Industry aims to strip local control of food supply
Environmental and healthy-farming advocates are learning what tobacco-free campaigners learned in the 1990s: When local governments step up to protect their community's citizens, industry responds by taking away the authority of local governments.
Industry aims to strip local control of food supply
Britt Bailey, Becky Tarbotton
Wednesday, July 20, 2005
(original article)
Environmental and healthy-farming advocates are learning what tobacco-free campaigners learned in the 1990s: When local governments step up to protect their community's citizens, industry responds by taking away the authority of local governments.
In spring 2004, three California counties and two cities passed
ordinances that restricted growing genetically modified organisms. In
response, state Sen. Dean Florez, D-Shafter (Kern County), earlier this
month gutted and then amended Senate Bill 1056 with some of the
broadest and most sweeping pre-emptive language ever written in the
Legislature. Its purpose? To override existing local restrictions,
prohibit any future initiatives that might restrict genetically
engineered crops and eliminate local control of seeds and plants.
Essentially, to hijack control of our food supply.
Just as the tobacco industry acted to restrict local tobacco controls
in 20 states, agribusiness corporations and their affiliated
associations are behind the moves to thwart local efforts to restrict
the growing of genetically modified foods. In the 2005 session, 16
state legislatures, including California, introduced bills prohibiting
local control of seeds and plants. The nearly identical language used
in each of the bills illustrates a systematic and ordered approach to
stifling community decision-making. Agribusiness councils, whose
leadership includes members such as bioengineering firms Monsanto and
Syngenta, are promoting the legislation while the bills' initial
language has been developed by the American Legislative Exchange
Council, a conservative public-policy organization.
What will such pre-emptive
laws do to local control? According to Tom Campbell, director of the
California Department of Finance, "state pre-emption laws can do two things.
They can overturn the will of the people in the event an initiative has
passed, and they can prevent the introduction of laws on the same subject
from being introduced in the future."
Pre-empting local authority stifles citizen participation in the democratic process and should give pause for any legislator or citizen. What are voters in Mendocino and Marin counties to think when their votes to restrict genetically modified crops and protect local food and farming are worthy of so little respect?
There is no denying that agricultural biotechnology is a complex and
controversial issue. You would think this would be all the more reason
public debate and discussion should be encouraged, not silenced. Yet if
legislators such as Florez have their way, citizens will lose an
opportunity to be part of the discussion to resolve one of the most
challenging issues of our time. Local initiatives and citizen actions
restricting genetically modified crops are a signal to the Legislature
that Californians are concerned about this new technology and, in the
absence of government leadership, are taking matters into their own
hands to protect their environment, economy and health.
Proponents of SB1056 assert that California needs uniformity
and homogeneity with regard to seed laws and that the state could
not possibly handle a patchwork of laws passed by local government. Yet,
if local authority over seeds is taken away by the state, then so is
every farmer's choice not to use genetically engineered seeds and
plants. Once genetically engineered plants are released into the
environment, historically preserved and heirloom seed strains are forever
affected, according to a 2004 report by the Union of Concerned
Scientists.
Diverse agricultural economies may suffer from losses due to this
contamination. For example, if organic crops become contaminated with
genetically engineered pollen, those farmers may lose their organic
certification. In 1787, Thomas Jefferson wrote a letter to James
Madison in which he stated, "I know of no safe repository of the
ultimate power of society but the people, and if we think them not
enlightened enough, the remedy is not to take the power from them."
That critical power is now being challenged, as state Sen. Wes Chesbro,
D-Arcata (Humboldt County), noted: "Regardless of how you feel about
the (genetically modified organism) issue, taking away local voters'
rights is a serious threat to democracy."
Please voice your opposition to SB1056, which
impedes our ability as community members to protect and create a sustainable
food supply. Contact your legislator (to find out who that is, go to
leginfo.ca.gov/yourleg.html), Senate President Pro Tem Don Perata
(senator.perata@sen.ca.gov) and Assembly Speaker Fabian
Núñez (assemblymember.nunez@assembly.ca.gov). This legislation does
not represent the freedoms our country was founded upon.
Britt Bailey
is director of Environmental Commons in Gualala (Mendocino County) and
environmental policy instructor at the College of Marin in Kentfield. For
updated information on the seed and plant pre-emption bills, visit
www.environmentalcommons.org/gmo-tracker.html. Becky Tarbotton is campaign
coordinator for Californians for GE-Free Agriculture (www.calgefree.org), a
statewide coalition promoting ecologically and economically viable
agriculture.
