“My herd was started in 2001 and I have been in the CWD monitoring program since its inception in 2002. All of the animals that died on the farm or died at slaughter have tested negative for the CWD prion. No signs of the disease have ever been present,” Wolf told the board.

Barb Armstrong told the board that her deer farm was started in 2009. “We put everything we had into our farm, inheritance, retirement funds. It’s our passion and our livelihood,” she said, adding that if the rule were to be enacted “we’re going to lose everything.

“What do we do if they close us down? We’ll have nothing left,” she said.

Jenny Cherek testified tearfully that people’s livelihoods are at stake and brought her son Logan, 11, who told the board “Don’t crush my dreams. Don’t make us kill our deer.”

80% out of business

Bob Welch, who works as a lobbyist with state deer farmers said he hopes the industry can work with the department to arrive at a rule that will not put deer farmers out of business. The proposal, as it stands, will put “80 percent of deer farms out of business in months. We think there are answers.”

He urged that board not to “kill the goose that’s about to lay the golden egg” – referring to genetic work that is finding resistance to CWD among certain strains of deer.

Today, in order to move deer, enrollment in the state’s CWD herd status program is mandatory and farmers must be enrolled in that program for at least five years before movement is allowed. Herd veterinarians do an inventory all the deer on the property and that vet reports to state officials that there were no signs of CWD.

All animals on the farm must be identified before they are 12 months old with two forms of identification. All escapes must be promptly reported and complete herd records must be maintained.

Under current rules, Welch noted, a veterinary certificate is required and must accompany every farm-raised deer that is moved from a herd in the state. Animals going to slaughter must complete a federal form. As a way to protect the regulated deer inside the fence, if two or more wild deer are found or killed within five miles of the farm and have CWD, the herd must be enclosed with a double fence.