
three million pounds during the month of route dispositions and/or
transfers of packaged fluid milk products to other plants.
(2) [Reserved]
(e) Two or more plants that are located in the marketing area and
operated by the same handler may qualify as a unit by meeting the total
and in-area route distribution requirements specified in paragraph (a)
of this section subject to the following additional requirements:
(1) At least one of the plants in the unit qualifies as a pool
distributing plant pursuant to paragraph (a) of this section;
(2) Other plants in the unit must process at least 60 percent of
monthly receipts of producer milk only as Class I or Class II products
and must be located in the Northeast marketing area, as defined in Sec.
1001.2, in a pricing zone providing the same or a lower Class I price
than the price applicable at the distributing plant(s) included in the
unit; and
(3) A written request to form a unit, or to add or remove plants
from a unit, or to cancel a unit, must be filed with the market
administrator prior to the first day of the month for which unit
formation is to be effective.
(f) Two or more supply plants operated by the same handler, or by
one or more cooperative associations, may qualify for pooling as a
system of plants by meeting the applicable percentage requirements of
paragraph (c) of this section in the same manner as a single plant
subject to the following additional requirements:
(1) A supply plant system will be effective for the period of August
1 through July 31 of the following year. Written notification must be
given to the market administrator listing the plants to be included in
the system prior to the first day of July preceding the effective date
of the system. The plants included in the system shall be listed in the
sequence in which they shall qualify for pool plant status based on the
minimum deliveries required. If the deliveries made are insufficient to
qualify the entire system for pooling, the last listed plant shall be
excluded from the system, followed by the plant next-to-last on the
list, and continuing in this sequence until remaining listed plants have
met the minimum shipping requirements; and
(2) Each plant that qualifies as a pool plant within a system shall
continue each month as a plant in the system through the following July
unless the plant subsequently fails to qualify for
[[Page 51]]
pooling, the handler submits a written notification to the market
administrator prior to the first day of the month that the plant be
deleted from the system, or that the system be discontinued. Any plant
that has been so deleted from the system, or that has failed to qualify
as a pool plant in any month, will not be part of the system for the
remaining months through July. For any system that qualifies in August,
no plant may be added in any subsequent month through the following July
unless the plant replaces another plant in the system that has ceased
operations and the market administrator is notified of such replacement
prior to the first day of the month for which it is to be effective.
(g) The applicable shipping percentages of paragraphs (c) and (f) of
this section may be increased or decreased by the market administrator
if the market administrator finds that such adjustment is necessary to
encourage needed shipments or to prevent uneconomic shipments. Before
making such a finding, the market administrator shall investigate the
need for adjustment either on the market administrator's own initiative
or at the request of interested parties if the request is made in
writing at least 15 days prior to the month for which the requested
revision is desired effective. If the investigation shows that an
adjustment of the shipping percentages might be appropriate, the market
administrator shall issue a notice stating that an adjustment is being
considered and invite data, views and arguments. Any decision to revise
an applicable shipping percentage must be issued in writing at least one
day before the effective date.
(h) The term pool plant shall not apply to the following plants:
(1) A producer-handler plant;
(2) An exempt plant as defined in Sec. 1000.8(e);
(3) A plant qualified pursuant to paragraph (a) of this section that
is located within the marketing area if the plant also meets the pooling
requirements of another Federal order and more than 50 percent of its
route distribution has been in such other Federal order marketing area
for 3 consecutive months;
(4) A plant qualified pursuant to paragraph (a) of this section
which is not located within any Federal order marketing area that meets
the pooling requirements of another Federal order and has had greater
route disposition in such other Federal order's marketing area for 3
consecutive months;
(5) A plant qualified pursuant to paragraph (a) of this section that
is located in another Federal order marketing area if the plant meets
the pooling requirements of such other Federal order and does not have a
majority of its route distribution in this marketing area for 3
consecutive months or if the plant is required to be regulated under
such other Federal order without regard to its route disposition in any
other Federal order marketing area; and
(6) A plant qualified pursuant to paragraph (c) of this section
which also meets the pooling requirements of another Federal order and
from which greater qualifying shipments are made to plants regulated
under the other Federal order than are made to plants regulated under
the order in this part, or the plant has automatic pooling status under
the other Federal order.
[64 FR 47954, Sept. 1, 1999, as amended at 70 FR 18962, Apr. 12, 2005;
71 FR 25497, May 1, 2006; 71 FR 28249, May 16, 2006]
Sec. 1001.8 Nonpool plant.
See Sec. 1000.8.
Sec. 1001.9 Handler.
See Sec. 1000.9.
Sec. 1001.10 Producer-handler.
Producer-handler means a person who:
(a) Operates a dairy farm and a distributing plant from which there
is route disposition in the marketing area, and from which total route
disposition and packaged sales of fluid milk products to other plants
during the month does not exceed 3 million pounds;
(b) Receives milk solely from own farm production or receives milk
that is fully subject to the pricing and pooling provisions of this or
any other Federal order;
(c) Receives at its plant or acquires for route disposition no more
than 150,000 pounds of fluid milk products
[[Page 52]]
from handlers fully regulated under any Federal order. This limitation
shall not apply if the producer-handler's own farm production is less
than 150,000 pounds during the month;
(d) Disposes of no other source milk as Class I milk except by
increasing the nonfat milk solids content of the fluid milk products;
and
(e) Provides proof satisfactory to the market administrator that the
care and management of the dairy animals and other resources necessary
to produce all Class I milk handled (excluding receipts from handlers
fully regulated under any Federal order) and the processing and
packaging operations are the producer-handler's own enterprise and at
its own risk.
(f) Any producer-handler with Class I route dispositions and/or
transfers of packaged fluid milk products in the marketing area
described in Sec. 1131.2 of this chapter shall be subject to payments
into the Order 1131 producer settlement fund on such dispositions
pursuant to Sec. 1000.76(a) and payments into the Order 1131
administrative fund provided such dispositions are less than three
million pounds in the current month and such producer-handler had total
Class I route dispositions and/or transfers of packaged fluid milk
products from own farm production of three million pounds or more the
previous month. If the producer-handler has Class I route dispositions
and/or transfers of packaged fluid milk products into the marketing area
described in Sec. 1131.2 of this chapter of three million pounds or
more during the current month, such producer-handler shall be subject to
the provisions described in Sec. 1131.7 of this chapter or Sec.
1000.76(a).
[64 FR 47954, Sept. 1, 1999, as amended at 71 FR 25497, May 1, 2006; 75
FR 21160, Apr. 23, 2010]
Sec. 1001.11 [Reserved]
Sec. 1001.12 Producer.
(a) Except as provided in paragraph (b) of this section, producer
means any person who produces milk approved by a duly constituted
regulatory agency for fluid consumption as Grade A milk and whose milk
(or components of milk) is:
(1) Received at a pool plant directly from the producer or diverted
by the plant operator in accordance with Sec. 1001.13; or
(2) Received by a handler described in Sec. 1000.9(c).
(b) Producer shall not include a dairy farmer described in
paragraphs (b)(1) through (6) of this section. A dairy farmer described
in paragraphs (b)(5) or (6) of this section shall be known as a dairy
farmer for other markets.
(1) A producer-handler as defined in any Federal order;
(2) A dairy farmer whose milk is received at an exempt plant,
excluding producer milk diverted to the exempt plant pursuant to Sec.
1001.13(d);
(3) A dairy farmer whose milk is received by diversion at a pool
plant from a handler regulated under another Federal order if the other
Federal order designates the dairy farmer as a producer under that order
and that milk is allocated by request to a utilization other than Class
I;
(4) A dairy farmer whose milk is reported as diverted to a plant
fully regulated under another Federal order with respect to that portion
of the milk so diverted that is assigned to Class I under the provisions
of such other order;
(5) For any month of December through June, any dairy farmer whose
milk is received at a pool plant or by a cooperative association handler
described in Sec. 1000.9(c) if the pool plant operator or the
cooperative association caused milk from the same farm to be delivered
to any plant as other than producer milk, as defined under the order in
this part or any other Federal milk order, during the same month, either
of the 2 preceding months, or during any of the preceding months of July
through November; and
(6) For any month of July through November, any dairy farmer whose
milk is received at a pool plant or by a cooperative association handler
described in Sec. 1000.9(c) if the pool plant operator or the
cooperative association caused milk from the same farm to be delivered
to any plant as other than producer milk, as defined under the order in
this part or any other Federal milk order, during the same month.
[[Page 53]]
Sec. 1001.13 Producer milk.
Producer milk means the skim milk (or the skim equivalent of
components of skim milk) and butterfat contained in milk of a producer
that is:
(a) Received by the operator of a pool plant directly from a
producer or from a handler described in Sec. 1000.9(c). Any milk which
is picked up from the producer's farm in a tank truck under the control
of the operator of a pool plant or a handler described in Sec.
1000.9(c) but which is not received at a plant until the following month
shall be considered as having been received by the handler during the
month in which it is picked up at the farm. All milk received pursuant
to this paragraph shall be priced at the location of the plant where it
is first physically received;
(b) Received by the operator of a pool plant or a handler described
in Sec. 1000.9(c) in excess of the quantity delivered to pool plants
subject to the following conditions:
(1) The producers whose farms are outside of the states included in
the marketing area and outside the states of Maine or West Virginia
shall be organized into state units and each such unit shall be reported
separately; and
(2) For pooling purposes, each reporting unit must satisfy the
shipping standards specified for a supply plant pursuant to Sec.
1001.7(c);
(c) Diverted by a proprietary pool plant operator to another pool
plant. Milk so diverted shall be priced at the location of the plant to
which diverted; or
(d) Diverted by the operator of a pool plant or by a handler
described in Sec. 1000.9(c) to a nonpool plant, subject to the
following conditions:
(1) Milk of a dairy farmer shall not be eligible for diversion
unless one day's milk production of such dairy farmer was physically
received as producer milk and the dairy farmer has continuously retained
producer status since that time. If a dairy farmer loses producer status
under the order in this part (except as a result of a temporary loss of
Grade A approval), the dairy farmer's milk shall not be eligible for
diversion unless milk of the dairy farmer has been physically received
as producer milk at a pool plant during the month;
(2) Of the total quantity of producer milk received during the month
(including diversion but excluding the quantity of producer milk
received from a handler described in Sec. 1000.9(c) or which is
diverted to another pool plant), the handler diverted to nonpool plants
not more than 80 percent during each of the months of September through
November and 90 percent during each of the months of January through
August and December. In the event that a handler causes the milk of a
producer to be over diverted, a dairy farmer will not lose producer
status;
(3) Diverted milk shall be priced at the location of the plant to
which diverted.
(4) Any milk diverted in excess of the limits set forth in paragraph
(d)(2) of this section shall not be producer milk. The diverting handler
shall designate the dairy farmer deliveries that shall not be producer
milk. If the handler fails to designate the dairy farmer deliveries
which are ineligible, producer milk status shall be forfeited with
respect to all milk diverted to nonpool plants by such handler; and
(5) The delivery day requirement and the diversion percentages in
paragraphs (d)(1) and (d)(2) of this section may be increased or
decreased by the Market Administrator if the Market Administrator finds
that such revision is necessary to assure orderly marketing and
efficient handling of milk in the marketing area. Before making such a
finding, the Market Administrator shall investigate the need for the
revision either on the Market Administrator's own initiative or at the
request of interested persons if the request is made in writing at least
15 days prior to the month for which the requested revision is desired
to be effective. If the investigation shows that a revision might be
appropriate, the Market Administrator shall issue a notice stating that
the revision is being considered and inviting written data, views, and
arguments. Any decision to revise an applicable percentage or delivery
day requirement must be issued in writing at least one day before the
effective date.
(e) Producer milk shall not include milk of a producer that is
subject to inclusion and participation in a
[[Page 54]]
marketwide equalization pool under a milk classification and pricing
program imposed under the authority of another government entity.
[64 FR 47954, Sept. 1, 1999, as amended at 70 FR 18962, Apr. 12, 2005]
Sec. 1001.14 Other source milk.
See Sec. 1000.14.
Sec. 1001.15 Fluid milk product.
See Sec. 1000.15.
Sec. 1001.16 Fluid cream product.
See Sec. 1000.16.
Sec. 1001.17 [Reserved]
Sec. 1001.18 Cooperative association.
See Sec. 1000.18.
Sec. 1001.19 Commercial food processing establishment.
See Sec. 1000.19.
Handler Reports
Sec. 1001.30 Reports of receipts and utilization.
Each handler shall report monthly so that the Market Administrator's
office receives the report on or before the 10th day after the end of
the month, in the detail and on prescribed forms, as follows:
(a) Each pool plant operator shall report for each of its operations
the following information:
(1) Product pounds, pounds of butterfat, pounds of protein, and
pounds of nonfat solids other than protein (other solids) contained in
or represented by:
(i) Receipts of producer milk, including producer milk diverted by
the reporting handler, from sources other than handlers described in
Sec. 1000.9(c); and
(ii) Receipts of milk from handlers described in Sec. 1000.9(c);
(2) Product pounds and pounds of butterfat contained in:
(i) Receipts of fluid milk products and bulk fluid cream products
from other pool plants;
(ii) Receipts of other source milk; and
(iii) Inventories at the beginning and end of the month of fluid
milk products and bulk fluid cream products;
(3) The utilization or disposition of all milk and milk products
required to be reported pursuant to this paragraph; and
(4) Such other information with respect to the receipts and
utilization of skim milk, butterfat, milk protein, and other nonfat
solids as the market administrator may prescribe.
(b) Each handler operating a partially regulated distributing plant
shall report with respect to such plant in the same manner as prescribed
for reports required by paragraph (a) of this section. Receipts of milk
that would have been producer milk if the plant had been fully regulated
shall be reported in lieu of producer milk. The report shall show also
the quantity of any reconstituted skim milk in route disposition in the
marketing area.
(c) Each handler described in Sec. 1000.9(c) shall report:
(1) The product pounds, pounds of butterfat, pounds of protein, and
the pounds of solids-not-fat other than protein (other solids) contained
in receipts of milk from producers; and
(2) The utilization or disposition of such receipts.
(d) Each handler not specified in paragraph (a) or (b) of this
section shall report with respect to its receipts and utilization of
milk and milk products in such manner as the market administrator may
prescribe.
[64 FR 47954, Sept. 1, 1999, as amended at 70 FR 18963, Apr. 12, 2005]
Sec. 1001.31 Payroll reports.
(a) On or before the 22nd day after the end of each month, each
handler that operates a pool plant pursuant to Sec. 1001.7 and each
handler described in Sec. 1000.9(c) shall report to the market
administrator its producer payroll for the month, in detail prescribed
by the market administrator, showing for each producer the information
specified in Sec. 1001.73(e).
(b) Each handler operating a partially regulated distributing plant
who elects to make payment pursuant to Sec. 1000.76(b) shall report for
each dairy farmer who would have been a producer if the plant had been
fully regulated in the same manner as prescribed for reports required by
paragraph (a) of this section.
[[Page 55]]
Sec. 1001.32 Other reports.
In addition to the reports required pursuant to Sec. Sec. 1001.30
and 1001.31, each handler shall report any information the market
administrator deems necessary to verify or establish each handler's
obligation under the order.
Classification of Milk
Sec. 1001.40 Classes of utilization.
See Sec. 1000.40.
Sec. 1001.41 [Reserved]
Sec. 1001.42 Classification of transfers and diversions.
See Sec. 1000.42.
Sec. 1001.43 General classification rules.
See Sec. 1000.43.
Sec. 1001.44 Classification of producer milk.
See Sec. 1000.44.
Sec. 1001.45 Market administrator's reports and announcements
concerning classification.
See Sec. 1000.45.
Class Prices
Sec. 1001.50 Class prices, component prices, and advanced pricing factors.
See Sec. 1000.50.
Sec. 1001.51 Class I differential and price.
The Class I differential shall be the differential established for
Suffolk County, Massachusetts, which is reported in Sec. 1000.52. The
Class I price shall be the price computed pursuant to Sec. 1000.50(a)
for Suffolk County, Massachusetts.
Sec. 1001.52 Adjusted Class I differentials.
See Sec. 1000.52.
Sec. 1001.53 Announcement of class prices, component prices, and
advanced pricing factors.
See Sec. 1000.53.
Sec. 1001.54 Equivalent price.
See Sec. 1000.54.
Producer Price Differential
Sec. 1001.60 Handler's value of milk.
For the purpose of computing a handler's obligation for producer
milk, the market administrator shall determine for each month the value
of milk of each handler with respect to each of the handler's pool
plants and of each handler described in Sec. 1000.9(c) with respect to
milk that was not received at a pool plant by adding the amounts
computed in paragraphs (a) through (h) of this section and subtracting
from that total amount the value computed in paragraph (i) of this
section. Unless otherwise specified, the skim milk, butterfat, and the
combined pounds of skim milk and butterfat referred to in this section
shall result from the steps set forth in Sec. 1000.44(a), (b), and (c),
respectively, and the nonfat components of producer milk in each class
shall be based upon the proportion of such components in producer skim
milk. Receipts of nonfluid milk products that are distributed as labeled
reconstituted milk for which payments are made to the producer-
settlement fund of another Federal order under Sec. 1000.76(a)(4) or
(d) shall be excluded from pricing under this section.
(a) Class I value. (1) Multiply the pounds of skim milk in Class I
by the Class I skim milk price; and
(2) Add an amount obtained by multiplying the pounds of butterfat in
Class I by the Class I butterfat price.
(b) Class II value. (1) Multiply the pounds of nonfat solids in
Class II skim milk by the Class II nonfat solids price; and
(2) Add an amount obtained by multiplying the pounds of butterfat in
Class II times the Class II butterfat price.
(c) Class III value. (1) Multiply the pounds of protein in Class III
skim milk by the protein price;
(2) Add an amount obtained by multiplying the pounds of other solids
in Class III skim milk by the other solids price; and
(3) Add an amount obtained by multiplying the pounds of butterfat in
Class III by the butterfat price.
(d) Class IV value. (1) Multiply the pounds of nonfat solids in
Class IV skim milk by the nonfat solids price; and
[[Page 56]]
(2) Add an amount obtained by multiplying the pounds of butterfat in
Class IV by the butterfat price.
(e) Multiply the pounds of skim milk and butterfat overage assigned
to each class pursuant to Sec. 1000.44(a)(11) and the corresponding
step of Sec. 1000.44(b) by the skim milk prices and butterfat prices
applicable to each class.
(f) Multiply the difference between the current month's Class I, II,
or III price, as the case may be, and the Class IV price for the
preceding month by the hundredweight of skim milk and butterfat
subtracted from Class I, II, or III, respectively, pursuant to Sec.
1000.44(a)(7) and the corresponding step of Sec. 1000.44(b);
(g) Multiply the difference between the Class I price applicable at
the location of the pool plant and the Class IV price by the
hundredweight of skim milk and butterfat assigned to Class I pursuant to
Sec. 1000.43(d) and the hundredweight of skim milk and butterfat
subtracted from Class I pursuant to Sec. 1000.44(a)(3)(i) through (vi)
and the corresponding step of Sec. 1000.44(b), excluding receipts of
bulk fluid cream products from a plant regulated under other Federal
orders and bulk concentrated fluid milk products from pool plants,
plants regulated under other Federal orders, and unregulated supply
plants.
(h) Multiply the difference between the Class I price applicable at
the location of the nearest unregulated supply plants from which an
equivalent volume was received and the Class III price by the pounds of
skim milk and butterfat in receipts of concentrated fluid milk products
assigned to Class I pursuant to Sec. 1000.43(d) and Sec.
1000.44(a)(3)(i) and the corresponding step of Sec. 1000.44(b) and the
pounds of skim milk and butterfat subtracted from Class I pursuant to
Sec. 1000.44(a)(8) and the corresponding step of Sec. 1000.44(b),
excluding such skim milk and butterfat in receipts of fluid milk
products from an unregulated supply plant to the extent that an
equivalent amount of skim milk or butterfat disposed of to such plant by
handlers fully regulated under any Federal milk order is classified and
priced as Class I milk and is not used as an offset for any other
payment obligation under any order.
(i) For reconstituted milk made from receipts of nonfluid milk
products, multiply $1.00 (but not more than the difference between the
Class I price applicable at the location of the pool plant and the Class
IV price) by the hundredweight of skim milk and butterfat contained in
receipts of nonfluid milk products that are allocated to Class I use
pursuant to Sec. 1000.43(d).
[64 FR 47954, Sept. 1, 1999, as amended at 65 FR 82834, Dec. 28, 2000;
68 FR 7065, Feb. 12, 2003]
Sec. 1001.61 Computation of producer price differential.
For each month, the market administrator shall compute a producer
price differential per hundredweight. The report of any handler who has
not made payments required pursuant to Sec. 1001.71 for the preceding
month shall not be included in the computation of the producer price
differential, and such handler's report shall not be included in the
computation for succeeding months until the handler has made full
payment of outstanding monthly obligations. Subject to the conditions in
this paragraph, the market administrator shall compute the producer
price differential in the following manner:
(a) Combine into one total the values computed pursuant to Sec.
1001.60 for all handlers required to file reports prescribed in Sec.
1001.30;
(b) Subtract the total of the values obtained by multiplying each
handler's total pounds of protein, other solids, and butterfat contained
in the milk for which an obligation was computed pursuant to Sec.
1001.60 by the protein price, other solids price, and the butterfat
price, respectively;
(c) Add an amount equal to the minus location adjustments and
subtract an amount equal to the plus location adjustments computed
pursuant to Sec. 1001.75;
(d) Add an amount equal to not less than one-half of the unobligated
balance in the producer-settlement fund;
(e) Divide the resulting amount by the sum of the following for all
handlers included in these computations:
(1) The total hundredweight of producer milk; and
[[Page 57]]
(2) The total hundredweight for which a value is computed pursuant
to Sec. 1001.60(h); and
(f) Subtract not less than 4 cents nor more than 5 cents from the
price computed pursuant to paragraph (e) of this section. The result,
rounded to the nearest cent, shall be known as the producer price
differential for the month.
[68 FR 7065, Feb. 12, 2003]
Sec. 1001.62 Announcement of producer prices.
On or before the 14th day after the end of the month, the Market
Administrator shall announce the following prices and information:
(a) The producer price differential;
(b) The protein price;
(c) The nonfat solids price;
(d) The other solids price;
(e) The butterfat price;
(f) The average butterfat, protein, nonfat solids, and other solids
content of producer milk; and
(g) The statistical uniform price for milk containing 3.5 percent
butterfat computed by combining the Class III price and the producer
price differential.
(h) If the 14th falls on a Saturday, Sunday, or national holiday,
the Market Administrator may have up to two additional business days to
announce the producer price differential and the statistical uniform
price.
[64 FR 47954, Sept. 1, 1999, as amended at 65 FR 82834, Dec. 28, 2000;
68 FR 7065, Feb. 12, 2003; 70 FR 18963, Apr. 12, 2005]
Payments for Milk
Sec. 1001.70 Producer-settlement fund.
See Sec. 1000.70.
Sec. 1001.71 Payments to the producer-settlement fund.
Each handler shall make payment to the producer-settlement fund in a
manner that provides receipt of the funds by the Market Administrator no
later than two days after the announcement of the producer price
differential and the statistical uniform price pursuant to Sec. 1001.62
(except as provided for in Sec. 1000.90). Payment shall be the amount,
if any, by which the amount specified in paragraph (a) of this section
exceeds the amount specified in paragraph (b) of this section:
(a) The total value of milk to the handler for the month as
determined pursuant to Sec. 1001.60.
(b) The sum of:
(1) An amount obtained by multiplying the total hundredweight of
producer milk as determined pursuant to Sec. 1000.44(c) by the producer
price differential as adjusted pursuant to Sec. 1001.75;
(2) An amount obtained by multiplying the total pounds of protein,
other solids, and butterfat contained in producer milk by the protein,
other solids, and butterfat prices respectively; and
(3) An amount obtained by multiplying the pounds of skim milk and
butterfat for which a value was computed pursuant to Sec. 1001.60(h) by
the producer price differential as adjusted pursuant to Sec. 1001.75
for the location of the plant from which received.
[64 FR 47954, Sept. 1, 1999, as amended at 65 FR 82834, Dec. 28, 2000;
68 FR 7066, Feb. 12, 2003; 70 FR 18963, Apr. 12, 2005]
Sec. 1001.72 Payments from the producer--settlement fund.
No later than the day after the due date required for payment to the
Market Administrator pursuant to Sec. 1001.71 (except as provided in
Sec. 1001.90), the Market Administrator shall pay to each handler the
amount, if any, by which the amount computed pursuant to Sec.
1001.71(b) exceeds the amount computed pursuant to Sec. 1001.71(a). If,
at such time, the balance in the producer-settlement fund is
insufficient to make all payments pursuant to this section, the Market
Administrator shall reduce uniformly such payments and shall complete
the payments as soon as the funds are available.
[70 FR 18963, Apr. 12, 2005]
Sec. 1001.73 Payments to producers and to cooperative associations.
(a) Each handler that is not paying a cooperative association for
producer milk shall pay each producer as follows:
(1) Partial payment. For each producer who has not discontinued
shipments as of the 23rd day of the month, payment shall be made so that
it is received by
[[Page 58]]
the producer on or before the 26th day of the month (except as provided
in Sec. 1000.90) for milk received during the first 15 days of the
month at not less than the lowest announced class price for the
preceding month, less proper deductions authorized in writing by the
producer.
(2) Final payment. For milk received during the month, payment shall
be made during the following month so it is received by each producer no
later than the day after the required date of payment by the Market
Administrator, pursuant to Sec. 1001.72, in an amount computed as
follows:
(i) Multiply the hundredweight of producer milk received by the
producer price differential for the month as adjusted pursuant to Sec.
1001.75;
(ii) Multiply the pounds of butterfat received by the butterfat
price for the month;
(iii) Multiply the pounds of protein received by the protein price
for the month;
(iv) Multiply the pounds of other solids received by the other
solids price for the month; and
(v) Add the amounts computed in paragraphs (a)(2)(i) through (iv) of
this section, and from that sum:
(A) Subtract the partial payment made pursuant to paragraph (a)(1)
of this section;
(B) Subtract the deduction for marketing services pursuant to Sec.
