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Wed 14 Dec, 2005 10:49 am
The Republican senator from southeastern Colorado is boiling over the State Department of Corrections' decision to largely replace beef in inmates' diets with turkey, including in tacos, sloppy joes and spaghetti sauce.
That amounts to 170,000 pounds of beef each quarter that no longer will be purchased, mostly from Colorado ranchers, he said.
Many of those ranchers are Kester's constituents.
"I want to know, where's the beef," Kester said. "I have a lot of Colorado beef producers who are hot as all get-out in my district. They want answers and so do I."
Prisons spokeswoman Patti Micciche said the prison removed bulk ground beef from menus because of religious lawsuits and because the turkey is leaner. She said prisoners still get stew beef and even top round.
Kester called the explanations conflicting and confusing.
"That's just not good for the economy of southern Colorado," Kester said. "We've taken a lot of hits down here. We lost a bus plant, we lost a pickle factory, we're trying to recover from the drought ... and
here we hit them with this."
Kester senses some irony in that he has more cattle in his district than he has people, but he also has more prisons in his district that in any other senate district in the country.
TS for the cattle ranchers. Lower the prices and sell to the rest of the country.
I agree. It's strange how businesses get the idea that the gov't exists to protect their business model.
Cycloptichorn
Some of the chemicals in turkey make many folks drowsy. Perhaps this is the prison's way of subduing the inmates without having to resort to tranquilizers imported from Canada (although manufactured in the U.S).
Sturgis wrote:Some of the chemicals in turkey make many folks drowsy.
Sure seems to have worked for all the turkeys who eat turkey who voted for this turkey.
When are they gonna wake up?