"The Organic Consumers Association (OCA) needs your immediate help to stop Congress and the Bush administration from seriously degrading organic standards. After 35 years of hard work, the U.S. organic community has built up a multi-billion dollar alternative to industrial agriculture, based upon strict organic standards and organic community control over modification to these standards.
Now, large corporations such as Kraft & Dean Foods--aided and abetted by the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), are moving to lower organic standards by allowing a Bush appointee to create a list of synthetic ingredients that would be allowed organic production. Even worse these proposed regulatory changes will reduce future public discussion and input and take away the National Organic Standards Board's (NOSB) traditional lead jurisdiction in setting standards. What this means, in blunt terms. is that USDA bureaucrats and industry lobbyists, not consumers, will now have more control over what can go into organic foods and products.
This week, acting in haste and near-total secrecy, the U.S. Senate will vote on a "rider" to the 2006 Agriculture Appropriations Bill that will reduce control over organic standards from the National Standards Board and put this control in the hands of federal bureaucrats in the USDA (remember the USDA proposal in 1997-98 that said that genetic engineering, toxic sludge, and food irradiation would be OK on organic farms, or USDA suggestions in 2004 that heretofore banned pesticides, hormones, tainted feeds, and animal drugs would be OK?).
For the past week in Washington, OCA has been urging members of the Senate not to reopen and subvert the federal statute that governs U.S. Organic standards (the Organic Food Production Act - OFPA), but rather to let the organic community and the National Organic Standards resolve our differences over issues like synthetics and animal feed internally, and then proceed to a open public comment period. Unfortunately most Senators seem to be listening to industry lobbyists more closely than to us. We need to raise our voices.
In the past, grassroots mobilization and mass pressure by organic consumers have been able to stop the USDA and Congress from degrading organic standards. This time Washington insiders tell us that the "fix is is already in." So we must take decisive action now. We need you to call your U.S. Senators today. We need you to sign the following petition and send it to everyone you know. We also desperately need funds to head off this attack in the weeks and months to come. Thank you for your support. Together we will take back citizen control over organic standards and preserve organic integrity.
Take action here:
http://www.demaction.org/dia/organizati
September 24 2005, 04:54:43 UTC 6 years ago
You're complaining that the USDA is loosening regulations and that consumers are losing control? The more control the federal government has, the less control consumers and producers have. Vote to loosen or abolish government regulation if you want to regain control over what you eat and buy.
September 24 2005, 14:43:09 UTC 6 years ago
If the USDA loosens the organic standard (for example, allowing sythetic ingredients) than comsumers will no longer have control over what they are putting into their body. The approved organic products will no longer be held to the standard we appreciate and trust. By buying organic, regulated products, I do have control over what I eat and buy (so I would never want to vote to abolish the regulation).
September 24 2005, 15:38:48 UTC 6 years ago
I advocate not supporting this movement.
September 24 2005, 16:55:38 UTC 6 years ago
I would hazard to guess, however, that you are ideologically a "small government" person. You would probably rather that the government stay out of the business of putting the "USDA Organic" logo on the food in the first place. I respect that point of view. In fact, things worked pretty well when private companies would assure consumers that the food lived up to certain standards. However, I do prefer the USDA oversight of organic standards.
September 24 2005, 20:03:04 UTC 6 years ago
Mary
September 25 2005, 00:34:27 UTC 6 years ago
September 25 2005, 03:14:26 UTC 6 years ago
At any rate, I've stated my opinion and don't want to argue til I'm blue in the face, so I'll shut up.
September 28 2005, 21:46:41 UTC 6 years ago