1000.86;
(C) Add or subtract for errors made in previous payments to the
producer; and
(D) Subtract proper deductions authorized in writing by the
producer.
(b) One day before partial and final payments are due pursuant to
paragraph (a) of this section, each handler shall pay a cooperative
association for milk received as follows:
(1) Partial payment to a cooperative association for bulk milk
received directly from producers' farms. For bulk milk (including the
milk of producers who are not members of such association and who the
market administrator determines have authorized the cooperative
association to collect payment for their milk) received during the first
15 days of the month from a cooperative association in any capacity,
except as the operator of a pool plant, the payment shall be equal to
the hundredweight of milk received multiplied by the lowest announced
class price for the preceding month.
(2) Partial payment to a cooperative association for milk
transferred from its pool plant. For bulk milk/skimmed milk products
received during the first 15 days of the month from a cooperative
association in its capacity as the operator of a pool plant, the partial
payment shall be at the pool plant operator's estimated use value of the
milk using the most recent class prices available at the receiving
plant's location.
(3) Final payment to a cooperative association for milk transferred
from its pool plant. Following the classification of bulk fluid milk
products and bulk fluid cream products received during the month from a
cooperative association in its capacity as the operator of a pool plant,
the final payment for such receipts shall be determined as follows:
(i) Multiply the hundredweight of Class I skim milk by the Class I
skim milk price for the month at the receiving plant;
(ii) Multiply the pounds of Class I butterfat by the Class I
butterfat price for the month at the receiving plant;
(iii) Multiply the pounds of nonfat solids in Class II skim milk by
the Class II nonfat solids price;
(iv) Multiply the pounds of butterfat in Class II times the Class II
butterfat price;
(v) Multiply the pounds of nonfat solids in Class IV milk by the
nonfat solids price for the month;
(vi) Multiply the pounds of butterfat in Class III and Class IV milk
by the butterfat price for the month;
(vii) Multiply the pounds of protein in Class III milk by the
protein price for the month;
(viii) Multiply the pounds of other solids in Class III milk by the
other solids price for the month; and
(ix) Add together the amounts computed in paragraphs (b)(3)(i)
through (viii) of this section and from that sum deduct any payment made
pursuant to paragraph (b)(2) of this section.
(4) Final payment to a cooperative association for bulk milk
received directly from producers' farms. For bulk milk received from a
cooperative association
[[Page 59]]
during the month, including the milk of producers who are not members of
such association and who the market administrator determines have
authorized the cooperative association to collect payment for their
milk, the final payment for such milk shall be an amount equal to the
sum of the individual payments otherwise payable for such milk pursuant
to paragraph (a)(2) of this section.
(c) If a handler has not received full payment from the market
administrator pursuant to Sec. 1001.72 by the payment date specified in
paragraph (a) or (b) of this section, the handler may reduce payments
pursuant to paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section, but by not more than
the amount of the underpayment. The payments shall be completed on the
next scheduled payment date after receipt of the balance due from the
market administrator.
(d) If a handler claims that a required payment to a producer cannot
be made because the producer is deceased or cannot be located, or
because the cooperative association or its lawful successor or assignee
is no longer in existence, the payment shall be made to the producer-
settlement fund, and in the event that the handler subsequently locates
and pays the producer or a lawful claimant, or in the event that the
handler no longer exists and a lawful claim is later established, the
market administrator shall make the required payment from the producer-
settlement fund to the handler or to the lawful claimant as the case may
be.
(e) In making payments to producers pursuant to this section, each
handler shall furnish each producer (except for a producer whose milk
was received from a cooperative association handler described in Sec.
1000.9(a) or 9(c)), a supporting statement in such form that it may be
retained by the recipient which shall show:
(1) The name, address, Grade A identifier assigned by a duly
constituted regulatory agency, and the payroll number of the producer;
(2) The month and dates that milk was received from the producer,
including the daily and total pounds of milk received;
(3) The total pounds of butterfat, protein, and other solids
contained in the producer's milk;
(4) The minimum rate or rates at which payment to the producer is
required pursuant to the order in this part;
(5) The rate used in making payment if the rate is other than the
applicable minimum rate;
(6) The amount, or rate per hundredweight, or rate per pound of
component, and the nature of each deduction claimed by the handler; and
(7) The net amount of payment to the producer or cooperative
association.
[64 FR 47954, Sept. 1, 1999, as amended at 65 FR 32010, May 22, 2000; 65
FR 82835, Dec. 28, 2000; 68 FR 7066, Feb. 12, 2003; 70 FR 18963, Apr.
12, 2005]
Sec. 1001.74 [Reserved]
Sec. 1001.75 Plant location adjustments for producer milk and nonpool
milk.
For purposes of making payments for producer milk and nonpool milk,
a plant location adjustment shall be determined by subtracting the Class
I price specified in Sec. 1001.51 from the Class I price at the plant's
location. The difference, plus or minus as the case may be, shall be
used to adjust the payments required pursuant to Sec. Sec. 1001.73 and
1000.76.
Sec. 1001.76 Payments by a handler operating a partially regulated
distributing plant.
See Sec. 1000.76.
Sec. 1001.77 Adjustment of accounts.
See Sec. 1000.77.
Sec. 1001.78 Charges on overdue accounts.
See Sec. 1000.78.
Administrative Assessment and Marketing Service Deduction
Sec. 1001.85 Assessment for order administration.
See Sec. 1000.85.
Sec. 1001.86 Deduction for marketing services.
See Sec. 1000.86.
[[Page 60]]
PARTS 1002 1004 [RESERVED]
PART 1005_MILK IN THE APPALACHIAN MARKETING AREA--Table of Contents
Subpart_Order Regulating Handling
General Provisions
Sec.
1005.1 General provisions.
Definitions
1005.2 Appalachian marketing area.
1005.3 Route disposition.
1005.4 Plant.
1005.5 Distributing plant.
1005.6 Supply plant.
1005.7 Pool plant.
1005.8 Nonpool plant.
1005.9 Handler.
1005.10 Producer-handler.
1005.11 [Reserved]
1005.12 Producer.
1005.13 Producer milk.
1005.14 Other source milk.
1005.15 Fluid milk product.
1005.16 Fluid cream product.
1005.17 [Reserved]
1005.18 Cooperative association.
1005.19 Commercial food processing establishment.
Handler Reports
1005.30 Reports of receipts and utilization.
1005.31 Payroll reports.
1005.32 Other reports.
Classification of Milk
1005.40 Classes of utilization.
1005.41 [Reserved]
1005.42 Classification of transfers and diversions.
1005.43 General classification rules.
1005.44 Classification of producer milk.
1005.45 Market administrator's reports and announcements concerning
classification.
Class Prices
1005.50 Class prices, component prices, and advanced pricing factors.
1005.51 Class I differential, adjustments to Class I prices, and Class I
price.
1005.52 Adjusted Class I differentials.
1005.53 Announcement of class prices, component prices, and advanced
pricing factors.
1005.54 Equivalent price.
Uniform Prices
1005.60 Handler's value of milk.
1005.61 Computation of uniform prices.
1005.62 Announcement of uniform prices.
Payments for Milk
1005.70 Producer-settlement fund.
1005.71 Payments to the producer-settlement fund.
1005.72 Payments from the producer-settlement fund.
1005.73 Payments to producers and to cooperative associations.
1005.74 [Reserved]
1005.75 Plant location adjustments for producer milk and nonpool milk.
1005.76 Payments by a handler operating a partially regulated
distributing plant.
1005.77 Adjustment of accounts.
1005.78 Charges on overdue accounts.
Marketwide Service Payments
1005.80 Transportation credit balancing fund.
1005.81 Payments to the transportation credit balancing fund.
1005.82 Payments from the transportation credit balancing fund.
1005.83 Mileage rate for the transportation credit balancing fund.
Administrative Assessment and Marketing Service Deduction
1005.85 Assessment for order administration.
1005.86 Deduction for marketing services.
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 601-674, and 7253.
Source: 64 FR 47960, Sept. 1, 1999, unless otherwise noted.
Subpart_Order Regulating Handling
General Provisions
Sec. 1005.1 General provisions.
The terms, definitions, and provisions in part 1000 of this chapter
apply to this part 1005. In this part 1005, all references to sections
in part 1000 refer to part 1000 of this chapter.
Definitions
Sec. 1005.2 Appalachian marketing area.
The marketing area means all the territory within the bounds of the
following states and political subdivisions, including all piers, docks
and wharves connected therewith and all craft moored thereat, and all
territory occupied by government (municipal, State or Federal)
reservations, installations, institutions, or other similar
establishments if any part thereof is
[[Page 61]]
within any of the listed states or political subdivisions:
Georgia Counties
Catoosa, Chattooga, Dade, Fannin, Murray, Walker, and Whitfield.
Indiana Counties
Clark, Crawford, Daviess, Dubois, Floyd, Gibson, Greene, Harrison,
Knox, Martin, Orange, Perry, Pike, Posey, Scott, Spencer, Sullivan,
Vanderburgh, Warrick, and Washington.
Kentucky Counties
Adair, Anderson, Bath, Bell, Bourbon, Boyle, Breathitt,
Breckinridge, Bullitt, Butler, Carroll, Carter, Casey, Clark, Clay,
Clinton, Cumberland, Daviess, Edmonson, Elliott, Estill, Fayette,
Fleming, Franklin, Gallatin, Garrard, Grayson, Green, Hancock, Hardin,
Harlan, Hart, Henderson, Henry, Hopkins, Jackson, Jefferson, Jessamine,
Knott, Knox, Larue, Laurel, Lee, Leslie, Letcher, Lincoln, Madison,
Marion, McCreary, McLean, Meade, Menifee, Mercer, Montgomery, Morgan,
Muhlenberg, Nelson, Nicholas, Ohio, Oldham, Owen, Owsley, Perry, Powell,
Pulaski, Rockcastle, Rowan, Russell, Scott, Shelby, Spencer, Taylor,
Trimble, Union, Washington, Wayne, Webster, Whitley, Wolfe, and
Woodford.
North Carolina and South Carolina
All of the States of North Carolina and South Carolina.
Tennessee Counties
Anderson, Blount, Bradley, Campbell, Carter, Claiborne, Cocke,
Cumberland, Grainger, Greene, Hamblen, Hamilton, Hancock, Hawkins,
Jefferson, Johnson, Knox, Loudon, Marion, McMinn, Meigs, Monroe, Morgan,
Polk, Rhea, Roane, Scott, Sequatchie, Sevier, Sullivan, Unicoi, Union,
and Washington.
Virginia Counties and Cities
Alleghany, Amherst, Augusta, Bath, Bedford, Bland, Botetourt,
Buchanan, Campbell, Carroll, Craig, Dickenson, Floyd, Franklin, Giles,
Grayson, Henry, Highland, Lee, Montgomery, Patrick, Pittsylvania,
Pulaski, Roanoke, Rockbridge, Rockingham, Russell, Scott, Smyth,
Tazewell, Washington, Wise, and Wythe; and the cities of Bedford,
Bristol, Buena Vista, Clifton Forge, Covington, Danville, Galax,
Harrisonburg, Lexington, Lynchburg, Martinsville, Norton, Radford,
Roanoke, Salem, Staunton, and Waynesboro.
West Virginia Counties
McDowell and Mercer.
[64 FR 47960, Sept. 1, 1999, as amended at 70 FR 59223, Oct. 12, 2005]
Sec. 1005.3 Route disposition.
See Sec. 1000.3.
Sec. 1005.4 Plant.
See Sec. 1000.4.
Sec. 1005.5 Distributing plant.
See Sec. 1000.5.
Sec. 1005.6 Supply plant.
See Sec. 1000.6.
Sec. 1005.7 Pool plant.
Pool plant means a plant specified in paragraphs (a) through (d) of
this section, a unit of plants as specified in paragraph (e) of this
section, or a plant specified in paragraph (g) of this section but
excluding a plant specified in paragraph (h) of this section. The
pooling standards described in paragraphs (c) and (d) of this section
are subject to modification pursuant to paragraph (f) of this section:
(a) A distributing plant, other than a plant qualified as a pool
plant pursuant to paragraph (b) of this section or Sec. --------.7(b)
of any other Federal milk order, from which during the month 50 percent
or more of the fluid milk products physically received at such plant
(excluding concentrated milk received from another plant by agreement
for other than Class I use) are disposed of as route disposition or are
transferred in the form of packaged fluid milk products to other
distributing plants. At least 25 percent of such route disposition and
transfers must be to outlets in the marketing area.
(b) Any distributing plant located in the marketing area which
during the month processed at least 50 percent of the total quantity of
fluid milk products physically received at the plant (excluding
concentrated milk received from another plant by agreement for other
than Class I use) into ultra-pasteurized or aseptically-processed fluid
milk products.
(c) A supply plant from which 50 percent or more of the total
quantity of milk that is physically received during
[[Page 62]]
the month from dairy farmers and handlers described in Sec. 1000.9(c),
including milk that is diverted from the plant, is transferred to pool
distributing plants. Concentrated milk transferred from the supply plant
to a distributing plant for an agreed-upon use other than Class I shall
be excluded from the supply plant's shipments in computing the plant's
shipping percentage.
(d) A plant located within the marketing area or in the State of
Virginia that is operated by a cooperative association if pool plant
status under this paragraph is requested for such plant by the
cooperative association and during the month at least 60 percent of the
producer milk of members of such cooperative association is delivered
directly from farms to pool distributing plants or is transferred to
such plants as a fluid milk product (excluding concentrated milk
transferred to a distributing plant for an agreed-upon use other than
Class I) from the cooperative's plant.
(e) Two or more plants operated by the same handler and that are
located within the marketing area may qualify for pool status as a unit
by meeting the total and in-area route disposition requirements
specified in paragraph (a) of this section and the following additional
requirements:
(1) At least one of the plants in the unit must qualify as a pool
plant pursuant to paragraph (a) of this section;
(2) Other plants in the unit must process only Class I or Class II
products and must be located in a pricing zone providing the same or a
lower Class I price than the price applicable at the distributing plant
included in the unit pursuant to paragraph (e)(1) of this section; and
(3) A written request to form a unit, or to add or remove plants
from a unit, must be filed with the market administrator prior to the
first day of the month for which it is to be effective.
(f) The applicable shipping percentages of paragraphs (c) and (d) of
this section may be increased or decreased by the market administrator
if the market administrator finds that such adjustment is necessary to
encourage needed shipments or to prevent uneconomic shipments. Before
making such a finding, the market administrator shall investigate the
need for adjustment either on the market administrator's own initiative
or at the request of interested parties if the request is made in
writing at least 15 days prior to the date for which the requested
revision is desired effective. If the investigation shows that an
adjustment of the shipping percentages might be appropriate, the market
administrator shall issue a notice stating that an adjustment is being
considered and invite data, views and arguments. Any decision to revise
an applicable shipping percentage must be issued in writing at least one
day before the effective date.
(g) Any distributing plant other than a plant qualified as a pool
plant pursuant to paragraph Sec. 1005.(7)(a) or paragraph (b) of this
section or Sec. ------.7(b) of any other Federal milk order or Sec.
1005.(7)(e) or Sec. 1000.(8)(a) or Sec. 1000.(8)(e); located within
the marketing area as described on May 1, 2006, in Sec. 1005.2, from
which there is route disposition and/or transfers of packaged fluid milk
products in any non-Federally regulated marketing area(s) located within
one or more States that require handlers to pay minimum prices for raw
milk provided that 25 percent or more of the total quantity of fluid
milk products physically received at such plant (excluding concentrated
milk received from another plant by agreement for other than Class I
use) is disposed of as route disposition and/or is transferred in the
form of packaged fluid milk products to other plants. At least 25
percent of such route disposition and/or transfers, in aggregate, are in
any non-Federally regulated marketing area(s) located within one or more
States that require handlers to pay minimum prices for raw milk. Subject
to the following exclusion:
(1) The plant is subject to the pricing provisions of a State-
operated milk pricing plan which provides for the payment of minimum
class prices for raw milk;
(2) A producer-handler described in Sec. 1005.10 with less than
three million pounds during the month of route disposition and/or
transfers of packaged fluid milk products to other plants.
(h) The term pool plant shall not apply to the following plants:
(1) A producer-handler plant;
[[Page 63]]
(2) An exempt plant as defined in Sec. 1000.8(e);
(3) A plant qualified pursuant to paragraph (a) of this section
which is not located within any Federal order marketing area, meets the
pooling requirements of another Federal order, and has had greater route
disposition in such other Federal order marketing area for 3 consecutive
months;
(4) A plant qualified pursuant to paragraph (a) of this section
which is located in another Federal order marketing area, meets the
pooling standards of the other Federal order, and has not had a majority
of its route disposition in this marketing area for 3 consecutive months
or is locked into pool status under such other Federal order without
regard to its route disposition in any other Federal order marketing
area;
(5) A plant qualified pursuant to paragraph (c) of this section
which also meets the pooling requirements of another Federal order and
from which greater qualifying shipments are made to plants regulated
under such other order than are made to plants regulated under the order
in this part, or such plant has automatic pooling status under such
other order; and
(6) That portion of a pool plant designated as a ``nonpool plant''
that is physically separate and operated separately from the pool
portion of such plant. The designation of a portion of a regulated plant
as a nonpool plant must be requested in writing by the handler and must
be approved by the market administrator.
[64 FR 47960, Sept. 1, 1999, as amended at 71 FR 25497, May 1, 2006; 71
FR 28249, May 16, 2006]
Sec. 1005.8 Nonpool plant.
See Sec. 1000.8.
Sec. 1005.9 Handler.
See Sec. 1000.9.
Sec. 1005.10 Producer-handler.
Producer-handler means a person who:
(a) Operates a dairy farm and a distributing plant from which there
is route disposition in the marketing area, and from which total route
disposition and packaged sales of fluid milk products to other plants
during the month does not exceed 3 million pounds;
(b) Receives no fluid milk products, and acquires no fluid milk
products for route disposition, from sources other than own farm
production;
(c) Disposes of no other source milk as Class I milk except by
increasing the nonfat milk solids content of the fluid milk products
received from own farm production; and
(d) Provides proof satisfactory to the market administrator that the
care and management of the dairy animals and other resources necessary
to produce all Class I milk handled, and the processing and packaging
operations are the producer-handler's own enterprise and are operated at
the producer-handler's own risk.
(e) Any producer-handler with Class I route dispositions and/or
transfers of packaged fluid milk products in the marketing area
described in Sec. 1131.2 of this chapter shall be subject to payments
into the Order 1131 producer settlement fund on such dispositions
pursuant to Sec. 1000.76(a) and payments into the Order 1131
administrative fund provided such dispositions are less than three
million pounds in the current month and such producer-handler had total
Class I route dispositions and/or transfers of packaged fluid milk
products from own farm production of three million pounds or more the
previous month. If the producer-handler has Class I route dispositions
and/or transfers of packaged fluid milk products into the marketing area
described in Sec. 1131.2 of this chapter of three million pounds or
more during the current month, such producer-handler shall be subject to
the provisions described in Sec. 1131.7 of this chapter or Sec.
1000.76(a).
[64 FR 47960, Sept. 1, 1999, as amended at 71 FR 25498, May 1, 2006; 75
FR 21160, Apr. 23, 2010]
Sec. 1005.11 [Reserved]
Sec. 1005.12 Producer.
(a) Except as provided in paragraph (b) of this section, producer
means any person who produces milk approved by a duly constituted
regulatory agency for fluid consumption as Grade A milk and whose milk
(or components of milk) is:
[[Page 64]]
(1) Received at a pool plant directly from the producer or diverted
by the plant operator in accordance with Sec. 1005.13; or
(2) Received by a handler described in Sec. 1000.9(c).
(b) Producer shall not include:
(1) A producer-handler as defined in any Federal order;
(2) A dairy farmer whose milk is received at an exempt plant,
excluding producer milk diverted to the exempt plant pursuant to Sec.
1005.13(d);
(3) A dairy farmer whose milk is received by diversion at a pool
plant from a handler regulated under another Federal order if the other
Federal order designates the dairy farmer as a producer under that order
and that milk is allocated by request to a utilization other than Class
I; and
(4) A dairy farmer whose milk is reported as diverted to a plant
fully regulated under another order with respect to that portion of the
milk so diverted that is assigned to Class I under the provisions of
such other order.
Sec. 1005.13 Producer milk.
Except as provided for in paragraph (e) of this section, Producer
milk means the skim milk (or the skim equivalent of components of skim
milk) and butterfat contained in milk of a producer that is:
(a) Received by the operator of a pool plant directly from a
producer or a handler described in Sec. 1000.9(c). All milk received
pursuant to this paragraph shall be priced at the location of the plant
where it is first physically received;
(b) Received by a handler described in Sec. 1000.9(c) in excess of
the quantity delivered to pool plants;
(c) Diverted by a pool plant operator to another pool plant. Milk so
diverted shall be priced at the location of the plant to which diverted;
or
(d) Diverted by the operator of a pool plant or a handler described
in Sec. 1000.9(c) to a nonpool plant, subject to the following
conditions:
(1) In any month of July through December, not less than 1 days'
production of the producer whose milk is diverted is physically received
at a pool plant during the month;
(2) In any month of January through June, not less than 1 days'
production of the producer whose milk is diverted is physically received
at a pool plant during the month;
(3) The total quantity of milk so diverted during the month by a
cooperative association shall not exceed 25 percent during the months of
July through November, January, and February, and 35 percent during the
months of December and March through June, of the producer milk that the
cooperative association caused to be delivered to, and physically
received at, pool plants during the month, excluding the total pounds of
bulk milk received directly from producers meeting the conditions as
described in Sec. 1005.82(c)(2)(ii) and (iii), and for which a
transportation credit is requested;
(4) The operator of a pool plant that is not a cooperative
association may divert any milk that is not under the control of a
cooperative association that diverts milk during the month pursuant to
paragraph (d) of this section. The total quantity of milk so diverted
during the month shall not exceed 25 percent during the months of July
through November, January, and February, and 35 percent during the
months of December and March through June, of the producer milk
physically received at such plant (or such unit of plants in the case of
plants that pool as a unit pursuant to Sec. 1005.7(d)) during the
month, excluding the quantity of producer milk received from handler
described in Sec. 1000.9(c) and excluding the total pounds of bulk milk
received directly from producers meeting the conditions as described in
Sec. 1005.82 (c)(2)(ii) and (iii), and for which a transportation
credit is requested.
(5) Any milk diverted in excess of the limits prescribed in
paragraphs (d)(3) and (4) of this section shall not be producer milk. If
the diverting handler or cooperative association fails to designate the
dairy farmers' deliveries that will not be producer milk, no milk
diverted by the handler or cooperative association shall be producer
milk;
(6) Diverted milk shall be priced at the location of the plant to
which diverted; and
[[Page 65]]
(7) The delivery day requirements and the diversion percentages in
paragraphs (d)(1) through (4) of this section may be increased or
decreased by the market administrator if the market administrator finds
that such revision is necessary to assure orderly marketing and
efficient handling of milk in the marketing area. Before making such a
finding, the market administrator shall investigate the need for the
revision either on the market administrator's own initiative or at the
request of interested persons. If the investigation shows that a
revision might be appropriate, the market administrator shall issue a
notice stating that the revision is being considered and inviting
written data, views, and arguments. Any decision to revise an applicable
percentage must be issued in writing at least one day before the
effective date.
(e) Producer milk shall not include milk of a producer that is
subject to inclusion and participation in a marketwide equalization pool
under a milk classification and pricing program imposed under the
authority of a State government maintaining marketwide pooling of
returns.
[64 FR 47960, Sept. 1, 1999, as amended at 70 FR 59223, Oct. 12, 2005;
71 FR 62378; Oct. 25, 2006; 73 FR 14156, Mar. 17, 2008; 73 FR 26315, May
9, 2008]
Sec. 1005.14 Other source milk.
See Sec. 1000.14.
Sec. 1005.15 Fluid milk product.
See Sec. 1000.15.
Sec. 1005.16 Fluid cream product.
See Sec. 1000.16.
Sec. 1005.17 [Reserved]
Sec. 1005.18 Cooperative association.
See Sec. 1000.18.
Sec. 1005.19 Commercial food processing establishment.
See Sec. 1000.19.
Handler Reports
Sec. 1005.30 Reports of receipts and utilization.
Each handler shall report monthly so that the market administrator's
office receives the report on or before the 7th day after the end of the
month, in the detail and on prescribed forms, as follows:
(a) With respect to each of its pool plants, the quantities of skim
milk and butterfat contained in or represented by:
(1) Receipts of producer milk, including producer milk diverted by
the reporting handler, from sources other than handlers described in
Sec. 1000.9(c);
(2) Receipts of milk from handlers described in Sec. 1000.9(c);
(3) Receipts of fluid milk products and bulk fluid cream products
from other pool plants;
(4) Receipts of other source milk;
(5) Receipts of bulk milk from a plant regulated under another
Federal order, except Federal Order 1007, for which a transportation
credit is requested pursuant to Sec. 1005.82;
(6) Receipts of producer milk described in Sec. 1005.82(c)(2),
including the identity of the individual producers whose milk is
eligible for the transportation credit pursuant to that paragraph and
the date that such milk was received;
(7) For handlers submitting transportation credit requests,
transfers of bulk milk to nonpool plants, including the dates that such
milk was transferred;
(8) Inventories at the beginning and end of the month of fluid milk
products and bulk fluid cream products; and
(9) The utilization or disposition of all milk and milk products
required to be reported pursuant to this paragraph.
(b) Each handler operating a partially regulated distributing plant
shall report with respect to such plant in the same manner as prescribed
for reports required by paragraph (a) of this section. Receipts of milk
that would have been producer milk if the plant had been fully regulated
shall be reported in lieu of producer milk. The report shall show also
the quantity of any reconstituted skim milk in route disposition in the
marketing area.
