Title 7 › Chapter CHAPTER 79— - PORK PROMOTION, RESEARCH, AND CONSUMER INFORMATION › § 4809
An order requires an assessment to be paid within 30 days after the order becomes effective. The assessment must be paid by producers for each porcine animal produced in the United States that is sold or slaughtered for sale, by producers for certain other porcine animals that are sold, and by importers for each porcine animal, pork, or pork product brought into the United States. The money is collected and sent to the Board once the Board is appointed; until then the Secretary collects it and holds the Board’s share. The purchaser collects the fee for animals sold, producers collect it for the animals they sell, and importers collect it for imports. A person does not have to pay again if they can prove the fee was already paid for the same animal or product. The initial rate is the smaller of 0.25 percent of the market value or an amount set by the Secretary based on a Delegate Body recommendation. The rate may rise by up to 0.1 percent per year on the Delegate Body’s recommendation, but it cannot go above 0.50 percent unless the Delegate Body recommends a higher rate after the initial referendum and that higher rate is approved in a referendum. Imported pork is assessed based on the equivalent live-animal value as the Secretary determines; the Secretary may waive assessments on an import type if collection is not practicable. Collected funds are split among State associations, the National Pork Producers Council (NPPC), and the Board by the formulas in the law. Each State association gets a share based on assessments from animals produced in that State minus its share of refunds and at least 16.5 percent of that amount, with a special alternative rule for States that had a pork program from July 1, 1984, to June 30, 1985. The NPPC gets 37.5 percent of early collections until the Board is appointed, 35 percent afterward until a referendum, 25 percent until 12 months after the referendum, and none after that except funds it may receive from the Board. Refunds are allocated to States and the NPPC by the law’s formulas. Funds may be used for promotion, research, consumer information, and related administration, but not for false or misleading claims or for influencing legislation. The Board must keep records, give reports and an annual audit to the Secretary, and may invest funds only in specified safe investments with the Secretary’s approval.
Full Legal Text
Agriculture — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
7 U.S.C. § 4809
Title 7 — Agriculture
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73