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Statutes > New-york > Agm > Article-21-c > 258-kk

§   258-kk.   Northeast  interstate  dairy  compact.    The  northeast  interstate dairy compact as set forth in this article is hereby  adopted  and  entered into with all jurisdictions joining therein. The compact is  as follows:                     NORTHEAST INTERSTATE DAIRY COMPACT    ARTICLE I. STATEMENT OF PURPOSE, FINDINGS AND DECLARATION OF POLICY    § 1.  Statement of purpose, findings and declaration of policy.    ARTICLE II. DEFINITIONS AND RULES OF CONSTRUCTION    § 2.  Definitions.    § 3.  Rules of construction.    ARTICLE III. COMMISSION ESTABLISHED    § 4.  Commission established.    § 5.  Voting requirements.    § 6.  Administration and management.    § 7.  Rulemaking power.    ARTICLE IV. POWERS OF THE COMMISSION    § 8.  Powers to promote regulatory uniformity, simplicity, and  inter-  state cooperation.    § 9.  Equitable farm prices.    § 10. Optional provisions for pricing order.    ARTICLE V. RULEMAKING PROCEDURE    § 11. Rulemaking procedure.    § 12. Findings and referendum.    § 13. Producer referendum.    § 14. Termination of over-order price or marketing order.    ARTICLE VI. ENFORCEMENT    § 15. Records, reports, access to premises.    § 16. Subpoena, hearings and judicial review.    § 17. Enforcement with respect to handlers.    ARTICLE VII. FINANCE    § 18. Finance of start-up and regular costs.    § 19. Audit and accounts.    ARTICLE VIII. ENTRY INTO FORCE; ADDITIONAL MEMBERS AND WITHDRAWAL    § 20. Entry into force; additional members.    § 21. Withdrawal from compact.    § 22. Severability.    § 23. Reservation of rights.     ARTICLE I. STATEMENT OF PURPOSE, FINDINGS AND DECLARATION OF POLICY    § 1. Statement of purpose, findings and declaration of policy.    The  purpose  of  this  compact  is  to  recognize  by  constitutional  prerequisite the interstate character of the  northeast  dairy  industry  and  to  form  an  interstate  commission for the northeast region.  The  mission of the commission is to take such  steps  as  are  necessary  to  assure the continued viability of dairy farming in the northeast, and to  assure  consumers  of  an  adequate,  local supply of pure and wholesome  milk.    The participating states find and declare that the dairy  industry  is  the  paramount  agricultural activity of the northeast. Dairy farms, and  associated  suppliers,  marketers,  processors  and  retailers,  are  an  integral  component  of the region's economy. Their ability to provide a  stable, local supply of pure,  wholesome  milk  is  a  matter  of  great  importance to the health and welfare of the region.    The  participating  states further find that dairy farms are essential  to the region's rural communities and character. The farms preserve open  spaces, sculpt the landscape and provide the land base for  a  diversity  of  recreational  pursuits.  In  defining  the  rural  character  of our  communities and landscape, dairy farms also provide a major draw for our  tourist industries.By entering into this compact, the participating  states  affirm  that  their  ability  to  regulate  the  price  which  northeast dairy farmers  receive for their product is essential to the public interest. Assurance  of a fair and equitable price for dairy farmers ensures their ability to  provide  milk  to  the  market  and  the vitality of the northeast dairy  industry, with all the associated benefits.    Recent, dramatic price fluctuations, with a pronounced downward trend,  threaten the viability and stability  of  the  northeast  dairy  region.  Historically,  individual  state regulatory action has been an effective  emergency remedy available to farmers confronting a  distressed  market.  The  federal  order  system,  implemented  by the Agricultural Marketing  Agreement Act  of  1937,  establishes  only  minimum  prices  for  dairy  products, without preempting the power of states to regulate milk prices  above  the  minimum levels so established. Based on this authority, each  state in the region has individually attempted to implement at least one  regulatory program in response to the current dairy industry crisis.    In  today's  regional  dairy  marketplace,  cooperative,  rather  than  individual   state  action  may  address  more  effectively  the  market  disarray. Under our constitutional system, properly  authorized,  states  acting  cooperatively  may  exercise  more  power to regulate interstate  commerce than they may assert individually without such  authority.  For  this  reason,  the participating states invoke their authority to act in  common agreement, with the consent of congress, under the compact clause  of the constitution.    In establishing their constitutional  regulatory  authority  over  the  region's  fluid  milk  market  by this compact, the participating states  declare their purpose that this compact  neither  displace  the  federal  order  system  nor  encourage  the merging of federal orders.   Specific  provisions of the compact itself set forth this basic principle.    Designed as a flexible mechanism  able  to  adjust  to  changes  in  a  regulated marketplace, the compact also contains a contingency provision  should  the  federal  order  system  be discontinued. In that event, the  interstate commission is  authorized  to  regulate  the  marketplace  in  replacement  of  the  order  system.  This contingent authority does not  anticipate such a change, however, and should not be so construed. It is  only provided should developments in the market other than establishment  of this compact result in discontinuance of the order system.              ARTICLE II. DEFINITIONS AND RULES OF CONSTRUCTION    § 2. Definitions.    For  the  purposes  of  this  compact,  and  of  any  supplemental  or  concurring  legislation  enacted  pursuant  thereto,  except  as  may be  otherwise required by the context:    (a) "Commission" means the commission established by this compact.    (b) "Compact" means this interstate compact.    (c) "Region" means the territorial limits of the states which  are  or  become parties to this compact.    (d)  "Participating  state"  means a state which has become a party to  this compact by the enactment of concurring legislation.    (e) "Regulated area" means any area within the region governed by  and  defined  in  regulations  establishing  a  compact  over-order  price or  commission marketing order.    (f) "Pool plant" means any milk plant located in a regulated area.    (g) "Partially regulated plant" means a milk plant not  located  in  a  regulated  area  but  having  class  I distribution within such area, or  receipts from producers located in such area.    Commission  regulations  may  exempt  plants having such distribution or receipts in amounts less  than the limits defined therein.(h) "Compact over-order price" means a minimum price  required  to  be  paid  to  producers  for  class  I milk established by the commission in  regulations adopted pursuant to sections nine and ten of  this  compact,  which  is  above the price established in federal marketing orders or by  state  farm price regulation in the regulated area. Such price may apply  throughout the region or in any part or parts thereof as defined in  the  regulations of the commission.    (i)  "Commission  marketing  order"  means  regulations adopted by the  commission pursuant to sections nine and ten of this compact in place of  a terminated federal marketing order or  state  dairy  regulation.  Such  order may apply throughout the region or in any part or parts thereof as  defined  in  the regulations of the commission. Such order may establish  minimum prices for any or all classes of milk.    (j) "Milk" means the lacteal secretion of cows and includes all  skim,  butterfat,  or  other constituents obtained from separation or any other  process. The term is used in its  broadest  sense  and  may  be  further  defined by the commission for regulatory purposes.    (k)  "Class I milk" means milk disposed of in fluid form or as a fluid  milk product, subject to  further  definition  in  accordance  with  the  principles  expressed  in  subdivision  (b)  of  section  three  of this  compact.    (l) "State dairy regulation"  means  any  state  regulation  of  dairy  prices,  and associated assessments, whether by statute, marketing order  or otherwise.    § 3. Rules of construction.  (a) This compact shall not  be  construed  to  displace  existing  federal  milk  marketing  orders  or state dairy  regulation in the region but to supplement them. In the  event  some  or  all  federal orders in the region are discontinued, the compact shall be  construed to provide the commission the option to replace them with  one  or more commission marketing orders pursuant to this compact.    (b)  This compact shall be construed liberally in order to achieve the  purposes and intent enunciated in section one of this compact. It is the  intent of this compact to establish  a  basic  structure  by  which  the  commission   may   achieve   those  purposes  through  the  application,  adaptation and development of  the  regulatory  techniques  historically  associated  with  milk  marketing  and  to  afford  the commission broad  flexibility to devise regulatory mechanisms to achieve the  purposes  of  this  compact. In accordance with this intent, the technical terms which  are associated with market order  regulation  and  which  have  acquired  commonly  understood  general  meanings  are  not defined herein but the  commission may further define the terms used in this compact and develop  additional  concepts  and  define  additional  terms  as  it  may   find  appropriate to achieve its purposes.                     ARTICLE III. COMMISSION ESTABLISHED    § 4. Commission established.    There  is  hereby  created  a  commission  to  administer the compact,  composed of delegations from each state  in  the  region.  A  delegation  shall  include  not  less  than  three nor more than five persons.  Each  delegation shall include at least one dairy farmer who is engaged in the  production of milk at the time of appointment or reappointment, and  one  consumer  representative.  Delegation  members  shall  be  residents and  voters of, and subject to such confirmation process as is  provided  for  in,  the  appointing  state. Delegation members shall serve no more than  three consecutive terms with no single term of more than four years, and  be subject to removal for cause.   In  all  other  respects,  delegation  members   shall   serve  in  accordance  with  the  laws  of  the  state  represented. The compensation,  if  any,  of  the  members  of  a  state  delegation  shall  be  determined  and  paid  by  each  state, but theirexpenses shall be paid by the commission. Each state delegation shall be  entitled to one vote in the conduct of the commission's affairs.    § 5. Voting requirements.    All  actions  taken by the commission, except for the establishment or  termination of an over-order price or commission  marketing  order,  and  the adoption, amendment or rescission of the commission's by-laws, shall  be  by  majority  vote  of  the  delegations  present.  Establishment or  termination of an over-order price or commission marketing  order  shall  require  at  least  a  two-thirds  vote  of the delegations present. The  establishment of a  regulated  area  which  covers  all  or  part  of  a  participating  state  shall  require  also  the affirmative vote of that  state's delegation. A majority of the delegations from the participating  states shall constitute a quorum for the  conduct  of  the  commission's  business.    § 6. Administration and management.    (a)  The commission shall elect annually from among the members of the  participating state delegations a chairperson, a vice-chairperson, and a  treasurer. The commission shall appoint an executive  director  and  fix  his  or  her duties and compensation. The executive director shall serve  at the pleasure of the commission, and,  together  with  the  treasurer,  shall  be  bonded  in  an  amount  determined  by  the  commission.  The  commission may establish through  its  by-laws  an  executive  committee  composed of one member elected by each delegation.    (b) The commission shall adopt by-laws for the conduct of its business  by a two-thirds vote, and shall have the power by the same vote to amend  and  rescind  these by-laws. The commission shall publish its by-laws in  convenient form with the appropriate agency or officer in  each  of  the  participating  states.  The by-laws shall provide for appropriate notice  to the delegations of all commission meetings and hearings  and  of  the  business  to  be  transacted  at  such meetings or hearings. Notice also  shall be given to other agencies or officers of participating states  as  provided by the laws of those states.    (c)  The  commission shall file an annual report with the secretary of  agriculture of the United States, and with  each  of  the  participating  states  by  submitting  copies  to  the  governor,  both  houses  of the  legislature,   and   the   head   of   the   state   department   having  responsibilities for agriculture.    (d)  In addition to the powers and duties elsewhere prescribed in this  compact, the commission shall have the power:    (1) to sue and be sued in any state or federal court;    (2) to have a seal and alter the same at pleasure;    (3) to acquire, hold, and dispose of real  and  personal  property  by  gift,  purchase,  lease,  license,  or  other  similar  manner,  for its  corporate purposes;    (4) to borrow money and to issue notes, to provide for the  rights  of  the  holders  thereof  and  to  pledge  the revenue of the commission as  security therefor, subject to the provisions of section eighteen of this  compact;    (5) to appoint such officers, agents, and employees  as  it  may  deem  necessary, prescribe their powers, duties, and qualifications; and    (6)  to create and abolish such offices, employments, and positions as  it deems necessary for the purposes of the compact and provide  for  the  removal,  term,  tenure,  compensation,  fringe  benefits,  pension, and  retirement rights of its officers and employees. The commission may also  retain personal services on a contract basis.    § 7. Rulemaking power.    In addition to the power to promulgate a compact over-order  price  or  commission  marketing orders as provided by this compact, the commissionis further empowered to make  and  enforce  such  additional  rules  and  regulations  as  it  deems necessary to implement any provisions of this  compact, or to effectuate in any other  respect  the  purposes  of  this  compact.                    ARTICLE IV. POWERS OF THE COMMISSION    §   8.  Powers  to  promote  regulatory  uniformity,  simplicity,  and  interstate cooperation.    The commission is hereby empowered to:    (a) Investigate or provide for  investigations  or  research  projects  designed   to   review   the   existing  laws  and  regulations  of  the  participating states, to consider their  administration  and  costs,  to  measure  their  impact on the production and marketing of milk and their  effects on the shipment of milk and milk products within the region.    (b) Prepare and transmit to the participating states model dairy  laws  and  regulations  dealing  with  the  inspection  of  farms  and plants,  sanitary  codes,  labels  for  dairy  products  and  their   imitations,  standards  for  dairy  products,  license  standards,  producer security  programs, and fair trade laws.    (c)  Study  and  recommend  to  the  participating  states  joint   or  cooperative  programs  for  the  administration  of  the  dairy laws and  regulations and to prepare estimates of cost  savings  and  benefits  of  such programs.    (d)   Encourage  the  harmonious  relationships  between  the  various  elements in the industry for the solution of  their  material  problems.  