[[Page 66]]
(c) Each handler described in Sec. 1000.9(c) shall report:
(1) The quantities of all skim milk and butterfat contained in
receipts of milk from producers;
(2) The utilization or disposition of all such receipts; and
(3) With respect to milk for which a cooperative association is
requesting a transportation credit pursuant to Sec. 1005.82, all of the
information required in paragraphs (a)(5), (a)(6), and (a)(7) of this
section.
(d) Each handler not specified in paragraphs (a) through (c) of this
section shall report with respect to its receipts and utilization of
milk and milk products in such manner as the market administrator may
prescribe.
Sec. 1005.31 Payroll reports.
(a) On or before the 20th day after the end of each month, each
handler that operates a pool plant pursuant to Sec. 1005.7 and each
handler described in Sec. 1000.9(c) shall report to the market
administrator its producer payroll for the month, in detail prescribed
by the market administrator, showing for each producer the information
specified in Sec. 1005.73(e).
(b) Each handler operating a partially regulated distributing plant
who elects to make payment pursuant to Sec. 1000.76(b) shall report for
each dairy farmer who would have been a producer if the plant had been
fully regulated in the same manner as prescribed for reports required by
paragraph (a) of this section.
Sec. 1005.32 Other reports.
(a) On or before the 20th day after the end of each month, each
handler described in Sec. 1000.9(a) and (c) shall report to the market
administrator any adjustments to transportation credit requests as
reported pursuant to Sec. 1005.30(a)(5), (6), and (7).
(b) In addition to the reports required pursuant to Sec. Sec.
1005.30, 1005.31, and 1005.32(a), each handler shall report any
information the market administrator deems necessary to verify or
establish each handler's obligation under the order.
Classification of Milk
Sec. 1005.40 Classes of utilization.
See Sec. 1000.40.
Sec. 1005.41 [Reserved]
Sec. 1005.42 Classification of transfers and diversions.
See Sec. 1000.42.
Sec. 1005.43 General classification rules.
See Sec. 1000.43.
Sec. 1005.44 Classification of producer milk.
See Sec. 1000.44.
Sec. 1005.45 Market administrator's reports and announcements
concerning classification.
See Sec. 1000.45.
Class Prices
Sec. 1005.50 Class prices, component prices, and advanced pricing factors.
See Sec. 1000.50.
Sec. 1005.51 Class I differential, adjustments to Class I prices, and
Class I price.
(a) The Class I differential shall be the differential established
for Mecklenburg County, North Carolina, which is reported in Sec.
1000.52. The Class I price shall be the price computed pursuant to Sec.
1005.50(a) for Mecklenburg County, North Carolina.
(b) Adjustment to Class I prices. Class I prices shall be
established pursuant to Sec. 1000.50(a), (b) and (c) using the
following adjustments:
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class I price
State County/parish FIPS adjustment
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
GA.................................... CATOOSA............................... 13047 0.60
GA.................................... CHATTOOGA............................. 13055 0.60
GA.................................... DADE.................................. 13083 0.60
GA.................................... FANNIN................................ 13111 0.60
GA.................................... MURRAY................................ 13213 0.60
GA.................................... WALKER................................ 13295 0.60
GA.................................... WHITFIELD............................. 13313 0.60
[[Page 67]]
IN.................................... CLARK................................. 18019 0.10
IN.................................... CRAWFORD.............................. 18025 0.10
IN.................................... DAVIESS............................... 18027 0.10
IN.................................... DUBOIS................................ 18037 0.10
IN.................................... FLOYD................................. 18043 0.10
IN.................................... GIBSON................................ 18051 0.10
IN.................................... GREENE................................ 18055 0.10
IN.................................... HARRISON.............................. 18061 0.10
IN.................................... KNOX.................................. 18083 0.10
IN.................................... MARTIN................................ 18101 0.10
IN.................................... ORANGE................................ 18117 0.10
IN.................................... PERRY................................. 18123 0.10
IN.................................... PIKE.................................. 18125 0.10
IN.................................... POSEY................................. 18129 0.10
IN.................................... SCOTT................................. 18143 0.10
IN.................................... SPENCER............................... 18147 0.10
IN.................................... SULLIVAN.............................. 18153 0.10
IN.................................... VANDERBURGH........................... 18163 0.10
IN.................................... WARRICK............................... 18173 0.10
IN.................................... WASHINGTON............................ 18175 0.10
KY.................................... ADAIR................................. 21001 0.20
KY.................................... ANDERSON.............................. 21005 0.40
KY.................................... BATH.................................. 21011 0.40
KY.................................... BELL.................................. 21013 0.50
KY.................................... BOURBON............................... 21017 0.40
KY.................................... BOYLE................................. 21021 0.40
KY.................................... BREATHITT............................. 21025 0.70
KY.................................... BRECKINRIDGE.......................... 21027 0.10
KY.................................... BULLITT............................... 21029 0.10
KY.................................... BUTLER................................ 21031 0.20
KY.................................... CARROLL............................... 21041 0.10
KY.................................... CARTER................................ 21043 0.40
KY.................................... CASEY................................. 21045 0.20
KY.................................... CLARK................................. 21049 0.40
KY.................................... CLAY.................................. 21051 0.50
KY.................................... CLINTON............................... 21053 0.50
KY.................................... CUMBERLAND............................ 21057 0.50
KY.................................... DAVIESS............................... 21059 0.10
KY.................................... EDMONSON.............................. 21061 0.20
KY.................................... ELLIOTT............................... 21063 0.40
KY.................................... ESTILL................................ 21065 0.40
KY.................................... FAYETTE............................... 21067 0.40
KY.................................... FLEMING............................... 21069 0.40
KY.................................... FRANKLIN.............................. 21073 0.10
KY.................................... GALLATIN.............................. 21077 0.10
KY.................................... GARRARD............................... 21079 0.40
KY.................................... GRAYSON............................... 21085 0.20
KY.................................... GREEN................................. 21087 0.20
KY.................................... HANCOCK............................... 21091 0.10
KY.................................... HARDIN................................ 21093 0.10
KY.................................... HARLAN................................ 21095 0.50
KY.................................... HART.................................. 21099 0.20
KY.................................... HENDERSON............................. 21101 0.10
KY.................................... HENRY................................. 21103 0.10
KY.................................... HOPKINS............................... 21107 0.20
KY.................................... JACKSON............................... 21109 0.70
KY.................................... JEFFERSON............................. 21111 0.10
KY.................................... JESSAMINE............................. 21113 0.40
KY.................................... KNOTT................................. 21119 0.50
KY.................................... KNOX.................................. 21121 0.50
KY.................................... LARUE................................. 21123 0.40
KY.................................... LAUREL................................ 21125 0.50
KY.................................... LEE................................... 21129 0.40
KY.................................... LESLIE................................ 21131 0.50
KY.................................... LETCHER............................... 21133 0.50
KY.................................... LINCOLN............................... 21137 0.40
KY.................................... MC CREARY............................. 21147 0.50
KY.................................... MC LEAN............................... 21149 0.40
KY.................................... MADISON............................... 21151 0.40
KY.................................... MARION................................ 21155 0.40
KY.................................... MEADE................................. 21163 0.10
KY.................................... MENIFEE............................... 21165 0.40
KY.................................... MERCER................................ 21167 0.40
[[Page 68]]
KY.................................... MONTGOMERY............................ 21173 0.40
KY.................................... MORGAN................................ 21175 0.40
KY.................................... MUHLENBURG............................ 21177 0.20
KY.................................... NELSON................................ 21179 0.10
KY.................................... NICHOLAS.............................. 21181 0.40
KY.................................... OHIO.................................. 21183 0.20
KY.................................... OLDHAM................................ 21185 0.10
KY.................................... OWEN.................................. 21187 0.10
KY.................................... OWSLEY................................ 21189 0.70
KY.................................... PERRY................................. 21193 0.50
KY.................................... POWELL................................ 21197 0.40
KY.................................... PULASKI............................... 21199 0.50
KY.................................... ROCKCASTLE............................ 21203 0.70
KY.................................... ROWAN................................. 21205 0.40
KY.................................... RUSSELL............................... 21207 0.50
KY.................................... SCOTT................................. 21209 0.10
KY.................................... SHELBY................................ 21211 0.10
KY.................................... SPENCER............................... 21215 0.10
KY.................................... TAYLOR................................ 21217 0.20
KY.................................... TRIMBLE............................... 21223 0.10
KY.................................... UNION................................. 21225 0.10
KY.................................... WASHINGTON............................ 21229 0.40
KY.................................... WAYNE................................. 21231 0.50
KY.................................... WEBSTER............................... 21233 0.20
KY.................................... WHITLEY............................... 21235 0.50
KY.................................... WOLFE................................. 21237 0.40
KY.................................... WOODFORD.............................. 21239 0.40
NC.................................... ALAMANCE.............................. 37001 0.30
NC.................................... ALEXANDER............................. 37003 0.45
NC.................................... ALLEGHANY............................. 37005 0.45
NC.................................... ANSON................................. 37007 0.50
NC.................................... ASHE.................................. 37009 0.45
NC.................................... AVERY................................. 37011 0.45
NC.................................... BEAUFORT.............................. 37013 0.40
NC.................................... BERTIE................................ 37015 0.20
NC.................................... BLADEN................................ 37017 0.70
NC.................................... BRUNSWICK............................. 37019 0.70
NC.................................... BUNCOMBE.............................. 37021 0.45
NC.................................... BURKE................................. 37023 0.45
NC.................................... CABARRUS.............................. 37025 0.30
NC.................................... CALDWELL.............................. 37027 0.45
NC.................................... CAMDEN................................ 37029 0.20
NC.................................... CARTERET.............................. 37031 0.40
NC.................................... CASWELL............................... 37033 0.30
NC.................................... CATAWBA............................... 37035 0.30
NC.................................... CHATHAM............................... 37037 0.30
NC.................................... CHEROKEE.............................. 37039 0.45
NC.................................... CHOWAN................................ 37041 0.20
NC.................................... CLAY.................................. 37043 0.45
NC.................................... CLEVELAND............................. 37045 0.30
NC.................................... COLUMBUS.............................. 37047 0.70
NC.................................... CRAVEN................................ 37049 0.40
NC.................................... CUMBERLAND............................ 37051 0.30
NC.................................... CURRITUCK............................. 37053 0.20
NC.................................... DARE.................................. 37055 0.40
NC.................................... DAVIDSON.............................. 37057 0.30
NC.................................... DAVIE................................. 37059 0.30
NC.................................... DUPLIN................................ 37061 0.30
NC.................................... DURHAM................................ 37063 0.30
NC.................................... EDGECOMBE............................. 37065 0.20
NC.................................... FORSYTH............................... 37067 0.30
NC.................................... FRANKLIN.............................. 37069 0.30
NC.................................... GASTON................................ 37071 0.30
NC.................................... GATES................................. 37073 0.20
NC.................................... GRAHAM................................ 37075 0.45
NC.................................... GRANVILLE............................. 37077 0.30
NC.................................... GREENE................................ 37079 0.40
NC.................................... GUILFORD.............................. 37081 0.30
NC.................................... HALIFAX............................... 37083 0.30
NC.................................... HARNETT............................... 37085 0.10
NC.................................... HAYWOOD............................... 37087 0.45
NC.................................... HENDERSON............................. 37089 0.45
NC.................................... HERTFORD.............................. 37091 0.20
[[Page 69]]
NC.................................... HOKE.................................. 37093 0.30
NC.................................... HYDE.................................. 37095 0.40
NC.................................... IREDELL............................... 37097 0.30
NC.................................... JACKSON............................... 37099 0.45
NC.................................... JOHNSTON.............................. 37101 0.20
NC.................................... JONES................................. 37103 0.40
NC.................................... LEE................................... 37105 0.30
NC.................................... LENOIR................................ 37107 0.40
NC.................................... LINCOLN............................... 37109 0.30
NC.................................... MC DOWELL............................. 37111 0.45
NC.................................... MACON................................. 37113 0.45
NC.................................... MADISON............................... 37115 0.45
NC.................................... MARTIN................................ 37117 0.40
NC.................................... MECKLENBURG........................... 37119 0.30
NC.................................... MITCHELL.............................. 37121 0.45
NC.................................... MONTGOMERY............................ 37123 0.30
NC.................................... MOORE................................. 37125 0.30
NC.................................... NASH.................................. 37127 0.30
NC.................................... NEW HANOVER........................... 37129 0.70
NC.................................... NORTHAMPTON........................... 37131 0.30
NC.................................... ONSLOW................................ 37133 0.30
NC.................................... ORANGE................................ 37135 0.30
NC.................................... PAMLICO............................... 37137 0.40
NC.................................... PASQUOTANK............................ 37139 0.20
NC.................................... PENDER................................ 37141 0.70
NC.................................... PERQUIMANS............................ 37143 0.20
NC.................................... PERSON................................ 37145 0.30
NC.................................... PITT.................................. 37147 0.40
NC.................................... POLK.................................. 37149 0.30
NC.................................... RANDOLPH.............................. 37151 0.30
NC.................................... RICHMOND.............................. 37153 0.50
NC.................................... ROBESON............................... 37155 0.70
NC.................................... ROCKINGHAM............................ 37157 0.45
NC.................................... ROWAN................................. 37159 0.30
NC.................................... RUTHERFORD............................ 37161 0.30
NC.................................... SAMPSON............................... 37163 0.30
NC.................................... SCOTLAND.............................. 37165 0.30
NC.................................... STANLY................................ 37167 0.30
NC.................................... STOKES................................ 37169 0.45
NC.................................... SURRY................................. 37171 0.45
NC.................................... SWAIN................................. 37173 0.45
NC.................................... TRANSYLVANIA.......................... 37175 0.45
NC.................................... TYRRELL............................... 37177 0.40
NC.................................... UNION................................. 37179 0.50
NC.................................... VANCE................................. 37181 0.30
NC.................................... WAKE.................................. 37183 0.30
NC.................................... WARREN................................ 37185 0.30
NC.................................... WASHINGTON............................ 37187 0.40
NC.................................... WATAUGA............................... 37189 0.45
NC.................................... WAYNE................................. 37191 0.40
NC.................................... WILKES................................ 37193 0.45
NC.................................... WILSON................................ 37195 0.20
NC.................................... YADKIN................................ 37197 0.30
NC.................................... YANCEY................................ 37199 0.45
SC.................................... ABBEVILLE............................. 45001 0.50
SC.................................... AIKEN................................. 45003 0.70
SC.................................... ALLENDALE............................. 45005 1.00
SC.................................... ANDERSON.............................. 45007 0.50
SC.................................... BAMBERG............................... 45009 0.70
SC.................................... BARNWELL.............................. 45011 0.70
SC.................................... BEAUFORT.............................. 45013 1.00
SC.................................... BERKELEY.............................. 45015 1.00
SC.................................... CALHOUN............................... 45017 0.70
SC.................................... CHARLESTON............................ 45019 1.00
SC.................................... CHEROKEE.............................. 45021 0.50
SC.................................... CHESTER............................... 45023 0.50
SC.................................... CHESTERFIELD.......................... 45025 0.30
SC.................................... CLARENDON............................. 45027 0.70
SC.................................... COLLETON.............................. 45029 1.00
SC.................................... DARLINGTON............................ 45031 0.70
SC.................................... DILLON................................ 45033 0.70
SC.................................... DORCHESTER............................ 45035 1.00
SC.................................... EDGEFIELD............................. 45037 0.30
[[Page 70]]
SC.................................... FAIRFIELD............................. 45039 0.30
SC.................................... FLORENCE.............................. 45041 0.70
SC.................................... GEORGETOWN............................ 45043 0.70
SC.................................... GREENVILLE............................ 45045 0.50
SC.................................... GREENWOOD............................. 45047 0.50
SC.................................... HAMPTON............................... 45049 1.00
SC.................................... HORRY................................. 45051 0.70
SC.................................... JASPER................................ 45053 1.00
SC.................................... KERSHAW............................... 45055 0.30
SC.................................... LANCASTER............................. 45057 0.50
SC.................................... LAURENS............................... 45059 0.50
SC.................................... LEE................................... 45061 0.70
SC.................................... LEXINGTON............................. 45063 0.70
SC.................................... MC CORMICK............................ 45065 0.50
SC.................................... MARION................................ 45067 0.70
SC.................................... MARLBORO.............................. 45069 0.70
SC.................................... NEWBERRY.............................. 45071 0.30
SC.................................... OCONEE................................ 45073 0.50
SC.................................... ORANGEBURG............................ 45075 0.70
SC.................................... PICKENS............................... 45077 0.50
SC.................................... RICHLAND.............................. 45079 0.70
SC.................................... SALUDA................................ 45081 0.30
SC.................................... SPARTANBURG........................... 45083 0.50
SC.................................... SUMTER................................ 45085 0.70
SC.................................... UNION................................. 45087 0.50
SC.................................... WILLIAMSBURG.......................... 45089 0.70
SC.................................... YORK.................................. 45091 0.50
TN.................................... ANDERSON.............................. 47001 0.40
TN.................................... BLOUNT................................ 47009 0.40
TN.................................... BRADLEY............................... 47011 0.60
TN.................................... CAMPBELL.............................. 47013 0.40
TN.................................... CARTER................................ 47019 0.40
TN.................................... CLAIBORNE............................. 47025 0.40
TN.................................... COCKE................................. 47029 0.40
TN.................................... CUMBERLAND............................ 47035 0.40
TN.................................... GRAINGER.............................. 47057 0.40
TN.................................... GREENE................................ 47059 0.40
TN.................................... HAMBLEN............................... 47063 0.40
TN.................................... HAMILTON.............................. 47065 0.60
TN.................................... HANCOCK............................... 47067 0.40
TN.................................... HAWKINS............................... 47073 0.40
TN.................................... JEFFERSON............................. 47089 0.40
TN.................................... JOHNSON............................... 47091 0.40
TN.................................... KNOX.................................. 47093 0.40
TN.................................... LOUDON................................ 47105 0.40
TN.................................... MC MINN............................... 47107 0.60
TN.................................... MARION................................ 47115 0.60
TN.................................... MEIGS................................. 47121 0.60
TN.................................... MONROE................................ 47123 0.60
TN.................................... MORGAN................................ 47129 0.40
TN.................................... POLK.................................. 47139 0.60
TN.................................... RHEA.................................. 47143 0.40
TN.................................... ROANE................................. 47145 0.40
TN.................................... SCOTT................................. 47151 0.10
TN.................................... SEQUATCHIE............................ 47153 0.40
TN.................................... SEVIER................................ 47155 0.40
TN.................................... SULLIVAN.............................. 47163 0.40
TN.................................... UNICOI................................ 47171 0.40
TN.................................... UNION................................. 47173 0.40
TN.................................... WASHINGTON............................ 47179 0.40
VA.................................... ALLEGHANY............................. 51005 0.10
VA.................................... AMHERST............................... 51009 0.40
VA.................................... AUGUSTA............................... 51015 0.10
VA.................................... BATH.................................. 51017 0.10
VA.................................... BEDFORD............................... 51019 0.40
VA.................................... BLAND................................. 51021 0.40
VA.................................... BOTETOURT............................. 51023 0.10
VA.................................... BUCHANAN.............................. 51027 0.10
VA.................................... CAMPBELL.............................. 51031 0.40
VA.................................... CARROLL............................... 51035 0.40
VA.................................... CRAIG................................. 51045 0.10
VA.................................... DICKENSON............................. 51051 0.40
VA.................................... FLOYD................................. 51063 0.40
[[Page 71]]
VA.................................... FRANKLIN.............................. 51067 0.40
VA.................................... GILES................................. 51071 0.10
VA.................................... GRAYSON............................... 51077 0.40
VA.................................... HENRY................................. 51089 0.40
VA.................................... HIGHLAND.............................. 51091 0.10
VA.................................... LEE................................... 51105 0.40
VA.................................... MONTGOMERY............................ 51121 0.40
VA.................................... PATRICK............................... 51141 0.40
VA.................................... PITTSYLVANIA.......................... 51143 0.40
VA.................................... PULASKI............................... 51155 0.40
VA.................................... ROANOKE............................... 51161 0.40
VA.................................... ROCKBRIDGE............................ 51163 0.10
VA.................................... ROCKINGHAM............................ 51165 0.10
VA.................................... RUSSELL............................... 51167 0.40
VA.................................... SCOTT................................. 51169 0.40
VA.................................... SMYTH................................. 51173 0.40
VA.................................... TAZEWELL.............................. 51185 0.40
VA.................................... WASHINGTON............................ 51191 0.40
VA.................................... WISE.................................. 51195 0.40
VA.................................... WYTHE................................. 51197 0.40
VA.................................... BEDFORD CITY.......................... 51515 0.40
VA.................................... BRISTOL CITY.......................... 51520 0.40
VA.................................... BUENA VISTA CITY...................... 51530 0.10
VA.................................... CLIFTON FORGE CITY.................... 51560 0.10
VA.................................... COVINGTON CITY........................ 51580 0.10
VA.................................... DANVILLE CITY......................... 51590 0.40
VA.................................... GALAX CITY............................ 51640 0.40
VA.................................... HARRISONBURG CITY..................... 51660 0.10
VA.................................... LEXINGTON CITY........................ 51678 0.10
VA.................................... LYNCHBURG CITY........................ 51680 0.40
VA.................................... MARTINSVILLE CITY..................... 51690 0.40
VA.................................... NORTON CITY........................... 51720 0.40
VA.................................... RADFORD CITY.......................... 51750 0.40
VA.................................... ROANOKE CITY.......................... 51770 0.40
VA.................................... SALEM CITY............................ 51775 0.40
VA.................................... STAUNTON CITY......................... 51790 0.10
VA.................................... WAYNESBORO CITY....................... 51820 0.10
WV.................................... MC DOWELL............................. 54047 0.10
WV.................................... MERCER................................ 54055 0.10
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[73 FR 14156, Mar. 17, 2008]
Sec. 1005.52 Adjusted Class I differentials.
See Sec. 1000.52.
Sec. 1005.53 Announcement of class prices, component prices, and
advanced pricing factors.
See Sec. 1000.53.
Sec. 1005.54 Equivalent price.
See Sec. 1000.54.
Uniform Prices
Sec. 1005.60 Handler's value of milk.
For the purpose of computing a handler's obligation for producer
milk, the market administrator shall determine for each month the value
of milk of each handler with respect to each of the handler's pool
plants and of each handler described in Sec. 1000.9(c) with respect to
milk that was not received at a pool plant by adding the amounts
computed in paragraphs (a) through (e) of this section and subtracting
from that total amount the value computed in paragraph (f) of this
section. Receipts of nonfluid milk products that are distributed as
labeled reconstituted milk for which payments are made to the producer-
settlement fund of another Federal order under Sec. 1000.76(a)(4) or
(d) shall be excluded from pricing under this section.
(a) Multiply the pounds of skim milk and butterfat in producer milk
that were classified in each class pursuant to Sec. 1000.44(c) by the
applicable skim milk and butterfat prices, and add the resulting
amounts; except that for the months of January 2005 through March 2005,
the Class I skim milk price for this purpose shall be the Class I skim
milk price as determined in Sec. 1000.50(b)
[[Page 72]]
plus $0.04 per hundredweight, and the Class I butterfat price for this
purpose shall be the Class I butterfat price as determined in Sec.
1000.50(c) plus $0.0004 per pound. The adjustments to the Class I skim
milk and butterfat prices provided herein may be reduced by the market
administrator for any month if the market administrator determines that
the payments yet unpaid computed pursuant to paragraphs (g)(1) through
(5) and paragraph (g)(7) of this section will be less than the amount
computed pursuant to paragraph (g)(6) of this section. The adjustments
to the Class I skim milk and butterfat prices provided herein during the
months of January 2005 through March 2005 shall be announced along with
the prices announced in Sec. 1000.53(b);
(b) Multiply the pounds of skim milk and butterfat overage assigned
to each class pursuant to Sec. 1000.44(a)(11) by the respective skim
milk and butterfat prices applicable at the location of the pool plant;
(c) Multiply the difference between the Class IV price for the
preceding month and the current month's Class I, II, or III price, as
the case may be, by the hundredweight of skim milk and butterfat
subtracted from Class I, II, or III, respectively, pursuant to Sec.
1000.44(a)(7) and the corresponding step of Sec. 1000.44(b);
(d) Multiply the difference between the Class I price applicable at
the location of the pool plant and the Class IV price by the
hundredweight of skim milk and butterfat assigned to Class I pursuant to
Sec. 1000.43(d) and the hundredweight of skim milk and butterfat
subtracted from Class I pursuant to Sec. 1000.44(a)(3)(i) through (vi)
and the corresponding step of Sec. 1000.44(b), excluding receipts of
bulk fluid cream products from a plant regulated under other Federal
orders and bulk concentrated fluid milk products from pool plants,
plants regulated under other Federal orders, and unregulated supply
plants;
(e) Multiply the Class I skim milk and Class I butterfat prices
applicable at the location of the nearest unregulated supply plants from
which an equivalent volume was received by the pounds of skim milk and
butterfat in receipts of concentrated fluid milk products assigned to
Class I pursuant to Sec. 1000.43(d) and Sec. 1000.44(a)(3)(i) and the
corresponding step of Sec. 1000.44(b) and the pounds of skim milk and
butterfat subtracted from Class I pursuant to Sec. 1000.44(a)(8) and
the corresponding step of Sec. 1000.44(b), excluding such skim milk and
butterfat in receipts of fluid milk products from an unregulated supply
plant to the extent that an equivalent amount of skim milk or butterfat
disposed of to such plant by handlers fully regulated under any Federal
milk order is classified and priced as Class I milk and is not used as
an offset for any other payment obligation under any order.
(f) For reconstituted milk made from receipts of nonfluid milk
products, multiply $1.00 (but not more than the difference between the
Class I price applicable at the location of the pool plant and the Class
IV price) by the hundredweight of skim milk and butterfat contained in
receipts of nonfluid milk products that are allocated to Class I use
pursuant to Sec. 1000.43(d).
