The battle lines on food labeling
Plan C: Lobby for a federal law
The food and biotech industries apparently aren’t waiting for the vote in Washington to start working on this.
The bill most likely would vest authority to regulate GMO labeling entirely with the Food and Drug Administration. The agency has long held that it lacks the authority to regulate genetically engineered foods. The industry is simultaneously encouraging FDA to finalize a 12-year-old draft guidance that would set voluntary standards.
“We support the FDA policy, and the FDA policy has held to a risk-based scientific approach on labeling,” said Cathleen Enright, executive vice president of food and agriculture for the Biotechnology Industry Organization. “In the U.S., for the most part, decisions for a mandatory label are reserved to communicate to consumers a safety issue.”
The Grocery Manufacturers Association, the food industry’s most influential group, wouldn’t confirm that it has been talking specifically to Upton, but it acknowledged a lobbying effort is taking place.
“A 50-state patchwork of laws governing the use of this important and safe technology would confuse consumers, raise food prices and do nothing to ensure product safety,” GMA said in an emailed statement. “We have been in communication with members of Congress because we believe this is an issue best addressed at the federal level. We will continue to explore a federal solution that protects consumers and ensures that decisions about the use of genetically modified food ingredients are based on sound science, not fear and misunderstanding.”
The Empire State waits in the wings
Meanwhile, advocates for mandatory GMO labeling have their own reasons to be confident.
For starters, Just Label It’s Faber thinks a GMO labeling law will be passed in Washington state. Many of the crops grown in the state are exported to Pacific Rim countries that already have restrictions on GMOs, he notes. Also, Washingtonians are leery that a proposed strain of GMO salmon — the approval for which has long been pending at the FDA — that could threaten the state’s fisheries.
A win for food labeling advocates in Washington could translate into momentum for efforts to gain requirements in other states, Faber adds.
Waiting in the wings most immediately behind Washington is New York, where state Assemblywoman Linda Rosenthal introduced A3525A last summer just before the chamber went on its six-month break. New York has considered GMO labeling laws every year since 2001, but Rosenthal’s bill has gone the furthest, coming just one vote short of getting passed by a committee. It now has 46 bipartisan co-sponsors in the 150-member chamber. A parallel bill reportedly has eight bipartisan co-sponsors in the 63-member state Senate.
A GMO labeling law in New York gives Connecticut the number of votes it needs to activate its GMO law.
“People are more and more concerned about what they put in their bodies” said Rosenthal, whose district includes the Upper West Side of Manhattan. “The food industry says, ‘Oh, go buy organic.’ But organic is expensive; it’s not a good option; and it’s insulting. Not everyone can afford that. If there is nothing wrong with GMOs, then what’s wrong with saying there are GMOs [in food products]? This is a common-sense labeling effort.”
The food and biotech industries apparently aren’t waiting for the vote in Washington to start working on this.
On Sept. 17, pro-labeling group Food Democracy Now sent
an alert to its supporters warning that House Energy and Commerce
Committee Chairman Fred Upton (R-Mich.), after being lobbied by the food
industry, “is working behind the scenes to introduce a bill that would
kill state GMO labeling efforts by pre-empting it with a bill that would
place GMO labeling under federal authority, circumventing successful
citizen-led efforts in Maine and Connecticut and trying to invalidate
the ballot initiative in Washington state before it even passes.”
A committee spokeswoman declines to confirm the advocacy group’s
report but said, “Committee staff are hearing from a lot of different
stakeholders on the issue. … We intend to do our due diligence and hear
from all sides before determining a legislative future.”The bill most likely would vest authority to regulate GMO labeling entirely with the Food and Drug Administration. The agency has long held that it lacks the authority to regulate genetically engineered foods. The industry is simultaneously encouraging FDA to finalize a 12-year-old draft guidance that would set voluntary standards.
“We support the FDA policy, and the FDA policy has held to a risk-based scientific approach on labeling,” said Cathleen Enright, executive vice president of food and agriculture for the Biotechnology Industry Organization. “In the U.S., for the most part, decisions for a mandatory label are reserved to communicate to consumers a safety issue.”
The Grocery Manufacturers Association, the food industry’s most influential group, wouldn’t confirm that it has been talking specifically to Upton, but it acknowledged a lobbying effort is taking place.
“A 50-state patchwork of laws governing the use of this important and safe technology would confuse consumers, raise food prices and do nothing to ensure product safety,” GMA said in an emailed statement. “We have been in communication with members of Congress because we believe this is an issue best addressed at the federal level. We will continue to explore a federal solution that protects consumers and ensures that decisions about the use of genetically modified food ingredients are based on sound science, not fear and misunderstanding.”
The Empire State waits in the wings
Meanwhile, advocates for mandatory GMO labeling have their own reasons to be confident.
For starters, Just Label It’s Faber thinks a GMO labeling law will be passed in Washington state. Many of the crops grown in the state are exported to Pacific Rim countries that already have restrictions on GMOs, he notes. Also, Washingtonians are leery that a proposed strain of GMO salmon — the approval for which has long been pending at the FDA — that could threaten the state’s fisheries.
A win for food labeling advocates in Washington could translate into momentum for efforts to gain requirements in other states, Faber adds.
Waiting in the wings most immediately behind Washington is New York, where state Assemblywoman Linda Rosenthal introduced A3525A last summer just before the chamber went on its six-month break. New York has considered GMO labeling laws every year since 2001, but Rosenthal’s bill has gone the furthest, coming just one vote short of getting passed by a committee. It now has 46 bipartisan co-sponsors in the 150-member chamber. A parallel bill reportedly has eight bipartisan co-sponsors in the 63-member state Senate.
A GMO labeling law in New York gives Connecticut the number of votes it needs to activate its GMO law.
“People are more and more concerned about what they put in their bodies” said Rosenthal, whose district includes the Upper West Side of Manhattan. “The food industry says, ‘Oh, go buy organic.’ But organic is expensive; it’s not a good option; and it’s insulting. Not everyone can afford that. If there is nothing wrong with GMOs, then what’s wrong with saying there are GMOs [in food products]? This is a common-sense labeling effort.”
Read more: http://www.politico.com/story/2013/10/washington-state-gmo-law-97951_Page2.html#ixzz2hSOCcjC9
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