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Pams Commentary
February 17th,
2006
www.pamkilleen.com
RE: Food
Warning Labels (see story below my commentary)
You
only have to read a few of my commentaries to understand
where Im coming from. The very health conscious state
of California wants to see food companies put warning
labels on foods containing certain toxins.
The
article below mentions that this type of bill would help
food companies clean up their products. Does this mean
that we will see labels and the eventual removal of
ingredients such as MSG, aspartame, splenda, acrylamide,
furan, trans fats, artificial dyes etc
.? If customers
are properly educated about the problems associated with
artificial foods, will they stop buying them? Many
commercial foods contain ingredients that cause them to
be addictive and it can be very difficult for people to
stop eating them.
So far,
the masses have been turning a blind eye to the problems
associated with our food supply. They wont hear the
truth in mainstream media, so they have to look to for
more information in underground sources on the
Internet. Realistically, who has time to do this? If
someone is sick enough, they may then decide to search
for answers.
Even if
food companies indicate that many processed foods
contain acrylamide, what other chemicals might they
ignore? What about warning us that grains shouldnt be
subjected to high heat and pressure? What about warning
us that in order to better digest grains, they should be
first soaked and fermented?
Remember when you read stories like this (see below)
that inevitably the truth will be covered up. Even if
the bill is passed, which I doubt, it will still not be
able to address all of the problems associated with our
food supply.
As part
of the solution, stop buying processed foods (such as
crackers, cereals, breads) and start buying things like
real sourdough bread and make your own cereal by soaking
oatmeal first (overnight), then cooking it. See Sally
Fallons cookbook, Nourishing Traditions
to find real recipes.
February 9, 2006
Limits on the Table for Food Warning Signs
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With California trying to give consumers more
information on hazards, industry is lobbying Congress to
give federal officials veto power.
By Richard Simon, Times Staff Writer
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-food9feb09,0,3831305.story
WASHINGTON A bill is gaining momentum in Congress that
would give federal regulators the last word on when to
require public warnings about food ingredients an
industry-driven move aimed at reining in California's
Proposition 65.
The 20-year-old law requires businesses of all types to
alert the public to substances "known to the state to
cause cancer, birth defects or other reproductive harm."
California officials say the law has been effective in
pressuring the makers of products ranging from
California wines to Kaopectate to reduce the use of
substances identified as possible health risks.
Now, as California attempts to require warnings for
canned tuna, French fries and potato chips, the food
industry is lobbying Congress and its often
business-friendly Republican majority to give federal
regulators final say on when warnings would be required
on packaging, store shelves and in advertising.
Under the federal legislation, states would need
approval from the Food and Drug Administration to enact
rules that differed from federal standards, something
critics say would be hard to obtain.
"I guarantee you FDA will deny every petition that is
ever submitted to them," said Ed Weil, a top-level
lawyer in the California attorney general's office.
"Their philosophy is if it was a good and necessary
thing, they would have already done it."
Although the bill has been debated for several years, it
is now supported by more than half of the members of the
House, including a dozen California representatives.
Although the legislation's fate remains uncertain in the
Senate, it is emerging as one of the most hotly debated
measures that Congress will face this year.
Calvin M. Dooley, an ex-congressman from Visalia who
heads the Food Products Assn. and is among those
lobbying for the measure, calls its prospects for
passage "better than they've ever been." The measure
cleared a key House committee late last year on a
bipartisan vote of 30-18.
The bill's proponents say they are attempting to ensure
that the food industry does not have to contend with a
patchwork of state laws that could drive up food costs.
"Different labels in different states confuse consumers,
who will wonder whether the same product sold in one
state is somehow less safe than the same product sold in
another," said Susan Stout, vice president of federal
affairs for the Grocery Manufacturers Assn.
Added Dooley: "If you have a proliferation of different
standards in all 50 states, it certainly adds to costs."
But the bill's backers also acknowledge that their main
target is Proposition 65. And that, the bill's opponents
say, should make lawmakers more suspicious in
considering the legislation.
