I dont know! I think there is a lot of information missing in this report. Sounds to me like maybe somebody got mad that they didnt get what they wanted so now they are throwing a hissy fit. I am not saying there is no wrong doing, but first off. Did the FFA Chapter purchase the steer or did the ag teacher purchase the steer? If the ag teacher purchased the steer with his own money and then sold it, then he wasnt acting on behalf of the school so could charge whatever he wanted. If the FFA program purchased the steer then why did they pay the ag teacher, unless they meant they wrote a check to the chapter and then handed it to him. I have never heard of an FFA program paying to feed a students project, if the students dont have to buy feed throughout the year, maybe that $7,000 was a total cost for purchasing, housing, and feeding the animal. Maybe the students who were charged for feed opted out of this one time lump sum payment and payed monthly, maybe they payed in instalments and are now just saying they were being charged for feed in order to help this law suit. Anyone find it funny that the only "mistreatment" they can point out at this barn is feeding manure and rocks to make the steer crazy, which by the way I have never heard of in my life. Yet they are referencing every bad practice known in the show ring in this article? The only situations I know where the school district buys animals are set up where the students sign up to show and the teacher goes out and buys the number of animals needed. The total cost is divided among the number of students showing, then the students draw numbers to see who gets to pic in what order. The cost ussually isnt that off because the teachers shop to find that many animals of similar quality instead of just buying all the animals they can at one cost, this way it depends on who works the hardest mostly in how well they do. So for that reason, if all students payed say $3,000, if you went to the producers that sold them, yes one of the steers may have actually cost less, but some may have costs more. I agree this story sounds very fishy, but I dont think its just the teachers who seem suspicious here.
What I will say is batten down the hatches boys, because mainstream media just made known all the dirty little unethical things that happen in the show industry, its about to get attacked from all sides.