Washington state launches groundbreaking 'Label It Wa' grassroots GMO labeling campaign
(NaturalNews) The state of Washington appears to be leading the charge
these days in the fight for honest food labeling, as two new pieces of
legislation are now being considered that would require the labeling of
genetically-modified organisms (GMOs) in food. I-522, also known as
The People's Right to Know Genetically Engineered Food Act,
and House Bill 1407 both tackle the GMO labeling issue head on, the
former at the state level and the latter at the local level, and
Washington voters will soon have the opportunity to let their voices be
heard on these two proposed laws.
As we reported just after the
turn of the new year, proponents of GMO labeling in Washington have
already successfully gathered more than 350,000 petition signatures,
exceeding the minimum number required by more than 100,000, to get I-522
on the 2013 ballot. This means Washington voters will have the
opportunity this coming fall to vote in favor of the initiative which,
if passed, will require that all foods produced using GMOs and sold
within the state be properly labeled. (
http://www.naturalnews.com)
And
in the event that this initiative ends up getting railroaded like
Proposition 37 did in California last fall, HB 1407 will allow local
communities to decide for themselves how to handle both the labeling and
cultivation of GMOs in their areas. Introduced by Representative Cary
Condotta, a Republican from Washington's 12th District, HB 1407
specifically provisions that local governments will be free to regulate
GMOs however they see fit, independently from whatever the state decides
to do.
"When we saw San Juan do this, we thought it was great,
so we see this on a different path than I-522 but we made sure to put a
provision in HB 1407 that none of it would override I-522," explained
Rep. Condotta about the proposed legislation, comparing it to the recent
passage of Measure No. 2012-4, which banned the cultivation of GMOs in
Washington's San Juan County. "So if the
labeling bill passes, all food will still be labeled statewide. This just give the local level even more control."
HB 1407 would recognize right of local communities to label, ban GMOsThis
two-pronged approach to GMO labeling is groundbreaking, as it addresses
some of the failures of other GMO labeling proposals in other states.
And particularly with HB 1407, the decentralization of power in matters
relating to GMOs will help prevent corporate interests from hijacking
efforts to increase food labeling transparency at the local level.
"It
is within the jurisdiction of the local legislative authority to
determine the parameters of regulation, which may include the
production, use, advertising, sale, distribution, storage,
transportation, formulation, packaging, labeling, certification,
registration, propagation, cultivation, raising, or growing of
genetically modified organisms," explains HB 1407.
Both bills are
uniquely important because, together, they will procure the legal
framework needed to ensure that the people of Washington, and not the
biotechnology industry, are the ones calling the shots when it comes to
GMO policy.
To learn more about I-522, visit:
http://www.labelitwa.org/To learn more about HB 1407, visit:
http://apps.leg.wa.govSource:-
http://www.naturalnews.com/039078_Washington_state_GMO_labeling_campaign.html