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How California's GM food referendum may change what America eats
Richard Schiffman
The Guardian, 13 June 2012
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2012/jun/13/california-gm-referendum-change-america-food

*The vast majority of Americans want genetically modified food labelled. If
California passes November's ballot, they could get it

Last month, nearly 1 million signatures were delivered to county registrars
throughout California calling for a referendum on the labeling of genetically
engineered foods. If the measure, "The Right to Know Genetically Engineered Food
Act", which will be on the ballot in November, passes, California will become
the first state in the nation to require that GM foods be labeled as such on the
package.

This is not the first time that the issue has come up in California. Several
labeling laws have been drafted there, but none has made it out of legislative
committee. Lawmakers in states like Vermont and Connecticut have also proposed
labeling legislation, which has gone nowhere in the face of stiff industry
opposition. And the US Congress has likewise seen sporadic, unsuccessful
attempts to mandate GM food labeling since 1999.

What makes the referendum in California different is that, for the first time,
voters and not politicians will be the ones to decide. And this has the food
industry worried. Understandably so, since only one in four Americans is
convinced that GMOs are "basically safe", according to a survey conducted by the
Mellman Group, and a big majority wants food containing GMOs to be labeled.

This is one of the few issues in America today that enjoys broad bipartisan
support: 89% of Republicans and 90% of Democrats want genetically altered foods
to be labeled, as they already are in 40 nations in Europe, in Brazil, and even
in China. In 2007, then candidate Obama latched onto this popular issue saying
that he would push for labeling - a promise the president has yet to keep.

In Europe, only 5% of food sold contains GMOs, a figure that continues to
shrink. In the US, by contrast, an estimated 70% of the products on supermarket
shelves include at least traces of genetically engineered crops - mostly, corn
and soy byproducts and canola oil, which are ingredients in many of America's
processed foods.

Given their unpopularity with consumers, labeling "Frankenfoods" would
undoubtedly hurt sales, possibly even forcing supermarkets to take them off
their shelves. In one survey, just over half of those polled said they would not
buy food that they knew to be genetically modified.

This makes the financial stakes for November's referendum vote huge. California
is not just America's leading agricultural state, but the most populous state in
the nation. If companies are made to change their labels in California, they may
well do so all over the country, rather than maintain a costly two-tier
packaging and distribution system.

Several hurdles will have to be overcome, however, before this happens. The
ballot initiative will face fierce opposition from the food and biotech
industries, which are expected to spend an estimated $60-100m on an advertising
blitz to convince Californians that labeling is unnecessary, will hurt farmers,
increase their food prices, and even contribute to world hunger.

One lobbyist the corporations have hired to make this case is Tom Hiltachk, the
head of the Coalition Against the Costly Food Labeling Proposition (CACFLP),
whose members include the Grocery Manufacturers Association (GMA), Monsanto,
BASF, Bayer, Dow and Syngenta, as well as several big food processors and
supermarket chains. Hiltachk is no stranger to the shadowy world of industry
front groups, according to Alexis Baden-Mayer, political director of the Organic
Consumers Association. The food activist reported on Alternet that:

    "With a little help from his friends at Philip Morris and RJ Reynolds, he
helped organize the Californians for Smokers' Rights group to fight anti-smoking
initiatives in the 1980s and 1990s."

Also working to defeat the labeling initiative, according to Baden-Mayer, is the
California Citizens Against Lawsuit Abuse (CALA), which likewise receives big
bucks from the tobacco industry and assorted other corporations. The consumer
watchdog group Public Citizen says that CALA aims "to incite public scorn for
the civil justice system, juries and judges, and to pave the way for enactment
of laws immunizing corporations from liability for actions that harm consumers."

Whether lobbying groups like these will be able to convince famously independent
Californians to reject the labeling initiative in November remains to be seen.
But even if the referendum passes, the food industry can be expected to
challenge in court the state's right to mandate its own labeling requirements -
a function usually reserved for the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), at the
federal level.

The FDA's position on GMOs is that they are safe and essentially equivalent
nutritionally to conventionally grown food varieties. But critics counter that
the FDA has no way of knowing if this is true, since crucial testing of GM foods
has never been required by the agency, and indeed, has not yet been conducted.
Writes Dr Suzanne Wuerthele, a toxicologist with the US Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA):

    "We are confronted with the most powerful technology the world has ever
known, and it is being rapidly deployed with almost no thought whatsoever to its
consequences."

The concern is that genetic modification alters the proteins in foods in ways
that researchers do not yet fully understand. Substances that have never existed
before in nature are entering our food supply untested. While researchers have
not yet found a "smoking gun", which would prove that GM foods as a class are
dangerous, there are troubling signs that they may be a factor in the recent
epidemic of food allergies. Soon after GM soy was introduced to the UK, for
example, soy allergies escalated by 50%.

Rosa Rashall, a nutritionist in Garberville, California, who took part in the
petition campaign to get the labeling initiative on the ballot, told the Redwood
Times:

    "We are all worried for a variety of reasons, from health effects to
skyrocketing food sensitivities that have started to come about in the last 20
years. There has been an incredible 400% increase in food sensitivities that
coincides pretty well with the unlabeled introduction of GMO food into the
marketplace."

Critics also argue that agriculture's increasing dependence on GMOs has
coincided with a steep rise in toxic agrochemical use over the last decade. A
variety of GM corn sold by Monsanto was developed specifically to withstand
punishing doses of the company's bestselling herbicide, Roundup.

Food scientists remain divided on the larger food safety issue. Some say that
there is no cause for alarm, while others cite the allergy problem and also
animal studies, like one published by the International Journal of Biological
Sciences, which showed high levels of kidney and liver failures (the two organs
of detoxification) in rats that were fed Monsanto GM corn. Monsanto's biotech
corn is designed to produce a pesticide in its cellular structure that wards off
insect pests. Nobody knows what effect this toxin will have on the people who
eat the flesh of livestock that are fed it.

The bottom line is that we can't be sure what the physiological effects of
consuming GM foods are until rigorous human trials are conducted - which is not
likely to happen anytime soon.

Californians aren't waiting until all of the scientific results are in. And what
they decide at the polling station in November may change what the rest of us
eat.
The Genetic Engineering News is produced by Thomas Wittman and EcoFarm, and supported by a generous donation from the Newman's Own Foundation.  Please pass this vital information on.  If you would like to get on this list go to www.eco-farm.org and select Newsletters.

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