Let North Carolina Choose: Stop the Raw Milk Ban
Our Stand: At-A-Glance
In collaboration with Weston A. Price Foundation
Updated May 6, 2025
- UPDATED! The bill was amended today, there was significant changes to the raw milk provisions. What initially appeared to be a win, with the amendment allowing raw milk herdshares, were tempered by the removal of language that previously permitted the sale of raw milk for animal (pet) consumption.
- For many North Carolinians, purchasing raw milk labeled for pet use has been one of the only accessible ways to obtain it through stores or farmers markets. Sadly, the new amendment eliminates this option, meaning that some families still won’t be able to legally purchase raw milk—even with the herdshare provision in place.
- Make sure you have written your legislators on this issue, today!
- North Carolina lawmakers are moving to ban raw milk—your food choices are on the line.
- Section 20 of Senate Bill 639 would ban herdshare agreements which have been legal under state statute for seven years; herdshares are the only way currently to legally distribute raw milk for human consumption in North Carolina. A proponent of the ban recently made the following statement about raw milk, “We’ve been playing Russian roulette with one bullet in the chamber with these other pathogens, but when you add [bird flu] into the mix, we put two more bullets into that chamber.” This is a scientifically inaccurate statement, read below for why:
- The legislature should be protecting your freedom of choice to obtain the foods you believe best for the health of you and your family, not taking that right away. There is zero evidence that bird flu will increase the risk of illness from raw milk consumption. Bird flu is transmitted through the respiratory tract; it is not gastrointestinal disease transmitted through the digestive tract; there are no cases of illness from bird flu in raw milk or any other food.
- Raw milk has a good track record for safety; as far as is known, there have been no cases of foodorve illness attributed to raw milk producers operating under the NC herdshare law.
- The herdshare law improves the ability of farmers to make a living. For diversified farms, raw milk can be a gateway to sales of other farm products like meat, poultry, eggs and produce.
- The herd share law keeps more of the food dollar in the community, and fewer people will go to South Carolina to get their raw milk.
- The facts:
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- Raw milk is legal in 47 states
- Louisiana just re-legalized it in 2024
- Meanwhile, raw milk accounts for far fewer illnesses than legal raw foods like lettuce, onions, and ground beef
- In contrast, leafy greens caused 11 deaths in recent years; onions sickened over 2,000 people
- So why target raw milk? This is not about safety—it’s about control.
- Call and email your legislator – tell them to oppose Section 20 of SB 639
- Attend the hearing on May 6 at 11:00 a.m. in 544 LOB. Be prepared to testify if the committee chair allows it. For directions and parking details, go to Visitor Info for the Legislative Office Building (LOB) located at 300 N. Salisbury St., Raleigh, NC 27603.
- Share this message with others who value health freedom and local farmsNorth Carolinians deserve food freedom, not arbitrary bans.
- Support small dairies by standing up for their right to operate legally