TAKE  BACK YOUR FOOD!

This section of the newsletter gets you in touch with the current issues related to the food we eat--the politics of how it's grown and gets to our tables. Be sure to check the Take Back Your Food section in our bi-monthly newsletter The Co-op Commons and the Take Back Your Food section of the kiosk next to Member Services in the store for the most current updates.


"This could be something quite big. We might be setting up a huge problem."

-Robert Kremer, USDA Soil Scientist, on the damage caused by Monsanto's genetically engineered RoundUp Ready technology

READ ABOUT THE SALE OF AMERICA'S LONGEST-RUNNING FARM
After you read about the Tuttle Farm, sign the petition to protect America's farmland by clicking on the ACT NOW button at the food.change.org website where this article lives.

READ REPORTS ABOUT THE SUPREME COURT RULING ON GMO ALFALFA (6/21/10): 
"Monsanto Wins Supreme Court Case" (Associated Press), "Supreme Court Case a Defeat for Monsanto's Ambitions" (Center for Food Safety), "Supreme Court's ruling on Monsanto's GE alfalfa: Who Won?" grist

READ SPECIAL REPORT "Are Regulators Dropping the Ball on Biocrops?"
Washington Post, April 13, 2010


take-back-your-food-web.jpg
VICTORY!
FEDERAL COURT RESCINDS USDA APPROVAL OF GE SUGAR BEETS


Order bans planting or sale of controversial crop. Court denies Monsanto request to allow continued planting.

Today Judge Jeffrey White, federal district judge for the Northern District of California, issued a ruling granting the request of plaintiffs Center for Food Safety, Organic Seed Alliance, High Mowing Organic Seeds, and the Sierra Club to rescind the United States Department of Agriculture’s (USDA’s) approval of genetically engineered “Roundup Ready” sugar beets (Center for Food Safety v. Vilsack, No. C08-00484 JSW [N.D. Cal. 2010]). In September 2009, the Court had found that the USDA had violated the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) by approving the Monsanto-engineered biotech crop without first preparing an Environmental Impact Statement. The crop was engineered to resist the effects of Monsanto’s Roundup herbicide, which it sells to farmers together with the patented seed.  Similar Roundup Ready crops have led to increased use of herbicides, proliferation of herbicide resistant weeds, and contamination of conventional and organic crops.

In today’s ruling the Court officially “vacated” the USDA “deregulation” of Monsanto’s biotech sugar beets and prohibited any future planting and sale pending the agency’s compliance with NEPA and all other relevant laws.  USDA has estimated that an EIS may be ready by 2012.

Andrew Kimbrell, Executive Director of plaintiff and co-counsel the Center for Food Safety, stated, “This is a major victory for farmers, consumers and the rule of law.  USDA has once again acted illegally and had its approval of a biotech crop rescinded.  Hopefully the agency will learn that their mandate is to protect farmers, consumers and the environment and not the bottom line of corporations such as Monsanto.”

Paul Achitoff of Earthjustice, lead counsel for the plaintiffs, commented: “Time and again, USDA has ignored the law and abdicated its duty to protect the environment and American agriculture from genetically engineered crops designed to sell toxic chemicals.  Time and again, citizens speaking truth to power have taken USDA to court and won.”

In his order, Judge White noted that USDA’s “errors are not minor or insignificant, and his “concern that Defendants are not taking this process seriously.”  He also pointed out that “despite the fact that the statutes at issue are designed to protect the environment,” USDA and the sugar beet industry focused on the economic consequences to themselves, yet “failed to demonstrate that serious economic harm would be incurred pending a full economic review....”

The Court held in part: …the Court GRANTS Plaintiffs’ request to vacate APHIS’s decision to deregulate genetically engineered sugar beets and remands this matter to APHIS.  Based on this vacatur, genetically engineered sugar beets are once again regulated articles pursuant to the Plant Protection Act.  This vacatur applies to all future plantings…

This is the second time a Court has rescinded USDA’s approval of a biotech crop.  The first such crop, Roundup Ready alfalfa, is also illegal to plant, based on the vacating of its deregulation in 2007 pending preparation of an EIS.  Although Monsanto took that case all the way to the Supreme Court and the High Court set aside part of the relief granted, the full prohibition on its planting – based on the same remedy granted here, the vacatur – remains in place.  In the past several years federal courts have also held illegal USDA's approval of biotech crop field trials, including the testing of biotech grasses in Oregon and the testing of engineered, pharmaceutical-producing crops in Hawai’i.

Source: Center for Food Safety & True Food Network (August 2010)



WASHINGTON AGRICULTURE

Strategic Plan 2020 & Beyond

Future of Farming.jpg At the request of the 2007 Legislature, WSDA developed a statewide strategic plan for Washington agriculture. Carried out during 2008, the project sought input on the present conditions and future challenges of agriculture from as many industry segments as possible. Readers are invited to consider the Strategic Plan for Washington Agriculture as a tool for education, a launching point for discussions, and a seed for future actions benefiting the social, environmental, and economic future of Washington. Looking forward to 2020 and beyond, the Future of Farming horizon will help Washington prepare to take opportunities and mitigate challenges starting now. Click on image to read the Strategic Plan.




Take Back Your Food!
SB 6343 WA Food Policy Forum
Healthy Food Declaration
The Food Co-op, 414 Kearney St., Port Townsend, WA, 98368
Open Mon - Sat 8 am - 9 pm, Sun 9 am - 8 pm
(360) 385-2883

 
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