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Hosted by the Beef Cattle Institute

at Kansas State University May 19-21

 

Online Animal Care Training and Certification Now Available for Livestock Auction Market Personnel

 

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (May 13, 2010) — Proper livestock handling and animal care is a major industry topic — and now livestock auction market personnel can fine-tune their handling skills, thanks to a new partnership between Livestock Marketing Association (LMA) and the Beef Cattle Institute (BCI) at Kansas State University (K-State).


LMA and BCI have collaborated to produce the Animal Care Training website www.animalcaretraining.org, offering training video, testing and certification in specific areas of livestock handling.


Kristen Parman, LMA’s vice president for membership services, said the program addresses “the unique animal handling challenges faced by livestock marketing business owners and their employees. With some 35 million cattle and calves and 11 million sheep and swine going through America’s livestock auction markets annually, we feel that the markets are doing a tremendous job, but continuous training is vital for the safety of the livestock we care for and our employees.”


The training package includes topics such as low-stress animal handling, handling injured or disabled animals; properly moving nonambulatory animals; safe and responsible euthanasia, and safely working with gates. There is also a section for business owners and managers addressing the need for a coordinated animal handling or risk management program.


LMA members, which include about 80% of North America’s livestock auction markets, can access the training package by clicking on the Animal Care Program link at www.LMAweb.com, or by going to www.animalcaretraining.org.


For a one-time fee, market owners and managers can register all their employees and gain access to all of the training modules. The full site, including all training modules, is available in English and Spanish. With no time limits, the training can be completed and made to fit around the hectic work environment at livestock auction markets.


Veterinarian Dan Thomson, director of the BCI and Jones Professor of Production Medicine at K-State, said the program was the result of a “unique partnership” between LMA and the BCI, which produced “a novel training platform” for livestock market personnel.


LMA’s member businesses “have understood the importance of animal well-being for a long time,” he continued, “because nobody cares more about the animals than the people who work with them day to day.”


Market employees, Thomson said, “will now have online tools to learn the latest advances in best management practices for animal health and well-being.”


The Animal Care Training Program is “the beginning of the collaboration between our two organizations,” Parman said. “We will continue to create training modules on the key issues facing livestock marketing businesses.”


The BCI was founded in 2007. Its purpose is to create a collaborative environment at K-State to tackle the issues facing the beef industry today and tomorrow through education, research and outreach.


LMA is North America’s largest membership organization dedicated to supporting, representing and communicating with and for the entire livestock marketing sector.

 

The new program, designed specifically for LMA market owners, managers and employees, will be demonstrated during the Membership Services Committee meeting, June 17, at the LMA Annual Convention in Oklahoma City. For further information, contact Kristen Parman, 1-800-821-2048, or kparman@lmaweb.com.

 
Editor’s Note: This article was provided as a news release by the LMA and may be redistributed.