Mandatory GM Labels keine Hilfe Verbraucher

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Niemand in der Evergreen State will einen alten Streit um die Kennzeichnung Lebensmittel refight, dass gentechnisch veränderte Bestandteile enthalten. Für uns, it’s a settled question: Washington voters rejected this bad idea in 2013, when we turned down Initiative 522.

Unless the US Senate acts, jedoch, we may have a version of I-522 imposed on us by people in other states.

I hope my Senators—Maria Cantwell and Patty Murray, both Democrats—will have the good sense to make sure this doesn’t happen. They should get behind an idea that carried bipartisan majorities in the House of Representatives last year and in the Senate’s Committee on Agriculture last week.

The problem started on the other side of the country, in Vermont. Vor zwei Jahren, its legislature approved a GMO labeling law that will stigmatize the kind of crops I grow on my farm in the Walla Walla Valley as well as raise the cost of food for ordinary Americans.

Why would an ill-considered labeling law in a small state in New England matter to people in the Pacific Northwest? The answer is distressingly simple: It will force food companies either to pull out of Vermont and any state that chooses to follow Vermont’s lead, or it will compel them to restructure their way of doing business.

This dispute isn’t merely about pointless labels. It’s about an onerous new regulation that will push companies to embark on the expensive project of reformulating their products, for the sake of a policy that ignores science and demonizes safe food.

Durch meine Erfahrung, Es ist. Cantwell doesn’t get involved in agricultural issues. Es ist. Murray, obwohl, is a friend of farmers. Vor fünf Jahren, when activist groups tried to pressure her into signing a letter that called on the Department of Agriculture to halt the deregulation of GMO alfalfa, Senator Murray took the pragmatic step of consulting Washington’s alfalfa farmers.

I happen to grow alfalfa, and I recognized the excellent potential of GMO varieties. I told Senator Murray’s policy advisors that I thought deregulation would improve my ability to run an economically viable and environmentally sustainable farm.

My Senator refused to sign the anti-GMO letter—and I’m grateful for her decision. Because our lawmakers got it right, GMO alfalfa allows me to grow more food and feed on less land than ever before.

I have no idea what my senators thought about I-522. Federal officials tend to keep mum on statewide ballot initiatives. I remember what happened back in 2013, obwohl. A September poll had indicated that nearly two-thirds of voters favored the labeling law. After our state debated the proposal for two months, thousands of Washingtonians changed their minds. The measure went down to a well-deserved defeat.

People in other states reached similar conclusions. California voters opposed a labeling law in 2012, as did Colorado and Oregon voters in 2014.

They came to appreciate and understand that GM crops and the food they produce are conventional tools of modern agriculture. Scientists have endorsed their use. Groups ranging from the American Medical Association to the World Health Organization have declared GMOs to be perfectly compatible with human health.

Mit anderen Worten, GMOs don’t deserve warning labels—and farmers like me shouldn’t be ashamed to grow these outstanding crops.

Another point also persuaded voters. Studies showed that if mandatory labels were to force the repackaging and reformulation of safe and nutritious food, typical families would pay hundreds of dollars extra at grocery stores every year. Im vergangenen Monat, an analysis by the Corn Refiners Association said that if states pass a patchwork of contradictory labeling laws, food costs could spike by more than $1,000 per family.

Das ist Wahnsinn. People who want to avoid GMOs already enjoy plenty of options. They can buy organic food, which may not contain GMO ingredients, and they can look for the Non-GMO label.

Im März 1, a bipartisan majority of the Senate’s Committee on Agriculture voted to approve a bill that will stop Vermont and other states from passing GMO labeling laws. Now it goes to the full Senate, where Senators Cantwell and Murray will have a chance to do the right thing.

I hope they’ll defend the interests of farmers like me as well as consumers everywhere. Am meisten, I hope they’ll heed the wishes of their constituents, who recently engaged in a big conversation about GMO labels—and concluded that the Evergreen State doesn’t need them.

Mark Waggoner
GESCHRIEBEN VON

Mark Waggoner

Mark Wagoner ist eine dritte Generation der Familie Bauer im Südosten Bundesstaat Washington, wo sie Alfalfasamen für vier große Saatgut-Unternehmen wachsen. Unter Berufung auf die Alkali-Biene, ein gebürtiger Boden nisten Biene, und leafcutter Bienen für die Bestäubung, Mark arbeitet mit der National Alfalfa und Futter Allianz und der Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) um sicherzustellen, dass sichere und wirksame Insektizide zur Verwendung während des Bienenfluges verfügbar sind. Markieren Sie Freiwillige als Vorstandsmitglieder für das Global Farmer Network.

Mark Freiwillige als Vorstandsmitglied für das Global Farmer Netzwerk und zahlreiche andere Bretter Adressieren Wasser- und Landnutzung Fragen. Er wurde in das Washington State Department of Ecology Walla Walla Valley berufen 2050 Komitee, eine Planungsgruppe zur Verbesserung der Wasserverfügbarkeit im Tal. Er arbeitet fleißig zu entwickeln und Koexistenzstrategien zur Herstellung von konventionellen zu implementieren, organischer und genetisch verbesserter Alfalfa.

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