The House voted 78-15 on Feb. 8 to approve House Bill 1255, which would clarify in state law that “milk” is a “lacteal secretion” obtained from a hoofed mammal. The proposal will now go to the Senate.
The bill sponsored by Rep. Dawson Holle, a Mandan Republican and dairy farmer, doesn’t draw the line at cows — secretions collected from goats, sheep, horses and even reindeer can also be considered milk. An amendment to the proposal added milk from llamas and camels to the definition.
The legislation intentionally leaves out drinks made from soy, oats, coconuts and almonds that are marketed to consumers as milk varieties. Holle mentioned at a hearing last month that there’s an ongoing “war between dairy milk and soy milk.”
Holle told his colleagues Wednesday the bill helps “send a message to our farmers that we support them and we want to keep dairy in North Dakota for generations to come.”
The intent of the bill is not to crack down on the labeling of plant-based beverages in North Dakota, Holle previously told Forum News Service. That kind of enforcement would likely have to come from the federal government.
Still, several lawmakers who voted against the bill Feb. 8 worried that cementing a strict legal definition of milk would diminish the availability of plant-based beverages in the state.
Rep. Larry Klemin, R-Bismarck, said he believes passing the legislation would “severely limit the ability of people like me who are lactose intolerant to get something to put on my cereal in the morning.”