David Roe, a Proposition 65 coauthor who practices law
in San Francisco, said, "The superficial argument sounds
great: 'We wouldn't want to have 50 different labels.' I
doubt very much that when [bill supporters] were
collecting sponsors, they said, 'We want to wipe out a
California law that's turned up nasty things in food
that we don't want to talk about.' "
Benjamin Cohen, senior staff attorney for the Center for
Science in the Public Interest, a consumer advocacy
group, said that "there's no question that the food
industry is trying to get rid of Prop. 65."
The bill is part of a larger effort by congressional
Republicans to rein in state actions some lawmakers say
unfairly hamper business.
The sweeping energy bill approved by Congress last year
gave federal regulators final say over the location of
liquefied natural gas terminals a provision that grew
out of a dispute between California officials and
federal regulators over how much authority the state
should have in approving a proposed terminal in Long
Beach. And Congress is considering a measure that would
preempt stronger state laws including one in
California that requires companies to notify customers
of data security breaches.
The food bill's chief sponsor, Rep. Mike Rogers (R-Mich.),
has sought to counter arguments that it would unfairly
infringe on state regulatory powers.
"States rights have nothing to do with food safety and
the free flow of commerce," said Sylvia Warner, a
spokeswoman for Rogers.
Proposition 65, the focus of a bitter campaign between
consumer groups and business interests in California,
passed in 1986 with 63% of the vote.
The initiative led to the posting of warnings signs at a
wide range of businesses throughout California from
gas stations to hardware stores.
In many supermarkets, a sign is posted, usually near the
seafood section, warning consumers especially pregnant
women and children about the dangers of eating fish
that contain mercury.
There aren't more warning signs in food stores,
California officials say, because the idea behind the
initiative was to pressure manufacturers to alter
products to reduce exposure to toxic substances.
"That's part of the beauty" of Proposition 65, Weil
said. "Companies know people don't want to buy [a
product] with that warning, so they reduce chemicals in
their products."
Industry executives and others have complained for years
that the standards used by state officials to determine
whether products expose the public to a significant risk
of cancer or birth defects is often unsupported by
scientific data.
Richard Samp, chief counsel of the conservative
Washington Legal Foundation, said the initiative had
sparked lawsuits over substances in food "for which
there is no scientific evidence to suggest they cause
cancer."
But California Atty. Gen. Bill Lockyer said in a letter
to lawmakers that Proposition 65 led to reductions in
toxic levels of some substances in food before federal
regulators acted and "in some instances may have
spurred FDA to take action that otherwise never would
have been taken."
The bill in Congress picked up support after Lockyer's
office went to court to require warnings on products
such as potato chips and French fries because they
contain higher levels of a suspected carcinogen,
acrylamide, than other foods. Acrylamide, known to cause
cancer in laboratory rats, is formed when starchy foods
are cooked at high temperatures.
Food industry officials accused the attorney general of
unnecessarily alarming the public. Hunt Shipman, a
spokesman for the Food Products Assn., said the case,
which is pending, had posed a "major headache for the
food industry."
The Washington Legal Foundation also questioned the
basis for the state's concerns, saying in a statement: "Acrylamide
is naturally created by high-temperature cooking and has
been a regular part of human diets for thousands of
years."
But Weil, of the state attorney general's office, said
that the scope of the problem of acrylamide in food was
not known until recently. "When I was a child, we didn't
wear seat belts or sunscreen, and pregnant women drank
cocktails," he said. "Does that mean it was a good idea,
based on what we know now?"
Lockyer also has gone to court to require warnings on
labels or in grocery aisles where canned tuna is sold to
alert consumers to mercury in canned albacore and light
tuna. Mercury is a neurotoxin that can interfere with
brain development.
The U.S. Tuna Foundation, an industry trade group, has
contended that Lockyer's efforts are "not grounded in
science and will needlessly scare consumers away from
affordable foods that are good for them."
Food industry officials say the proposed bill would
still allow California and other states to issue public
announcements on radio or television, for example
warning about a substance in a food.
"You can do whatever you want to tell your citizens that
you think there is a danger
but you can't make the
industry put it on its product" without FDA approval,
said Stout of the Grocery Manufacturers Assn.
"Taxpayers shouldn't have to pay the cost of trying to
educate the public about toxic chemicals that companies
know are in their products," Weil said. "And a label or
sign near the product is much more helpful and available
to the consumer than an announcement by the government."
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