(g) For the months of January 2005 through March 2005 for handlers
who have submitted proof satisfactory to the market administrator to
determine eligibility for reimbursement of transportation costs,
subtract an amount equal to:
(1) The cost of transportation on loads of producer milk delivered
or rerouted to a pool distributing plant which were delivered as a
result of hurricanes Charley, Frances, Ivan, and Jeanne;
(2) The cost of transportation on loads of producer milk delivered
or rerouted to a pool supply plant that was then transferred to a pool
distributing plant which were delivered as a result of hurricanes
Charley, Frances, Ivan, and Jeanne;
(3) The cost of transportation on loads of bulk milk delivered or
rerouted to a pool distributing plant from a pool supply plant which
were delivered as a result of hurricanes Charley, Frances, Ivan, and
Jeanne;
(4) The cost of transportation on loads of bulk milk delivered or
rerouted to a pool distributing plant from another order plant which
were delivered as a result of hurricanes
[[Page 73]]
Charley, Frances, Ivan, and Jeanne; and
(5) The cost of transportation on loads of bulk milk transferred or
diverted to a plant regulated under another Federal order or to other
nonpool plants which were delivered as a result of hurricanes Charley,
Frances, Ivan, and Jeanne.
(6) The total amount of payment to all handlers under this section
shall be limited for each month to an amount determined by multiplying
the total Class I producer milk for all handlers pursuant to Sec.
1000.44(c) times $0.04 per hundredweight.
(7) If the cost of transportation computed pursuant to paragraphs
(g)(1) through (5) of this section exceeds the amount computed pursuant
to paragraph (g)(6) of this section, the market administrator shall
prorate such payments to each handler based on the handler's proportion
of transportation costs submitted pursuant to paragraphs (g)(1) through
(5) of this section. Transportation costs submitted pursuant to
paragraphs (g)(1) through (5) of this section which are not paid as a
result of such a proration shall be included in each subsequent month's
transportation costs submitted pursuant to paragraphs (g)(1) through (5)
of this section until paid, or until the time period for such payments
is concluded.
(8) The reimbursement of transportation costs pursuant to this
section shall be the actual demonstrated cost of such transportation of
bulk milk delivered or rerouted as described in paragraphs (g)(1)
through (5) of this section, or the miles of transportation on loads of
bulk milk delivered or rerouted as described in paragraphs (g)(1)
through (5) of this section multiplied by $2.25 per loaded mile,
whichever is less.
(9) For each handler, the reimbursement of transportation costs
pursuant to paragraph (g) of this section for bulk milk delivered or
rerouted as described in paragraphs (g)(1) through (5) of this section
shall be reduced by the amount of payments received for such milk
movements from the transportation credit balancing fund pursuant to
Sec. 1005.82.
[64 FR 47960, Sept. 1, 1999, as amended at 65 FR 82835, Dec. 28, 2000;
69 FR 71699, Dec. 10, 2004]
Sec. 1005.61 Computation of uniform prices.
On or before the 11th day of each month, the market administrator
shall compute a uniform butterfat price, a uniform skim milk price, and
a uniform price for producer milk receipts reported for the prior month.
The report of any handler who has not made payments required pursuant to
Sec. 1005.71 for the preceding month shall not be included in the
computation of these prices, and such handler's report shall not be
included in the computation for succeeding months until the handler has
made full payment of outstanding monthly obligations.
(a) Uniform butterfat price. The uniform butterfat price per pound,
rounded to the nearest one-hundredth cent, shall be computed by:
(1) Multiplying the pounds of butterfat in producer milk allocated
to each class pursuant to Sec. 1000.44(b) by the respective class
butterfat prices;
(2) Adding the butterfat value calculated in Sec. 1005.60(e) for
other source milk allocated to Class I pursuant to Sec. 1000.43(d) and
the steps of Sec. 1000.44(b) that correspond to Sec. 1000.44(a)(3)(i)
and Sec. 1000.44(a)(8) by the Class I price; and
(3) Dividing the sum of paragraphs (a)(1) and (a)(2) of this section
by the sum of the pounds of butterfat in producer milk and other source
milk used to calculate the values in paragraphs (a)(1) and (a)(2) of
this section.
(b) Uniform skim milk price. The uniform skim milk price per
hundredweight, rounded to the nearest cent, shall be computed as
follows:
(1) Combine into one total the values computed pursuant to Sec.
1005.60 for all handlers;
(2) Add an amount equal to the minus location adjustments and
subtract an amount equal to the plus location adjustments computed
pursuant to Sec. 1005.75;
(3) Add an amount equal to not less than one-half of the unobligated
balance in the producer-settlement fund;
[[Page 74]]
(4) Subtract the value of the total pounds of butterfat for all
handlers. The butterfat value shall be computed by multiplying the sum
of the pounds of butterfat in producer milk and other source milk used
to calculate the values in paragraphs (a)(1) and (a)(2) of this section
by the butterfat price computed in paragraph (a) of this section;
(5) Divide the resulting amount by the sum of the following for all
handlers included in these computations:
(i) The total skim pounds of producer milk; and
(ii) The total skim pounds for which a value is computed pursuant to
Sec. 1005.60(e); and
(6) Subtract not less than 4 cents and not more than 5 cents.
(c) Uniform price. The uniform price per hundredweight, rounded to
the nearest cent, shall be the sum of the following:
(1) Multiply the uniform butterfat price for the month pursuant to
paragraph (a) of this section times 3.5 pounds of butterfat; and
(2) Multiply the uniform skim milk price for the month pursuant to
paragraph (b) of this section times 96.5 pounds of skim milk.
[64 FR 47960, Sept. 1, 1999, as amended at 65 FR 82835, Dec. 28, 2000]
Sec. 1005.62 Announcement of uniform prices.
On or before the 11th day after the end of the month, the market
administrator shall announce the uniform prices for the month computed
pursuant to Sec. 1005.61.
Payments for Milk
Sec. 1005.70 Producer-settlement fund.
See Sec. 1000.70.
Sec. 1005.71 Payments to the producer-settlement fund.
Each handler shall make a payment to the producer-settlement fund in
a manner that provides receipt of the funds by the market administrator
no later than the 12th day after the end of the month (except as
provided in Sec. 1000.90). Payment shall be the amount, if any, by
which the amount specified in paragraph (a) of this section exceeds the
amount specified in paragraph (b) of this section:
(a) The total value of milk of the handler for the month as
determined pursuant to Sec. 1005.60; and
(b) The sum of the value at the uniform prices for skim milk and
butterfat, adjusted for plant location, of the handler's receipts of
producer milk; and the value at the uniform price, as adjusted pursuant
to Sec. 1005.75, applicable at the location of the plant from which
received of other source milk for which a value is computed pursuant to
Sec. 1005.60(e).
Sec. 1005.72 Payments from the producer-settlement fund.
No later than one day after the date of payment receipt required
under Sec. 1005.71, the market administrator shall pay to each handler
the amount, if any, by which the amount computed pursuant to Sec.
1005.71(b) exceeds the amount computed pursuant to Sec. 1005.71(a). If,
at such time, the balance in the producer-settlement fund is
insufficient to make all payments pursuant to this section, the market
administrator shall reduce uniformly such payments and shall complete
the payments as soon as the funds are available.
Sec. 1005.73 Payments to producers and to cooperative associations.
(a) Each handler that is not paying a cooperative association for
producer milk shall pay each producer as follows:
(1) Partial payment. For each producer who has not discontinued
shipments as of the 23rd day of the month, payment shall be made so that
it is received by the producer on or before the 26th day of the month
(except as provided in Sec. 1000.90) for milk received during the first
15 days of the month at not less than 90 percent of the preceding
month's uniform price, adjusted for plant location pursuant to Sec.
1005.75 and proper deductions authorized in writing by the producer.
(2) Final payment. For milk received during the month, a payment
computed as follows shall be made so that it is received by each
producer one day after the payment date required in Sec. 1005.72:
[[Page 75]]
(i) Multiply the hundredweight of producer skim milk received times
the uniform skim milk price for the month;
(ii) Multiply the pounds of butterfat received times the uniform
butterfat price for the month;
(iii) Multiply the hundredweight of producer milk received times the
plant location adjustment pursuant to Sec. 1005.75; and
(iv) Add the amounts computed in paragraph (a)(2)(i), (ii), and
(iii) of this section, and from that sum:
(A) Subtract the partial payment made pursuant to paragraph (a)(1)
of this section;
(B) Subtract the deduction for marketing services pursuant to Sec.
1000.86;
(C) Add or subtract for errors made in previous payments to the
producer; and
(D) Subtract proper deductions authorized in writing by the
producer.
(b) One day before partial and final payments are due pursuant to
paragraph (a) of this section, each handler shall pay a cooperative
association for milk received as follows:
(1) Partial payment to a cooperative association for bulk milk
received directly from producers' farms. For bulk milk (including the
milk of producers who are not members of such association and who the
market administrator determines have authorized the cooperative
association to collect payment for their milk) received during the first
15 days of the month from a cooperative association in any capacity,
except as the operator of a pool plant, the payment shall be equal to
the hundredweight of milk received multiplied by 90 percent of the
preceding month's uniform price, adjusted for plant location pursuant to
Sec. 1005.75.
(2) Partial payment to a cooperative association for milk
transferred from its pool plant. For bulk fluid milk products and bulk
fluid cream products received during the first 15 days of the month from
a cooperative association in its capacity as the operator of a pool
plant, the partial payment shall be at the pool plant operator's
estimated use value of the milk using the most recent class prices
available for skim milk and butterfat at the receiving plant's location.
(3) Final payment to a cooperative association for milk transferred
from its pool plant. For bulk fluid milk products and bulk fluid cream
products received during the month from a cooperative association in its
capacity as the operator of a pool plant, the final payment shall be the
classified value of such milk as determined by multiplying the pounds of
skim milk and butterfat assigned to each class pursuant to Sec. 1000.44
by the class prices for the month at the receiving plant's location, and
subtracting from this sum the partial payment made pursuant to paragraph
(b)(2) of this section.
(4) Final payment to a cooperative association for bulk milk
received directly from producers' farms. For bulk milk received from a
cooperative association during the month, including the milk of
producers who are not members of such association and who the market
administrator determines have authorized the cooperative association to
collect payment for their milk, the final payment for such milk shall be
an amount equal to the sum of the individual payments otherwise payable
for such milk pursuant to paragraph (a)(2) of this section.
(c) If a handler has not received full payment from the market
administrator pursuant to Sec. 1005.72 by the payment date specified in
paragraph (a) or (b) of this section, the handler may reduce payments
pursuant to paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section, but by not more than
the amount of the underpayment. The payments shall be completed on the
next scheduled payment date after receipt of the balance due from the
market administrator.
(d) If a handler claims that a required payment to a producer cannot
be made because the producer is deceased or cannot be located, or
because the cooperative association or its lawful successor or assignee
is no longer in existence, the payment shall be made to the producer-
settlement fund, and in the event that the handler subsequently locates
and pays the producer or a lawful claimant, or in the event that the
handler no longer exists and a lawful claim is later established, the
market administrator shall make the required payment from the producer-
settlement
[[Page 76]]
fund to the handler or to the lawful claimant as the case may be.
(e) In making payments to producers pursuant to this section, each
pool plant operator shall furnish each producer, except a producer whose
milk was received from a cooperative association described in Sec.
1000.9(a) or (c), a supporting statement in such form that it may be
retained by the recipient which shall show:
(1) The name, address, Grade A identifier assigned by a duly
constituted regulatory agency, and the payroll number of the producer;
(2) The month and dates that milk was received from the producer,
including the daily and total pounds of milk received;
(3) The total pounds of butterfat in the producer's milk;
(4) The minimum rate or rates at which payment to the producer is
required pursuant to the order in this part;
(5) The rate used in making payment if the rate is other than the
applicable minimum rate;
(6) The amount, or rate per hundredweight, and nature of each
deduction claimed by the handler; and
(7) The net amount of payment to the producer or cooperative
association.
[64 FR 47960, Sept. 1, 1999, as amended at 65 FR 32010, May 22, 2000]
Sec. 1005.74 [Reserved]
Sec. 1005.75 Plant location adjustments for producer milk and nonpool
milk.
For purposes of making payments for producer milk and nonpool milk,
a plant location adjustment shall be determined by subtracting the Class
I price specified in Sec. 1005.51 from the Class I price at the plant's
location. The difference, plus or minus as the case may be, shall be
used to adjust the payments required pursuant to Sec. Sec. 1005.73 and
1000.76.
Sec. 1005.76 Payments by a handler operating a partially regulated
distributing plant.
See Sec. 1000.76.
Sec. 1005.77 Adjustment of accounts.
See Sec. 1000.77.
Sec. 1005.78 Charges on overdue accounts.
See Sec. 1000.78.
Marketwide Service Payments
Sec. 1005.80 Transportation credit balancing fund.
The market administrator shall maintain a separate fund known as the
Transportation Credit Balancing Fund into which shall be deposited the
payments made by handlers pursuant to Sec. 1005.81 and out of which
shall be made the payments due handlers pursuant to Sec. 1005.82.
Payments due a handler shall be offset against payments due from the
handler.
Sec. 1005.81 Payments to the transportation credit balancing fund.
(a) On or before the 12th day after the end of the month (except as
provided in Sec. 1000.90), each handler operating a pool plant and each
handler specified in Sec. 1000.9 (c) shall pay to the Market
Administrator a transportation credit balancing fund assessment
determined by multiplying the pounds of Class I producer milk assigned
pursuant to Sec. 1005.44 by $0.15 per hundredweight or such lesser
amount as the Market Administrator deems necessary to maintain a balance
in the fund equal to the total transportation credits disbursed during
the prior June-February period. In the event that during any month of
the June-February period the fund balance is insufficient to cover the
amount of credits that are due, the assessment should be based upon the
amount of credits that would have been disbursed had the fund balance
been sufficient.
(b) The market administrator shall announce publicly on or before
the 23rd day of the month (except as provided in Sec. 1000.90) the
assessment pursuant to paragraph (a) of this section for the following
month.
[71 FR 62379, Oct. 25, 2006, as amended at 73 FR 14161, Mar. 17, 2008]
[[Page 77]]
Sec. 1005.82 Payments from the transportation credit balancing fund.
(a) Payments from the transportation credit balancing fund to
handlers and cooperative associations requesting transportation credits
shall be made as follows:
(1) On or before the 13th day (except as provided in Sec. 1000.90)
after the end of each of the months of January, February and July
through December and any other month in which transportation credits are
in effect pursuant to paragraph (b) of this section, the market
administrator shall pay to each handler that received, and reported
pursuant to Sec. 1005.30(a)(5), bulk milk transferred from a plant
fully regulated under another Federal order as described in paragraph
(c)(1) of this section or that received, and reported pursuant to Sec.
1005.30(a)(6), milk directly from producers'' farms as specified in
paragraph (c)(2) of this section, a preliminary amount determined
pursuant to paragraph (d) of this section to the extent that funds are
available in the transportation credit balancing fund. If an
insufficient balance exists to pay all of the credits computed pursuant
to this section, the market administrator shall distribute the balance
available in the transportation credit balancing fund by reducing
payments prorata using the percentage derived by dividing the balance in
the fund by the total credits that are due for the month. The amount of
credits resulting from this initial proration shall be subject to audit
adjustment pursuant to paragraph (a)(2) of this section.
(2) The market administrator shall accept adjusted requests for
transportation credits on or before the 20th day of the month following
the month for which such credits were requested pursuant to Sec.
1005.32(a). After such date, a preliminary audit will be conducted by
the market administrator, who will recalculate any necessary proration
of transportation credit payments for the preceding month pursuant to
paragraph (a) of this section. Handlers will be promptly notified of an
overpayment of credits based upon this final computation and remedial
payments to or from the transportation credit balancing fund will be
made on or before the next payment date for the following month.
(3) Transportation credits paid pursuant to paragraphs (a)(1) and
(2) of this section shall be subject to final verification by the market
administrator pursuant to Sec. 1000.77. Adjusted payments to or from
the transportation credit balancing fund will remain subject to the
final proration established pursuant to paragraph (a)(2) of this
section.
(4) In the event that a qualified cooperative association is the
responsible party for whose account such milk is received and written
documentation of this fact is provided to the market administrator
pursuant to Sec. 1005.30(c)(3) prior to the date payment is due, the
transportation credits for such milk computed pursuant to this section
shall be made to such cooperative association rather than to the
operator of the pool plant at which the milk was received.
(b) The Market Administrator may extend the period during which
transportation credits are in effect (i.e., the transportation credit
period) to the month of June if a written request to do so is received
15 days prior to the beginning of the month for which the request is
made and, after conducting an independent investigation, finds that such
extension is necessary to assure the market of an adequate supply of
milk for fluid use. Before making such a finding, the Market
Administrator shall notify the Deputy Administrator of the Dairy
Programs and all handlers in the market that an extension is being
considered and invite written data, views, and arguments. Any decision
to extend the transportation credit period must be issued in writing
prior to the first day of the month for which the extension is to be
effective.
(c) Transportation credits shall apply to the following milk:
(1) Bulk milk received at a pool distributing plant from a plant
regulated under another Federal order, except Federal Order 1007; and
(2) Bulk milk received directly from the farms of dairy farmers at
pool distributing plants subject to the following conditions:
[[Page 78]]
(i) The dairy farmer was not a ``producer'' under this order for
more than 45 days during the immediately preceding months of March
through May, or not more than 50 percent of the production of the dairy
farmer during those 3 months, in aggregate, was received as producer
milk under this order during those 3 months; and
(ii) The farm on which the milk was produced is not located within
the specified marketing area of the order in this part or the marketing
area of Federal Order 1007 (7 CFR part 1007).
(iii) The market administrator may increase or decrease the milk
production standard specified in paragraph (c)(2)(i) of this section if
the market administrator finds that such revision is necessary to assure
orderly marketing and efficient handling of milk in the marketing area.
Before making such a finding, the market administrator shall investigate
the need for the revision either on the market administrator's own
initiative or at the request of interested persons. If the investigation
shows that a revision might be appropriate, the market administrator
shall issue a notice stating that the revision is being considered and
inviting written data, views, and arguments. Any decision to revise an
applicable percentage must be issued in writing at least one day before
the effective date.
(d) Transportation credits shall be computed as follows:
(1) The market administrator shall subtract from the pounds of milk
described in paragraphs (c)(1) and (2) of this section the pounds of
bulk milk transferred from the pool plant receiving the supplemental
milk if milk was transferred to a nonpool plant on the same calendar day
that the supplemental milk was received. For this purpose, the
transferred milk shall be subtracted from the most distant load of
supplemental milk received, and then in sequence with the next most
distant load until all of the transfers have been offset.
(2) With respect to the pounds of milk described in paragraph (c)(1)
of this section that remain after the computations described in
paragraph (d)(1) of this section, the market administrator shall:
(i) Determine the shortest hard-surface highway distance between the
shipping plant and the receiving plant;
(ii) Multiply the number of miles so determined by the mileage rate
for the month computed pursuant to Sec. 1005.83(a)(6).
(iii) Subtract the applicable Class I price specified in Sec.
1000.50(a) for the county in which the shipping plant is located from
the Class I price applicable for the county in which the receiving plant
is located;
(iv) Subtract any positive difference computed in paragraph
(d)(2)(iii) of this section from the amount computed in paragraph
(d)(2)(ii) of this section; and
(v) Multiply the remainder computed in paragraph (d)(2)(iv) of this
section by the hundredweight of milk described in paragraph (d)(2) of
this section.
(3) For the remaining milk described in paragraph (c)(2) of this
section after computations described in paragraph (d)(1) of this
section, the market administrator shall:
(i) Determine an origination point for each load of milk by locating
the nearest city to the last producer's farm from which milk was picked
up for delivery to the receiving pool plant;
(ii) Determine the shortest hard-surface highway distance between
the receiving pool plant and the origination point;
(iii) Subtract 85 miles from the mileage so determined;
(iv) Multiply the remaining miles so computed by the mileage rate
for the month computed pursuant to Sec. 1005.83(a)(6).
(v) Subtract the Class I price specified in Sec. 1000.50(a)
applicable for the county in which the origination point is located from
the Class I price applicable at the receiving pool plant's location;
(vi) Subtract any positive difference computed in paragraph
(d)(3)(v) of this section from the amount computed in paragraph
(d)(3)(iv) of this section; and
(vii) Multiply the remainder computed in paragraph (d)(3)(vi) of
this section by the hundredweight of milk described in paragraph (d)(3)
of this section.
[64 FR 47960, Sept. 1, 1999, as amended at 70 FR 59223, Oct. 12, 2005;
71 FR 62379, Oct. 25, 2006; 73 FR 14161, Mar. 17, 2008]
[[Page 79]]
Sec. 1005.83 Mileage rate for the transportation credit balancing fund.
(a) The market administrator shall compute a mileage rate each month
as follows:
(1) Compute the simple average rounded down to three decimal places
for the most recent 4 four weeks of the Diesel Price per Gallon as
reported by the Energy Information Administration of the United States
Department of Energy for the Lower Atlantic and Gulf Coast Districts
combined.
(2) From the result in paragraph (a)(1) in this section subtract
$1.42 per gallon;
(3) Divide the result in paragraph (a)(2) of this section by 5.5,
and round down to three decimal places to compute the fuel cost
adjustment factor;
(4) Add the result in paragraph (a)(3) of this section to $1.91;
(5) Divide the result in paragraph (a)(4) of this section by 480;
(6) Round the result in paragraph (a)(5) of this section down to
five decimal places to compute the mileage rate.
(b) The market administrator shall announce publicly on or before
the 23rd day of the month (except as provided in Sec. 1000.90) the
mileage rate pursuant to paragraph (a) of this section for the following
month.
[71 FR 62379, Oct. 25, 2006]
Administrative Assessment and Marketing Service Deduction
Sec. 1005.85 Assessment for order administration.
See Sec. 1000.85.
Sec. 1005.86 Deduction for marketing services.
See Sec. 1000.86.
PART 1006_MILK IN THE FLORIDA MARKETING AREA--Table of Contents
Subpart_Order Regulating Handling
General Provisions
Sec.
1006.1 General provisions.
Definitions
1006.2 Florida marketing area.
1006.3 Route disposition.
1006.4 Plant.
1006.5 Distributing plant.
1006.6 Supply plant.
1006.7 Pool plant.
1006.8 Nonpool plant.
1006.9 Handler.
1006.10 Producer-handler.
1006.11 [Reserved]
1006.12 Producer.
1006.13 Producer milk.
1006.14 Other source milk.
1006.15 Fluid milk product.
1006.16 Fluid cream product.
1006.17 [Reserved]
1006.18 Cooperative association.
1006.19 Commercial food processing establishment.
Handler Reports
1006.30 Reports of receipts and utilization.
1006.31 Payroll reports.
1006.32 Other reports.
Classification of Milk
1006.40 Classes of utilization.
1006.41 [Reserved]
1006.42 Classification of transfers and diversions.
1006.43 General classification rules.
1006.44 Classification of producer milk.
1006.45 Market administrator's reports and announcements concerning
classification.
Class Prices
1006.50 Class prices, component prices, and advanced pricing factors.
1006.51 Class I differential, adjustments to Class I prices, and Class I
price.
1006.52 Adjusted Class I differentials.
1006.53 Announcement of class prices, component prices, and advanced
pricing factors.
1006.54 Equivalent price.
Uniform Prices
1006.60 Handler's value of milk.
1006.61 Computation of uniform prices.
1006.62 Announcement of uniform prices.
Payments for Milk
1006.70 Producer-settlement fund.
1006.71 Payments to the producer-settlement fund.
1006.72 Payments from the producer-settlement fund.
1006.73 Payments to producers and to cooperative associations.
1006.74 [Reserved]
1006.75 Plant location adjustments for producer milk and nonpool milk.
1006.76 Payments by a handler operating a partially regulated
distributing plant.
1006.77 Adjustment of accounts.
1006.78 Charges on overdue accounts.
[[Page 80]]
Administrative Assessment and Marketing Service Deduction
1006.85 Assessment for order administration.
1006.86 Deduction for marketing services.
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 601-674, and 7253.
Source: 64 FR 47966, Sept. 1, 1999, unless otherwise noted.
Subpart_Order Regulating Handling
General Provisions
Sec. 1006.1 General provisions.
The terms, definitions, and provisions in part 1000 of this chapter
apply to this part 1006. In this part 1006, all references to sections
in part 1000 refer to part 1000 of this chapter.
Definitions
Sec. 1006.2 Florida marketing area.
The marketing area means all the territory within the State of
Florida, except the counties of Escambia, Okaloosa, Santa Rosa, and
Walton, including all piers, docks and wharves connected therewith and
all craft moored thereat, and all territory occupied by government
(municipal, State or Federal) reservations, installations, institutions,
or other similar establishments if any part thereof is within any of the
listed states or political subdivisions.
Sec. 1006.3 Route disposition.
See Sec. 1000.3.
Sec. 1006.4 Plant.
See Sec. 1000.4.
Sec. 1006.5 Distributing plant.
See Sec. 1000.5.
Sec. 1006.6 Supply plant.
See Sec. 1000.6.
Sec. 1006.7 Pool plant.
Pool plant means a plant specified in paragraphs (a) through (d) of
this section, a unit of plants as specified in paragraph (e) of this
section, or a plant specified in paragraph (h) of this section, but
excluding a plant specified in paragraph (g) of this section. The
pooling standards described in paragraphs (c) and (d) of this section
are subject to modification pursuant to paragraph (f) of this section:
(a) A distributing plant, other than a plant qualified as a pool
plant pursuant to paragraph (b) of this section or Sec. --------.7(b)
of any other Federal milk order, from which during the month 50 percent
or more of the fluid milk products physically received at such plant
(excluding concentrated milk received from another plant by agreement
for other than Class I use) are disposed of as route disposition or are
transferred in the form of packaged fluid milk products to other
distributing plants. At least 25 percent of such route disposition and
transfers must be to outlets in the marketing area.
(b) Any distributing plant located in the marketing area which
during the month processed at least 50 percent of the total quantity of
fluid milk products physically received at the plant (excluding
concentrated milk received from another plant by agreement for other
than Class I use) into ultra-pasteurized or aseptically-processed fluid
milk products.
