Why Labeling GMOs is Important
What is Proposition
37? Proposition
37 is a common-sense November ballot measure that will help consumers make
informed choices about the food they eat. Written with broad input from food
groups, industry, science, legal and health experts Prop. 37 (The California
Right to Know Genetically Engineered Food Act) requires clear labels letting
consumers know if foods are genetically modified.
What Are Genetically
Engineered Foods (GMOs)? A genetically engineered food is a plant or meat product
that has had its DNA artificially altered in a laboratory by genes from other
plants, animals, viruses, or bacteria in order to produce
foreign compounds in that food. This type of genetic alteration is not found in
nature and is experimental. Many of the foods we currently eat and
feed our families (including certain baby formulas and a high percentage
of corn, soy, cotton and sugar beets commonly used in processed foods sold in
the U.S.), but we don’t know which ones without labeling.
Yes Prop 37-Truck Painted by Griffin One & Ernest Doty |
Example: Genetically Modified corn has
been engineered in a laboratory to produce pesticides in its own tissue. GMO
corn is regulated by the Environmental Protection Agency as an Insecticide, but
is sold unlabeled. [EPA Pesticides]. Walmart is now sellingMonsanto's sweet corn that has been
genetically engineered to contain an insecticide, but consumers don't know
because it's not labeled.
Are Genetically
Engineered Foods Safe? GMOs have not been proven safe, and long-term health studies
have not been conducted. A growing body of peer-reviewed studies has
linked these foods to allergies, organ
toxicity, and other health problems. These studies must be followed
up. However, unlike the strict safety evaluations required for the approval of
new drugs, the US Food and Drug Administration does not require safety studies
for genetically engineered foods. The United Nations/World Health Organization food
standards group and the American Medical Association have
called for mandatory safety testing of genetically engineered foods -- a
standard the U.S. fails to meet.
GMOs Linked to
Environmental Problems: Various environmental problems associated with genetic
engineering have been well documented, including biodiversity loss, an overall increase in pesticide use, the emergence of super weeds that are threatening
millions of acres of farmland, and the unintentional contamination of non-GMO
and organic crops.
We Have a Right to
Know What's in Our Food: Fifty countries around the world—representing more than 40% of
the world’s population---already require GMO labeling, including all of Europe,
Japan, India and China. Polls show that more than 90% of Americans want to
know if their food is genetically engineered. We are free to choose what we
want to eat and feed our children. The free market is supposed to provide
consumers with accurate information about products so we can make informed
choices.
Who is in Favor of
Proposition 37? Prop
37 was initiated by a grassroots organizing effort with the help of thousands
of volunteers across the state, the Right to Know campaign gathered nearly one
million signatures from California voters within a 10 week period. More than
2,000 organizations – including media outlets, food manufacturers and
retailers, leading consumer, environmental, farming, health, faith-based,
political and labor groups – have since endorsed Yes on 37: www.carighttoknow.org/endorsements.
Who is Opposed to
Proposition 37? Not
one human being has made a contribution to the campaign against Prop. 37. Instead,
the campaign is funded entirely by giant pesticide and junk food companies with
a track record of making false claims about the safety of their products. The
“No” campaign’s two largest donors-- Monsanto and DuPont—are the same companies that told us Agent Orange and DDT
were safe. Further undermining the No campaign’s credibility
is the fact that its biggest funder—Monsanto—produced a series of ads supporting
labeling of GMOs in Europe in the 1990s.
A Simple Proposition
for California in 2012:
The California Right to Know Genetically Engineered Food Act is simple: The
initiative would simply require food sold in retail outlets to be labeled if it
is produced through genetic engineering, and would not allow these products to
be labeled as “natural.” Prop 37 gives companies 18 months to change
their labels, and allows for the GMO disclosure to appear wherever they choose
on packaging.
No Cost to Consumers
or Food Producers: Companies change their labeling all the time, and research
shows that Prop. 37 will have no cost impact on consumers or food producers. In a recent study on the economic impact of
Proposition 37, Joanna Shepherd Bailey, Ph.D., Professor at Emory University
School of Law, concluded that there would be “no increases in prices as a
result of the relabeling required.” In Europe, introduction of GMO
labeling produced no increase in food costs. David Byrne, former European Commissioner
for Health and Consumer Protection of the European Parliament, stated that when
Europe introduced GMO labeling in 1997, "it did not result in
increased costs, despite the horrifying (double-digit) prediction of
some interests.”
Prop. 37 Doesn’t Ban
the Sale of Any Foods:
Despite opposition claims that Prop 37 would "ban the sale of thousands of
groceries," it would not ban any foods at all. It merely requires that
GMO-containing foods be labeled with the phrase “partially produced with
genetic engineering” anywhere on the front or back of packages.
Greater Legal
Certainty For Businesses:
According to an independent legal analysis by James
Cooper, JD, PhD, of George Mason University School of Law, Proposition 37 has
been narrowly crafted in a way that provides “greater legal certainty” for
businesses than other California consumer disclosure laws. It won’t
invite frivolous lawsuits. What it will do is help California consumers
make more informed choices about the food they eat.
If Proposition 37
passes, it will be a huge step toward the transparency we deserve.
This is about our right to know what's in our food and the right to choose for
ourselves what we eat and feed our families. These are fundamental American
values. Join us in helping us win back our right to know about the genetic
engineering of our food system. Vote Yes on 37 in November, join
our campaign, share
our ad, donate if you can (every little bit
helps!).
Together, we can make
history this November
No comments:
Post a Comment