This has been a long time coming since thousands of people allergic to GMOS have already died, especially in North, South and Central America. Most still don't know what killed their relatives and friends. With labeling they will be more able in the future to know for sure what caused their friends and relatives deaths. 70% of processed food in Grocery stores in U.S. has GMO food grains like wheat, soy or rice in it or GMO Meat or fish in it. However, if you can't even know for sure what you are eating how can you stop all the deaths?
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Senate backs bill to label genetically modified food
Omaha World-Herald3 days agoThe vote was 63-30 for the bipartisan measure, which would compel foods that include genetically modified organisms, or GMOs, to carry a text label, a symbol or an electronic code readable by...Senate backs bill to label genetically modified food :: WRAL.com
WRAL.com Raleigh4 days agoSenate backs bill to label GMO food
Senate backs bill to label genetically modified food
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Posted: Friday, July 8, 2016 3:58 am
WASHINGTON (AP) —
Food packages nationwide would for the first time be required to carry
labels listing genetically modified ingredients under legislation the
Senate backed Thursday.
The vote was 63-30
for the bipartisan measure, which would compel foods that include
genetically modified organisms, or GMOs, to carry a text label, a symbol
or an electronic code readable by smartphone. Advocates for labeling
and the food industry, which has fought mandatory labeling, have wanted
to find a national solution to avoid a state-by-state patchwork of laws.
The food industry supports the
Senate bill, but many labeling proponents do not. Critics say the labels
should be easily readable by consumers without smartphones, and have
complained that the measure lacks penalties for companies that don’t
comply.
“It is time for us to provide
certainty in the marketplace,” said Sen. Pat Roberts, R-Kan., chairman
of the Agriculture Committee, who brokered the compromise bill with the
panel’s top Democrat, Michigan Sen. Debbie Stabenow.
The measure now heads to the House, where its fate is less certain. That chamber has voted to make labeling voluntary.
Senate approval came over the
strong objections of Vermont’s senators — presidential contender Bernie
Sanders, an independent, and Democrat Patrick Leahy. They argued that
the measure falls short, especially compared to tougher labeling
requirements in their state that kicked in last Friday.
They said the federal government
shouldn’t run roughshod over a state’s rules, pre-empting Vermont’s law,
and the federal requirements would not be consumer-friendly. Sanders
called Vermont’s law “a triumph for consumers” that was shaping up as a
hollow victory, with the Senate bill trumping his state’s law.
Sen. Thom Tillis, R-N.C., said a
federal statute would save consumers money and avoid imposing Vermont’s
law on other states, or a grab bag of state laws.
“What about California? What about my state of North Carolina, all the other ones?” Tillis asked.
Genetically modified foods are
plants or animals that have had genes copied from other plants or
animals inserted into their DNA. While farmers have been selectively
breeding plants for centuries, this manipulation is done in a lab,
speeding up the process by transferring a gene from one plant or animal
to another. The engineering is done to create certain traits, like
resistance to herbicides.
The bulk of the nation’s
genetically engineered crops are corn and soybeans that are eaten by
livestock or made into popular processed food ingredients like
cornstarch, soybean oil or high-fructose corn syrup. Only a handful of
genetically engineered fruits and vegetables are available in the
produce aisle, including Hawaiian papaya, some zucchini and squash and
some sweet corn.
The food industry says 75 percent
to 80 percent of foods contain genetically modified ingredients — most
of those corn and soy-based. The Food and Drug Administration says they
are safe to eat.
The Agriculture Department would have two years to write the rules.
The legislation encompasses some
foods that were exempted from the Vermont law, but it also allows the
Agriculture Department to determine how much of a “bioengineered
substance” must be present to require a GMO label. Labeling advocates
say many foods wouldn’t be labeled if the department sets a high
threshold.
“The idea that people would need
to walk around the grocery store scanning product codes just to find out
what’s in the food they’re buying is ridiculous and unfair,” said Sen.
Dick Durbin of Illinois, the No. 2 Democrat in the Senate, a foe of the
measure.
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