(c) A supply plant from which 60 percent or more of the total
quantity of milk that is physically received during the month from dairy
farmers and handlers described in Sec. 1000.9(c), including milk that
is diverted from the plant, is transferred to pool distributing plants.
Concentrated milk transferred from the supply plant to a distributing
plant for an agreed-upon use other than Class I shall be excluded from
the supply plant's shipments in computing the plant's shipping
percentage.
(d) A plant located within the marketing area that is operated by a
cooperative association if pool plant status under this paragraph is
requested for such plant by the cooperative association and during the
month 60 percent of the producer milk of members of such cooperative
association is delivered directly from farms to pool distributing plants
or is transferred to such plants as a fluid milk product (excluding
concentrated milk transferred to a distributing plant for an agreed-upon
use other than Class I) from the cooperative's plant.
[[Page 81]]
(e) Two or more plants operated by the same handler and that are
located within the marketing area may qualify for pool status as a unit
by meeting the total and in-area route disposition requirements
specified in paragraph (a) of this section and the following additional
requirements:
(1) At least one of the plants in the unit must qualify as a pool
plant pursuant to paragraph (a) of this section;
(2) Other plants in the unit must process only Class I or Class II
products and must be located in a pricing zone providing the same or a
lower Class I price than the price applicable at the distributing plant
included in the unit pursuant to paragraph (e)(1) of this section; and
(3) A written request to form a unit, or to add or remove plants
from a unit, must be filed with the market administrator prior to the
first day of the month for which it is to be effective.
(f) The applicable shipping percentages of paragraphs (c) and (d) of
this section may be increased or decreased by the market administrator
if the market administrator finds that such adjustment is necessary to
encourage needed shipments or to prevent uneconomic shipments. Before
making such a finding, the market administrator shall investigate the
need for adjustment either on the market administrator's own initiative
or at the request of interested parties if the request is made in
writing at least 15 days prior to the date for which the requested
revision is desired effective. If the investigation shows that an
adjustment of the shipping percentages might be appropriate, the market
administrator shall issue a notice stating that an adjustment is being
considered and invite data, views and arguments. Any decision to revise
an applicable shipping percentage must be issued in writing at least one
day before the effective date.
(g) The term pool plant shall not apply to the following plants:
(1) A producer-handler plant;
(2) An exempt plant as defined in Sec. 1000.8(e);
(3) A plant qualified pursuant to paragraph (a) of this section
which is not located within any Federal order marketing area, meets the
pooling requirements of another Federal order, and has had greater route
disposition in such other Federal order marketing area for 3 consecutive
months;
(4) A plant qualified pursuant to paragraph (a) of this section
which is located in another Federal order marketing area, meets the
pooling standards of the other Federal order, and has not had a majority
of its route disposition in this marketing area for 3 consecutive months
or is locked into pool status under such other Federal order without
regard to its route disposition in any other Federal order marketing
area; and
(5) A plant qualified pursuant to paragraph (c) of this section
which also meets the pooling requirements of another Federal order and
from which greater qualifying shipments are made to plants regulated
under such other order than are made to plants regulated under the order
in this part, or such plant has automatic pooling status under such
other order.
(h) Any distributing plant, located within the marketing area as
described on May 1, 2006, in Sec. 1006.2;
(1) From which there is route disposition and/or transfers of
packaged fluid milk products in any non-Federally regulated marketing
area(s) located within one or more States that require handlers to pay
minimum prices for raw milk provided that 25 percent or more of the
total quantity of fluid milk products physically received at such plant
(excluding concentrated milk received from another plant by agreement
for other than Class I use) is disposed of as route disposition and/or
is transferred in the form of packaged fluid milk products to other
plants. At least 25 percent of such route disposition and/or transfers,
in aggregate, are in any non-Federally regulated marketing area(s)
located within one or more States that require handlers to pay minimum
prices for raw milk. Subject to the following exclusions:
(i) The plant is described in Sec. 1006.7(a), (b), or (e);
(ii) The plant is subject to the pricing provisions of a State-
operated milk pricing plan which provides for the payment of minimum
class prices for raw milk;
(iii) The plant is described in Sec. 1000.8(a) or (e); or
[[Page 82]]
(iv) A producer-handler described in Sec. 1006.10 with less than
three million pounds during the month of route disposition and/or
transfers of packaged fluid milk products to other plants.
(2) [Reserved]
[64 FR 47966, Sept. 1, 1999, as amended at 71 FR 25498, May 1, 2006; 71
FR 28249, May 16, 2006]
Sec. 1006.8 Nonpool plant.
See Sec. 1000.8.
Sec. 1006.9 Handler.
See Sec. 1000.9.
Sec. 1006.10 Producer-handler.
Producer-handler means a person who:
(a) Operates a dairy farm and a distributing plant from which there
is route disposition in the marketing area, and from which total route
disposition and packaged sales of fluid milk products to other plants
during the month does not exceed 3 million pounds;
(b) Receives no fluid milk products, and acquires no fluid milk
products for route disposition, from sources other than own farm
production;
(c) Disposes of no other source milk as Class I milk except by
increasing the nonfat milk solids content of the fluid milk products
received from own farm production; and
(d) Provides proof satisfactory to the market administrator that the
care and management of the dairy animals and other resources necessary
to produce all Class I milk handled, and the processing and packaging
operations, are the producer-handler's own enterprise and are operated
at the producer-handler's own risk.
(e) Any producer-handler with Class I route dispositions and/or
transfers of packaged fluid milk products in the marketing area
described in Sec. 1131.2 of this chapter shall be subject to payments
into the Order 1131 producer settlement fund on such dispositions
pursuant to Sec. 1000.76(a) and payments into the Order 1131
administrative fund provided such dispositions are less than three
million pounds in the current month and such producer-handler had total
Class I route dispositions and/or transfers of packaged fluid milk
products from own farm production of three million pounds or more the
previous month. If the producer-handler has Class I route dispositions
and/or transfers of packaged fluid milk products into the marketing area
described in Sec. 1131.2 of this chapter of three million pounds or
more during the current month, such producer-handler shall be subject to
the provisions described in Sec. 1131.7 of this chapter or Sec.
1000.76(a).
[64 FR 47966, Sept. 1, 1999, as amended at 71 FR 25498, May 1, 2006; 75
FR 21160, Apr. 23, 2010]
Sec. 1006.11 [Reserved]
Sec. 1006.12 Producer.
(a) Except as provided in paragraph (b) of this section, producer
means any person who produces milk approved by a duly constituted
regulatory agency for fluid consumption as Grade A milk and whose milk
(or components of milk) is:
(1) Received at a pool plant directly from the producer or diverted
by the plant operator in accordance with Sec. 1006.13; or
(2) Received by a handler described in Sec. 1000.9(c).
(b) Producer shall not include:
(1) A producer-handler as defined in any Federal order;
(2) A dairy farmer whose milk is received at an exempt plant,
excluding producer milk diverted to the exempt plant pursuant to Sec.
1006.13(d);
(3) A dairy farmer whose milk is received by diversion at a pool
plant from a handler regulated under another Federal order if the other
Federal order designates the dairy farmer as a producer under that order
and that milk is allocated by request to a utilization other than Class
I; and
(4) A dairy farmer whose milk is reported as diverted to a plant
fully regulated under another Federal order with respect to that portion
of the milk so diverted that is assigned to Class I under the provisions
of such other order.
Sec. 1006.13 Producer milk.
Producer milk means the skim milk (or the skim equivalent of
components of skim milk) and butterfat contained in milk of a producer
that is:
[[Page 83]]
(a) Received by the operator of a pool plant directly from a
producer or a handler described in Sec. 1000.9(c). All milk received
pursuant to this paragraph shall be priced at the location of the plant
where it is first physically received;
(b) Received by a handler described in Sec. 1000.9(c) in excess of
the quantity delivered to pool plants;
(c) Diverted by a pool plant operator to another pool plant. Milk so
diverted shall be priced at the location of the plant to which diverted;
or
(d) Diverted by the operator of a pool plant or a handler described
in Sec. 1000.9(c) to a nonpool plant, subject to the following
conditions:
(1) In any month, not less than 10 days' production of the producer
whose milk is diverted is physically received at a pool plant during the
month;
(2) The total quantity of milk so diverted during the month by a
cooperative association shall not exceed 20 percent during the months of
July through November, 25 percent during the months of December through
February, and 40 percent during all other months, of the producer milk
that the cooperative association caused to be delivered to, and
physically received at, pool plants during the month;
(3) The operator of a pool plant that is not a cooperative
association may divert any milk that is not under the control of a
cooperative association that diverts milk during the month pursuant to
paragraph (d) of this section. The total quantity of milk so diverted
during the month shall not exceed 20 percent during the months of July
through November, 25 percent during the months of December through
February, and 40 percent during all other months, of the producer milk
physically received at such plant (or such unit of plants in the case of
plants that pool as a unit pursuant to Sec. 1006.7(d)) during the
month, excluding the quantity of producer milk received from a handler
described in Sec. 1000.9(c);
(4) Any milk diverted in excess of the limits prescribed in
paragraphs (d) (3) and (4) of this section shall not be producer milk.
If the diverting handler or cooperative association fails to designate
the dairy farmers' deliveries that will not be producer milk, no milk
diverted by the handler or cooperative association shall be producer
milk;
(5) Diverted milk shall be priced at the location of the plant to
which diverted; and
(6) The delivery day requirements and the diversion percentages in
paragraphs (d) (1) through (3) of this section may be increased or
decreased by the market administrator if the market administrator finds
that such revision is necessary to assure orderly marketing and
efficient handling of milk in the marketing area. Before making such a
finding, the market administrator shall investigate the need for the
revision either on the market administrator's own initiative or at the
request of interested persons. If the investigation shows that a
revision might be appropriate, the market administrator shall issue a
notice stating that the revision is being considered and inviting
written data, views, and arguments. Any decision to revise an applicable
percentage must be issued in writing at least one day before the
effective date.
Sec. 1006.14 Other source milk.
See Sec. 1000.14.
Sec. 1006.15 Fluid milk product.
See Sec. 1000.15.
Sec. 1006.16 Fluid cream product.
See Sec. 1000.16.
Sec. 1006.17 [Reserved]
Sec. 1006.18 Cooperative association.
See Sec. 1000.18.
Sec. 1006.19 Commercial food processing establishment.
See Sec. 1000.19.
Handler Reports
Sec. 1006.30 Reports of receipts and utilization.
Each handler shall report monthly so that the market administrator's
office receives the report on or before the 7th day after the end of the
month, in the detail and on prescribed forms, as follows:
(a) With respect to each of its pool plants, the quantities of skim
milk and
[[Page 84]]
butterfat contained in or represented by:
(1) Receipts of producer milk, including producer milk diverted by
the reporting handler, from sources other than handlers described in
Sec. 1000.9(c);
(2) Receipts of milk from handlers described in Sec. 1000.9(c);
(3) Receipts of fluid milk products and bulk fluid cream products
from other pool plants;
(4) Receipts of other source milk;
(5) Inventories at the beginning and end of the month of fluid milk
products and bulk fluid cream products; and
(6) The utilization or disposition of all milk and milk products
required to be reported pursuant to this paragraph.
(b) Each handler operating a partially regulated distributing plant
shall report with respect to such plant in the same manner as prescribed
for reports required by paragraph (a) of this section. Receipts of milk
that would have been producer milk if the plant had been fully regulated
shall be reported in lieu of producer milk. The report shall show also
the quantity of any reconstituted skim milk in route disposition in the
marketing area.
(c) Each handler described in Sec. 1000.9(c) shall report:
(1) The quantities of all skim milk and butterfat contained in
receipts of milk from producers; and
(2) The utilization or disposition of all such receipts.
(d) Each handler not specified in paragraphs (a) through (c) of this
section shall report with respect to its receipts and utilization of
milk and milk products in such manner as the market administrator may
prescribe.
Sec. 1006.31 Payroll reports.
(a) On or before the 20th day after the end of each month, each
handler that operates a pool plant pursuant to Sec. 1006.7 and each
handler described in Sec. 1000.9(c) shall report to the market
administrator its producer payroll for the month, in detail prescribed
by the market administrator, showing for each producer the information
specified in Sec. 1006.73(e).
(b) Each handler operating a partially regulated distributing plant
who elects to make payment pursuant to Sec. 1000.76(b) shall report for
each dairy farmer who would have been a producer if the plant had been
fully regulated in the same manner as prescribed for reports required by
paragraph (a) of this section.
Sec. 1006.32 Other reports.
In addition to the reports required pursuant to Sec. Sec. 1006.30
and 1006.31, each handler shall report any information the market
administrator deems necessary to verify or establish each handler's
obligation under the order.
Classification of Milk
Sec. 1006.40 Classes of utilization.
See Sec. 1000.40.
Sec. 1006.41 [Reserved]
Sec. 1006.42 Classification of transfers and diversions.
See Sec. 1000.42.
Sec. 1006.43 General classification rules.
See Sec. 1000.43.
Sec. 1006.44 Classification of producer milk.
See Sec. 1000.44.
Sec. 1006.45 Market administrator's reports and announcements
concerning classification.
See Sec. 1000.45.
Class Prices
Sec. 1006.50 Class prices, component prices, and advanced pricing factors.
See Sec. 1000.50.
Sec. 1006.51 Class I differential, adjustments to Class I prices, and
Class I price.
(a) The Class I differential shall be the differential established
for Hillsborough County, Florida, which is reported in Sec. 1000.52.
The Class I price shall be the price computed pursuant to Sec.
1006.50(a) for Hillsborough County, Florida.
(b) Adjustment to Class I prices. Class I prices shall be
established pursuant to Sec. 1000.50(a), (b) and (c) using the
following adjustments:
[[Page 85]]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class I price
State County/parish FIPS adjustment
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FL.................................... ALACHUA............................... 12001 1.30
FL.................................... BAKER................................. 12003 1.30
FL.................................... BAY................................... 12005 0.60
FL.................................... BRADFORD.............................. 12007 1.30
FL.................................... BREVARD............................... 12009 1.40
FL.................................... BROWARD............................... 12011 1.70
FL.................................... CALHOUN............................... 12013 0.60
FL.................................... CHARLOTTE............................. 12015 1.50
FL.................................... CITRUS................................ 12017 1.40
FL.................................... CLAY.................................. 12019 1.30
FL.................................... COLLIER............................... 12021 1.70
FL.................................... COLUMBIA.............................. 12023 1.30
FL.................................... DADE.................................. 12025 1.70
FL.................................... DE SOTO............................... 12027 1.80
FL.................................... DIXIE................................. 12029 1.30
FL.................................... DUVAL................................. 12031 1.30
FL.................................... FLAGLER............................... 12035 1.00
FL.................................... FRANKLIN.............................. 12037 0.90
FL.................................... GADSDEN............................... 12039 0.90
FL.................................... GILCHRIST............................. 12041 1.30
FL.................................... GLADES................................ 12043 1.50
FL.................................... GULF.................................. 12045 0.90
FL.................................... HAMILTON.............................. 12047 1.30
FL.................................... HARDEE................................ 12049 1.80
FL.................................... HENDRY................................ 12051 1.70
FL.................................... HERNANDO.............................. 12053 1.40
FL.................................... HIGHLANDS............................. 12055 1.80
FL.................................... HILLSBOROUGH.......................... 12057 1.40
FL.................................... HOLMES................................ 12059 0.60
FL.................................... INDIAN RIVER.......................... 12061 1.80
FL.................................... JACKSON............................... 12063 0.60
FL.................................... JEFFERSON............................. 12065 0.90
FL.................................... LAFAYETTE............................. 12067 1.30
FL.................................... LAKE.................................. 12069 1.40
FL.................................... LEE................................... 12071 1.70
FL.................................... LEON.................................. 12073 0.90
FL.................................... LEVY.................................. 12075 1.00
FL.................................... LIBERTY............................... 12077 0.90
FL.................................... MADISON............................... 12079 1.30
FL.................................... MANATEE............................... 12081 1.80
FL.................................... MARION................................ 12083 1.00
FL.................................... MARTIN................................ 12085 1.50
FL.................................... MONROE................................ 12087 1.70
FL.................................... NASSAU................................ 12089 1.30
FL.................................... OKEECHOBEE............................ 12093 1.80
FL.................................... ORANGE................................ 12095 1.40
FL.................................... OSCEOLA............................... 12097 1.40
FL.................................... PALM BEACH............................ 12099 1.70
FL.................................... PASCO................................. 12101 1.40
FL.................................... PINELLAS.............................. 12103 1.40
FL.................................... POLK.................................. 12105 1.40
FL.................................... PUTNAM................................ 12107 1.30
FL.................................... SAINT JOHNS........................... 12109 1.30
FL.................................... SAINT LUCIE........................... 12111 1.80
FL.................................... SARASOTA.............................. 12115 1.80
FL.................................... SEMINOLE.............................. 12117 1.40
FL.................................... SUMTER................................ 12119 1.40
FL.................................... SUWANNEE.............................. 12121 1.30
FL.................................... TAYLOR................................ 12123 1.30
FL.................................... UNION................................. 12125 1.30
FL.................................... VOLUSIA............................... 12127 1.40
FL.................................... WAKULLA............................... 12129 0.90
FL.................................... WASHINGTON............................ 12133 0.60
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[73 FR 14161, Mar. 17, 2008]
[[Page 86]]
Sec. 1006.52 Adjusted Class I differentials.
See Sec. 1000.52.
Sec. 1006.53 Announcement of class prices, component prices, and
advanced pricing factors.
See Sec. 1000.53.
Sec. 1006.54 Equivalent price.
See Sec. 1000.54.
Uniform Prices
Sec. 1006.60 Handler's value of milk.
For the purpose of computing a handler's obligation for producer
milk, the market administrator shall determine for each month the value
of milk of each handler with respect to each of the handler's pool
plants and of each handler described in Sec. 1000.9(c) with respect to
milk that was not received at a pool plant by adding the amounts
computed in paragraphs (a) through (e) of this section and subtracting
from that total amount the value computed in paragraph (f) of this
section. Receipts of nonfluid milk products that are distributed as
labeled reconstituted milk for which payments are made to the producer-
settlement fund of another Federal order under Sec. 1000.76(a)(4) or
(d) shall be excluded from pricing under this section.
(a) Multiply the pounds of skim milk and butterfat in producer milk
that were classified in each class pursuant to Sec. 1000.44(c) by the
applicable skim milk and butterfat prices, and add the resulting
amounts; except that for the months of January 2005 through March 2005,
the Class I skim milk price for this purpose shall be the Class I skim
milk price as determined in Sec. 1000.50(b) plus $0.09 per
hundredweight, and the Class I butterfat price for this purpose shall be
the Class I butterfat price as determined in Sec. 1000.50(c) plus
$0.0009 per pound. The adjustments to the Class I skim milk and
butterfat prices provided herein may be reduced by the market
administrator for any month if the market administrator determines that
the payments yet unpaid computed pursuant to paragraphs (g)(1) through
(5) and paragraph (g)(7) of this section will be less than the amount
computed pursuant to paragraph (g)(6) of this section. The adjustments
to the Class I skim milk and butterfat prices provided herein during the
months of January 2005 through March 2005 shall be announced along with
the prices announced in Sec. 1000.53(b);
(b) Multiply the pounds of skim milk and butterfat overage assigned
to each class pursuant to Sec. 1000.44(a)(11) by the respective skim
milk and butterfat prices applicable at the location of the pool plant;
(c) Multiply the difference between the Class IV price for the
preceding month and the current month's Class I, II, or III price, as
the case may be, by the hundredweight of skim milk and butterfat
subtracted from Class I, II, or III, respectively, pursuant to Sec.
1000.44(a)(7) and the corresponding step of Sec. 1000.44(b);
(d) Multiply the difference between the Class I price applicable at
the location of the pool plant and the Class IV price by the
hundredweight of skim milk and butterfat assigned to Class I pursuant to
Sec. 1000.43(d) and the hundredweight of skim milk and butterfat
subtracted from Class I pursuant to Sec. 1000.44(a)(3)(i) through (vi)
and the corresponding step of Sec. 1000.44(b), excluding receipts of
bulk fluid cream products from a plant regulated under other Federal
orders and bulk concentrated fluid milk products from pool plants,
plants regulated under other Federal orders, and unregulated supply
plants;
(e) Multiply the Class I skim milk and Class I butterfat prices
applicable at the location of the nearest unregulated supply plants from
which an equivalent volume was received by the pounds of skim milk and
butterfat in receipts of concentrated fluid milk products assigned to
Class I pursuant to Sec. 1000.43(d) and Sec. 1000.44(a)(3)(i) and the
corresponding step of Sec. 1000.44(b) and the pounds of skim milk and
butterfat subtracted from Class I pursuant to Sec. 1000.44(a)(8) and
the corresponding step of Sec. 1000.44(b), excluding such skim milk and
butterfat in receipts of fluid milk products from an unregulated supply
plant to the extent that an equivalent amount of skim milk or butterfat
disposed of to such plant by handlers fully regulated under any Federal
milk order is classified and priced as Class I milk and is not used
[[Page 87]]
as an offset for any other payment obligation under any order; and
(f) For reconstituted milk made from receipts of nonfluid milk
products, multiply $1.00 (but not more than the difference between the
Class I price applicable at the location of the pool plant and the Class
IV price) by the hundredweight of skim milk and butterfat contained in
receipts of nonfluid milk products that are allocated to Class I use
pursuant to Sec. 1000.43(d).
(g) For the months of January 2005 through March 2005 for handlers
who have submitted proof satisfactory to the market administrator to
determine eligibility for reimbursement of transportation costs subtract
an amount equal to:
(1) The cost of transportation on loads of producer milk delivered
or rerouted to a pool distributing plant which were delivered as a
result of hurricanes Charley, Frances, Ivan, and Jeanne;
(2) The cost of transportation on loads of producer milk delivered
or rerouted to a pool supply plant that was then transferred to a pool
distributing plant which were delivered as a result of hurricanes
Charley, Frances, Ivan, and Jeanne;
(3) The cost of transportation on loads of bulk milk delivered or
rerouted to a pool distributing plant from a pool supply plant which
were delivered as a result of hurricanes Charley, Frances, Ivan, and
Jeanne;
(4) The cost of transportation on loads of bulk milk delivered or
rerouted to a pool distributing plant from another order plant which
were delivered as a result of hurricanes Charley, Frances, Ivan, and
Jeanne; and
(5) The cost of transportation on loads of bulk milk transferred or
diverted to a plant regulated under another Federal order or to other
nonpool plants which were delivered as a result of hurricanes Charley,
Frances, Ivan, and Jeanne.
(6) The total amount of payment to all handlers under this section
shall be limited for each month to an amount determined by multiplying
the total Class I producer milk for all handlers pursuant to Sec.
1000.44(c) times $0.09 per hundredweight.
(7) If the cost of transportation computed pursuant to paragraphs
(g)(1) through (5) of this section exceeds the amount computed pursuant
to paragraph (g)(6) of this section, the market administrator shall
prorate such payments to each handler based on each handler's proportion
of transportation costs submitted pursuant to paragraphs (g)(1) through
(5) of this section. Transportation costs submitted pursuant to
paragraphs (g)(1) through (5) of this section which are not paid as a
result of such a proration shall be included in each subsequent month's
transportation costs submitted pursuant to paragraphs (g)(1) through (5)
of this section until paid, or until the time period for such payments
has concluded.
(8) The reimbursement of transportation costs pursuant to this
section shall be the actual demonstrated cost of such transportation of
bulk milk delivered or rerouted as described in paragraphs (g)(1)
through (5) of this section, or the miles of transportation on loads of
bulk milk delivered or rerouted as described in paragraphs (g)(1)
through (5) of this section multiplied by $2.25 per loaded mile,
whichever is less.
[64 FR 47966, Sept. 1, 1999, as amended at 65 FR 82835, Dec. 28, 2000;
69 FR 71700, Dec. 10, 2004]
Sec. 1006.61 Computation of uniform prices.
On or before the 11th day of each month, the market administrator
shall compute a uniform butterfat price, a uniform skim milk price, and
a uniform price for producer milk receipts reported for the prior month.
The report of any handler who has not made payments required pursuant to
Sec. 1006.71 for the preceding month shall not be included in the
computation of these prices, and such handler's report shall not be
included in the computation for succeeding months until the handler has
made full payment of outstanding monthly obligations.
(a) Uniform butterfat price. The uniform butterfat price per pound,
rounded to the nearest one-hundredth cent, shall be computed by:
(1) Multiplying the pounds of butterfat in producer milk allocated
to
[[Page 88]]
each class pursuant to Sec. 1000.44(b) by the respective class
butterfat prices;
(2) Adding the butterfat value calculated in Sec. 1006.60(e) for
other source milk allocated to Class I pursuant to Sec. 1000.43(d) and
the steps of Sec. 1000.44(b) that correspond to Sec. 1000.44(a)(3)(i)
and Sec. 1000.44(a)(8) by the Class I price; and
(3) Dividing the sum of paragraphs (a)(1) and (a)(2) of this section
by the sum of the pounds of butterfat in producer milk and other source
milk used to calculate the values in paragraphs (a)(1) and (a)(2) of
this section.
(b) Uniform skim milk price. The uniform skim milk price per
hundredweight, rounded to the nearest cent, shall be computed as
follows:
(1) Combine into one total the values computed pursuant to Sec.
1006.60 for all handlers;
(2) Add an amount equal to the minus location adjustments and
subtract an amount equal to the plus location adjustments computed
pursuant to Sec. 1006.75;
(3) Add an amount equal to not less than one-half of the unobligated
balance in the producer-settlement fund;
(4) Subtract the value of the total pounds of butterfat for all
handlers. The butterfat value shall be computed by multiplying the sum
of the pounds of butterfat in producer milk and other source milk used
to calculate the values in paragraphs (a)(1) and (a)(2) of this section
by the butterfat price computed in paragraph (a) of this section;
(5) Divide the resulting amount by the sum of the following for all
handlers included in these computations:
(i) The total skim pounds of producer milk; and
(ii) The total skim pounds for which a value is computed pursuant to
Sec. 1006.60(e); and
(6) Subtract not less than 4 cents and not more than 5 cents.
