State labeling initiatives

This article was originally published in August 2014

Two more GMO labeling initiatives appear headed for the ballot this November.

Supporters in Oregon turned in more signatures than the number needed to qualify. Signature-gathering also is underway in Colorado, where the campaign is on target, at press time, to submit the necessary number of signatures.

Legislatures in three East Coast states — Vermont, Connecticut and Maine — already have passed GE labeling bills in the past year.

Meanwhile, the Grocery Manufacturers Association (GMA) has lost a bid to toss out Washington state’s money-laundering lawsuit.

Washington’s attorney general, Bob Ferguson, charged the Washington, D.C. lobbying firm with laundering millions of dollars in last fall’s campaign to label genetically engineered (GE) foods, saying it’s the largest amount of money ever concealed in a state election.

Also in this issue

Letters to the editor, August 2014

Global warming and agriculture, Healthy sunscreen, Sugar in recipes, and more

Organic food superior

A major study published in the prestigious British Journal of Nutrition claims conclusive evidence that organic crops — and foods — are nutritionally superior to conventional crops and foods.

EPA whistleblower: Agency faked data on safety of "biosolids"

The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) used faked data in order to win approval of biosolids as a safe form of compost. An EPA whistleblower reveals in his new book, "Science for Sale," that he was forced out of EPA after publicly condemning biosolids.