Vilsack Calls For GMO Labeling Discussion

by | Dec 22, 2015 | HAT News Feed

Hoosier Ag Today by: Cayla McLeland

Secretary Vilsack Calls for GMO Labeling Meeting

The U.S. Agriculture Secretary plans to bring stakeholders in the genetically engineered food labeling debate to the table to reach common labeling-gmo-productsground on the issue. That comes as a handful of states are pushing for their own labeling laws that some farm groups call a “patchwork” of mismatched regulations.  Those regulations include a Vermont law starting in July which will cost hundreds of millions of dollars for the food industry to comply with, according to the Grocery Manufacturers Association.

On the federal level, a group of lawmakers is calling for a uniform GMO labeling system across all 50 states that would set a national standard. The Safe and Accurate Food Labeling Act of 2015, a federal voluntary labeling initiative, failed to get through Congress this year.  The opposition had coined the phrase ‘DARK Act’ as an alternate name for the bill, calling it the “Denying Consumers the Right to Know Act.”

Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack recently announced he will hold a stakeholder meeting on GMO labeling in 2016.

“I intend to, after the first of the year, convene a meeting of folks who have been reaching out to me. These are not necessarily senators of members of congress, but they are folks who are interested in the labeling issue.”

Vilsack said he is concerned about “chaos in the market” if more states implement labeling laws with differing provisions.

Many stakeholders from farm and food groups to consumer organizations are behind GMO labeling, but are unsure on the best path forward, according to USDA.

Vilsack says his meeting would be an effort to find balance in a labeling measure.

“In a way that doesn’t create significant market disruption while at the same time recognizing consumers’ need to know and right to know the basic information.”

Meanwhile, a handful of House and Senate Republicans have pledged to focus on legislation again in 2016 that would prevent states from enacting labeling laws, but some warn there is still not enough support in the Senate.Secretary Vilsack Calls for GMO Labeling Meeting

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