(c) Uniform price. The uniform price per hundredweight, rounded to
the nearest cent, shall be the sum of the following:
(1) Multiply the uniform butterfat price for the month pursuant to
paragraph (a) of this section times 3.5 pounds of butterfat; and
(2) Multiply the uniform skim milk price for the month pursuant to
paragraph (b) of this section times 96.5 pounds of skim milk.
[64 FR 47966, Sept. 1, 1999, as amended at 65 FR 82835, Dec. 28, 2000]
Sec. 1006.62 Announcement of uniform prices.
On or before the 11th day after the end of the month, the market
administrator shall announce the uniform prices for the month computed
pursuant to Sec. 1006.61.
Payments for Milk
Sec. 1006.70 Producer-settlement fund.
See Sec. 1000.70.
Sec. 1006.71 Payments to the producer-settlement fund.
Each handler shall make a payment to the producer-settlement fund in
a manner that provides receipt of the funds by the market administrator
no later than the 12th day after the end of the month (except as
provided in Sec. 1000.90). Payment shall be the amount, if any, by
which the amount specified in paragraph (a) of this section exceeds the
amount specified in paragraph (b) of this section:
(a) The total value of milk of the handler for the month as
determined pursuant to Sec. 1006.60; and
(b) The sum of the value at the uniform prices for skim milk and
butterfat, adjusted for plant location, of the handler's receipts of
producer milk; and the value at the uniform price, as adjusted pursuant
to Sec. 1006.75, applicable at the location of the plant from which
received of other source milk for which a value is computed pursuant to
Sec. 1006.60(e).
Sec. 1006.72 Payments from the producer-settlement fund.
No later than one day after the date of payment receipt required
under Sec. 1006.71, the market administrator shall pay to each handler
the amount, if any, by which the amount computed pursuant to Sec.
1006.71(b) exceeds the amount computed pursuant to Sec. 1006.71(a). If,
at such time, the balance in the producer-settlement fund is
insufficient to make all payments pursuant to this section, the market
administrator shall reduce uniformly such
[[Page 89]]
payments and shall complete the payments as soon as the funds are
available.
Sec. 1006.73 Payments to producers and to cooperative associations.
(a) Each handler that is not paying a cooperative association for
producer milk shall pay each producer as follows:
(1) Partial payments. (i) For each producer who has not discontinued
shipments as of the 15th day of the month, payment shall be made so that
it is received by the producer on or before the 20th day of the month
(except as provided in Sec. 1000.90) for milk received during the first
15 days of the month at not less than 85 percent of the preceding
month's uniform price, adjusted for plant location pursuant to Sec.
1006.75 and proper deductions authorized in writing by the producer; and
(ii) For each producer who has not discontinued shipments as of the
last day of the month, payment shall be made so that it is received by
the producer on or before the 5th day of the following month (except as
provided in Sec. 1000.90) for milk received from the 16th to the last
day of the month at not less than 85 percent of the preceding month's
uniform price, adjusted for plant location pursuant to Sec. 1006.75 and
proper deductions authorized in writing by the producer.
(2) Final payment. For milk received during the month, a payment
computed as follows shall be made so that it is received by each
producer one day after the payment date required in Sec. 1006.72:
(i) Multiply the hundredweight of producer skim milk received times
the uniform skim milk price for the month;
(ii) Multiply the pounds of butterfat received times the uniform
butterfat price for the month;
(iii) Multiply the hundredweight of producer milk received times the
plant location adjustment pursuant to Sec. 1006.75; and
(iv) Add the amounts computed in paragraphs (a)(2)(i), (ii), and
(iii) of this section, and from that sum:
(A) Subtract the partial payments made pursuant to paragraph (a)(1)
of this section;
(B) Subtract the deduction for marketing services pursuant to Sec.
1000.86;
(C) Add or subtract for errors made in previous payments to the
producer; and
(D) Subtract proper deductions authorized in writing by the
producer.
(b) One day before partial and final payments are due pursuant to
paragraph (a) of this section, each handler shall pay a cooperative
association for milk received as follows:
(1) Partial payment to a cooperative association for bulk milk
received directly from producers' farms. For bulk milk (including the
milk of producers who are not members of such association and who the
market administrator determines have authorized the cooperative
association to collect payment for their milk) received from a
cooperative association in any capacity, except as the operator of a
pool plant, the payment shall be equal to the hundredweight of milk
received multiplied by 90 percent of the preceding month's uniform
price, adjusted for plant location pursuant to Sec. 1006.75.
(2) Partial payment to a cooperative association for milk
transferred from its pool plant. For bulk fluid milk products and bulk
fluid cream products received during the first 15 days of the month from
a cooperative association in its capacity as the operator of a pool
plant, the partial payment shall be at the pool plant operator's
estimated use value of the milk using the most recent class prices
available for skim milk and butterfat at the receiving plant's location.
(3) Final payment to a cooperative association for milk transferred
from its pool plant. For bulk fluid milk products and bulk fluid cream
products received during the month from a cooperative association in its
capacity as the operator of a pool plant, the final payment shall be the
classified value of such milk as determined by multiplying the pounds of
skim milk and butterfat assigned to each class pursuant to Sec. 1000.44
by the class prices for the month at the receiving plant's location, and
subtracting from this sum the partial payment made pursuant to paragraph
(b)(2) of this section.
(4) Final payment to a cooperative association for bulk milk
received directly
[[Page 90]]
from producers' farms. For bulk milk received from a cooperative
association during the month, including the milk of producers who are
not members of such association and who the market administrator
determines have authorized the cooperative association to collect
payment for their milk, the final payment for such milk shall be an
amount equal to the sum of the individual payments otherwise payable for
such milk pursuant to paragraph (a)(2) of this section.
(c) If a handler has not received full payment from the market
administrator pursuant to Sec. 1006.72 by the payment date specified in
paragraph (a) or (b) of this section, the handler may reduce payments
pursuant to paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section, but by not more than
the amount of the underpayment. The payments shall be completed on the
next scheduled payment date after receipt of the balance due from the
market administrator.
(d) If a handler claims that a required payment to a producer cannot
be made because the producer is deceased or cannot be located, or
because the cooperative association or its lawful successor or assignee
is no longer in existence, the payment shall be made to the producer-
settlement fund, and in the event that the handler subsequently locates
and pays the producer or a lawful claimant, or in the event that the
handler no longer exists and a lawful claim is later established, the
market administrator shall make the required payment from the producer-
settlement fund to the handler or to the lawful claimant as the case may
be.
(e) In making payments to producers pursuant to this section, each
pool plant operator shall furnish each producer, except a producer whose
milk was received from a cooperative association described in Sec.
1000.9(a) or (c), a supporting statement in such form that it may be
retained by the recipient which shall show:
(1) The name, address, Grade A identifier assigned by a duly
constituted regulatory agency, and the payroll number of the producer;
(2) The month and dates that milk was received from the producer,
including the daily and total pounds of milk received;
(3) The total pounds of butterfat in the producer's milk;
(4) The minimum rate or rates at which payment to the producer is
required pursuant to the order in this part;
(5) The rate used in making payment if the rate is other than the
applicable minimum rate;
(6) The amount, or rate per hundredweight, and nature of each
deduction claimed by the handler; and
(7) The net amount of payment to the producer or cooperative
association.
[64 FR 47966, Sept. 1, 1999, as amended at 65 FR 32010, May 22, 2000]
Sec. 1006.74 [Reserved]
Sec. 1006.75 Plant location adjustments for producer milk and nonpool milk.
For purposes of making payments for producer milk and nonpool milk,
a plant location adjustment shall be determined by subtracting the Class
I price specified in Sec. 1006.51 from the Class I price at the plant's
location. The difference, plus or minus as the case may be, shall be
used to adjust the payments required pursuant to Sec. Sec. 1006.73 and
1000.76.
Sec. 1006.76 Payments by a handler operating a partially regulated
distributing plant.
See Sec. 1000.76.
Sec. 1006.77 Adjustment of accounts.
See Sec. 1000.77.
Sec. 1006.78 Charges on overdue accounts.
See Sec. 1000.78.
Administrative Assessment and Marketing Service Deduction
Sec. 1006.85 Assessment for order administration.
See Sec. 1000.85.
Sec. 1006.86 Deduction for marketing services.
See Sec. 1000.86.
[[Page 91]]
PART 1007_MILK IN THE SOUTHEAST MARKETING AREA--Table of Contents
Subpart_Order Regulating Handling
General Provisions
Sec.
1007.1 General provisions.
Definitions
1007.2 Southeast marketing area.
1007.3 Route disposition.
1007.4 Plant.
1007.5 Distributing plant.
1007.6 Supply plant.
1007.7 Pool plant.
1007.8 Nonpool plant.
1007.9 Handler.
1007.10 Producer-handler.
1007.11 [Reserved]
1007.12 Producer.
1007.13 Producer milk.
1007.14 Other source milk.
1007.15 Fluid milk product.
1007.16 Fluid cream product.
1007.17 [Reserved]
1007.18 Cooperative association.
1007.19 Commercial food processing establishment.
Handler Reports
1007.30 Reports of receipts and utilization.
1007.31 Payroll reports.
1007.32 Other reports.
Classification of Milk
1007.40 Classes of utilization.
1007.41 [Reserved]
1007.42 Classification of transfers and diversions.
1007.43 General classification rules.
1007.44 Classification of producer milk.
1007.45 Market administrator's reports and announcements concerning
classification.
Class Prices
1007.50 Class prices, component prices, and advanced pricing factors.
1007.51 Class I differential, adjustments to Class I prices, and Class I
price.
1007.52 Adjusted Class I differentials.
1007.53 Announcement of class prices, component prices, and advanced
pricing factors.
1007.54 Equivalent price.
Uniform Prices
1007.60 Handler's value of milk.
1007.61 Computation of uniform prices.
1007.62 Announcement of uniform prices.
Payments for Milk
1007.70 Producer-settlement fund.
1007.71 Payments to the producer-settlement fund.
1007.72 Payments from the producer-settlement fund.
1007.73 Payments to producers and to cooperative associations.
1007.74 [Reserved]
1007.75 Plant location adjustments for producer milk and nonpool milk.
1007.76 Payments by a handler operating a partially regulated
distributing plant.
1007.77 Adjustment of accounts.
1007.78 Charges on overdue accounts.
Marketwide Service Payments
1007.80 Transportation credit balancing fund.
1007.81 Payments to the transportation credit balancing fund.
1007.82 Payments from the transportation credit balancing fund.
1007.83 Mileage rate for the transportation credit balancing fund.
Administrative Assessment and Marketing Service Deduction
1007.85 Assessment for order administration.
1007.86 Deduction for marketing services.
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 601-674, and 7253.
Source: 64 FR 47971, Sept. 1, 1999, unless otherwise noted.
Subpart_Order Regulating Handling
General Provisions
Sec. 1007.1 General provisions.
The terms, definitions, and provisions in part 1000 of this chapter
apply to this part 1007. In this part 1007, all references to sections
in part 1000 refer to part 1000 of this chapter.
Definitions
Sec. 1007.2 Southeast marketing area.
The marketing area means all territory within the bounds of the
following states and political subdivisions, including all piers, docks
and wharves connected therewith and all craft moored thereat, and all
territory occupied by government (municipal, State or Federal)
reservations, installations, institutions, or other similar
establishments if any part thereof is within any of the listed states or
political subdivisions:
[[Page 92]]
Alabama, Arkansas, Louisiana, and Mississippi
All of the States of Alabama, Arkansas, Louisiana, and Mississippi.
Florida Counties
Escambia, Okaloosa, Santa Rosa, and Walton.
Georgia Counties
All of the State of Georgia except for the counties of Catoosa,
Chattooga, Dade, Fannin, Murray, Walker, and Whitfield.
Kentucky Counties
Allen, Ballard, Barren, Caldwell, Calloway, Carlisle, Christian,
Crittenden, Fulton, Graves, Hickman, Livingston, Logan, Lyon,
Marshall,McCracken, Metcalfe, Monroe, Simpson, Todd, Trigg, and Warren.
Missouri Counties
Barry, Barton, Bollinger, Butler, Cape Girardeau, Carter, Cedar,
Christian, Crawford, Dade, Dallas, Dent, Douglas, Dunklin, Greene,
Howell, Iron, Jasper, Laclede, Lawrence, Madison, McDonald, Mississippi,
New Madrid, Newton, Oregon, Ozark, Pemiscot, Perry, Polk, Reynolds,
Ripley, Scott, Shannon, St. Francois, Stoddard, Stone, Taney, Texas,
Vernon, Washington, Wayne, Webster, and Wright.
Tennessee Counties
All of the State of Tennessee except for the counties of Anderson,
Blount, Bradley, Campbell, Carter, Claiborne, Cocke, Cumberland,
Grainger, Greene, Hamblen, Hamilton, Hancock, Hawkins, Jefferson,
Johnson, Knox, Loudon, Marion, McMinn, Meigs, Monroe, Morgan, Polk,
Rhea, Roane, Scott, Sequatchie, Sevier, Sullivan, Unicoi, Union, and
Washington.
Sec. 1007.3 Route disposition.
See Sec. 1000.3.
Sec. 1007.4 Plant.
See Sec. 1000.4.
Sec. 1007.5 Distributing plant.
See Sec. 1000.5.
Sec. 1007.6 Supply plant.
See Sec. 1000.6.
Sec. 1007.7 Pool plant.
Pool plant means a plant specified in paragraphs (a) through (d) of
this section, a unit of plants as specified in paragraph (e) of this
section, or a plant specified in paragraph (h) of this section, but
excluding a plant specified in paragraph (g) of this section. The
pooling standards described in paragraphs (c) and (d) of this section
are subject to modification pursuant to paragraph (f) of this section:
(a) A distributing plant, other than a plant qualified as a pool
plant pursuant to paragraph (b) of this section or Sec. --------.7(b)
of any other Federal milk order, from which during the month 50 percent
or more of the fluid milk products physically received at such plant
(excluding concentrated milk received from another plant by agreement
for other than Class I use) are disposed of as route disposition or are
transferred in the form of packaged fluid milk products to other
distributing plants. At least 25 percent of such route disposition and
transfers must be to outlets in the marketing area.
(b) Any distributing plant located in the marketing area which
during the month processed at least 50 percent of the total quantity of
fluid milk products physically received at the plant (excluding
concentrated milk received from another plant by agreement for other
than Class I use) into ultra-pasteurized or aseptically-processed fluid
milk products.
(c) A supply plant from which 50 percent or more of the total
quantity of milk that is physically received during the month from dairy
farmers and handlers described in Sec. 1000.9(c), including milk that
is diverted from the plant, is transferred to pool distributing plants.
Concentrated milk transferred from the supply plant to a distributing
plant for an agreed-upon use other than Class I shall be excluded from
the supply plant's shipments in computing the plant's shipping
percentage.
(d) A plant located within the marketing area that is operated by a
cooperative association if pool plant status under this paragraph is
requested for such plant by the cooperative association and during the
month at least 60 percent of the producer milk of members of such
cooperative association is delivered directly from farms to pool
distributing plants or is transferred to such plants as a fluid milk
product (excluding concentrated milk transferred to a distributing plant
for an agreed-
[[Page 93]]
upon use other than Class I) from the cooperative's plant.
(e) Two or more plants operated by the same handler and located
within the marketing area may qualify for pool status as a unit by
meeting the total and in-area route disposition requirements specified
in paragraph (a) of this section and the following additional
requirements:
(1) At least one of the plants in the unit must qualify as a pool
plant pursuant to paragraph (a) of this section;
(2) Other plants in the unit must process only Class I or Class II
products and must be located in a pricing zone providing the same or a
lower Class I price than the price applicable at the distributing plant
included in the unit pursuant to paragraph (e)(1) of this section; and
(3) A written request to form a unit, or to add or remove plants
from a unit, must be filed with the market administrator prior to the
first day of the month for which it is to be effective.
(f) The applicable shipping percentages of paragraphs (c) and (d) of
this section may be increased or decreased by the market administrator
if the market administrator finds that such adjustment is necessary to
encourage needed shipments or to prevent uneconomic shipments. Before
making such a finding, the market administrator shall investigate the
need for adjustment either on the market administrator's own initiative
or at the request of interested parties if the request is made in
writing at least 15 days prior to the date for which the requested
revision is desired effective. If the investigation shows that an
adjustment of the shipping percentages might be appropriate, the market
administrator shall issue a notice stating that an adjustment is being
considered and invite data, views and arguments. Any decision to revise
an applicable shipping percentage must be issued in writing at least one
day before the effective date.
(g) The term pool plant shall not apply to the following plants:
(1) A producer-handler plant;
(2) An exempt plant as defined in Sec. 1000.8(e);
(3) A plant qualified pursuant to paragraph (a) of this section
which is not located within any Federal order marketing area, meets the
pooling requirements of another Federal order, and has had greater route
disposition in such other Federal order marketing area for 3 consecutive
months;
(4) A plant qualified pursuant to paragraph (a) of this section
which is located in another Federal order marketing area, meets the
pooling standards of the other Federal order, and has not had a majority
of its route disposition in this marketing area for 3 consecutive months
or is locked into pool status under such other Federal order without
regard to its route disposition in any other Federal order marketing
area; and
(5) A plant qualified pursuant to paragraph (c) of this section
which also meets the pooling requirements of another Federal order and
from which greater qualifying shipments are made to plants regulated
under such other order than are made to plants regulated under the order
in this part, or such plant has automatic pooling status under such
other order.
(h) Any distributing plant, located within the marketing area as
described on May 1, 2006, in Sec. 1007.2;
(1) From which there is route disposition and/or transfers of
packaged fluid milk products in any non-Federally regulated marketing
area(s) located within one or more States that require handlers to pay
minimum prices for raw milk provided that 25 percent or more of the
total quantity of fluid milk products physically received at such plant
(excluding concentrated milk received from another plant by agreement
for other than Class I use) is disposed of as route disposition and/or
is transferred in the form of packaged fluid milk products to other
plants. At least 25 percent of such route disposition and/or transfers,
in aggregate, are in any non-Federally regulated marketing area(s)
located within one or more States that require handlers to pay minimum
prices for raw milk. Subject to the following exclusions:
(i) The plant is described in Sec. 1007.7(a), (b), or (e);
(ii) The plant is subject to the pricing provisions of a State-
operated milk pricing plan which provides for the payment of minimum
class prices for raw milk;
[[Page 94]]
(iii) The plant is described in Sec. 1000.8(a) or (e); or
(iv) A producer-handler described in Sec. 1007.10 with less than
three million pounds during the month of route disposition and/or
transfers of packaged fluid milk products to other plants.
[64 FR 47971, Sept. 1, 1999, as amended at 71 FR 25498, May 1, 2006; 71
FR 28249, May 16, 2006]
Sec. 1007.8 Nonpool plant.
See Sec. 1000.8.
Sec. 1007.9 Handler.
See Sec. 1000.9.
Sec. 1007.10 Producer-handler.
Producer-handler means a person who:
(a) Operates a dairy farm and a distributing plant from which there
is route disposition in the marketing area, and from which total route
disposition and packaged sales of fluid milk products to other plants
during the month does not exceed 3 million pounds;
(b) Receives no fluid milk products, and acquires no fluid milk
products for route disposition, from sources other than own farm
production;
(c) Disposes of no other source milk as Class I milk except by
increasing the nonfat milk solids content of the fluid milk products
received from own farm production; and
(d) Provides proof satisfactory to the market administrator that the
care and management of the dairy animals and other resources necessary
to produce all Class I milk handled, and the processing and packaging
operations, are the producer-handler's own enterprise and are operated
at the producer-handler's own risk.
(e) Any producer-handler with Class I route dispositions and/or
transfers of packaged fluid milk products in the marketing area
described in Sec. 1131.2 of this chapter shall be subject to payments
into the Order 1131 producer settlement fund on such dispositions
pursuant to Sec. 1000.76(a) and payments into the Order 1131
administrative fund provided such dispositions are less than three
million pounds in the current month and such producer-handler had total
Class I route dispositions and/or transfers of packaged fluid milk
products from own farm production of three million pounds or more the
previous month. If the producer-handler has Class I route dispositions
and/or transfers of packaged fluid milk products into the marketing area
described in Sec. 1131.2 of this chapter of three million pounds or
more during the current month, such producer-handler shall be subject to
the provisions described in Sec. 1131.7 of this chapter or Sec.
1000.76(a).
[64 FR 47971, Sept. 1, 1999, as amended at 71 FR 25499, May 1, 2006; 75
FR 21160, Apr. 23, 2010]
Sec. 1007.11 [Reserved]
Sec. 1007.12 Producer.
(a) Except as provided in paragraph (b) of this section, producer
means any person who produces milk approved by a duly constituted
regulatory agency for fluid consumption as Grade A milk and whose milk
(or components of milk) is:
(1) Received at a pool plant directly from the producer or diverted
by the plant operator in accordance with Sec. 1007.13; or
(2) Received by a handler described in Sec. 1000.9(c).
(b) Producer shall not include:
(1) A producer-handler as defined in any Federal order;
(2) A dairy farmer whose milk is received at an exempt plant,
excluding producer milk diverted to the exempt plant pursuant to Sec.
1007.13(d);
(3) A dairy farmer whose milk is received by diversion at a pool
plant from a handler regulated under another Federal order if the other
Federal order designates the dairy farmer as a producer under that order
and that milk is allocated by request to a utilization other than Class
I; and
(4) A dairy farmer whose milk is reported as diverted to a plant
fully regulated under another Federal order with respect to that portion
of the milk so diverted that is assigned to Class I under the provisions
of such other order.
Sec. 1007.13 Producer milk.
Except as provided for in paragraph (e) of this section, Producer
milk means the skim milk (or the skim equivalent
[[Page 95]]
of components of skim milk) and butterfat contained in milk of a
producer that is:
(a) Received by the operator of a pool plant directly from a
producer or a handler described in Sec. 1000.9(c). All milk received
pursuant to this paragraph shall be priced at the location of the plant
where it is first physically received;
(b) Received by a handler described in Sec. 1000.9(c) in excess of
the quantity delivered to pool plants;
(c) Diverted by a pool plant operator to another pool plant. Milk so
diverted shall be priced at the location of the plant to which diverted;
or
(d) Diverted by the operator of a pool plant or a handler described
in Sec. 1000.9(c) to a nonpool plant, subject to the following
conditions:
(1) In any month of January through June, not less than 1 days'
production of the producer whose milk is diverted is physically received
at a pool plant during the month;
(2) In any month of July through December, not less than 1 days'
production of the producer whose milk is diverted is physically received
at a pool plant during the month;
(3) The total quantity of milk so diverted during the month by a
cooperative association shall not exceed 25 percent during the months of
July through November, January, and February, and 35 percent during the
months of December and March through June, of the producer milk that the
cooperative association caused to be delivered to, and physically
received at, pool plants during the month, excluding the total pounds of
bulk milk received directly from producers meeting for conditions as
described in Sec. 1007.82(c)(2)(ii) and (iii), and for which a
transportation credit is requested;
(4) The operator of a pool plant that is not a cooperative
association may divert any milk that is not under the control of a
cooperative association that diverts milk during the month pursuant to
paragraph (d) of this section. The total quantity of milk so diverted
during the month shall not exceed 25 percent during the months of July
through November, January, and February, and 35 percent during the
months of December and March through June of the producer milk
physically received at such plant (or such unit of plants in the case of
plants that pool as a unit pursuant to Sec. 1007.7(e)) during the
month, excluding the quantity of producer milk received from a handler
described in Sec. 1000.9(c), excluding the total pounds of bulk milk
received directly from producers meeting for conditions as described in
Sec. 1007.82(c)(2)(ii) and (iii), and for which a transportation credit
is requested;
(5) Any milk diverted in excess of the limits prescribed in
paragraphs (d)(3) and (4) of this section shall not be producer milk. If
the diverting handler or cooperative association fails to designate the
dairy farmers' deliveries that will not be producer milk, no milk
diverted by the handler or cooperative association shall be producer
milk;
(6) Diverted milk shall be priced at the location of the plant to
which diverted; and
(7) The delivery day requirements and the diversion percentages in
paragraphs (d)(1) through (4) of this section may be increased or
decreased by the market administrator if the market administrator finds
that such revision is necessary to assure orderly marketing and
efficient handling of milk in the marketing area. Before making such a
finding, the market administrator shall investigate the need for the
revision either on the market administrator's own initiative or at the
request of interested persons. If the investigation shows that a
revision might be appropriate, the market administrator shall issue a
notice stating that the revision is being considered and inviting
written data, views, and arguments. Any decision to revise an applicable
percentage must be issued in writing at least one day before the
effective date.
(e) Producer milk shall not include milk of a producer that is
subject to inclusion and participation in a marketwide equalization pool
under a milk classification and pricing program imposed under the
authority of a
[[Page 96]]
State government maintaining marketwide pooling of returns.
[64 FR 47971, Sept. 1, 1999, as amended at 70 FR 59223, Oct. 12, 2005;
71 FR 62379, Oct. 25, 2006; 73 FR 14162, Mar. 17, 2008; 73 FR 26315, May
9, 2008]
Sec. 1007.14 Other source milk.
See Sec. 1000.14.
Sec. 1007.15 Fluid milk product.
See Sec. 1000.15.
Sec. 1007.16 Fluid cream product.
See Sec. 1000.16.
Sec. 1007.17 [Reserved]
Sec. 1007.18 Cooperative association.
See Sec. 1000.18.
Sec. 1007.19 Commercial food processing establishment.
See Sec. 1000.19.
Handler Reports
Sec. 1007.30 Reports of receipts and utilization.