Conduct   symposiums   or   conferences  designed  to  improve  industry  relations, or a better understanding of problems.    (e) Prepare and release periodic reports on activities and results  of  the commission's efforts to the participating states.    (f)  Review  the  existing marketing system for milk and milk products  and recommend  changes  in  the  existing  structure  for  assembly  and  distribution  of  milk  which  may  assist,  improve,  or  promote  more  efficient assembly and distribution of milk.    (g) Investigate costs and charges for  producing,  hauling,  handling,  processing,  distributing,  selling and for all other services performed  with respect to milk.    (h) Examine current  economic  forces  affecting  producers,  probable  trends  in production and consumption, the level of dairy farm prices in  relation to costs, the financial conditions of dairy  farmers,  and  the  need  for  an  emergency  order  to relieve critical conditions on dairy  farms.    § 9. Equitable farm prices.    (a) The powers granted in this section and section ten of this compact  shall apply only to the establishment of a compact over-order price,  so  long as federal milk marketing orders remain in effect in the region. In  the event that any or all such orders are terminated, this article shall  authorize  the  commission to establish one or more commission marketing  orders, as herein provided, in the region or parts thereof as defined in  the order.    (b) A compact over-order price established pursuant  to  this  section  shall apply only to class I milk. Such over-order price shall not exceed  one  dollar  and  fifty  cents per gallon. Beginning in nineteen hundred  ninety, and using that year as a base,  the  foregoing  one  dollar  and  fifty cents per gallon maximum shall be adjusted annually by the rate of  change  in  the  consumer price index as reported by the Bureau of Labor  Statistics of the United States Department of Labor. For purposes of the  pooling and equalization of an over-order price, the value of milk  used  in  other  use  classifications  shall  be calculated at the appropriate  class price established pursuant to  the  applicable  federal  order  orstate  dairy  regulation  and  the  value  of  unregulated milk shall be  calculated  in  relation  to  the  nearest  prevailing  class  price  in  accordance  with  and  subject to such adjustments as the commission may  prescribe in regulations.    (c)  A  commission marketing order shall apply to all classes and uses  of milk.    (d) The commission is hereby empowered to establish the minimum  price  for  milk  to be paid by pool plants, partially regulated plants and all  other handlers receiving milk from  producers  located  in  a  regulated  area.  This  price  shall  be established either as a compact over-order  price or by one or more commission marketing  orders.  Whenever  such  a  price  has  been  established  by  either  type of regulation, the legal  obligation to pay such price shall be determined solely by the terms and  purpose of the regulation without regard to the situs of the transfer of  title, possession or any other factors not related to  the  purposes  of  the  regulation  and  this  compact.  Producer-handlers as defined in an  applicable federal market order  shall  not  be  subject  to  a  compact  over-order  price. The commission shall provide for similar treatment of  producer-handlers under commission marketing orders.    (e) In determining  the  price,  the  commission  shall  consider  the  balance  between production and consumption of milk and milk products in  the regulated area, the costs of production including, but  not  limited  to  the  price of feed, the cost of labor including the reasonable value  of the producer's own  labor  and  management,  machinery  expense,  and  interest  expense,  the  prevailing price for milk outside the regulated  area, the purchasing power of the public  and  the  price  necessary  to  yield a reasonable return to the producer and distributor.    (f) When establishing a compact over-order price, the commission shall  take such action as necessary and feasible to ensure that the over-order  price  does not create an incentive for producers to generate additional  supplies of milk.    (g) The commission shall whenever possible enter into agreements  with  state  or  federal  agencies for exchange of information or services for  the purpose of reducing regulatory burden and cost of administering  the  compact.  The commission may reimburse other agencies for the reasonable  cost of providing these services.    § 10. Optional provisions for pricing order.    Regulations establishing a compact over-order price  or  a  commission  marketing  order  may  contain,  but shall not be limited to, any of the  following:    (a) Provisions classifying milk in accordance with the form  in  which  or purpose for which it is used, or creating a flat pricing program.    (b)  With  respect  to  a  commission marketing order only, provisions  establishing or providing a method  for  establishing  separate  minimum  prices  for  each  use classification prescribed by the commission, or a  single minimum price for milk purchased from producers  or  associations  of producers.    (c)   With   respect   to  an  over-order  minimum  price,  provisions  establishing or providing a method for establishing such  minimum  price  for class I milk.    (d)  Provisions  for  establishing  either  an  over-order  price or a  commission marketing order may make use of  any  reasonable  method  for  establishing  such  price  or  prices including flat pricing and formula  pricing. Provision may also  be  made  for  location  adjustments,  zone  differentials  and  for  competitive  credits  with respect to regulated  handlers who market outside the regulated area.    (e) Provisions for the payment to all producers  and  associations  of  producers delivering milk to all handlers of uniform prices for all milkso  delivered,  irrespective  of  the  uses  made  of  such  milk by the  individual handler to whom it  is  delivered,  or  for  the  payment  of  producers  delivering milk to the same handler of uniform prices for all  milk delivered by them.    (1)  With  respect  to  regulations  establishing a compact over-order  price, the commission may establish one  equalization  pool  within  the  regulated  area  for the sole purpose of equalizing returns to producers  throughout the regulated area.    (2) With respect to any commission  marketing  order,  as  defined  in  subdivision  (i)  of  section two of this compact, which replaces one or  more terminated federal orders or state dairy regulation, the  marketing  area of now separate state or federal orders shall not be merged without  the  affirmative  consent  of each state, voting through its delegation,  which is partly or wholly included within any such new marketing area.    (f) Provisions requiring persons who  bring  class  I  milk  into  the  regulated  area  to  make compensatory payments with respect to all such  milk to the extent necessary to equalize the cost of milk  purchased  by  handlers  subject  to a compact over-order price or commission marketing  order. No such provisions  shall  discriminate  against  milk  producers  outside the regulated area. The provisions for compensatory payments may  require  payment of the difference between the class I price required to  be paid for such milk in the state  of  production  by  a  federal  milk  marketing  order  or  state  dairy  regulation  and  the  class  I price  established by the compact  over-order  price  or  commission  marketing  order.    (g)  Provisions  specially  governing  the pricing and pooling of milk  handled by partially regulated plants.    (h) Provisions requiring that the  account  of  any  person  regulated  under a compact over-order price shall be adjusted for any payments made  to  or  received  by  such persons with respect to a producer settlement  fund of any federal or state milk marketing order or other  state  dairy  regulation within the regulated area.    (i)  Provisions  requiring the payment by handlers of an assessment to  cover the costs of the administration  and  enforcement  of  such  order  pursuant to subdivision (a) of section eighteen of this compact.    (j) Provisions for reimbursement to participants of the Women, Infants  and  Children  Special  Supplemental  Food  Program of the United States  Child Nutrition Act of 1966.    (k) Other provisions and requirements as the commission may  find  are  necessary  or appropriate to effectuate the purposes of this compact and  to provide for the payment of  fair  and  equitable  minimum  prices  to  producers.                       ARTICLE V. RULEMAKING PROCEDURE    § 11. Rulemaking procedure.    Before   promulgation   of  any  regulations  establishing  a  compact  over-order price or commission marketing order, including any  provision  with  respect  to  milk  supply under subdivision (f) of section nine of  this compact, or amendment thereof, as provided in article  IV  of  this  compact,  the commission shall conduct an informal rulemaking proceeding  to provide interested persons with an opportunity to  present  data  and  views.  Such  rulemaking proceeding shall be governed by section four of  the Federal Administrative Procedure Act,  as  amended  (5  U.S.C.  Sec.  553).  In  addition,  the  commission  shall, to the extent practicable,  publish notice of rulemaking proceedings in  the  official  register  of  each  participating  state.  Before  the initial adoption of regulations  establishing a compact over-order price or a commission marketing  order  and   thereafter   before   any  amendment  with  regard  to  prices  or  assessments, the commission shall hold a public hearing. The  commissionmay commence a rulemaking proceeding on its own initiative or may in its  sole discretion act upon the petition of any person including individual  milk  producers, any organization of milk producers or handlers, general  farm organizations, consumer or public interest groups, and local, state  or federal officials.    § 12. Findings and referendum.    (a)  In addition to the concise general statement of basis and purpose  required by section 4(b) of the Federal Administrative Procedure Act, as  amended (5 U.S.C. Sec. 553(c)), the commission shall  make  findings  of  fact with respect to:    (1) Whether the public interest will be served by the establishment of  minimum milk prices to dairy farmers under article IV of this compact.    (2)  What  level  of prices will assure that producers receive a price  sufficient to cover  their  costs  of  production  and  will  elicit  an  adequate  supply  of  milk for the inhabitants of the regulated area and  for manufacturing purposes.    (3) Whether the major provisions of the order, other than those fixing  minimum milk prices, are in  the  public  interest  and  are  reasonably  designed to achieve the purposes of the order.    (4)  Whether the terms of the proposed regional order or amendment are  approved by producers as provided in section thirteen of this compact.    § 13. Producer referendum.    (a) For the purpose of ascertaining whether the issuance or  amendment  of  regulations  establishing a compact over-order price or a commission  marketing order, including any provision with  respect  to  milk  supply  under  subdivision  (f)  of section nine of this compact, is approved by  producers, the commission shall conduct a  referendum  among  producers.  The  referendum  shall  be  held  in  a  timely manner, as determined by  regulation of the commission. The terms and conditions of  the  proposed  order  or  amendment  shall be described by the commission in the ballot  used in the conduct of the  referendum,  but  the  nature,  content,  or  extent  of  such  description  shall  not  be  a basis for attacking the  legality of the order or any action relating thereto.    (b) An order or amendment shall be deemed approved by producers if the  commission determines that it is approved by at least two-thirds of  the  voting  producers  who, during a representative period determined by the  commission, have been engaged in the production of  milk  the  price  of  which would be regulated under the proposed order or amendment.    (c)  For purposes of any referendum, the commission shall consider the  approval or disapproval by any  cooperative  association  of  producers,  qualified  under  the  provisions  of  the  act  of congress of February  eighteen,  nineteen  hundred  twenty-two,  as  amended,  known  as   the  Capper-Volstead  Act,  bona  fide  engaged  in  marketing  milk,  or  in  rendering services for or advancing the interests of producers  of  such  commodity,  as  the  approval  or  disapproval  of the producers who are  members or stockholders in, or under  contract  with,  such  cooperative  association  of  producers,  except as provided in paragraph one of this  subdivision and subject to the provisions of paragraphs two, three, four  and five of this subdivision:    (1) No cooperative which has been formed to act as a common  marketing  agency for both cooperatives and individual producers shall be qualified  to block vote for either.    (2)  Any  cooperative  which  is qualified to block vote shall, before  submitting its approval or disapproval in  any  referendum,  give  prior  written  notice  to each of its members as to whether and how it intends  to cast its vote. The notice shall  be  given  in  a  timely  manner  as  established, and in the form prescribed by the commission.(3)  Any  producer may obtain a ballot from the commission in order to  register approval or disapproval of the proposed order.    (4)  A  producer  who  is a member of a cooperative which has provided  notice of its intent to approve or not to approve a proposed order,  and  who  obtains  a  ballot  and  with such ballot expresses his approval or  disapproval of the proposed order, shall notify the commission as to the  name of the cooperative of  which  he  or  she  is  a  member,  and  the  commission  shall remove such producer's name from the list certified by  such cooperative with its corporate vote.    (5) In order to insure that all milk producers are informed  regarding  a proposed order, the commission shall notify all milk producers that an  order is being considered and that each producer may register his or her  approval  or  disapproval with the commission either directly or through  his or her cooperative.    § 14. Termination of over-order price or marketing order.    (a) The commission shall terminate  any  regulations  establishing  an  over-order price or commission marketing order issued under this article  whenever it finds that such order or price obstructs or does not tend to  effectuate the declared policy of this compact.    (b)  The  commission  shall  terminate any regulations establishing an  over-order price or a  commission  marketing  order  issued  under  this  article whenever it finds that such termination is favored by a majority  of  the  producers who, during a representative period determined by the  commission, have been engaged in the production of  milk  the  price  of  which  is  regulated  by  such  order;  but  such  termination  shall be  effective only if announced on or before such date as may  be  specified  in such marketing agreement or order.    (c)  The  termination or suspension of any order or provision thereof,  shall not be considered an order within the meaning of this article  and  shall  require  no  hearing,  but shall comply with the requirements for  informal  rulemaking  prescribed  by  section  four   of   the   Federal  Administrative Procedure Act, as amended (5 U.S.C. Sec. 553).                           ARTICLE VI. ENFORCEMENT    § 15. Records, reports, access to premises.    (a) The commission may by rule and regulation prescribe record keeping  and  reporting  requirements  for all regulated persons. For purposes of  the administration and enforcement of this compact,  the  commission  is  authorized  to  examine  the  books  and records of any regulated person  relating to  his  or  her  milk  business  and  for  that  purpose,  the  commission's  properly  designated  officers, employees, or agents shall  have full access during  normal  business  hours  to  the  premises  and  records of all regulated persons.    (b)  Information  furnished to or acquired by the commission officers,  employees, or its agents pursuant to this section shall be  confidential  and  not  subject to disclosure except to the extent that the commission  deems disclosure to be  necessary  in  any  administrative  or  judicial  proceeding  involving the administration or enforcement of this compact,  an over-order price, a compact marketing order, or other regulations  of  the  commission.  The  commission  may  promulgate  regulations  further  defining the confidentiality of information pursuant  to  this  section.  Nothing  in this section shall be deemed to prohibit (1) the issuance of  general statements based upon the reports of a number of handlers, which  do not identify the information furnished by  any  person,  or  (2)  the  publication  by  direction  of  the commission of the name of any person  violating any regulation of the commission, together with a statement of  the particular provisions violated by such person.    (c)  No  officer,  employee,  or  agent  of   the   commission   shall  intentionally  disclose information, by inference or otherwise, which ismade confidential pursuant to this section.  Any  person  violating  the  provisions of this section shall upon conviction be subject to a fine of  not  more than one thousand dollars or by imprisonment for not more than  one  year,  or by both, and shall be removed from office. The commission  shall refer any allegation  of  a  violation  of  this  section  to  the  appropriate state enforcement authority or United States attorney.    § 16. Subpoena, hearings and judicial review.    (a)  The  commission is hereby authorized and empowered by its members  and its properly designated  officers  to  administer  oaths  and  issue  subpoenas  throughout  all  signatory states to compel the attendance of  witnesses and the giving  of  testimony  and  the  production  of  other  evidence.    (b)  Any  handler subject to an order may file a written petition with  the commission stating that any such order or any provision of any  such  order  or  any  obligation  imposed  in  connection  therewith is not in  accordance with law and praying for a  modification  thereof  or  to  be  exempted  therefrom.  He  shall  thereupon be given an opportunity for a  hearing upon such petition, in accordance with regulations made  by  the  commission.  After such hearing, the commission shall make a ruling upon  the prayer of such petition which shall be final, if in accordance  with  law.    (c)  The district courts of the United States in any district in which  such handler is an inhabitant, or has his principal place  of  business,  are  hereby  vested  with  jurisdiction in equity to review such ruling,  provided a bill in equity for that purpose is filed within  thirty  days  from  the  date  of the entry of such ruling. Service of process in such  proceedings may be had upon the commission by delivering to it a copy of  the bill of complaint. If the court determines that such ruling  is  not  in  accordance  with  law,  it  shall  remand  such  proceedings  to the  commission with directions either (1) to make such ruling as  the  court  shall  determine  to  be  in  accordance  with  law, or (2) to take such  further proceedings as, in its opinion, the law requires.  The  pendency  of proceedings instituted pursuant to this subdivision shall not impede,  hinder,  or  delay  the  commission  from  obtaining  relief pursuant to  section seventeen of this compact.  Any proceedings brought pursuant  to  section  seventeen  of  this  compact  (except  where  brought by way of  counterclaim in proceedings instituted pursuant to this  section)  shall  abate  whenever  a final decree has been rendered in proceedings between  the same parties, and  covering  the  same  subject  matter,  instituted  pursuant to this section.    § 17. Enforcement with respect to handlers.    (a)  Any  violation  by  a  handler  of  the provisions of regulations  establishing an over-order price or a  commission  marketing  order,  or  other regulations adopted pursuant to this compact shall:    (1)  Constitute  a  violation  of  the  laws  of each of the signatory  states. Such violation shall render the  violator  subject  to  a  civil  penalty  in  an  amount  as may be prescribed by the laws of each of the  participating states, recoverable in  any  state  or  federal  court  of  competent   jurisdiction.   Each  day  such  violation  continues  shall  constitute a separate violation.    (2) Constitute grounds for the revocation  of  license  or  permit  to  engage   in   the  milk  business  under  the  applicable  laws  of  the  participating states.    (b) With  respect  to  handlers,  the  commission  shall  enforce  the  provisions  of  this  compact,  regulations  establishing  an over-order  price,  a  commission  marketing  order  or  other  regulations  adopted  hereunder by:(1)  Commencing an action for legal or equitable relief brought in the  name of the commission in  any  state  or  federal  court  of  competent  jurisdiction; or    (2)   With  the  agreement  of  the  appropriate  state  agency  of  a  participating state, by referral to the state agency for enforcement  by  judicial or administrative remedy.    (c)  With  respect to handlers, the commission may bring an action for  injunction to enforce the provisions of this compact  or  the  order  or  regulations  adopted  thereunder  without  being  compelled to allege or  prove that an adequate remedy of law does not exist.                            ARTICLE VII. FINANCE    § 18. Finance of startup and regular costs.    (a) To provide for its start-up costs, the commission may borrow money  pursuant to its general power under paragraph four of subdivision (d) of  section six of  this  compact.    In  order  to  finance  the  costs  of  administration  and  enforcement  of  this compact, including payback of  start-up costs,  the  commission  is  hereby  empowered  to  collect  an  assessment  from  each  handler who purchases milk from producers within  the region. If imposed, this assessment shall be collected on a  monthly  basis  for  up  to one year from the date the commission convenes, in an  amount not to exceed one-tenth of one percent of the applicable  federal  market  order  blend  price  per  hundredweight  of  milk purchased from  producers during the period of the assessment.  The  initial  assessment  may  apply  to  the  projected  purchases  of handlers for the two-month  period following the date  the  commission  convenes.  In  addition,  if  regulations  establishing  an  over-order  price  or a compact marketing  order are adopted, they may  include  an  assessment  for  the  specific  purpose  of  their  administration.  These regulations shall provide for  establishment of  a  reserve  for  the  commission's  ongoing  operating  expenses.    (b)  The  commission  shall not pledge the credit of any participating  state or of the United States. Notes issued by the  commission  and  all  other   financial   obligations  incurred  by  it,  shall  be  its  sole  responsibility and no participating state or the United States shall  be  liable therefor.    § 19. Audit and accounts.    (a)  The  commission  shall keep accurate accounts of all receipts and  disbursements, which shall  be  subject  to  the  audit  and  accounting  procedures  established  under  its rules. In addition, all receipts and  disbursements of funds handled by the commission shall be audited yearly  by a qualified public accountant and the report of the  audit  shall  be  included in and become part of the annual report of the commission.    (b)  The  accounts  of  the commission shall be open at any reasonable  time for inspection by duly constituted officers  of  the  participating  states and by any persons authorized by the commission.    (c)  Nothing  contained  in this article shall be construed to prevent  commission compliance with laws  relating  to  audit  or  inspection  of  accounts  by  or  on  behalf of any participating state or of the United  States.      ARTICLE VIII. ENTRY INTO FORCE; ADDITIONAL MEMBERS AND WITHDRAWAL    § 20. Entry into force; additional members.    The compact shall enter into force effective when enacted into law  by  any  three  states  of  the  group  of  states  composed of Connecticut,  Delaware, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New  York, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Vermont  and  Virginia  and  when  the  consent  of  congress has been obtained. This compact shall also be open  to states which are contiguous to any of the named states  and  open  to  states which are contiguous to participating states.§ 21. Withdrawal from compact.    Any  participating  state may withdraw from this compact by enacting a  statute repealing the same, but no such  withdrawal  shall  take  effect  until one year after notice in writing of the withdrawal is given to the  commission  and  the  governors  of  all  other participating states. No  withdrawal shall affect any liability already incurred by or  chargeable  to a party state prior to the time of such withdrawal.    § 22. Severability.    If  any  part  or provision of this compact is adjudged invalid by any  court, such judgment shall be confined in its operation to the  part  or  provision  directly  involved  in the controversy in which such judgment  shall have been rendered and shall not affect or impair the validity  of  the remainder of this compact.    Congress  reserves  the  right  to  amend  or  rescind this interstate  compact at any time.    § 23. Reservation of rights.    (a) In general. The right to alter, amend, or repeal this  compact  is  expressly reserved.    (b)  Compensation  requirement. When an over-order price is in effect,  the  commission  established  in  this  compact  shall  compensate   the  commodity  credit  corporation before the end of the fiscal year for the  cost of any increased commodity credit corporation dairy purchases  that  result  from  projected  increased fluid milk production for that fiscal  year within the compact region in excess of the national average rate of  increase.

State Codes and Statutes

Statutes > New-york > Agm > Article-21-c > 258-kk

§   258-kk.   Northeast  interstate  dairy  compact.    The  northeast  interstate dairy compact as set forth in this article is hereby  adopted  and  entered into with all jurisdictions joining therein. The compact is  as follows:                     NORTHEAST INTERSTATE DAIRY COMPACT    ARTICLE I. STATEMENT OF PURPOSE, FINDINGS AND DECLARATION OF POLICY    § 1.  Statement of purpose, findings and declaration of policy.    ARTICLE II. DEFINITIONS AND RULES OF CONSTRUCTION    § 2.  Definitions.    § 3.  Rules of construction.    ARTICLE III. COMMISSION ESTABLISHED    § 4.  Commission established.    § 5.  Voting requirements.    § 6.  Administration and management.    § 7.  Rulemaking power.    ARTICLE IV. POWERS OF THE COMMISSION    § 8.  Powers to promote regulatory uniformity, simplicity, and  inter-  state cooperation.    § 9.  Equitable farm prices.    § 10. Optional provisions for pricing order.    ARTICLE V. RULEMAKING PROCEDURE    § 11. Rulemaking procedure.    § 12. Findings and referendum.    § 13. Producer referendum.    § 14. Termination of over-order price or marketing order.    ARTICLE VI. ENFORCEMENT    § 15. Records, reports, access to premises.    § 16. Subpoena, hearings and judicial review.    § 17. Enforcement with respect to handlers.    ARTICLE VII. FINANCE    § 18. Finance of start-up and regular costs.    § 19. Audit and accounts.    ARTICLE VIII. ENTRY INTO FORCE; ADDITIONAL MEMBERS AND WITHDRAWAL    § 20. Entry into force; additional members.    § 21. Withdrawal from compact.    § 22. Severability.    § 23. Reservation of rights.     ARTICLE I. STATEMENT OF PURPOSE, FINDINGS AND DECLARATION OF POLICY    § 1. Statement of purpose, findings and declaration of policy.    The  purpose  of  this  compact  is  to  recognize  by  constitutional  prerequisite the interstate character of the  northeast  dairy  industry  and  to  form  an  interstate  commission for the northeast region.  The  mission of the commission is to take such  steps  as  are  necessary  to  assure the continued viability of dairy farming in the northeast, and to  assure  consumers  of  an  adequate,  local supply of pure and wholesome  milk.    The participating states find and declare that the dairy  industry  is  the  paramount  agricultural activity of the northeast. Dairy farms, and  associated  suppliers,  marketers,  processors  and  retailers,  are  an  integral  component  of the region's economy. Their ability to provide a  stable, local supply of pure,  wholesome  milk  is  a  matter  of  great  importance to the health and welfare of the region.    The  participating  states further find that dairy farms are essential  to the region's rural communities and character. The farms preserve open  spaces, sculpt the landscape and provide the land base for  a  diversity  of  recreational  pursuits.  In  defining  the  rural  character  of our  communities and landscape, dairy farms also provide a major draw for our  tourist industries.By entering into this compact, the participating  states  affirm  that  their  ability  to  regulate  the  price  which  northeast dairy farmers  receive for their product is essential to the public interest. Assurance  of a fair and equitable price for dairy farmers ensures their ability to  provide  milk  to  the  market  and  the vitality of the northeast dairy  industry, with all the associated benefits.    Recent, dramatic price fluctuations, with a pronounced downward trend,  threaten the viability and stability  of  the  northeast  dairy  region.  Historically,  individual  state regulatory action has been an effective  emergency remedy available to farmers confronting a  distressed  market.  The  federal  order  system,  implemented  by the Agricultural Marketing  Agreement Act  of  1937,  establishes  only  minimum  prices  for  dairy  products, without preempting the power of states to regulate milk prices  above  the  minimum levels so established. Based on this authority, each  state in the region has individually attempted to implement at least one  regulatory program in response to the current dairy industry crisis.    In  today's  regional  dairy  marketplace,  cooperative,  rather  than  individual   state  action  may  address  more  effectively  the  market  disarray. Under our constitutional system, properly  authorized,  states  acting  cooperatively  may  exercise  more  power to regulate interstate  commerce than they may assert individually without such  authority.  For  this  reason,  the participating states invoke their authority to act in  common agreement, with the consent of congress, under the compact clause  of the constitution.    In establishing their constitutional  regulatory  authority  over  the  region's  fluid  milk  market  by this compact, the participating states  declare their purpose that this compact  neither  displace  the  federal  order  system  nor  encourage  the merging of federal orders.   Specific  provisions of the compact itself set forth this basic principle.    Designed as a flexible mechanism  able  to  adjust  to  changes  in  a  regulated marketplace, the compact also contains a contingency provision  should  the  federal  order  system  be discontinued. In that event, the  interstate commission is  authorized  to  regulate  the  marketplace  in  replacement  of  the  order  system.  