Cook County officials back embattled dairy farmer blocking inspectors

Cook County commissioners sided with the embattled Lake View Natural Dairy on Tuesday, approving a letter of support for the Grand Marais farmer who is refusing to allow state agricultural inspectors on the property.

By mayarao

March 18, 2015 at 6:01PM
David Berglund at work on his farm in Grand Marais.
David Berglund at work on his farm in Grand Marais. (The Minnesota Star Tribune)

Cook County commissioners sided with the embattled Lake View Natural Dairy on Tuesday, approving a letter of support for the Grand Marais farmer who is refusing to allow state agricultural inspectors on the property.

The commissioners backed the Berglund family's right to sell products from the farm, citing lines from the Minnesota constitution that protect the farm "from governmental intrusions, when [it] is privately associating with private men and women to sell and peddle the products of their farm at their farm location."

The move comes a week after Judge Michael Cuzzo denied a motion from the Department of Agriculture to hold David Berglund in contempt for not allowing inspectors on his farm. The state initially sought to have him fined $500 a day. Cuzzo stayed the department's order for inspection until he could address the constitutional issues in the case, a ruling that will come in the next 90 days.

Lake View sells milk from its cows without processing it in sanitized containers, according to court records. Some of the milk is turned into cream and butter for customers. The Agriculture Department initially tried to visit the farm two years ago to discuss how Lake View could voluntarily comply with rules governing the manufacturing and sale of unpasteurized dairy products.

Regulators disagreed with Berglund's assertion that he was constitutionally exempt — by the "No license required to peddle" clause — from a requirement that he have a license to sell goods from the farm. They argued that the farm was still subject to inspections and food-safety requirements and that it needed a dairy-producer permit.

"He's a local farmer, the family's been here for generations, and so we support economic development and people that are trying to make a living here," said Heidi Doo-Kirk, who chairs the Cook County Board of Commissioners.

Like many others in town, Doo-Kirk and her family have gone to the farm to buy milk. Lake View even has an honor system, she said: customers can grab milk from a cooler, write their purchase on a sign-in sheet and leave money in a box.

"They're out working the field," she said. "They've got a lot of cattle and a lot of work to do, so they've got to keep up with everything … they're a great family."

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