Each handler shall report monthly so that the market administrator's
office receives the report on or before the 7th day after the end of the
month, in the detail and on prescribed forms, as follows:
(a) With respect to each of its pool plants, the quantities of skim
milk and butterfat contained in or represented by:
(1) Receipts of producer milk, including producer milk diverted by
the reporting handler, from sources other than handlers described in
Sec. 1000.9(c);
(2) Receipts of milk from handlers described in Sec. 1000.9(c);
(3) Receipts of fluid milk products and bulk fluid cream products
from other pool plants;
(4) Receipts of other source milk;
(5) Receipts of bulk milk from a plant regulated under another
Federal order, except Federal Order 1005, for which a transportation
credit is requested pursuant to Sec. 1007.82;
(6) Receipts of producer milk described in Sec. 1007.82(c)(2),
including the identity of the individual producers whose milk is
eligible for the transportation credit pursuant to that paragraph and
the date that such milk was received;
(7) For handlers submitting transportation credit requests,
transfers of bulk milk to nonpool plants, including the dates that such
milk was transferred;
(8) Inventories at the beginning and end of the month of fluid milk
products and bulk fluid cream products; and
(9) The utilization or disposition of all milk and milk products
required to be reported pursuant to this paragraph.
(b) Each handler operating a partially regulated distributing plant
shall report with respect to such plant in the same manner as prescribed
for reports required by paragraphs (a)(1), (a)(2), (a)(3), (a)(4), and
(a)(8) of this section. Receipts of milk that would have been producer
milk if the plant had been fully regulated shall be reported in lieu of
producer milk. The report shall show also the quantity of any
reconstituted skim milk in route disposition in the marketing area.
(c) Each handler described in Sec. 1000.9(c) shall report:
(1) The quantities of all skim milk and butterfat contained in
receipts of milk from producers;
(2) The utilization or disposition of all such receipts; and
(3) With respect to milk for which a cooperative association is
requesting a transportation credit pursuant to Sec. 1007.82, all of the
information required in paragraphs (a)(5), (a)(6), and (a)(7) of this
section.
(d) Each handler not specified in paragraphs (a) through (c) of this
section shall report with respect to its receipts and utilization of
milk and milk products in such manner as the market administrator may
prescribe.
Sec. 1007.31 Payroll reports.
(a) On or before the 20th day after the end of each month, each
handler that operates a pool plant pursuant to Sec. 1007.7 and each
handler described in Sec. 1000.9(c) shall report to the market
administrator its producer payroll for the month, in detail prescribed
by the market administrator, showing for each producer the information
specified in Sec. 1007.73(e).
(b) Each handler operating a partially regulated distributing plant
who elects to make payment pursuant to
[[Page 97]]
Sec. 1000.76(b) shall report for each dairy farmer who would have been
a producer if the plant had been fully regulated in the same manner as
prescribed for reports required by paragraph (a) of this section.
Sec. 1007.32 Other reports.
(a) On or before the 20th day after the end of each month, each
handler described in Sec. 1000.9(a) and (c) shall report to the market
administrator any adjustments to transportation credit requests as
reported pursuant to Sec. 1007.30(a)(5), (6), and (7).
(b) In addition to the reports required pursuant to Sec. Sec.
1007.30, 31, and 32(a), each handler shall report any information the
market administrator deems necessary to verify or establish each
handler's obligation under the order.
Classification of Milk
Sec. 1007.40 Classes of utilization.
See Sec. 1000.40.
Sec. 1007.41 [Reserved]
Sec. 1007.42 Classification of transfers and diversions.
See Sec. 1000.42.
Sec. 1007.43 General classification rules.
See Sec. 1000.43.
Sec. 1007.44 Classification of producer milk.
See Sec. 1000.44.
Sec. 1007.45 Market administrator's reports and announcements
concerning classification.
See Sec. 1000.45.
Class Prices
Sec. 1007.50 Class prices, component prices, and advanced pricing factors.
See Sec. 1000.50.
Sec. 1007.51 Class I differential, adjustments to Class I prices, and Class I price.
(a) The Class I differential shall be the differential established
for Fulton County, Georgia, which is reported in Sec. 1000.52. The
Class I price shall be the price computed pursuant to Sec. 1007.50(a)
for Fulton County, Georgia.
(b) Adjustment to Class I prices. Class I prices shall be
established pursuant to Sec. 1000.50(a), (b) and (c) using the
following adjustments:
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class I price
State Country/parish FIPS adjustment
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
AL.................................... AUTAUGA............................... 01001 0.50
AL.................................... BALDWIN............................... 01003 0.50
AL.................................... BARBOUR............................... 01005 0.55
AL.................................... BIBB.................................. 01007 0.30
AL.................................... BLOUNT................................ 01009 0.20
AL.................................... BULLOCK............................... 01011 0.70
AL.................................... BUTLER................................ 01013 0.55
AL.................................... CALHOUN............................... 01015 0.30
AL.................................... CHAMBERS.............................. 01017 0.70
AL.................................... CHEROKEE.............................. 01019 0.30
AL.................................... CHILTON............................... 01021 0.70
AL.................................... CHOCTAW............................... 01023 0.50
AL.................................... CLARKE................................ 01025 0.35
AL.................................... CLAY.................................. 01027 0.70
AL.................................... CLEBURNE.............................. 01029 0.70
AL.................................... COFFEE................................ 01031 0.85
AL.................................... COLBERT............................... 01033 0.30
AL.................................... CONECUH............................... 01035 0.55
AL.................................... COOSA................................. 01037 0.70
AL.................................... COVINGTON............................. 01039 0.55
AL.................................... CRENSHAW.............................. 01041 0.55
AL.................................... CULLMAN............................... 01043 0.20
AL.................................... DALE.................................. 01045 0.85
AL.................................... DALLAS................................ 01047 0.50
AL.................................... DE KALB............................... 01049 0.40
AL.................................... ELMORE................................ 01051 0.50
AL.................................... ESCAMBIA.............................. 01053 0.55
AL.................................... ETOWAH................................ 01055 0.30
AL.................................... FAYETTE............................... 01057 0.20
AL.................................... FRANKLIN.............................. 01059 0.30
AL.................................... GENEVA................................ 01061 0.85
[[Page 98]]
AL.................................... GREENE................................ 01063 0.30
AL.................................... HALE.................................. 01065 0.30
AL.................................... HENRY................................. 01067 0.85
AL.................................... HOUSTON............................... 01069 0.85
AL.................................... JACKSON............................... 01071 0.40
AL.................................... JEFFERSON............................. 01073 0.30
AL.................................... LAMAR................................. 01075 0.20
AL.................................... LAUDERDALE............................ 01077 0.30
AL.................................... LAWRENCE.............................. 01079 0.30
AL.................................... LEE................................... 01081 0.70
AL.................................... LIMESTONE............................. 01083 0.30
AL.................................... LOWNDES............................... 01085 0.70
AL.................................... MACON................................. 01087 0.70
AL.................................... MADISON............................... 01089 0.30
AL.................................... MARENGO............................... 01091 0.50
AL.................................... MARION................................ 01093 0.20
AL.................................... MARSHALL.............................. 01095 0.40
AL.................................... MOBILE................................ 01097 0.50
AL.................................... MONROE................................ 01099 0.35
AL.................................... MONTGOMERY............................ 01101 0.70
AL.................................... MORGAN................................ 01103 0.30
AL.................................... PERRY................................. 01105 0.30
AL.................................... PICKENS............................... 01107 0.30
AL.................................... PIKE.................................. 01109 0.55
AL.................................... RANDOLPH.............................. 01111 0.70
AL.................................... RUSSELL............................... 01113 0.70
AL.................................... SAINT CLAIR........................... 01115 0.30
AL.................................... SHELBY................................ 01117 0.30
AL.................................... SUMTER................................ 01119 0.30
AL.................................... TALLADEGA............................. 01121 0.30
AL.................................... TALLAPOOSA............................ 01123 0.70
AL.................................... TUSCALOOSA............................ 01125 0.30
AL.................................... WALKER................................ 01127 0.20
AL.................................... WASHINGTON............................ 01129 0.35
AL.................................... WILCOX................................ 01131 0.50
AL.................................... WINSTON............................... 01133 0.20
AR.................................... ARKANSAS.............................. 05001 0.00
AR.................................... ASHLEY................................ 05003 0.10
AR.................................... BAXTER................................ 05005 0.10
AR.................................... BENTON................................ 05007 0.10
AR.................................... BOONE................................. 05009 0.10
AR.................................... BRADLEY............................... 05011 0.30
AR.................................... CALHOUN............................... 05013 0.30
AR.................................... CARROLL............................... 05015 0.10
AR.................................... CHICOT................................ 05017 0.10
AR.................................... CLARK................................. 05019 0.00
AR.................................... CLAY.................................. 05021 0.10
AR.................................... CLEBURNE.............................. 05023 0.10
AR.................................... CLEVELAND............................. 05025 0.30
AR.................................... COLUMBIA.............................. 05027 0.10
AR.................................... CONWAY................................ 05029 0.10
AR.................................... CRAIGHEAD............................. 05031 0.10
AR.................................... CRAWFORD.............................. 05033 0.10
AR.................................... CRITTENDEN............................ 05035 0.10
AR.................................... CROSS................................. 05037 0.10
AR.................................... DALLAS................................ 05039 0.00
AR.................................... DESHA................................. 05041 0.30
AR.................................... DREW.................................. 05043 0.30
AR.................................... FAULKNER.............................. 05045 0.10
AR.................................... FRANKLIN.............................. 05047 0.10
AR.................................... FULTON................................ 05049 0.10
AR.................................... GARLAND............................... 05051 0.10
AR.................................... GRANT................................. 05053 0.00
AR.................................... GREENE................................ 05055 0.10
AR.................................... HEMPSTEAD............................. 05057 0.30
AR.................................... HOT SPRING............................ 05059 0.00
AR.................................... HOWARD................................ 05061 0.00
AR.................................... INDEPENDENCE.......................... 05063 0.10
AR.................................... IZARD................................. 05065 0.10
AR.................................... JACKSON............................... 05067 0.10
AR.................................... JEFFERSON............................. 05069 0.00
AR.................................... JOHNSON............................... 05071 0.10
AR.................................... LAFAYETTE............................. 05073 0.10
[[Page 99]]
AR.................................... LAWRENCE.............................. 05075 0.10
AR.................................... LEE................................... 05077 0.10
AR.................................... LINCOLN............................... 05079 0.30
AR.................................... LITTLE RIVER.......................... 05081 0.30
AR.................................... LOGAN................................. 05083 0.10
AR.................................... LONOKE................................ 05085 0.10
AR.................................... MADISON............................... 05087 0.10
AR.................................... MARION................................ 05089 0.10
AR.................................... MILLER................................ 05091 0.10
AR.................................... MISSISSIPPI........................... 05093 0.30
AR.................................... MONROE................................ 05095 0.10
AR.................................... MONTGOMERY............................ 05097 0.10
AR.................................... NEVADA................................ 05099 0.30
AR.................................... NEWTON................................ 05101 0.10
AR.................................... OUACHITA.............................. 05103 0.30
AR.................................... PERRY................................. 05105 0.10
AR.................................... PHILLIPS.............................. 05107 0.00
AR.................................... PIKE.................................. 05109 0.00
AR.................................... POINSETT.............................. 05111 0.30
AR.................................... POLK.................................. 05113 0.10
AR.................................... POPE.................................. 05115 0.10
AR.................................... PRAIRIE............................... 05117 0.10
AR.................................... PULASKI............................... 05119 0.10
AR.................................... RANDOLPH.............................. 05121 0.10
AR.................................... SAINT FRANCIS......................... 05123 0.10
AR.................................... SALINE................................ 05125 0.10
AR.................................... SCOTT................................. 05127 0.10
AR.................................... SEARCY................................ 05129 0.10
AR.................................... SEBASTIAN............................. 05131 0.10
AR.................................... SEVIER................................ 05133 0.00
AR.................................... SHARP................................. 05135 0.10
AR.................................... STONE................................. 05137 0.10
AR.................................... UNION................................. 05139 0.10
AR.................................... VAN BUREN............................. 05141 0.10
AR.................................... WASHINGTON............................ 05143 0.10
AR.................................... WHITE................................. 05145 0.10
AR.................................... WOODRUFF.............................. 05147 0.10
AR.................................... YELL.................................. 05149 0.10
FL.................................... ESCAMBIA.............................. 12033 0.55
FL.................................... OKALOOSA.............................. 12091 0.55
FL.................................... SANTA ROSA............................ 12113 0.55
FL.................................... WALTON................................ 12131 0.55
GA.................................... APPLING............................... 13001 1.15
GA.................................... ATKINSON.............................. 13003 1.15
GA.................................... BACON................................. 13005 1.15
GA.................................... BAKER................................. 13007 0.85
GA.................................... BALDWIN............................... 13009 0.70
GA.................................... BANKS................................. 13011 0.70
GA.................................... BARROW................................ 13013 0.70
GA.................................... BARTOW................................ 13015 0.30
GA.................................... BEN HILL.............................. 13017 1.15
GA.................................... BERRIEN............................... 13019 1.15
GA.................................... BIBB.................................. 13021 0.70
GA.................................... BLECKLEY.............................. 13023 1.00
GA.................................... BRANTLEY.............................. 13025 1.15
GA.................................... BROOKS................................ 13027 1.15
GA.................................... BRYAN................................. 13029 1.15
GA.................................... BULLOCH............................... 13031 1.00
GA.................................... BURKE................................. 13033 0.70
GA.................................... BUTTS................................. 13035 0.70
GA.................................... CALHOUN............................... 13037 0.85
GA.................................... CAMDEN................................ 13039 1.15
GA.................................... CANDLER............................... 13043 1.00
GA.................................... CARROLL............................... 13045 0.70
GA.................................... CHARLTON.............................. 13049 1.15
GA.................................... CHATHAM............................... 13051 1.15
GA.................................... CHATTAHOOCHEE......................... 13053 0.70
GA.................................... CHEROKEE.............................. 13057 0.30
GA.................................... CLARKE................................ 13059 0.70
GA.................................... CLAY.................................. 13061 0.85
GA.................................... CLAYTON............................... 13063 0.70
GA.................................... CLINCH................................ 13065 1.15
GA.................................... COBB.................................. 13067 0.70
[[Page 100]]
GA.................................... COFFEE................................ 13069 1.15
GA.................................... COLQUITT.............................. 13071 1.15
GA.................................... COLUMBIA.............................. 13073 0.70
GA.................................... COOK.................................. 13075 1.15
GA.................................... COWETA................................ 13077 0.70
GA.................................... CRAWFORD.............................. 13079 0.70
GA.................................... CRISP................................. 13081 0.85
GA.................................... DAWSON................................ 13085 0.30
GA.................................... DECATUR............................... 13087 1.15
GA.................................... DE KALB............................... 13089 0.70
GA.................................... DODGE................................. 13091 0.85
GA.................................... DOOLY................................. 13093 0.85
GA.................................... DOUGHERTY............................. 13095 0.85
GA.................................... DOUGLAS............................... 13097 0.70
GA.................................... EARLY................................. 13099 0.85
GA.................................... ECHOLS................................ 13101 1.15
GA.................................... EFFINGHAM............................. 13103 1.00
GA.................................... ELBERT................................ 13105 0.70
GA.................................... EMANUEL............................... 13107 1.00
GA.................................... EVANS................................. 13109 1.15
GA.................................... FAYETTE............................... 13113 0.70
GA.................................... FLOYD................................. 13115 0.30
GA.................................... FORSYTH............................... 13117 0.70
GA.................................... FRANKLIN.............................. 13119 0.70
GA.................................... FULTON................................ 13121 0.70
GA.................................... GILMER................................ 13123 0.30
GA.................................... GLASCOCK.............................. 13125 0.90
GA.................................... GLYNN................................. 13127 1.15
GA.................................... GORDON................................ 13129 0.30
GA.................................... GRADY................................. 13131 1.15
GA.................................... GREENE................................ 13133 0.70
GA.................................... GWINNETT.............................. 13135 0.70
GA.................................... HABERSHAM............................. 13137 0.30
GA.................................... HALL.................................. 13139 0.70
GA.................................... HANCOCK............................... 13141 0.70
GA.................................... HARALSON.............................. 13143 0.70
GA.................................... HARRIS................................ 13145 0.70
GA.................................... HART.................................. 13147 0.70
GA.................................... HEARD................................. 13149 0.70
GA.................................... HENRY................................. 13151 0.70
GA.................................... HOUSTON............................... 13153 0.70
GA.................................... IRWIN................................. 13155 1.15
GA.................................... JACKSON............................... 13157 0.70
GA.................................... JASPER................................ 13159 0.70
GA.................................... JEFF DAVIS............................ 13161 1.15
GA.................................... JEFFERSON............................. 13163 0.70
GA.................................... JENKINS............................... 13165 1.00
GA.................................... JOHNSON............................... 13167 1.00
GA.................................... JONES................................. 13169 0.70
GA.................................... LAMAR................................. 13171 0.70
GA.................................... LANIER................................ 13173 1.15
GA.................................... LAURENS............................... 13175 1.00
GA.................................... LEE................................... 13177 0.85
GA.................................... LIBERTY............................... 13179 1.15
GA.................................... LINCOLN............................... 13181 0.70
GA.................................... LONG.................................. 13183 1.15
GA.................................... LOWNDES............................... 13185 1.15
GA.................................... LUMPKIN............................... 13187 0.30
GA.................................... MC DUFFIE............................. 13189 0.70
GA.................................... MC INTOSH............................. 13191 1.15
GA.................................... MACON................................. 13193 0.70
GA.................................... MADISON............................... 13195 0.70
GA.................................... MARION................................ 13197 0.70
GA.................................... MERIWETHER............................ 13199 0.70
GA.................................... MILLER................................ 13201 0.85
GA.................................... MITCHELL.............................. 13205 1.15
GA.................................... MONROE................................ 13207 0.70
GA.................................... MONTGOMERY............................ 13209 1.15
GA.................................... MORGAN................................ 13211 0.70
GA.................................... MUSCOGEE.............................. 13215 0.70
GA.................................... NEWTON................................ 13217 0.70
GA.................................... OCONEE................................ 13219 0.70
GA.................................... OGLETHORPE............................ 13221 0.70
[[Page 101]]
GA.................................... PAULDING.............................. 13223 0.70
GA.................................... PEACH................................. 13225 0.70
GA.................................... PICKENS............................... 13227 0.30
GA.................................... PIERCE................................ 13229 1.15
GA.................................... PIKE.................................. 13231 0.70
GA.................................... POLK.................................. 13233 0.70
GA.................................... PULASKI............................... 13235 0.85
GA.................................... PUTNAM................................ 13237 0.70
GA.................................... QUITMAN............................... 13239 0.85
GA.................................... RABUN................................. 13241 0.30
GA.................................... RANDOLPH.............................. 13243 0.85
GA.................................... RICHMOND.............................. 13245 0.70
GA.................................... ROCKDALE.............................. 13247 0.70
GA.................................... SCHLEY................................ 13249 0.70
GA.................................... SCREVEN............................... 13251 1.00
GA.................................... SEMINOLE.............................. 13253 1.15
GA.................................... SPALDING.............................. 13255 0.70
GA.................................... STEPHENS.............................. 13257 0.30
GA.................................... STEWART............................... 13259 0.55
GA.................................... SUMTER................................ 13261 0.85
GA.................................... TALBOT................................ 13263 0.70
GA.................................... TALIAFERRO............................ 13265 0.70
GA.................................... TATTNALL.............................. 13267 1.15
GA.................................... TAYLOR................................ 13269 0.70
GA.................................... TELFAIR............................... 13271 1.15
GA.................................... TERRELL............................... 13273 0.85
GA.................................... THOMAS................................ 13275 1.15
GA.................................... TIFT.................................. 13277 1.15
GA.................................... TOOMBS................................ 13279 1.15
GA.................................... TOWNS................................. 13281 0.30
GA.................................... TREUTLEN.............................. 13283 1.00
GA.................................... TROUP................................. 13285 0.70
GA.................................... TURNER................................ 13287 0.85
GA.................................... TWIGGS................................ 13289 0.70
GA.................................... UNION................................. 13291 0.30
GA.................................... UPSON................................. 13293 0.70
GA.................................... WALTON................................ 13297 0.70
GA.................................... WARE.................................. 13299 1.15
GA.................................... WARREN................................ 13301 0.70
GA.................................... WASHINGTON............................ 13303 0.70
GA.................................... WAYNE................................. 13305 1.15
GA.................................... WEBSTER............................... 13307 0.55
GA.................................... WHEELER............................... 13309 1.15
GA.................................... WHITE................................. 13311 0.30
GA.................................... WILCOX................................ 13315 0.85
GA.................................... WILKES................................ 13317 0.70
GA.................................... WILKINSON............................. 13319 0.70
GA.................................... WORTH................................. 13321 0.85
KY.................................... ALLEN................................. 21003 0.20
KY.................................... BALLARD............................... 21007 0.30
KY.................................... BARREN................................ 21009 0.20
KY.................................... CALDWELL.............................. 21033 0.20
KY.................................... CALLOWAY.............................. 21035 0.30
KY.................................... CARLISLE.............................. 21039 0.30
KY.................................... CHRISTIAN............................. 21047 0.20
KY.................................... CRITTENDEN............................ 21055 0.20
KY.................................... FULTON................................ 21075 0.30
KY.................................... GRAVES................................ 21083 0.30
KY.................................... HICKMAN............................... 21105 0.30
KY.................................... LIVINGSTON............................ 21139 0.30
KY.................................... LOGAN................................. 21141 0.20
KY.................................... LYON.................................. 21143 0.20
KY.................................... MC CRACKEN............................ 21145 0.30
KY.................................... MARSHALL.............................. 21157 0.30
KY.................................... METCALFE.............................. 21169 0.20
KY.................................... MONROE................................ 21171 0.50
KY.................................... SIMPSON............................... 21213 0.20
KY.................................... TODD.................................. 21219 0.20
KY.................................... TRIGG................................. 21221 0.20
KY.................................... WARREN................................ 21227 0.20
LA.................................... ACADIA................................ 22001 0.30
LA.................................... ALLEN................................. 22003 0.30
LA.................................... ASCENSION............................. 22005 0.20
[[Page 102]]
LA.................................... ASSUMPTION............................ 22007 0.20
LA.................................... AVOYELLES............................. 22009 0.00
LA.................................... BEAUREGARD............................ 22011 0.30
LA.................................... BIENVILLE............................. 22013 0.00
LA.................................... BOSSIER............................... 22015 0.10
LA.................................... CADDO................................. 22017 0.10
LA.................................... CALCASIEU............................. 22019 0.30
LA.................................... CALDWELL.............................. 22021 0.00
LA.................................... CAMERON............................... 22023 0.20
LA.................................... CATAHOULA............................. 22025 0.00
LA.................................... CLAIBORNE............................. 22027 0.10
LA.................................... CONCORDIA............................. 22029 0.00
LA.................................... DE SOTO............................... 22031 0.00
LA.................................... EAST BATON ROUGE...................... 22033 0.20
LA.................................... EAST CARROLL.......................... 22035 0.20
LA.................................... EAST FELICIANA........................ 22037 0.30
LA.................................... EVANGELINE............................ 22039 0.30
LA.................................... FRANKLIN.............................. 22041 0.00
LA.................................... GRANT................................. 22043 0.00
LA.................................... IBERIA................................ 22045 0.20
LA.................................... IBERVILLE............................. 22047 0.20
LA.................................... JACKSON............................... 22049 0.00
LA.................................... JEFFERSON............................. 22051 0.20
LA.................................... JEFFERSON DAVIS....................... 22053 0.30
LA.................................... LAFAYETTE............................. 22055 0.20
LA.................................... LAFOURCHE............................. 22057 0.20
LA.................................... LA SALLE.............................. 22059 0.00
LA.................................... LINCOLN............................... 22061 0.10
LA.................................... LIVINGSTON............................ 22063 0.20
LA.................................... MADISON............................... 22065 0.00
LA.................................... MOREHOUSE............................. 22067 0.10
LA.................................... NATCHITOCHES.......................... 22069 0.00
LA.................................... ORLEANS............................... 22071 0.20
LA.................................... OUACHITA.............................. 22073 0.10
LA.................................... PLAQUEMINES........................... 22075 0.20
LA.................................... POINTE COUPEE......................... 22077 0.30
LA.................................... RAPIDES............................... 22079 0.00
LA.................................... RED RIVER............................. 22081 0.00
LA.................................... RICHLAND.............................. 22083 0.20
LA.................................... SABINE................................ 22085 0.00
LA.................................... SAINT BERNARD......................... 22087 0.20