This contingent authority does not  anticipate such a change, however, and should not be so construed. It is  only provided should developments in the market other than establishment  of this compact result in discontinuance of the order system.              ARTICLE II. DEFINITIONS AND RULES OF CONSTRUCTION    § 2. Definitions.    For  the  purposes  of  this  compact,  and  of  any  supplemental  or  concurring  legislation  enacted  pursuant  thereto,  except  as  may be  otherwise required by the context:    (a) "Commission" means the commission established by this compact.    (b) "Compact" means this interstate compact.    (c) "Region" means the territorial limits of the states which  are  or  become parties to this compact.    (d)  "Participating  state"  means a state which has become a party to  this compact by the enactment of concurring legislation.    (e) "Regulated area" means any area within the region governed by  and  defined  in  regulations  establishing  a  compact  over-order  price or  commission marketing order.    (f) "Pool plant" means any milk plant located in a regulated area.    (g) "Partially regulated plant" means a milk plant not  located  in  a  regulated  area  but  having  class  I distribution within such area, or  receipts from producers located in such area.    Commission  regulations  may  exempt  plants having such distribution or receipts in amounts less  than the limits defined therein.(h) "Compact over-order price" means a minimum price  required  to  be  paid  to  producers  for  class  I milk established by the commission in  regulations adopted pursuant to sections nine and ten of  this  compact,  which  is  above the price established in federal marketing orders or by  state  farm price regulation in the regulated area. Such price may apply  throughout the region or in any part or parts thereof as defined in  the  regulations of the commission.    (i)  "Commission  marketing  order"  means  regulations adopted by the  commission pursuant to sections nine and ten of this compact in place of  a terminated federal marketing order or  state  dairy  regulation.  Such  order may apply throughout the region or in any part or parts thereof as  defined  in  the regulations of the commission. Such order may establish  minimum prices for any or all classes of milk.    (j) "Milk" means the lacteal secretion of cows and includes all  skim,  butterfat,  or  other constituents obtained from separation or any other  process. The term is used in its  broadest  sense  and  may  be  further  defined by the commission for regulatory purposes.    (k)  "Class I milk" means milk disposed of in fluid form or as a fluid  milk product, subject to  further  definition  in  accordance  with  the  principles  expressed  in  subdivision  (b)  of  section  three  of this  compact.    (l) "State dairy regulation"  means  any  state  regulation  of  dairy  prices,  and associated assessments, whether by statute, marketing order  or otherwise.    § 3. Rules of construction.  (a) This compact shall not  be  construed  to  displace  existing  federal  milk  marketing  orders  or state dairy  regulation in the region but to supplement them. In the  event  some  or  all  federal orders in the region are discontinued, the compact shall be  construed to provide the commission the option to replace them with  one  or more commission marketing orders pursuant to this compact.    (b)  This compact shall be construed liberally in order to achieve the  purposes and intent enunciated in section one of this compact. It is the  intent of this compact to establish  a  basic  structure  by  which  the  commission   may   achieve   those  purposes  through  the  application,  adaptation and development of  the  regulatory  techniques  historically  associated  with  milk  marketing  and  to  afford  the commission broad  flexibility to devise regulatory mechanisms to achieve the  purposes  of  this  compact. In accordance with this intent, the technical terms which  are associated with market order  regulation  and  which  have  acquired  commonly  understood  general  meanings  are  not defined herein but the  commission may further define the terms used in this compact and develop  additional  concepts  and  define  additional  terms  as  it  may   find  appropriate to achieve its purposes.                     ARTICLE III. COMMISSION ESTABLISHED    § 4. Commission established.    There  is  hereby  created  a  commission  to  administer the compact,  composed of delegations from each state  in  the  region.  A  delegation  shall  include  not  less  than  three nor more than five persons.  Each  delegation shall include at least one dairy farmer who is engaged in the  production of milk at the time of appointment or reappointment, and  one  consumer  representative.  Delegation  members  shall  be  residents and  voters of, and subject to such confirmation process as is  provided  for  in,  the  appointing  state. Delegation members shall serve no more than  three consecutive terms with no single term of more than four years, and  be subject to removal for cause.   In  all  other  respects,  delegation  members   shall   serve  in  accordance  with  the  laws  of  the  state  represented. The compensation,  if  any,  of  the  members  of  a  state  delegation  shall  be  determined  and  paid  by  each  state, but theirexpenses shall be paid by the commission. Each state delegation shall be  entitled to one vote in the conduct of the commission's affairs.    § 5. Voting requirements.    All  actions  taken by the commission, except for the establishment or  termination of an over-order price or commission  marketing  order,  and  the adoption, amendment or rescission of the commission's by-laws, shall  be  by  majority  vote  of  the  delegations  present.  Establishment or  termination of an over-order price or commission marketing  order  shall  require  at  least  a  two-thirds  vote  of the delegations present. The  establishment of a  regulated  area  which  covers  all  or  part  of  a  participating  state  shall  require  also  the affirmative vote of that  state's delegation. A majority of the delegations from the participating  states shall constitute a quorum for the  conduct  of  the  commission's  business.    § 6. Administration and management.    (a)  The commission shall elect annually from among the members of the  participating state delegations a chairperson, a vice-chairperson, and a  treasurer. The commission shall appoint an executive  director  and  fix  his  or  her duties and compensation. The executive director shall serve  at the pleasure of the commission, and,  together  with  the  treasurer,  shall  be  bonded  in  an  amount  determined  by  the  commission.  The  commission may establish through  its  by-laws  an  executive  committee  composed of one member elected by each delegation.    (b) The commission shall adopt by-laws for the conduct of its business  by a two-thirds vote, and shall have the power by the same vote to amend  and  rescind  these by-laws. The commission shall publish its by-laws in  convenient form with the appropriate agency or officer in  each  of  the  participating  states.  The by-laws shall provide for appropriate notice  to the delegations of all commission meetings and hearings  and  of  the  business  to  be  transacted  at  such meetings or hearings. Notice also  shall be given to other agencies or officers of participating states  as  provided by the laws of those states.    (c)  The  commission shall file an annual report with the secretary of  agriculture of the United States, and with  each  of  the  participating  states  by  submitting  copies  to  the  governor,  both  houses  of the  legislature,   and   the   head   of   the   state   department   having  responsibilities for agriculture.    (d)  In addition to the powers and duties elsewhere prescribed in this  compact, the commission shall have the power:    (1) to sue and be sued in any state or federal court;    (2) to have a seal and alter the same at pleasure;    (3) to acquire, hold, and dispose of real  and  personal  property  by  gift,  purchase,  lease,  license,  or  other  similar  manner,  for its  corporate purposes;    (4) to borrow money and to issue notes, to provide for the  rights  of  the  holders  thereof  and  to  pledge  the revenue of the commission as  security therefor, subject to the provisions of section eighteen of this  compact;    (5) to appoint such officers, agents, and employees  as  it  may  deem  necessary, prescribe their powers, duties, and qualifications; and    (6)  to create and abolish such offices, employments, and positions as  it deems necessary for the purposes of the compact and provide  for  the  removal,  term,  tenure,  compensation,  fringe  benefits,  pension, and  retirement rights of its officers and employees. The commission may also  retain personal services on a contract basis.    § 7. Rulemaking power.    In addition to the power to promulgate a compact over-order  price  or  commission  marketing orders as provided by this compact, the commissionis further empowered to make  and  enforce  such  additional  rules  and  regulations  as  it  deems necessary to implement any provisions of this  compact, or to effectuate in any other  respect  the  purposes  of  this  compact.                    ARTICLE IV. POWERS OF THE COMMISSION    §   8.  Powers  to  promote  regulatory  uniformity,  simplicity,  and  interstate cooperation.    The commission is hereby empowered to:    (a) Investigate or provide for  investigations  or  research  projects  designed   to   review   the   existing  laws  and  regulations  of  the  participating states, to consider their  administration  and  costs,  to  measure  their  impact on the production and marketing of milk and their  effects on the shipment of milk and milk products within the region.    (b) Prepare and transmit to the participating states model dairy  laws  and  regulations  dealing  with  the  inspection  of  farms  and plants,  sanitary  codes,  labels  for  dairy  products  and  their   imitations,  standards  for  dairy  products,  license  standards,  producer security  programs, and fair trade laws.    (c)  Study  and  recommend  to  the  participating  states  joint   or  cooperative  programs  for  the  administration  of  the  dairy laws and  regulations and to prepare estimates of cost  savings  and  benefits  of  such programs.    (d)   Encourage  the  harmonious  relationships  between  the  various  elements in the industry for the solution of  their  material  problems.  Conduct   symposiums   or   conferences  designed  to  improve  industry  relations, or a better understanding of problems.    (e) Prepare and release periodic reports on activities and results  of  the commission's efforts to the participating states.    (f)  Review  the  existing marketing system for milk and milk products  and recommend  changes  in  the  existing  structure  for  assembly  and  distribution  of  milk  which  may  assist,  improve,  or  promote  more  efficient assembly and distribution of milk.    (g) Investigate costs and charges for  producing,  hauling,  handling,  processing,  distributing,  selling and for all other services performed  with respect to milk.    (h) Examine current  economic  forces  affecting  producers,  probable  trends  in production and consumption, the level of dairy farm prices in  relation to costs, the financial conditions of dairy  farmers,  and  the  need  for  an  emergency  order  to relieve critical conditions on dairy  farms.    § 9. Equitable farm prices.    (a) The powers granted in this section and section ten of this compact  shall apply only to the establishment of a compact over-order price,  so  long as federal milk marketing orders remain in effect in the region. In  the event that any or all such orders are terminated, this article shall  authorize  the  commission to establish one or more commission marketing  orders, as herein provided, in the region or parts thereof as defined in  the order.    (b) A compact over-order price established pursuant  to  this  section  shall apply only to class I milk. Such over-order price shall not exceed  one  dollar  and  fifty  cents per gallon. Beginning in nineteen hundred  ninety, and using that year as a base,  the  foregoing  one  dollar  and  fifty cents per gallon maximum shall be adjusted annually by the rate of  change  in  the  consumer price index as reported by the Bureau of Labor  Statistics of the United States Department of Labor. For purposes of the  pooling and equalization of an over-order price, the value of milk  used  in  other  use  classifications  shall  be calculated at the appropriate  class price established pursuant to  the  applicable  federal  order  orstate  dairy  regulation  and  the  value  of  unregulated milk shall be  calculated  in  relation  to  the  nearest  prevailing  class  price  in  accordance  with  and  subject to such adjustments as the commission may  prescribe in regulations.    (c)  A  commission marketing order shall apply to all classes and uses  of milk.    (d) The commission is hereby empowered to establish the minimum  price  for  milk  to be paid by pool plants, partially regulated plants and all  other handlers receiving milk from  producers  located  in  a  regulated  area.  This  price  shall  be established either as a compact over-order  price or by one or more commission marketing  orders.  Whenever  such  a  price  has  been  established  by  either  type of regulation, the legal  obligation to pay such price shall be determined solely by the terms and  purpose of the regulation without regard to the situs of the transfer of  title, possession or any other factors not related to  the  purposes  of  the  regulation  and  this  compact.  Producer-handlers as defined in an  applicable federal market order  shall  not  be  subject  to  a  compact  over-order  price. The commission shall provide for similar treatment of  producer-handlers under commission marketing orders.    (e) In determining  the  price,  the  commission  shall  consider  the  balance  between production and consumption of milk and milk products in  the regulated area, the costs of production including, but  not  limited  to  the  price of feed, the cost of labor including the reasonable value  of the producer's own  labor  and  management,  machinery  expense,  and  interest  expense,  the  prevailing price for milk outside the regulated  area, the purchasing power of the public  and  the  price  necessary  to  yield a reasonable return to the producer and distributor.    (f) When establishing a compact over-order price, the commission shall  take such action as necessary and feasible to ensure that the over-order  price  does not create an incentive for producers to generate additional  supplies of milk.    (g) The commission shall whenever possible enter into agreements  with  state  or  federal  agencies for exchange of information or services for  the purpose of reducing regulatory burden and cost of administering  the  compact.  The commission may reimburse other agencies for the reasonable  cost of providing these services.    § 10. Optional provisions for pricing order.    Regulations establishing a compact over-order price  or  a  commission  marketing  order  may  contain,  but shall not be limited to, any of the  following:    (a) Provisions classifying milk in accordance with the form  in  which  or purpose for which it is used, or creating a flat pricing program.    (b)  With  respect  to  a  commission marketing order only, provisions  establishing or providing a method  for  establishing  separate  minimum  prices  for  each  use classification prescribed by the commission, or a  single minimum price for milk purchased from producers  or  associations  of producers.    (c)   With   respect   to  an  over-order  minimum  price,  provisions  establishing or providing a method for establishing such  minimum  price  for class I milk.    (d)  Provisions  for  establishing  either  an  over-order  price or a  commission marketing order may make use of  any  reasonable  method  for  establishing  such  price  or  prices including flat pricing and formula  pricing. Provision may also  be  made  for  location  adjustments,  zone  differentials  and  for  competitive  credits  with respect to regulated  handlers who market outside the regulated area.    (e) Provisions for the payment to all producers  and  associations  of  producers delivering milk to all handlers of uniform prices for all milkso  delivered,  irrespective  of  the  uses  made  of  such  milk by the  individual handler to whom it  is  delivered,  or  for  the  payment  of  producers  delivering milk to the same handler of uniform prices for all  milk delivered by them.    (1)  With  respect  to  regulations  establishing a compact over-order  price, the commission may establish one  equalization  pool  within  the  regulated  area  for the sole purpose of equalizing returns to producers  throughout the regulated area.    (2) With respect to any commission  marketing  order,  as  defined  in  subdivision  (i)  of  section two of this compact, which replaces one or  more terminated federal orders or state dairy regulation, the  marketing  area of now separate state or federal orders shall not be merged without  the  affirmative  consent  of each state, voting through its delegation,  which is partly or wholly included within any such new marketing area.    (f) Provisions requiring persons who  bring  class  I  milk  into  the  regulated  area  to  make compensatory payments with respect to all such  milk to the extent necessary to equalize the cost of milk  purchased  by  handlers  subject  to a compact over-order price or commission marketing  order. No such provisions  shall  discriminate  against  milk  producers  outside the regulated area. The provisions for compensatory payments may  require  payment of the difference between the class I price required to  be paid for such milk in the state  of  production  by  a  federal  milk  marketing  order  or  state  dairy  regulation  and  the  class  I price  established by the compact  over-order  price  or  commission  marketing  order.    (g)  Provisions  specially  governing  the pricing and pooling of milk  handled by partially regulated plants.    (h) Provisions requiring that the  account  of  any  person  regulated  under a compact over-order price shall be adjusted for any payments made  to  or  received  by  such persons with respect to a producer settlement  fund of any federal or state milk marketing order or other  state  dairy  regulation within the regulated area.    (i)  Provisions  requiring the payment by handlers of an assessment to  cover the costs of the administration  and  enforcement  of  such  order  pursuant to subdivision (a) of section eighteen of this compact.    (j) Provisions for reimbursement to participants of the Women, Infants  and  Children  Special  Supplemental  Food  Program of the United States  Child Nutrition Act of 1966.    (k) Other provisions and requirements as the commission may  find  are  necessary  or appropriate to effectuate the purposes of this compact and  to provide for the payment of  fair  and  equitable  minimum  prices  to  producers.                       ARTICLE V. RULEMAKING PROCEDURE    § 11. Rulemaking procedure.    Before   promulgation   of  any  regulations  establishing  a  compact  over-order price or commission marketing order, including any  provision  with  respect  to  milk  supply under subdivision (f) of section nine of  this compact, or amendment thereof, as provided in article  IV  of  this  compact,  the commission shall conduct an informal rulemaking proceeding  to provide interested persons with an opportunity to  present  data  and  views.  Such  rulemaking proceeding shall be governed by section four of  the Federal Administrative Procedure Act,  as  amended  (5  U.S.C.  Sec.  553).  In  addition,  the  commission  shall, to the extent practicable,  publish notice of rulemaking proceedings in  the  official  register  of  each  participating  state.  Before  the initial adoption of regulations  establishing a compact over-order price or a commission marketing  order  and   thereafter   before   any  amendment  with  regard  to  prices  or  assessments, the commission shall hold a public hearing. The  commissionmay commence a rulemaking proceeding on its own initiative or may in its  sole discretion act upon the petition of any person including individual  milk  producers, any organization of milk producers or handlers, general  farm organizations, consumer or public interest groups, and local, state  or federal officials.    § 12. Findings and referendum.    (a)  In addition to the concise general statement of basis and purpose  required by section 4(b) of the Federal Administrative Procedure Act, as  amended (5 U.S.C. Sec. 553(c)), the commission shall  make  findings  of  fact with respect to:    (1) Whether the public interest will be served by the establishment of  minimum milk prices to dairy farmers under article IV of this compact.    (2)  What  level  of prices will assure that producers receive a price  sufficient to cover  their  costs  of  production  and  will  elicit  an  adequate  supply  of  milk for the inhabitants of the regulated area and  for manufacturing purposes.    (3) Whether the major provisions of the order, other than those fixing  minimum milk prices, are in  the  public  interest  and  are  reasonably  designed to achieve the purposes of the order.    (4)  Whether the terms of the proposed regional order or amendment are  approved by producers as provided in section thirteen of this compact.    § 13. Producer referendum.    (a) For the purpose of ascertaining whether the issuance or  amendment  of  regulations  establishing a compact over-order price or a commission  marketing order, including any provision with  respect  to  milk  supply  under  subdivision  (f)  of section nine of this compact, is approved by  producers, the commission shall conduct a  referendum  among  producers.  The  referendum  shall  be  held  in  a  timely manner, as determined by  regulation of the commission. The terms and conditions of  the  proposed  order  or  amendment  shall be described by the commission in the ballot  used in the conduct of the  referendum,  but  the  nature,  content,  or  extent  of  such  description  shall  not  be  a basis for attacking the  legality of the order or any action relating thereto.    (b) An order or amendment shall be deemed approved by producers if the  commission determines that it is approved by at least two-thirds of  the  voting  producers  who, during a representative period determined by the  commission, have been engaged in the production of  milk  the  price  of  which would be regulated under the proposed order or amendment.    (c)  For purposes of any referendum, the commission shall consider the  approval or disapproval by any  cooperative  association  of  producers,  qualified  under  the  provisions  of  the  act  of congress of February  eighteen,  nineteen  hundred  twenty-two,  as  amended,  known  as   the  Capper-Volstead  Act,  bona  fide  engaged  in  marketing  milk,  or  in  rendering services for or advancing the interests of producers  of  such  commodity,  as  the  approval  or  disapproval  of the producers who are  members or stockholders in, or under  contract  with,  such  cooperative  association  of  producers,  except as provided in paragraph one of this  subdivision and subject to the provisions of paragraphs two, three, four  and five of this subdivision:    (1) No cooperative which has been formed to act as a common  marketing  agency for both cooperatives and individual producers shall be qualified  to block vote for either.    (2)  Any  cooperative  which  is qualified to block vote shall, before  submitting its approval or disapproval in  any  referendum,  give  prior  written  notice  to each of its members as to whether and how it intends  to cast its vote. The notice shall  be  given  in  a  timely  manner  as  established, and in the form prescribed by the commission.(3)  Any  producer may obtain a ballot from the commission in order to  register approval or disapproval of the proposed order.    (4)  A  producer  who  is a member of a cooperative which has provided  notice of its intent to approve or not to approve a proposed order,  and  who  obtains  a  ballot  and  with such ballot expresses his approval or  disapproval of the proposed order, shall notify the commission as to the  name of the cooperative of  which  he  or  she  is  a  member,  and  the  commission  shall remove such producer's name from the list certified by  such cooperative with its corporate vote.    (5) In order to insure that all milk producers are informed  regarding  a proposed order, the commission shall notify all milk producers that an  order is being considered and that each producer may register his or her  approval  or  disapproval with the commission either directly or through  his or her cooperative.    § 14. Termination of over-order price or marketing order.    (a) The commission shall terminate  any  regulations  establishing  an  over-order price or commission marketing order issued under this article  whenever it finds that such order or price obstructs or does not tend to  effectuate the declared policy of this compact.    (b)  The  commission  shall  terminate any regulations establishing an  over-order price or a  commission  marketing  order  issued  under  this  article whenever it finds that such termination is favored by a majority  of  the  producers who, during a representative period determined by the  commission, have been engaged in the production of  milk  the  price  of  which  is  regulated  by  such  order;  but  such  termination  shall be  effective only if announced on or before such date as may  be  specified  in such marketing agreement or order.    (c)  The  termination or suspension of any order or provision thereof,  shall not be considered an order within the meaning of this article  and  shall  require  no  hearing,  but shall comply with the requirements for  informal  rulemaking  prescribed  by  section  four   of   the   Federal  Administrative Procedure Act, as amended (5 U.S.C. Sec. 553).                           ARTICLE VI. ENFORCEMENT    § 15. Records, reports, access to premises.    (a) The commission may by rule and regulation prescribe record keeping  and  reporting  requirements  for all regulated persons. For purposes of  the administration and enforcement of this compact,  the  commission  is  authorized  to  examine  the  books  and records of any regulated person  relating to  his  or  her  milk  business  and  for  that  purpose,  the  commission's  properly  designated  officers, employees, or agents shall  have full access during  normal  business  hours  to  the  premises  and  records of all regulated persons.    (b)  Information  furnished to or acquired by the commission officers,  employees, or its agents pursuant to this section shall be  confidential  and  not  subject to disclosure except to the extent that the commission  deems disclosure to be  necessary  in  any  administrative  or  judicial  proceeding  involving the administration or enforcement of this compact,  an over-order price, a compact marketing order, or other regulations  of  the  commission.  The  commission  may  promulgate  regulations  further  defining the confidentiality of information pursuant  to  this  section.  Nothing  in this section shall be deemed to prohibit (1) the issuance of  general statements based upon the reports of a number of handlers, which  do not identify the information furnished by  any  person,  or  (2)  the  publication  by  direction  of  the commission of the name of any person  violating any regulation of the commission, together with a statement of  the particular provisions violated by such person.    (c)  No  officer,  employee,  or  agent  of   the   commission   shall  intentionally  disclose information, by inference or otherwise, which ismade confidential pursuant to this section.  Any  person  violating  the  provisions of this section shall upon conviction be subject to a fine of  not  more than one thousand dollars or by imprisonment for not more than  one  year,  or by both, and shall be removed from office. The commission  shall refer any allegation  of  a  violation  of  this  section  to  the  appropriate state enforcement authority or United States attorney.    § 16. Subpoena, hearings and judicial review.    (a)  The  commission is hereby authorized and empowered by its members  and its properly designated  officers  to  administer  oaths  and  issue  subpoenas  throughout  all  signatory states to compel the attendance of  witnesses and the giving  of  testimony  and  the  production  of  other  evidence.    (b)  Any  handler subject to an order may file a written petition with  the commission stating that any such order or any provision of any  such  order  or  any  obligation  imposed  in  connection  therewith is not in  accordance with law and praying for a  modification  thereof  or  to  be  exempted  therefrom.  He  shall  thereupon be given an opportunity for a  hearing upon such petition, in accordance with regulations made  by  the  commission.  After such hearing, the commission shall make a ruling upon  the prayer of such petition which shall be final, if in accordance  with  law.    (c)  The district courts of the United States in any district in which  such handler is an inhabitant, or has his principal place  of  business,  are  hereby  vested  with  jurisdiction in equity to review such ruling,  provided a bill in equity for that purpose is filed within  thirty  days  from  the  date  of the entry of such ruling. Service of process in such  proceedings may be had upon the commission by delivering to it a copy of  the bill of complaint. If the court determines that such ruling  is  not  in  accordance  with  law,  it  shall  remand  such  proceedings  to the  commission with directions either (1) to make such ruling as  the  court  shall  determine  to  be  in  accordance  with  law, or (2) to take such  further proceedings as, in its opinion, the law requires.  The  pendency  of proceedings instituted pursuant to this subdivision shall not impede,  hinder,  or  delay  the  commission  from  obtaining  relief pursuant to  section seventeen of this compact.  Any proceedings brought pursuant  to  section  seventeen  of  this  compact  (except  where  brought by way of  counterclaim in proceedings instituted pursuant to this  section)  shall  abate  whenever  a final decree has been rendered in proceedings between  the same parties, and  covering  the  same  subject  matter,  instituted  pursuant to this section.    § 17. Enforcement with respect to handlers.    (a)  Any  violation  by  a  handler  of  the provisions of regulations  establishing an over-order price or a  commission  marketing  order,  or  other regulations adopted pursuant to this compact shall:    (1)  Constitute  a  violation  of  the  laws  of each of the signatory  states. Such violation shall render the  violator  subject  to  a  civil  penalty  in  an  amount  as may be prescribed by the laws of each of the  participating states, recoverable in  any  state  or  federal  court  of  competent   jurisdiction.   Each  day  such  violation  continues  shall  constitute a separate violation.    (2) Constitute grounds for the revocation  of  license  or  permit  to  engage   in   the  milk  business  under  the  applicable  laws  of  the  participating states.    (b) With  respect  to  handlers,  the  commission  shall  enforce  the  provisions  of  this  compact,  regulations  establishing  an over-order  price,  a  commission  marketing  order  or  other  regulations  adopted  hereunder by:(1)  Commencing an action for legal or equitable relief brought in the  name of the commission in  any  state  or  federal  court  of  competent  jurisdiction; or    (2)   With  the  agreement  of  the  appropriate  state  agency  of  a  participating state, by referral to the state agency for enforcement  by  judicial or administrative remedy.    (c)  With  respect to handlers, the commission may bring an action for  injunction to enforce the provisions of this compact  or  the  order  or  regulations  adopted  thereunder  without  being  compelled to allege or  prove that an adequate remedy of law does not exist.                            ARTICLE VII. FINANCE    § 18. Finance of startup and regular costs.    (a) To provide for its start-up costs, the commission may borrow money  pursuant to its general power under paragraph four of subdivision (d) of  section six of  this  compact.    In  order  to  finance  the  costs  of  administration  and  enforcement  of  this compact, including payback of  start-up costs,  the  commission  is  hereby  empowered  to  collect  an  assessment  from  each  handler who purchases milk from producers within  the region. If imposed, this assessment shall be collected on a  monthly  basis  for  up  to one year from the date the commission convenes, in an  amount not to exceed one-tenth of one percent of the applicable  federal  market  order  blend  price  per  hundredweight  of  milk purchased from  producers during the period of the assessment.  The  initial  assessment  may  apply  to  the  projected  purchases  of handlers for the two-month  period following the date  the  commission  convenes.  In  addition,  if  regulations  establishing  an  over-order  price  or a compact marketing  order are adopted, they may  include  an  assessment  for  the  specific  purpose  of  their  administration.  These regulations shall provide for  establishment of  a  reserve  for  the  commission's  ongoing  operating  expenses.    (b)  The  commission  shall not pledge the credit of any participating  state or of the United States. Notes issued by the  commission  and  all  other   financial   obligations  incurred  by  it,  shall  be  its  sole  responsibility and no participating state or the United States shall  be  liable therefor.    § 19. Audit and accounts.    (a)  The  commission  shall keep accurate accounts of all receipts and  disbursements, which shall  be  subject  to  the  audit  and  accounting  procedures  established  under  its rules. In addition, all receipts and  disbursements of funds handled by the commission shall be audited yearly  by a qualified public accountant and the report of the  audit  shall  be  included in and become part of the annual report of the commission.    (b)  The  accounts  of  the commission shall be open at any reasonable  time for inspection by duly constituted officers  of  the  participating  states and by any persons authorized by the commission.    (c)  Nothing  contained  in this article shall be construed to prevent  commission compliance with laws  relating  to  audit  or  inspection  of  accounts  by  or  on  behalf of any participating state or of the United  States.      ARTICLE VIII. ENTRY INTO FORCE; ADDITIONAL MEMBERS AND WITHDRAWAL    § 20. Entry into force; additional members.    The compact shall enter into force effective when enacted into law  by  any  three  states  of  the  group  of  states  composed of Connecticut,  Delaware, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New  York, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Vermont  and  Virginia  and  when  the  consent  of  congress has been obtained. This compact shall also be open  to states which are contiguous to any of the named states  and  open  to  states which are contiguous to participating states.§ 21. Withdrawal from compact.    Any  participating  state may withdraw from this compact by enacting a  statute repealing the same, but no such  withdrawal  shall  take  effect  until one year after notice in writing of the withdrawal is given to the  commission  and  the  governors  of  all  other participating states. No  withdrawal shall affect any liability already incurred by or  chargeable  to a party state prior to the time of such withdrawal.    § 22. Severability.    If  any  part  or provision of this compact is adjudged invalid by any  court, such judgment shall be confined in its operation to the  part  or  provision  directly  involved  in the controversy in which such judgment  shall have been rendered and shall not affect or impair the validity  of  the remainder of this compact.    Congress  reserves  the  right  to  amend  or  rescind this interstate  compact at any time.    § 23. Reservation of rights.    (a) In general. The right to alter, amend, or repeal this  compact  is  expressly reserved.    (b)  Compensation  requirement. When an over-order price is in effect,  the  commission  established  in  this  compact  shall  compensate   the  commodity  credit  corporation before the end of the fiscal year for the  cost of any increased commodity credit corporation dairy purchases  that  result  from  projected  increased fluid milk production for that fiscal  year within the compact region in excess of the national average rate of  increase.

State Codes and Statutes

State Codes and Statutes

Statutes > New-york > Agm > Article-21-c > 258-kk

§   258-kk.   Northeast  interstate  dairy  compact.    The  northeast  interstate dairy compact as set forth in this article is hereby  adopted  and  entered into with all jurisdictions joining therein. The compact is  as follows:                     NORTHEAST INTERSTATE DAIRY COMPACT    ARTICLE I. STATEMENT OF PURPOSE, FINDINGS AND DECLARATION OF POLICY    § 1.  Statement of purpose, findings and declaration of policy.    ARTICLE II. DEFINITIONS AND RULES OF CONSTRUCTION    § 2.  Definitions.    § 3.  Rules of construction.    ARTICLE III. COMMISSION ESTABLISHED    § 4.  Commission established.    § 5.  Voting requirements.    § 6.  Administration and management.    § 7.  Rulemaking power.    ARTICLE IV. POWERS OF THE COMMISSION    § 8.  Powers to promote regulatory uniformity, simplicity, and  inter-  state cooperation.    § 9.  Equitable farm prices.    § 10. Optional provisions for pricing order.    ARTICLE V. RULEMAKING PROCEDURE    § 11. Rulemaking procedure.    § 12. Findings and referendum.    § 13. Producer referendum.    § 14. Termination of over-order price or marketing order.    ARTICLE VI. ENFORCEMENT    § 15. Records, reports, access to premises.    § 16. Subpoena, hearings and judicial review.    § 17. Enforcement with respect to handlers.    ARTICLE VII. FINANCE    § 18. Finance of start-up and regular costs.    § 19. Audit and accounts.    ARTICLE VIII. ENTRY INTO FORCE; ADDITIONAL MEMBERS AND WITHDRAWAL    § 20. Entry into force; additional members.    § 21. Withdrawal from compact.    § 22. Severability.    § 23. Reservation of rights.     ARTICLE I. STATEMENT OF PURPOSE, FINDINGS AND DECLARATION OF POLICY    § 1. Statement of purpose, findings and declaration of policy.    The  purpose  of  this  compact  is  to  recognize  by  constitutional  prerequisite the interstate character of the  northeast  dairy  industry  and  to  form  an  interstate  commission for the northeast region.  The  mission of the commission is to take such  steps  as  are  necessary  to  assure the continued viability of dairy farming in the northeast, and to  assure  consumers  of  an  adequate,  local supply of pure and wholesome  milk.    The participating states find and declare that the dairy  industry  is  the  paramount  agricultural activity of the northeast. Dairy farms, and  associated  suppliers,  marketers,  processors  and  retailers,  are  an  integral  component  of the region's economy. Their ability to provide a  stable, local supply of pure,  wholesome  milk  is  a  matter  of  great  importance to the health and welfare of the region.    The  participating  states further find that dairy farms are essential  to the region's rural communities and character. The farms preserve open  spaces, sculpt the landscape and provide the land base for  a  diversity  of  recreational  pursuits.  In  defining  the  rural  character  of our  communities and landscape, dairy farms also provide a major draw for our  tourist industries.By entering into this compact, the participating  states  affirm  that  their  ability  to  regulate  the  price  which  northeast dairy farmers  receive for their product is essential to the public interest. Assurance  of a fair and equitable price for dairy farmers ensures their ability to  provide  milk  to  the  market  and  the vitality of the northeast dairy  industry, with all the associated benefits.    Recent, dramatic price fluctuations, with a pronounced downward trend,  threaten the viability and stability  of  the  northeast  dairy  region.  Historically,  individual  state regulatory action has been an effective  emergency remedy available to farmers confronting a  distressed  market.  The  federal  order  system,  implemented  by the Agricultural Marketing  Agreement Act  of  1937,  establishes  only  minimum  prices  for  dairy  products, without preempting the power of states to regulate milk prices  above  the  minimum levels so established. Based on this authority, each  state in the region has individually attempted to implement at least one  regulatory program in response to the current dairy industry crisis.    In  today's  regional  dairy  marketplace,  cooperative,  rather  than  individual   state  action  may  address  more  effectively  the  market  disarray. Under our constitutional system, properly  authorized,  states  acting  cooperatively  may  exercise  more  power to regulate interstate  commerce than they may assert individually without such  authority.  For  this  reason,  the participating states invoke their authority to act in  common agreement, with the consent of congress, under the compact clause  of the constitution.    In establishing their constitutional  regulatory  authority  over  the  region's  fluid  milk  market  by this compact, the participating states  declare their purpose that this compact  neither  displace  the  federal  order  system  nor  encourage  the merging of federal orders.   Specific  provisions of the compact itself set forth this basic principle.    Designed as a flexible mechanism  able  to  adjust  to  changes  in  a  regulated marketplace, the compact also contains a contingency provision  should  the  federal  order  system  be discontinued. In that event, the  interstate commission is  authorized  to  regulate  the  marketplace  in  replacement  of  the  order  system.  This contingent authority does not  anticipate such a change, however, and should not be so construed. It is  only provided should developments in the market other than establishment  of this compact result in discontinuance of the order system.              ARTICLE II. DEFINITIONS AND RULES OF CONSTRUCTION    § 2. Definitions.    For  the  purposes  of  this  compact,  and  of  any  supplemental  or  concurring  legislation  enacted  pursuant  thereto,  except  as  may be  otherwise required by the context:    (a) "Commission" means the commission established by this compact.    (b) "Compact" means this interstate compact.    (c) "Region" means the territorial limits of the states which  are  or  become parties to this compact.    (d)  "Participating  state"  means a state which has become a party to  this compact by the enactment of concurring legislation.    (e) "Regulated area" means any area within the region governed by  and  defined  in  regulations  establishing  a  compact  over-order  price or  commission marketing order.    (f) "Pool plant" means any milk plant located in a regulated area.    (g) "Partially regulated plant" means a milk plant not  located  in  a  regulated  area  but  having  class  I distribution within such area, or  receipts from producers located in such area.    Commission  regulations  may  exempt  plants having such distribution or receipts in amounts less  than the limits defined therein.(h) "Compact over-order price" means a minimum price  required  to  be  paid  to  producers  for  class  I milk established by the commission in  regulations adopted pursuant to sections nine and ten of  this  compact,  which  is  above the price established in federal marketing orders or by  state  farm price regulation in the regulated area. Such price may apply  throughout the region or in any part or parts thereof as defined in  the  regulations of the commission.    (i)  "Commission  marketing  order"  means  regulations adopted by the  commission pursuant to sections nine and ten of this compact in place of  a terminated federal marketing order or  state  dairy  regulation.  Such  order may apply throughout the region or in any part or parts thereof as  defined  in  the regulations of the commission. Such order may establish  minimum prices for any or all classes of milk.    (j) "Milk" means the lacteal secretion of cows and includes all  skim,  butterfat,  or  other constituents obtained from separation or any other  process. The term is used in its  broadest  sense  and  may  be  further  defined by the commission for regulatory purposes.    (k)  "Class I milk" means milk disposed of in fluid form or as a fluid  milk product, subject to  further  definition  in  accordance  with  the  principles  expressed  in  subdivision  (b)  of  section  three  of this  compact.    (l) "State dairy regulation"  means  any  state  regulation  of  dairy  prices,  and associated assessments, whether by statute, marketing order  or otherwise.    § 3. Rules of construction.  (a) This compact shall not  be  construed  to  displace  existing  federal  milk  marketing  orders  or state dairy  regulation in the region but to supplement them. In the  event  some  or  all  federal orders in the region are discontinued, the compact shall be  construed to provide the commission the option to replace them with  one  or more commission marketing orders pursuant to this compact.    (b)  This compact shall be construed liberally in order to achieve the  purposes and intent enunciated in section one of this compact. It is the  intent of this compact to establish  a  basic  structure  by  which  the  commission   may   achieve   those  purposes  through  the  application,  adaptation and development of  the  regulatory  techniques  historically  associated  with  milk  marketing  and  to  afford  the commission broad  flexibility to devise regulatory mechanisms to achieve the  purposes  of  this  compact. In accordance with this intent, the technical terms which  are associated with market order  regulation  and  which  have  acquired  commonly  understood  general  meanings  are  not defined herein but the  commission may further define the terms used in this compact and develop  additional  concepts  and  define  additional  terms  as  it  may   find  appropriate to achieve its purposes.                     ARTICLE III. COMMISSION ESTABLISHED    § 4. Commission established.    There  is  hereby  created  a  commission  to  administer the compact,  composed of delegations from each state  in  the  region.  A  delegation  shall  include  not  less  than  three nor more than five persons.  Each  delegation shall include at least one dairy farmer who is engaged in the  production of milk at the time of appointment or reappointment, and  one  consumer  representative.  Delegation  members  shall  be  residents and  voters of, and subject to such confirmation process as is  provided  for  in,  the  appointing  state. Delegation members shall serve no more than  three consecutive terms with no single term of more than four years, and  be subject to removal for cause.   