The Northeast Interstate Dairy Compact is hereby entered into and enacted into law, subject to the provisions of section 8.1 of the compact. The compact is as follows:
STATEMENT OF PURPOSE, FINDINGSAND DECLARATION OF POLICY
The participating states find and declare that the dairy industry is the paramount agricultural activity of the northeast, and further find that dairy farms and associated suppliers, marketers, processors and retailers are an integral component of the region's economy and that 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 and that such farms preserve open spaces, sculpt the landscape and provide the land base for a diversity of recreational pursuits and 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 and that 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.
The participating states find that recent, dramatic price fluctuations, with a pronounced downward trend, threaten the viability and stability of the northeast dairy region and that historically, individual state regulatory action has been an effective emergency remedy available to farmers confronting a distressed market. The participating states further find that the federal order system, implemented by the Agricultural Marketing Agreement Act of 1937, established only minimum prices for dairy products without preempting the power of states to regulate milk prices above minimum levels so established and that 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.
The participating states find that in today's regional dairy marketplace, cooperative, rather than individual state action may address more effectively the market disarray and that 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 that their purpose shall be that this compact neither displace the federal order system nor encourage the merging of federal orders. If the federal order system is discontinued, 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.
DEFINITIONS AND RULES OF CONSTRUCTION
COMMISSION ESTABLISHED
POWERS OF THE COMMISSION
RULE-MAKING PROCEDURE
ENFORCEMENT
FINANCE
ENTRY INTO FORCE; ADDITIONAL MEMBERS AND WITHDRAWAL
Conn. Gen. Stat. § 22-203aa
( P.A. 93-320, S. 1.)