LA.................................... SAINT CHARLES......................... 22089 0.20
LA.................................... SAINT HELENA.......................... 22091 0.30
LA.................................... SAINT JAMES........................... 22093 0.20
LA.................................... SAINT JOHN THE BAPTIST................ 22095 0.20
LA.................................... SAINT LANDRY.......................... 22097 0.30
LA.................................... SAINT MARTIN.......................... 22099 0.20
LA.................................... SAINT MARY............................ 22101 0.20
LA.................................... SAINT TAMMANY......................... 22103 0.30
LA.................................... TANGIPAHOA............................ 22105 0.20
LA.................................... TENSAS................................ 22107 0.00
LA.................................... TERREBONNE............................ 22109 0.20
LA.................................... UNION................................. 22111 0.10
LA.................................... VERMILION............................. 22113 0.20
LA.................................... VERNON................................ 22115 0.00
LA.................................... WASHINGTON............................ 22117 0.30
LA.................................... WEBSTER............................... 22119 0.10
LA.................................... WEST BATON ROUGE...................... 22121 0.20
LA.................................... WEST CARROLL.......................... 22123 0.10
LA.................................... WEST FELICIANA........................ 22125 0.30
LA.................................... WINN.................................. 22127 0.00
MS.................................... ADAMS................................. 28001 0.00
MS.................................... ALCORN................................ 28003 0.30
MS.................................... AMITE................................. 28005 0.40
MS.................................... ATTALA................................ 28007 0.20
MS.................................... BENTON................................ 28009 0.30
MS.................................... BOLIVAR............................... 28011 0.10
MS.................................... CALHOUN............................... 28013 0.10
MS.................................... CARROLL............................... 28015 0.20
MS.................................... CHICKASAW............................. 28017 0.10
MS.................................... CHOCTAW............................... 28019 0.20
MS.................................... CLAIBORNE............................. 28021 0.10
MS.................................... CLARKE................................ 28023 0.50
[[Page 103]]
MS.................................... CLAY.................................. 28025 0.20
MS.................................... COAHOMA............................... 28027 0.30
MS.................................... COPIAH................................ 28029 0.10
MS.................................... COVINGTON............................. 28031 0.00
MS.................................... DE SOTO............................... 28033 0.00
MS.................................... FORREST............................... 28035 0.40
MS.................................... FRANKLIN.............................. 28037 0.00
MS.................................... GEORGE................................ 28039 0.40
MS.................................... GREENE................................ 28041 0.40
MS.................................... GRENADA............................... 28043 0.10
MS.................................... HANCOCK............................... 28045 0.30
MS.................................... HARRISON.............................. 28047 0.30
MS.................................... HINDS................................. 28049 0.00
MS.................................... HOLMES................................ 28051 0.20
MS.................................... HUMPHREYS............................. 28053 0.20
MS.................................... ISSAQUENA............................. 28055 0.20
MS.................................... ITAWAMBA.............................. 28057 0.30
MS.................................... JACKSON............................... 28059 0.30
MS.................................... JASPER................................ 28061 0.10
MS.................................... JEFFERSON............................. 28063 0.00
MS.................................... JEFFERSON DAVIS....................... 28065 0.00
MS.................................... JONES................................. 28067 0.40
MS.................................... KEMPER................................ 28069 0.30
MS.................................... LAFAYETTE............................. 28071 0.30
MS.................................... LAMAR................................. 28073 0.40
MS.................................... LAUDERDALE............................ 28075 0.10
MS.................................... LAWRENCE.............................. 28077 0.00
MS.................................... LEAKE................................. 28079 0.20
MS.................................... LEE................................... 28081 0.30
MS.................................... LEFLORE............................... 28083 0.10
MS.................................... LINCOLN............................... 28085 0.00
MS.................................... LOWNDES............................... 28087 0.20
MS.................................... MADISON............................... 28089 0.20
MS.................................... MARION................................ 28091 0.40
MS.................................... MARSHALL.............................. 28093 0.00
MS.................................... MONROE................................ 28095 0.20
MS.................................... MONTGOMERY............................ 28097 0.20
MS.................................... NESHOBA............................... 28099 0.20
MS.................................... NEWTON................................ 28101 0.10
MS.................................... NOXUBEE............................... 28103 0.30
MS.................................... OKTIBBEHA............................. 28105 0.20
MS.................................... PANOLA................................ 28107 0.30
MS.................................... PEARL RIVER........................... 28109 0.40
MS.................................... PERRY................................. 28111 0.40
MS.................................... PIKE.................................. 28113 0.40
MS.................................... PONTOTOC.............................. 28115 0.30
MS.................................... PRENTISS.............................. 28117 0.30
MS.................................... QUITMAN............................... 28119 0.30
MS.................................... RANKIN................................ 28121 0.10
MS.................................... SCOTT................................. 28123 0.10
MS.................................... SHARKEY............................... 28125 0.20
MS.................................... SIMPSON............................... 28127 0.10
MS.................................... SMITH................................. 28129 0.10
MS.................................... STONE................................. 28131 0.40
MS.................................... SUNFLOWER............................. 28133 0.10
MS.................................... TALLAHATCHIE.......................... 28135 0.10
MS.................................... TATE.................................. 28137 0.00
MS.................................... TIPPAH................................ 28139 0.30
MS.................................... TISHOMINGO............................ 28141 0.30
MS.................................... TUNICA................................ 28143 0.00
MS.................................... UNION................................. 28145 0.30
MS.................................... WALTHALL.............................. 28147 0.40
MS.................................... WARREN................................ 28149 0.00
MS.................................... WASHINGTON............................ 28151 0.10
MS.................................... WAYNE................................. 28153 0.40
MS.................................... WEBSTER............................... 28155 0.20
MS.................................... WILKINSON............................. 28157 0.40
MS.................................... WINSTON............................... 28159 0.20
MS.................................... YALOBUSHA............................. 28161 0.10
MS.................................... YAZOO................................. 28163 0.20
MO.................................... BARRY................................. 29009 0.20
MO.................................... BARTON................................ 29011 0.20
MO.................................... BOLLINGER............................. 29017 0.20
[[Page 104]]
MO.................................... BUTLER................................ 29023 0.20
MO.................................... CAPE GIRARDEAU........................ 29031 0.20
MO.................................... CARTER................................ 29035 0.20
MO.................................... CEDAR................................. 29039 0.20
MO.................................... CHRISTIAN............................. 29043 0.20
MO.................................... CRAWFORD.............................. 29055 0.40
MO.................................... DADE.................................. 29057 0.20
MO.................................... DALLAS................................ 29059 0.20
MO.................................... DENT.................................. 29065 0.40
MO.................................... DOUGLAS............................... 29067 0.20
MO.................................... DUNKLIN............................... 29069 0.50
MO.................................... GREENE................................ 29077 0.20
MO.................................... HOWELL................................ 29091 0.20
MO.................................... IRON.................................. 29093 0.40
MO.................................... JASPER................................ 29097 0.20
MO.................................... LACLEDE............................... 29105 0.20
MO.................................... LAWRENCE.............................. 29109 0.20
MO.................................... MC DONALD............................. 29119 0.20
MO.................................... MADISON............................... 29123 0.20
MO.................................... MISSISSIPPI........................... 29133 0.50
MO.................................... NEW MADRID............................ 29143 0.50
MO.................................... NEWTON................................ 29145 0.20
MO.................................... OREGON................................ 29149 0.20
MO.................................... OZARK................................. 29153 0.20
MO.................................... PEMISCOT.............................. 29155 0.50
MO.................................... PERRY................................. 29157 0.20
MO.................................... POLK.................................. 29167 0.20
MO.................................... REYNOLDS.............................. 29179 0.20
MO.................................... RIPLEY................................ 29181 0.20
MO.................................... SAINT FRANCOIS........................ 29187 0.40
MO.................................... SCOTT................................. 29201 0.20
MO.................................... SHANNON............................... 29203 0.20
MO.................................... STODDARD.............................. 29207 0.20
MO.................................... STONE................................. 29209 0.20
MO.................................... TANEY................................. 29213 0.20
MO.................................... TEXAS................................. 29215 0.20
MO.................................... VERNON................................ 29217 0.20
MO.................................... WASHINGTON............................ 29221 0.40
MO.................................... WAYNE................................. 29223 0.20
MO.................................... WEBSTER............................... 29225 0.20
MO.................................... WRIGHT................................ 29229 0.20
TN.................................... BEDFORD............................... 47003 0.30
TN.................................... BENTON................................ 47005 0.30
TN.................................... BLEDSOE............................... 47007 0.60
TN.................................... CANNON................................ 47015 0.30
TN.................................... CARROLL............................... 47017 0.10
TN.................................... CHEATHAM.............................. 47021 0.30
TN.................................... CHESTER............................... 47023 0.10
TN.................................... CLAY.................................. 47027 0.30
TN.................................... COFFEE................................ 47031 0.60
TN.................................... CROCKETT.............................. 47033 0.30
TN.................................... DAVIDSON.............................. 47037 0.30
TN.................................... DECATUR............................... 47039 0.30
TN.................................... DE KALB............................... 47041 0.30
TN.................................... DICKSON............................... 47043 0.30
TN.................................... DYER.................................. 47045 0.10
TN.................................... FAYETTE............................... 47047 0.10
TN.................................... FENTRESS.............................. 47049 0.30
TN.................................... FRANKLIN.............................. 47051 0.40
TN.................................... GIBSON................................ 47053 0.10
TN.................................... GILES................................. 47055 0.40
TN.................................... GRUNDY................................ 47061 0.60
TN.................................... HARDEMAN.............................. 47069 0.10
TN.................................... HARDIN................................ 47071 0.10
TN.................................... HAYWOOD............................... 47075 0.30
TN.................................... HENDERSON............................. 47077 0.30
TN.................................... HENRY................................. 47079 0.10
TN.................................... HICKMAN............................... 47081 0.30
TN.................................... HOUSTON............................... 47083 0.30
TN.................................... HUMPHREYS............................. 47085 0.30
TN.................................... JACKSON............................... 47087 0.30
TN.................................... LAKE.................................. 47095 0.10
TN.................................... LAUDERDALE............................ 47097 0.30
[[Page 105]]
TN.................................... LAWRENCE.............................. 47099 0.40
TN.................................... LEWIS................................. 47101 0.30
TN.................................... LINCOLN............................... 47103 0.40
TN.................................... MC NAIRY.............................. 47109 0.10
TN.................................... MACON................................. 47111 0.30
TN.................................... MADISON............................... 47113 0.30
TN.................................... MARSHALL.............................. 47117 0.30
TN.................................... MAURY................................. 47119 0.30
TN.................................... MONTGOMERY............................ 47125 0.30
TN.................................... MOORE................................. 47127 0.40
TN.................................... OBION................................. 47131 0.10
TN.................................... OVERTON............................... 47133 0.30
TN.................................... PERRY................................. 47135 0.30
TN.................................... PICKETT............................... 47137 0.30
TN.................................... PUTNAM................................ 47141 0.30
TN.................................... ROBERTSON............................. 47147 0.30
TN.................................... RUTHERFORD............................ 47149 0.30
TN.................................... SHELBY................................ 47157 0.10
TN.................................... SMITH................................. 47159 0.30
TN.................................... STEWART............................... 47161 0.30
TN.................................... SUMNER................................ 47165 0.30
TN.................................... TIPTON................................ 47167 0.10
TN.................................... TROUSDALE............................. 47169 0.30
TN.................................... VAN BUREN............................. 47175 0.60
TN.................................... WARREN................................ 47177 0.60
TN.................................... WAYNE................................. 47181 0.40
TN.................................... WEAKLEY............................... 47183 0.10
TN.................................... WHITE................................. 47185 0.30
TN.................................... WILLIAMSON............................ 47187 0.30
TN.................................... WILSON................................ 47189 0.30
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[73 FR 14163, Mar. 17, 2008]
Sec. 1007.52 Adjusted Class I differentials.
See Sec. 1000.52.
Sec. 1007.53 Announcement of class prices, component prices, and
advanced pricing factors.
See Sec. 1000.53.
Sec. 1007.54 Equivalent price.
See Sec. 1000.54.
Uniform Prices
Sec. 1007.60 Handler's value of milk.
For the purpose of computing a handler's obligation for producer
milk, the market administrator shall determine for each month the value
of milk of each handler with respect to each of the handler's pool
plants and of each handler described in Sec. 1000.9(c) with respect to
milk that was not received at a pool plant by adding the amounts
computed in paragraphs (a) through (e) of this section and subtracting
from that total amount the value computed in paragraph (f) of this
section. Receipts of nonfluid milk products that are distributed as
labeled reconstituted milk for which payments are made to the producer-
settlement fund of another Federal order under Sec. 1000.76(a)(4) or
(d) shall be excluded from pricing under this section.
(a) Multiply the pounds of skim milk and butterfat in producer milk
that were classified in each class pursuant to Sec. 1000.44(c) by the
applicable skim milk and butterfat prices, and add the resulting
amounts; except that for the months of January 2005 through March 2005,
the Class I skim milk price for this purpose shall be the Class I skim
milk price as determined in Sec. 1000.50(b) plus $0.04 per
hundredweight, and the Class I butterfat price for this purpose shall be
the Class I butterfat price as determined in Sec. 1000.50(c) plus
$0.0004 per pound. The adjustments to the Class I skim milk and
butterfat prices provided herein may be reduced by the market
administrator for any month if the market administrator determines that
the payments yet unpaid computed pursuant to paragraphs (g)(1) through
(5) and paragraph (g)(7) of this section will be less than the amount
computed pursuant to paragraph (g)(6)
[[Page 106]]
of this section. The adjustments to the Class I skim milk and butterfat
prices provided herein during the months of January 2005 through March
2005 shall be announced along with the prices announced in Sec.
1000.53(b);
(b) Multiply the pounds of skim milk and butterfat overage assigned
to each class pursuant to Sec. 1000.44(a)(11) by the respective skim
milk and butterfat prices applicable at the location of the pool plant;
(c) Multiply the difference between the Class IV price for the
preceding month and the current month's Class I, II, or III price, as
the case may be, by the hundredweight of skim milk and butterfat
subtracted from Class I, II, or III, respectively, pursuant to Sec.
1000.44(a)(7) and the corresponding step of Sec. 1000.44(b);
(d) Multiply the difference between the Class I price applicable at
the location of the pool plant and the Class IV price by the
hundredweight of skim milk and butterfat assigned to Class I pursuant to
Sec. 1000.43(d) and the hundredweight of skim milk and butterfat
subtracted from Class I pursuant to Sec. 1000.44(a)(3)(i) through (vi)
and the corresponding step of Sec. 1000.44(b), excluding receipts of
bulk fluid cream products from a plant regulated under other Federal
orders and bulk concentrated fluid milk products from pool plants,
plants regulated under other Federal orders, and unregulated supply
plants;
(e) Multiply the Class I skim milk and Class I butterfat prices
applicable at the location of the nearest unregulated supply plants from
which an equivalent volume was received by the pounds of skim milk and
butterfat in receipts of concentrated fluid milk products assigned to
Class I pursuant to Sec. 1000.43(d) and Sec. 1000.44(a)(3)(i) and the
corresponding step of Sec. 1000.44(b) and the pounds of skim milk and
butterfat subtracted from Class I pursuant to Sec. 1000.44(a)(8) and
the corresponding step of Sec. 1000.44(b), excluding such skim milk and
butterfat in receipts of fluid milk products from an unregulated supply
plant to the extent that an equivalent amount of skim milk or butterfat
disposed of to such plant by handlers fully regulated under any Federal
milk order is classified and priced as Class I milk and is not used as
an offset for any other payment obligation under any order; and
(f) For reconstituted milk made from receipts of nonfluid milk
products, multiply $1.00 (but not more than the difference between the
Class I price applicable at the location of the pool plant and the Class
IV price) by the hundredweight of skim milk and butterfat contained in
receipts of nonfluid milk products that are allocated to Class I use
pursuant to Sec. 1000.43(d).
(g) For the months of January 2005 through March 2005 for handlers
who have submitted proof satisfactory to the market administrator to
determine eligibility for reimbursement of transportation costs,
subtract an amount equal to:
(1) The cost of transportation on loads of producer milk delivered
or rerouted to a pool distributing plant which were delivered as a
result of hurricanes Charley, Frances, Ivan, and Jeanne;
(2) The cost of transportation on loads of producer milk delivered
or rerouted to a pool supply plant that was then transferred to a pool
distributing plant which were delivered as a result of hurricanes
Charley, Frances, Ivan, and Jeanne;
(3) The cost of transportation on loads of bulk milk delivered or
rerouted to a pool distributing plant from a pool supply plant which
were delivered as a result of hurricanes Charley, Frances, Ivan, and
Jeanne;
(4) The cost of transportation on loads of bulk milk delivered or
rerouted to a pool distributing plant from another order plant which
were delivered as a result of hurricanes Charley, Frances, Ivan, and
Jeanne; and
(5) The cost of transportation on loads of bulk milk transferred or
diverted to a plant regulated under another Federal order or to other
nonpool plants which were delivered as a result of hurricanes Charley,
Frances, Ivan, and Jeanne.
(6) The total amount of payment to all handlers under this section
shall be limited for each month to an amount determined by multiplying
the total Class I producer milk for all handlers
[[Page 107]]
pursuant to Sec. 1000.44(c) times $0.04 per hundredweight.
(7) If the cost of transportation computed pursuant to paragraphs
(g)(1) through (5) of this section exceeds the amount computed pursuant
to paragraph (g)(6) of this section, the market administrator shall
prorate such payments to each handler based on each handler's proportion
of transportation costs submitted pursuant to paragraphs (g)(1) through
(5) of this section. Transportation costs submitted pursuant to
paragraphs (g)(1) through (5) of this section which are not paid as a
result of such a proration shall be included in each subsequent month's
transportation costs submitted pursuant to paragraphs (g)(1) through (5)
of this section until paid, or until the time period for such payments
has concluded.
(8) The reimbursement of transportation costs pursuant to this
section shall be the actual demonstrated cost of such transportation of
bulk milk delivered or rerouted as described in paragraphs (g)(1)
through (5) of this section, or the miles of transportation on loads of
bulk milk delivered or rerouted as described in paragraphs (g)(1)
through (5) of this section multiplied by $2.25 per loaded mile,
whichever is less.
(9) For each handler, the reimbursement of transportation costs
pursuant to paragraph (g) of this section for bulk milk delivered or
rerouted as described in paragraphs (g)(1) through (5) of this section
shall be reduced by the amount of payments received for such milk
movements from the transportation credit balancing fund pursuant to
Sec. 1007.82.
[64 FR 47966, Sept. 1, 1999, as amended at 65 FR 82835, Dec. 28, 2000;
69 FR 71700, Dec. 10, 2004]
Sec. 1007.61 Computation of uniform prices.
On or before the 11th day of each month, the market administrator
shall compute a uniform butterfat price, a uniform skim milk price, and
a uniform price for producer milk receipts reported for the prior month.
The report of any handler who has not made payments required pursuant to
Sec. 1007.71 for the preceding month shall not be included in the
computation of these prices, and such handler's report shall not be
included in the computation for succeeding months until the handler has
made full payment of outstanding monthly obligations.
(a) Uniform butterfat price. The uniform butterfat price per pound,
rounded to the nearest one-hundredth cent, shall be computed by:
(1) Multiplying the pounds of butterfat in producer milk allocated
to each class pursuant to Sec. 1000.44(b) by the respective class
butterfat prices;
(2) Adding the butterfat value calculated in Sec. 1007.60(e) for
other source milk allocated to Class I pursuant to Sec. 1000.43(d) and
the steps of Sec. 1000.44(b) that correspond to Sec. 1000.44(a)(3)(i)
and Sec. 1000.44(a)(8) by the Class I price; and
(3) Dividing the sum of paragraphs (a)(1) and (a)(2) of this section
by the sum of the pounds of butterfat in producer milk and other source
milk used to calculate the values in paragraphs (a)(1) and (a)(2) of
this section.
(b) Uniform skim milk price. The uniform skim milk price per
hundredweight, rounded to the nearest cent, shall be computed as
follows:
(1) Combine into one total the values computed pursuant to Sec.
1007.60 for all handlers;
(2) Add an amount equal to the minus location adjustments and
subtract an amount equal to the plus location adjustments computed
pursuant to Sec. 1007.75;
(3) Add an amount equal to not less than one-half of the unobligated
balance in the producer-settlement fund;
(4) Subtract the value of the total pounds of butterfat for all
handlers. The butterfat value shall be computed by multiplying the sum
of the pounds of butterfat in producer milk and other source milk used
to calculate the values in paragraphs (a)(1) and (a)(2) of this section
by the butterfat price computed in paragraph (a) of this section;
(5) Divide the resulting amount by the sum of the following for all
handlers included in these computations:
(i) The total skim pounds of producer milk; and
(ii) The total skim pounds for which a value is computed pursuant to
Sec. 1007.60(e); and
[[Page 108]]
(6) Subtract not less than 4 cents and not more than 5 cents.
(c) Uniform price. The uniform price per hundredweight, rounded to
the nearest cent, shall be the sum of the following:
(1) Multiply the uniform butterfat price for the month pursuant to
paragraph (a) of this section times 3.5 pounds of butterfat; and
(2) Multiply the uniform skim milk price for the month pursuant to
paragraph (b) of this section times 96.5 pounds of skim milk.
[64 FR 47966, Sept. 1, 1999, as amended at 65 FR 82835, Dec. 28, 2000]
Sec. 1007.62 Announcement of uniform prices.
On or before the 11th day after the end of the month, the market
administrator shall announce the uniform prices for the month computed
pursuant to Sec. 1007.61.
Payments for Milk
Sec. 1007.70 Producer-settlement fund.
See Sec. 1000.70.
Sec. 1007.71 Payments to the producer-settlement fund.
Each handler shall make a payment to the producer-settlement fund in
a manner that provides receipt of the funds by the market administrator
no later than the 12th day after the end of the month (except as
provided in Sec. 1000.90). Payment shall be the amount, if any, by
which the amount specified in paragraph (a) of this section exceeds the
amount specified in paragraph (b) of this section:
(a) The total value of milk of the handler for the month as
determined pursuant to Sec. 1007.60; and
(b) The sum of the value at the uniform prices for skim milk and
butterfat, adjusted for plant location, of the handler's receipts of
producer milk; and the value at the uniform price, as adjusted pursuant
to Sec. 1007.75, applicable at the location of the plant from which
received of other source milk for which a value is computed pursuant to
Sec. 1007.60(e).
Sec. 1007.72 Payments from the producer-settlement fund.
No later than one day after the date of payment receipt required
under Sec. 1007.71, the market administrator shall pay to each handler
the amount, if any, by which the amount computed pursuant to Sec.
1007.71(b) exceeds the amount computed pursuant to Sec. 1007.71(a). If,
at such time, the balance in the producer-settlement fund is
insufficient to make all payments pursuant to this section, the market
administrator shall reduce uniformly such payments and shall complete
the payments as soon as the funds are available.
Sec. 1007.73 Payments to producers and to cooperative associations.
(a) Each handler that is not paying a cooperative association for
producer milk shall pay each producer as follows:
(1) Partial payment. For each producer who has not discontinued
shipments as of the 23rd day of the month, payment shall be made so that
it is received by the producer on or before the 26th day of the month
(except as provided in Sec. 1000.90) for milk received during the first
15 days of the month at not less than 90 percent of the preceding
month's uniform price, adjusted for plant location pursuant to Sec.
1007.75 and proper deductions authorized in writing by the producer.
(2) Final payment. For milk received during the month, a payment
computed as follows shall be made so that it is received by each
producer one day after the payment date required in Sec. 1007.72:
(i) Multiply the hundredweight of producer skim milk received times
the uniform skim milk price for the month;
(ii) Multiply the pounds of butterfat received times the uniform
butterfat price for the month;
(iii) Multiply the hundredweight of producer milk received times the
plant location adjustment pursuant to Sec. 1007.75; and
(iv) Add the amounts computed in paragraph (a)(2)(i), (ii), and
(iii) of this section, and from that sum:
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(A) Subtract the partial payment made pursuant to paragraph (a)(1)
of this section;
(B) Subtract the deduction for marketing services pursuant to Sec.
1000.86;
(C) Add or subtract for errors made in previous payments to the
producer; and
(D) Subtract proper deductions authorized in writing by the
producer.
(b) One day before partial and final payments are due pursuant to
paragraph (a) of this section, each handler shall pay a cooperative
association for milk received as follows:
(1) Partial payment to a cooperative association for bulk milk
received directly from producers' farms. For bulk milk (including the
milk of producers who are not members of such association and who the
market administrator determines have authorized the cooperative
association to collect payment for their milk) received during the first
15 days of the month from a cooperative association in any capacity,
except as the operator of a pool plant, the payment shall be equal to
the hundredweight of milk received multiplied by 90 percent of the
preceding month's uniform price, adjusted for plant location pursuant to
Sec. 1007.75.
(2) Partial payment to a cooperative association for milk
transferred from its pool plant. For bulk fluid milk products and bulk
fluid cream products received during the first 15 days of the month from
a cooperative association in its capacity as the operator of a pool
plant, the partial payment shall be at the pool plant operator's
estimated use value of the milk using the most recent class prices
available for skim milk and butterfat at the receiving plant's location.
(3) Final payment to a cooperative association for milk transferred
from its pool plant. For bulk fluid milk products and bulk fluid cream
products received during the month from a cooperative association in its
capacity as the operator of a pool plant, the final payment shall be the
classified value of such milk as determined by multiplying the pounds of
skim milk and butterfat assigned to each class pursuant to Sec. 1000.44
by the class prices for the month at the receiving plant's location, and
subtracting from this sum the partial payment made pursuant to paragraph
(b)(2) of this section.
(4) Final payment to a cooperative association for bulk milk
received directly from producers' farms. For bulk milk received from a
cooperative association during the month, including the milk of
producers who are not members of such association and who the market
administrator determines have authorized the cooperative association to
collect payment for their milk, the final payment for such milk shall be
an amount equal to the sum of the individual payments otherwise payable
for such milk pursuant to paragraph (a)(2) of this section.
(c) If a handler has not received full payment from the market
administrator pursuant to Sec. 1007.72 by the payment date specified in
paragraph (a) or (b) of this section, the handler may reduce payments
pursuant to paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section, but by not more than
the amount of the underpayment. The payments shall be completed on the
next scheduled payment date after receipt of the balance due from the
market administrator.
(d) If a handler claims that a required payment to a producer cannot
be made because the producer is deceased or cannot be located, or
because the cooperative association or its lawful successor or assignee
is no longer in existence, the payment shall be made to the producer-
settlement fund, and in the event that the handler subsequently locates
and pays the producer or a lawful claimant, or in the event that the
handler no longer exists and a lawful claim is later established, the
market administrator shall make the required payment from the producer-
settlement fund to the handler or to the lawful claimant as the case may
be.
(e) In making payments to producers pursuant to this section, each
pool plant operator shall furnish each producer, except a producer whose
milk was received from a cooperative association described in Sec.
1000.9(a) or (c), a supporting statement in such form that it may be
retained by the recipient which shall show:
(1) The name, address, Grade A identifier assigned by a duly
constituted regulatory agency, and the payroll number of the producer;
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(2) The month and dates that milk was received from the producer,
including the daily and total pounds of milk received;
(3) The total pounds of butterfat in the producer's milk;
(4) The minimum rate or rates at which payment to the producer is
required pursuant to this order;
(5) The rate used in making payment if the rate is other than the
applicable minimum rate;
(6) The amount, or rate per hundredweight, and nature of each
deduction claimed by the handler; and
(7) The net amount of payment to the producer or cooperative
association.
[64 FR 47971, Sept. 1, 1999, as amended at 65 FR 32010, May 22, 2000]
Sec. 1007.74 [Reserved]