In  all  other  respects,  delegation  members   shall   serve  in  accordance  with  the  laws  of  the  state  represented. The compensation,  if  any,  of  the  members  of  a  state  delegation  shall  be  determined  and  paid  by  each  state, but theirexpenses shall be paid by the commission. Each state delegation shall be  entitled to one vote in the conduct of the commission's affairs.    § 5. Voting requirements.    All  actions  taken by the commission, except for the establishment or  termination of an over-order price or commission  marketing  order,  and  the adoption, amendment or rescission of the commission's by-laws, shall  be  by  majority  vote  of  the  delegations  present.  Establishment or  termination of an over-order price or commission marketing  order  shall  require  at  least  a  two-thirds  vote  of the delegations present. The  establishment of a  regulated  area  which  covers  all  or  part  of  a  participating  state  shall  require  also  the affirmative vote of that  state's delegation. A majority of the delegations from the participating  states shall constitute a quorum for the  conduct  of  the  commission's  business.    § 6. Administration and management.    (a)  The commission shall elect annually from among the members of the  participating state delegations a chairperson, a vice-chairperson, and a  treasurer. The commission shall appoint an executive  director  and  fix  his  or  her duties and compensation. The executive director shall serve  at the pleasure of the commission, and,  together  with  the  treasurer,  shall  be  bonded  in  an  amount  determined  by  the  commission.  The  commission may establish through  its  by-laws  an  executive  committee  composed of one member elected by each delegation.    (b) The commission shall adopt by-laws for the conduct of its business  by a two-thirds vote, and shall have the power by the same vote to amend  and  rescind  these by-laws. The commission shall publish its by-laws in  convenient form with the appropriate agency or officer in  each  of  the  participating  states.  The by-laws shall provide for appropriate notice  to the delegations of all commission meetings and hearings  and  of  the  business  to  be  transacted  at  such meetings or hearings. Notice also  shall be given to other agencies or officers of participating states  as  provided by the laws of those states.    (c)  The  commission shall file an annual report with the secretary of  agriculture of the United States, and with  each  of  the  participating  states  by  submitting  copies  to  the  governor,  both  houses  of the  legislature,   and   the   head   of   the   state   department   having  responsibilities for agriculture.    (d)  In addition to the powers and duties elsewhere prescribed in this  compact, the commission shall have the power:    (1) to sue and be sued in any state or federal court;    (2) to have a seal and alter the same at pleasure;    (3) to acquire, hold, and dispose of real  and  personal  property  by  gift,  purchase,  lease,  license,  or  other  similar  manner,  for its  corporate purposes;    (4) to borrow money and to issue notes, to provide for the  rights  of  the  holders  thereof  and  to  pledge  the revenue of the commission as  security therefor, subject to the provisions of section eighteen of this  compact;    (5) to appoint such officers, agents, and employees  as  it  may  deem  necessary, prescribe their powers, duties, and qualifications; and    (6)  to create and abolish such offices, employments, and positions as  it deems necessary for the purposes of the compact and provide  for  the  removal,  term,  tenure,  compensation,  fringe  benefits,  pension, and  retirement rights of its officers and employees. The commission may also  retain personal services on a contract basis.    § 7. Rulemaking power.    In addition to the power to promulgate a compact over-order  price  or  commission  marketing orders as provided by this compact, the commissionis further empowered to make  and  enforce  such  additional  rules  and  regulations  as  it  deems necessary to implement any provisions of this  compact, or to effectuate in any other  respect  the  purposes  of  this  compact.                    ARTICLE IV. POWERS OF THE COMMISSION    §   8.  Powers  to  promote  regulatory  uniformity,  simplicity,  and  interstate cooperation.    The commission is hereby empowered to:    (a) Investigate or provide for  investigations  or  research  projects  designed   to   review   the   existing  laws  and  regulations  of  the  participating states, to consider their  administration  and  costs,  to  measure  their  impact on the production and marketing of milk and their  effects on the shipment of milk and milk products within the region.    (b) Prepare and transmit to the participating states model dairy  laws  and  regulations  dealing  with  the  inspection  of  farms  and plants,  sanitary  codes,  labels  for  dairy  products  and  their   imitations,  standards  for  dairy  products,  license  standards,  producer security  programs, and fair trade laws.    (c)  Study  and  recommend  to  the  participating  states  joint   or  cooperative  programs  for  the  administration  of  the  dairy laws and  regulations and to prepare estimates of cost  savings  and  benefits  of  such programs.    (d)   Encourage  the  harmonious  relationships  between  the  various  elements in the industry for the solution of  their  material  problems.  Conduct   symposiums   or   conferences  designed  to  improve  industry  relations, or a better understanding of problems.    (e) Prepare and release periodic reports on activities and results  of  the commission's efforts to the participating states.    (f)  Review  the  existing marketing system for milk and milk products  and recommend  changes  in  the  existing  structure  for  assembly  and  distribution  of  milk  which  may  assist,  improve,  or  promote  more  efficient assembly and distribution of milk.    (g) Investigate costs and charges for  producing,  hauling,  handling,  processing,  distributing,  selling and for all other services performed  with respect to milk.    (h) Examine current  economic  forces  affecting  producers,  probable  trends  in production and consumption, the level of dairy farm prices in  relation to costs, the financial conditions of dairy  farmers,  and  the  need  for  an  emergency  order  to relieve critical conditions on dairy  farms.    § 9. Equitable farm prices.    (a) The powers granted in this section and section ten of this compact  shall apply only to the establishment of a compact over-order price,  so  long as federal milk marketing orders remain in effect in the region. In  the event that any or all such orders are terminated, this article shall  authorize  the  commission to establish one or more commission marketing  orders, as herein provided, in the region or parts thereof as defined in  the order.    (b) A compact over-order price established pursuant  to  this  section  shall apply only to class I milk. Such over-order price shall not exceed  one  dollar  and  fifty  cents per gallon. Beginning in nineteen hundred  ninety, and using that year as a base,  the  foregoing  one  dollar  and  fifty cents per gallon maximum shall be adjusted annually by the rate of  change  in  the  consumer price index as reported by the Bureau of Labor  Statistics of the United States Department of Labor. For purposes of the  pooling and equalization of an over-order price, the value of milk  used  in  other  use  classifications  shall  be calculated at the appropriate  class price established pursuant to  the  applicable  federal  order  orstate  dairy  regulation  and  the  value  of  unregulated milk shall be  calculated  in  relation  to  the  nearest  prevailing  class  price  in  accordance  with  and  subject to such adjustments as the commission may  prescribe in regulations.    (c)  A  commission marketing order shall apply to all classes and uses  of milk.    (d) The commission is hereby empowered to establish the minimum  price  for  milk  to be paid by pool plants, partially regulated plants and all  other handlers receiving milk from  producers  located  in  a  regulated  area.  This  price  shall  be established either as a compact over-order  price or by one or more commission marketing  orders.  Whenever  such  a  price  has  been  established  by  either  type of regulation, the legal  obligation to pay such price shall be determined solely by the terms and  purpose of the regulation without regard to the situs of the transfer of  title, possession or any other factors not related to  the  purposes  of  the  regulation  and  this  compact.  Producer-handlers as defined in an  applicable federal market order  shall  not  be  subject  to  a  compact  over-order  price. The commission shall provide for similar treatment of  producer-handlers under commission marketing orders.    (e) In determining  the  price,  the  commission  shall  consider  the  balance  between production and consumption of milk and milk products in  the regulated area, the costs of production including, but  not  limited  to  the  price of feed, the cost of labor including the reasonable value  of the producer's own  labor  and  management,  machinery  expense,  and  interest  expense,  the  prevailing price for milk outside the regulated  area, the purchasing power of the public  and  the  price  necessary  to  yield a reasonable return to the producer and distributor.    (f) When establishing a compact over-order price, the commission shall  take such action as necessary and feasible to ensure that the over-order  price  does not create an incentive for producers to generate additional  supplies of milk.    (g) The commission shall whenever possible enter into agreements  with  state  or  federal  agencies for exchange of information or services for  the purpose of reducing regulatory burden and cost of administering  the  compact.  The commission may reimburse other agencies for the reasonable  cost of providing these services.    § 10. Optional provisions for pricing order.    Regulations establishing a compact over-order price  or  a  commission  marketing  order  may  contain,  but shall not be limited to, any of the  following:    (a) Provisions classifying milk in accordance with the form  in  which  or purpose for which it is used, or creating a flat pricing program.    (b)  With  respect  to  a  commission marketing order only, provisions  establishing or providing a method  for  establishing  separate  minimum  prices  for  each  use classification prescribed by the commission, or a  single minimum price for milk purchased from producers  or  associations  of producers.    (c)   With   respect   to  an  over-order  minimum  price,  provisions  establishing or providing a method for establishing such  minimum  price  for class I milk.    (d)  Provisions  for  establishing  either  an  over-order  price or a  commission marketing order may make use of  any  reasonable  method  for  establishing  such  price  or  prices including flat pricing and formula  pricing. Provision may also  be  made  for  location  adjustments,  zone  differentials  and  for  competitive  credits  with respect to regulated  handlers who market outside the regulated area.    (e) Provisions for the payment to all producers  and  associations  of  producers delivering milk to all handlers of uniform prices for all milkso  delivered,  irrespective  of  the  uses  made  of  such  milk by the  individual handler to whom it  is  delivered,  or  for  the  payment  of  producers  delivering milk to the same handler of uniform prices for all  milk delivered by them.    (1)  With  respect  to  regulations  establishing a compact over-order  price, the commission may establish one  equalization  pool  within  the  regulated  area  for the sole purpose of equalizing returns to producers  throughout the regulated area.    (2) With respect to any commission  marketing  order,  as  defined  in  subdivision  (i)  of  section two of this compact, which replaces one or  more terminated federal orders or state dairy regulation, the  marketing  area of now separate state or federal orders shall not be merged without  the  affirmative  consent  of each state, voting through its delegation,  which is partly or wholly included within any such new marketing area.    (f) Provisions requiring persons who  bring  class  I  milk  into  the  regulated  area  to  make compensatory payments with respect to all such  milk to the extent necessary to equalize the cost of milk  purchased  by  handlers  subject  to a compact over-order price or commission marketing  order. No such provisions  shall  discriminate  against  milk  producers  outside the regulated area. The provisions for compensatory payments may  require  payment of the difference between the class I price required to  be paid for such milk in the state  of  production  by  a  federal  milk  marketing  order  or  state  dairy  regulation  and  the  class  I price  established by the compact  over-order  price  or  commission  marketing  order.    (g)  Provisions  specially  governing  the pricing and pooling of milk  handled by partially regulated plants.    (h) Provisions requiring that the  account  of  any  person  regulated  under a compact over-order price shall be adjusted for any payments made  to  or  received  by  such persons with respect to a producer settlement  fund of any federal or state milk marketing order or other  state  dairy  regulation within the regulated area.    (i)  Provisions  requiring the payment by handlers of an assessment to  cover the costs of the administration  and  enforcement  of  such  order  pursuant to subdivision (a) of section eighteen of this compact.    (j) Provisions for reimbursement to participants of the Women, Infants  and  Children  Special  Supplemental  Food  Program of the United States  Child Nutrition Act of 1966.    (k) Other provisions and requirements as the commission may  find  are  necessary  or appropriate to effectuate the purposes of this compact and  to provide for the payment of  fair  and  equitable  minimum  prices  to  producers.                       ARTICLE V. RULEMAKING PROCEDURE    § 11. Rulemaking procedure.    Before   promulgation   of  any  regulations  establishing  a  compact  over-order price or commission marketing order, including any  provision  with  respect  to  milk  supply under subdivision (f) of section nine of  this compact, or amendment thereof, as provided in article  IV  of  this  compact,  the commission shall conduct an informal rulemaking proceeding  to provide interested persons with an opportunity to  present  data  and  views.  Such  rulemaking proceeding shall be governed by section four of  the Federal Administrative Procedure Act,  as  amended  (5  U.S.C.  Sec.  553).  In  addition,  the  commission  shall, to the extent practicable,  publish notice of rulemaking proceedings in  the  official  register  of  each  participating  state.  Before  the initial adoption of regulations  establishing a compact over-order price or a commission marketing  order  and   thereafter   before   any  amendment  with  regard  to  prices  or  assessments, the commission shall hold a public hearing. The  commissionmay commence a rulemaking proceeding on its own initiative or may in its  sole discretion act upon the petition of any person including individual  milk  producers, any organization of milk producers or handlers, general  farm organizations, consumer or public interest groups, and local, state  or federal officials.    § 12. Findings and referendum.    (a)  In addition to the concise general statement of basis and purpose  required by section 4(b) of the Federal Administrative Procedure Act, as  amended (5 U.S.C. Sec. 553(c)), the commission shall  make  findings  of  fact with respect to:    (1) Whether the public interest will be served by the establishment of  minimum milk prices to dairy farmers under article IV of this compact.    (2)  What  level  of prices will assure that producers receive a price  sufficient to cover  their  costs  of  production  and  will  elicit  an  adequate  supply  of  milk for the inhabitants of the regulated area and  for manufacturing purposes.    (3) Whether the major provisions of the order, other than those fixing  minimum milk prices, are in  the  public  interest  and  are  reasonably  designed to achieve the purposes of the order.    (4)  Whether the terms of the proposed regional order or amendment are  approved by producers as provided in section thirteen of this compact.    § 13. Producer referendum.    (a) For the purpose of ascertaining whether the issuance or  amendment  of  regulations  establishing a compact over-order price or a commission  marketing order, including any provision with  respect  to  milk  supply  under  subdivision  (f)  of section nine of this compact, is approved by  producers, the commission shall conduct a  referendum  among  producers.  The  referendum  shall  be  held  in  a  timely manner, as determined by  regulation of the commission. The terms and conditions of  the  proposed  order  or  amendment  shall be described by the commission in the ballot  used in the conduct of the  referendum,  but  the  nature,  content,  or  extent  of  such  description  shall  not  be  a basis for attacking the  legality of the order or any action relating thereto.    (b) An order or amendment shall be deemed approved by producers if the  commission determines that it is approved by at least two-thirds of  the  voting  producers  who, during a representative period determined by the  commission, have been engaged in the production of  milk  the  price  of  which would be regulated under the proposed order or amendment.    (c)  For purposes of any referendum, the commission shall consider the  approval or disapproval by any  cooperative  association  of  producers,  qualified  under  the  provisions  of  the  act  of congress of February  eighteen,  nineteen  hundred  twenty-two,  as  amended,  known  as   the  Capper-Volstead  Act,  bona  fide  engaged  in  marketing  milk,  or  in  rendering services for or advancing the interests of producers  of  such  commodity,  as  the  approval  or  disapproval  of the producers who are  members or stockholders in, or under  contract  with,  such  cooperative  association  of  producers,  except as provided in paragraph one of this  subdivision and subject to the provisions of paragraphs two, three, four  and five of this subdivision:    (1) No cooperative which has been formed to act as a common  marketing  agency for both cooperatives and individual producers shall be qualified  to block vote for either.    (2)  Any  cooperative  which  is qualified to block vote shall, before  submitting its approval or disapproval in  any  referendum,  give  prior  written  notice  to each of its members as to whether and how it intends  to cast its vote. The notice shall  be  given  in  a  timely  manner  as  established, and in the form prescribed by the commission.(3)  Any  producer may obtain a ballot from the commission in order to  register approval or disapproval of the proposed order.    (4)  A  producer  who  is a member of a cooperative which has provided  notice of its intent to approve or not to approve a proposed order,  and  who  obtains  a  ballot  and  with such ballot expresses his approval or  disapproval of the proposed order, shall notify the commission as to the  name of the cooperative of  which  he  or  she  is  a  member,  and  the  commission  shall remove such producer's name from the list certified by  such cooperative with its corporate vote.    (5) In order to insure that all milk producers are informed  regarding  a proposed order, the commission shall notify all milk producers that an  order is being considered and that each producer may register his or her  approval  or  disapproval with the commission either directly or through  his or her cooperative.    § 14. Termination of over-order price or marketing order.    (a) The commission shall terminate  any  regulations  establishing  an  over-order price or commission marketing order issued under this article  whenever it finds that such order or price obstructs or does not tend to  effectuate the declared policy of this compact.    (b)  The  commission  shall  terminate any regulations establishing an  over-order price or a  commission  marketing  order  issued  under  this  article whenever it finds that such termination is favored by a majority  of  the  producers who, during a representative period determined by the  commission, have been engaged in the production of  milk  the  price  of  which  is  regulated  by  such  order;  but  such  termination  shall be  effective only if announced on or before such date as may  be  specified  in such marketing agreement or order.    (c)  The  termination or suspension of any order or provision thereof,  shall not be considered an order within the meaning of this article  and  shall  require  no  hearing,  but shall comply with the requirements for  informal  rulemaking  prescribed  by  section  four   of   the   Federal  Administrative Procedure Act, as amended (5 U.S.C. Sec. 553).                           ARTICLE VI. ENFORCEMENT    § 15. Records, reports, access to premises.    (a) The commission may by rule and regulation prescribe record keeping  and  reporting  requirements  for all regulated persons. For purposes of  the administration and enforcement of this compact,  the  commission  is  authorized  to  examine  the  books  and records of any regulated person  relating to  his  or  her  milk  business  and  for  that  purpose,  the  commission's  properly  designated  officers, employees, or agents shall  have full access during  normal  business  hours  to  the  premises  and  records of all regulated persons.    (b)  Information  furnished to or acquired by the commission officers,  employees, or its agents pursuant to this section shall be  confidential  and  not  subject to disclosure except to the extent that the commission  deems disclosure to be  necessary  in  any  administrative  or  judicial  proceeding  involving the administration or enforcement of this compact,  an over-order price, a compact marketing order, or other regulations  of  the  commission.  The  commission  may  promulgate  regulations  further  defining the confidentiality of information pursuant  to  this  section.  Nothing  in this section shall be deemed to prohibit (1) the issuance of  general statements based upon the reports of a number of handlers, which  do not identify the information furnished by  any  person,  or  (2)  the  publication  by  direction  of  the commission of the name of any person  violating any regulation of the commission, together with a statement of  the particular provisions violated by such person.    (c)  No  officer,  employee,  or  agent  of   the   commission   shall  intentionally  disclose information, by inference or otherwise, which ismade confidential pursuant to this section.  Any  person  violating  the  provisions of this section shall upon conviction be subject to a fine of  not  more than one thousand dollars or by imprisonment for not more than  one  year,  or by both, and shall be removed from office. The commission  shall refer any allegation  of  a  violation  of  this  section  to  the  appropriate state enforcement authority or United States attorney.    § 16. Subpoena, hearings and judicial review.    (a)  The  commission is hereby authorized and empowered by its members  and its properly designated  officers  to  administer  oaths  and  issue  subpoenas  throughout  all  signatory states to compel the attendance of  witnesses and the giving  of  testimony  and  the  production  of  other  evidence.    (b)  Any  handler subject to an order may file a written petition with  the commission stating that any such order or any provision of any  such  order  or  any  obligation  imposed  in  connection  therewith is not in  accordance with law and praying for a  modification  thereof  or  to  be  exempted  therefrom.  He  shall  thereupon be given an opportunity for a  hearing upon such petition, in accordance with regulations made  by  the  commission.  After such hearing, the commission shall make a ruling upon  the prayer of such petition which shall be final, if in accordance  with  law.    (c)  The district courts of the United States in any district in which  such handler is an inhabitant, or has his principal place  of  business,  are  hereby  vested  with  jurisdiction in equity to review such ruling,  provided a bill in equity for that purpose is filed within  thirty  days  from  the  date  of the entry of such ruling. Service of process in such  proceedings may be had upon the commission by delivering to it a copy of  the bill of complaint. If the court determines that such ruling  is  not  in  accordance  with  law,  it  shall  remand  such  proceedings  to the  commission with directions either (1) to make such ruling as  the  court  shall  determine  to  be  in  accordance  with  law, or (2) to take such  further proceedings as, in its opinion, the law requires.  The  pendency  of proceedings instituted pursuant to this subdivision shall not impede,  hinder,  or  delay  the  commission  from  obtaining  relief pursuant to  section seventeen of this compact.  Any proceedings brought pursuant  to  section  seventeen  of  this  compact  (except  where  brought by way of  counterclaim in proceedings instituted pursuant to this  section)  shall  abate  whenever  a final decree has been rendered in proceedings between  the same parties, and  covering  the  same  subject  matter,  instituted  pursuant to this section.    § 17. Enforcement with respect to handlers.    (a)  Any  violation  by  a  handler  of  the provisions of regulations  establishing an over-order price or a  commission  marketing  order,  or  other regulations adopted pursuant to this compact shall:    (1)  Constitute  a  violation  of  the  laws  of each of the signatory  states. Such violation shall render the  violator  subject  to  a  civil  penalty  in  an  amount  as may be prescribed by the laws of each of the  participating states, recoverable in  any  state  or  federal  court  of  competent   jurisdiction.   Each  day  such  violation  continues  shall  constitute a separate violation.    (2) Constitute grounds for the revocation  of  license  or  permit  to  engage   in   the  milk  business  under  the  applicable  laws  of  the  participating states.    (b) With  respect  to  handlers,  the  commission  shall  enforce  the  provisions  of  this  compact,  regulations  establishing  an over-order  price,  a  commission  marketing  order  or  other  regulations  adopted  hereunder by:(1)  Commencing an action for legal or equitable relief brought in the  name of the commission in  any  state  or  federal  court  of  competent  jurisdiction; or    (2)   With  the  agreement  of  the  appropriate  state  agency  of  a  participating state, by referral to the state agency for enforcement  by  judicial or administrative remedy.    (c)  With  respect to handlers, the commission may bring an action for  injunction to enforce the provisions of this compact  or  the  order  or  regulations  adopted  thereunder  without  being  compelled to allege or  prove that an adequate remedy of law does not exist.                            ARTICLE VII. FINANCE    § 18. Finance of startup and regular costs.    (a) To provide for its start-up costs, the commission may borrow money  pursuant to its general power under paragraph four of subdivision (d) of  section six of  this  compact.    In  order  to  finance  the  costs  of  administration  and  enforcement  of  this compact, including payback of  start-up costs,  the  commission  is  hereby  empowered  to  collect  an  assessment  from  each  handler who purchases milk from producers within  the region. If imposed, this assessment shall be collected on a  monthly  basis  for  up  to one year from the date the commission convenes, in an  amount not to exceed one-tenth of one percent of the applicable  federal  market  order  blend  price  per  hundredweight  of  milk purchased from  producers during the period of the assessment.  The  initial  assessment  may  apply  to  the  projected  purchases  of handlers for the two-month  period following the date  the  commission  convenes.  In  addition,  if  regulations  establishing  an  over-order  price  or a compact marketing  order are adopted, they may  include  an  assessment  for  the  specific  purpose  of  their  administration.  These regulations shall provide for  establishment of  a  reserve  for  the  commission's  ongoing  operating  expenses.    (b)  The  commission  shall not pledge the credit of any participating  state or of the United States. Notes issued by the  commission  and  all  other   financial   obligations  incurred  by  it,  shall  be  its  sole  responsibility and no participating state or the United States shall  be  liable therefor.    § 19. Audit and accounts.    (a)  The  commission  shall keep accurate accounts of all receipts and  disbursements, which shall  be  subject  to  the  audit  and  accounting  procedures  established  under  its rules. In addition, all receipts and  disbursements of funds handled by the commission shall be audited yearly  by a qualified public accountant and the report of the  audit  shall  be  included in and become part of the annual report of the commission.    (b)  The  accounts  of  the commission shall be open at any reasonable  time for inspection by duly constituted officers  of  the  participating  states and by any persons authorized by the commission.    (c)  Nothing  contained  in this article shall be construed to prevent  commission compliance with laws  relating  to  audit  or  inspection  of  accounts  by  or  on  behalf of any participating state or of the United  States.      ARTICLE VIII. ENTRY INTO FORCE; ADDITIONAL MEMBERS AND WITHDRAWAL    § 20. Entry into force; additional members.    The compact shall enter into force effective when enacted into law  by  any  three  states  of  the  group  of  states  composed of Connecticut,  Delaware, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New  York, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Vermont  and  Virginia  and  when  the  consent  of  congress has been obtained. This compact shall also be open  to states which are contiguous to any of the named states  and  open  to  states which are contiguous to participating states.§ 21. Withdrawal from compact.    Any  participating  state may withdraw from this compact by enacting a  statute repealing the same, but no such  withdrawal  shall  take  effect  until one year after notice in writing of the withdrawal is given to the  commission  and  the  governors  of  all  other participating states. No  withdrawal shall affect any liability already incurred by or  chargeable  to a party state prior to the time of such withdrawal.    § 22. Severability.    If  any  part  or provision of this compact is adjudged invalid by any  court, such judgment shall be confined in its operation to the  part  or  provision  directly  involved  in the controversy in which such judgment  shall have been rendered and shall not affect or impair the validity  of  the remainder of this compact.    Congress  reserves  the  right  to  amend  or  rescind this interstate  compact at any time.    § 23. Reservation of rights.    (a) In general. The right to alter, amend, or repeal this  compact  is  expressly reserved.    (b)  Compensation  requirement. When an over-order price is in effect,  the  commission  established  in  this  compact  shall  compensate   the  commodity  credit  corporation before the end of the fiscal year for the  cost of any increased commodity credit corporation dairy purchases  that  result  from  projected  increased fluid milk production for that fiscal  year within the compact region in excess of the national average rate of  increase.