Industry Amendment to Farm Bill Will Undermine Local Authority to Regulate GMOs & Food Safety

June 19, 2007 |

Consumers Union

Contact:          
Jean Halloran, Consumers Union, 914-378-2457
Erin Williams, The Humane Society of the United States, 301-721-6446
Joe Mendelson, Center for Food Safety, 202- 547-9359
John Bianchi, Goodman Media, 212-576-2700

FARM BILL COULD HAMSTRING STATE FOOD SAFETY AGENCIES

Consumer, Environmental, Farmer and Animal Welfare Groups Protest Clause that Wipes Out State and Local Authority on Meat, Poultry, Biotechnology

Washington, June 19, 2007-Forty consumer, environmental, farmer and animal welfare groups today announced their opposition to a sweeping provision in the 2007 Farm Bill that wipes out critical state and local authority to protect food safety, the environment, and humane animal treatment.  The provision, Section 123 of Title I, was quietly inserted in the House bill several weeks ago by the Livestock, Dairy, and Poultry Subcommittee.

Consumers Union, the Sierra Club, the Humane Society of the United States, the Center for Food Safety, the Union of Concerned Scientists and three dozen other organizations today called for deletion of Section 123, in a letter sent today to the House Agriculture Committee.  The full Committee will hold its mark up of the 2007 Farm Bill later this month.

“At a time when we have seen repeated food safety failures at FDA and USDA, we need more food safety protection, not less,” states Jean Halloran, Director of Food Policy Initiatives at Consumers Union (publisher of Consumer Reports).  “This clause would tie the hands of states on meat, poultry and genetically engineered food,” she said.

Section 123 would prevent states and localities from passing any laws prohibiting commercial use of USDA-inspected products.  “This could prevent a local health inspector at a supermarket from condemning rodent-contaminated meat or poultry that has begun to go bad,” states Jean Halloran.

“Section 123 will subvert the principles of federalism and states’ rights,” states Wayne Pacelle, president and CEO of the Humane Society of the United States.  “If this appalling and outrageous measure is approved, agribusiness will accomplish what it could not achieve in state legislatures ­ the evisceration of state laws to protect horses from slaughter and a raft of other democratically approved animal welfare reforms.”

Section 123 would also get in the way of state laws on biotechnology.  No state could prohibit use in commerce of a product that USDA has determined is “non-regulated.” Both supporters and opponents of the measure agree that this refers to genetically engineered crops, which USDA “deregulates” after considering whether they might be a plant pest. “California, Arkansas and Missouri have passed laws creating state committees that review whether genetically engineered rice should be grown in the state,” notes Joe Mendelson, Legal Director of the Center for Food Safety.    “These laws, which farmers support, would be preempted.”

“This poorly conceived provision should be dropped immediately,” states Mendelson.  “Just in the last several months we have seen problems with melamine in animal feed and ground beef contaminated with E. coli.   Section 123 takes us backwards by removing existing protections we have at the state and local level.   We need increased, not decreased food safety efforts,” he said.

The forty groups signing onto the letter include:

American Humane
American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals
California Certified Organic Farmers
Californians for GE-Free Agriculture
Campaign for Labeling of Genetically Engineered Food
Center for Environmental Health
Center for Foodborne Illness Research & Prevention
Center for Food Safety
Citizens Campaign for the Environment
Consumers Union
Consumer Federation of America
Edmonds Institute
Equal Exchange
Farm Sanctuary
Florida Certified Organic Growers and Consumers, Inc.
Food and Water Watch
Government Accountability Project
Health Care Without Harm
The Humane Society of the United States
Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy
Institute for a Sustainable Future
Minnesota COACT (Citizens Organized Acting Together)
Minnesota Food Association
National Catholic Rural Life Conference, National Consumers League
National Environmental Trust
National Organic Coalition
Organic Consumers Association,
Physicians for Social Responsibility
Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine
Public Citizen
Safe Tables Our Priority (STOP)
Safe Alternatives for our Forest Environment
Say No To GMOs
Sierra Club
Society for Animal Protective Legislation,
Southern Sustainable Agriculture Working Group
Union of Concerned Scientists,
Washington Biotechnology Action Council
Western Sustainable Agriculture Working Group