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Federal Food Policy: Organic Inconsistencies
By Joshua Frank
December 18, 2005
Healthy living has become the national obsession these past few
decades. As the rate of cancer continues to escalate, and with the
obesity epidemic as it is in the United States, people are turning
toward healthier diets and lifestyles in hopes of enhancing their
longevity. Awareness about food’s nutritional content is also on
the rise -- many health conscious Americans are concerned with the
quality and content of the food they are scarfing down every day. As
these interests have grown, so has the organic food movement. Organics,
as the general definition puts it, are products that are not grown
genetically, and are developed without the use of synthetic pesticides,
herbicides or hormones.
In 1973, after the United States banned the perilous DDT, the
underground organics industry grew almost overnight, due in part to the
expanding consumer opposition to chemical pesticides as well as the
desire to eat foods that were produced without negatively impacting the
environment. Many people feared that conventional store bought food was
not as safe to eat as chemical produced goods and with the growing
awareness of what DDT did to human and environmental health, consumers
were growing weary of the corporate agricultural industry. So people
hastily flocked back to the land and planted crops on their own, or
joined food co-ops where they could grow and trade products among a
community of like-minded comrades. The market soon reacted to this
growing demand of organic foods and in the 1990s companies that
produced organics estimated sales of more than $1 billion annually.
Organic food was here to stay.
Congress soon followed and passed the Organic Foods Production Act
(OFPA) in 1990, which was attached to the Farm Bill and established the
initial framework to create National Organic Standards which set the
legal standards for organic foods. OFPA mandated the formation of the
National Organic Standards Board (NOSB), which was organized to advise
the Secretary of Agriculture in setting the standards for the United
States Department of Agriculture’s National Organic Program
(NOP). NOSB based its recommendations on industry consensus an organic
advocates were pleased. The next step, however, was a bit more
cumbersome. Turning USDA’s organic standards into rules and
regulations, took some intense lobbying. Americans didn’t seem
ready to put the food they ate to the test. But in October 2002, USDA
officially began labeling foods that met the agency’s definition
of ‘organic’ – products with 95% organic content or
higher.
Attempting to define what USDA considers “organic” is like
trying to figure out which lie George W. Bush told last -- it is a
difficult, if not impossible task. Since 2002, USDA has changed their
definition almost every year. So today’s products labeled
“organic” by the Agency may not have been labeled the same
in 2003. This sort of wavering has been met with much criticism from
many organic food advocates who believe USDA should stick to the
standards it agreed upon in 1990. Others, mostly industry suit coats,
still believe USDA’s labeling is too stringent. And why
wouldn’t they? The lesser the standards, the fatter their
bottom-lines. And here is where the lobbying efforts on the part of the
agriculture giants come into play.
“Certification is becoming big business,” writes Hilary
Chop for the Alternatives Journal, “Accredited certification
agencies are becoming for-profit enterprises instead of farmer –
and consumer run organizations. This raises the potential for conflict
of interests, particularly since farms pay the certifying agency based
on their acreage. If a mega-farm wants an exception from the rules, it
can be all too tempting for the enforcing officer who receives a
commission, to make allowances.”
Case in point: In 2002, shortly after USDA announced its labeling
policy, a controversy bubbled over when an accredited USDA-certifier
allowed Georgia chicken producer, Fieldale Chickens, to label its
products organic while only having to use ten percent organic feed
instead of 100 percent required by the NOP under USDA’s
guidelines. Fieldale spent tens of thousands of dollars to hire a prime
time Washington lobbyist to help change organic standards at USDA. And
with the help of the Georgia delegation in Congress, they were
successful.
Later in April 2004, after intense lobbying efforts by ag-industry
giants like ConAgra and Monsanto, USDA proposed new rules that would
have allowed USDA-certified organic farms to use fertilizers and
pesticides that contain "unknown" ingredients, or rather, ingredients
that could not be identified by either the grower or the inspector.
Also on the butcher block were USDA-certified organic dairy cows. Up
until 2004, organic certified cows could not be fed any antibiotics or
non-organic feed. That changed fast, as the desire for organic products
grew publicly, so did the awareness among the big-agriculture folks who
lobbied until they succeeded. Luckily, organic activists didn’t
back down from the fight. There was a public outcry, and in May 2004,
USDA retracted the proposed changes they had put forth a month prior.
If they hadn’t reversed their plea, USDA-certified cows could
have been administered antibiotics or fed non-organic fishmeal -- made
with synthetic preservatives and potentially contaminated by mercury
and PCBs, which is a known carcinogen.
Nonetheless, if industry giants are anything, they’re persistent.
And by June 2004, USDA had reinstated one of the directives from April
of that same year. Today all seafood, body care products, and clothing,
fertilizers and pet food can be labeled "organic” regardless of
how they were manufactured. And on December 13, 2005, the U.S. Senate
passed the 2006 Appropriations bill, which included language that
weakened even more USDA organic labeling standards.
Young dairy cows can now be treated with antibiotics and can also be
fed genetically engineered feed. Not only that, numerous synthetic food
additives and processing agents can now be used in USDA approved
organic foods. And in case of “emergency decrees,” or
rather, in case of a shortage of organic goods (shortage is determined
by USDA, not the U.S. public) loopholes now exist in the federal
statutes, which allow for the substitution of non-organic ingredients
without any public notification or oversight. The new changes are a
result of recent fight over USDA standards that began heating up in
2002 when organic blueberry farmer Arthur Harvey of Maine filed a
federal lawsuit against the United States Department of Agriculture for
allowing products containing synthetic ingredients to be sold as
‘organic’. Mr. Harvey contended that USDA’s organic
standards were ambiguous, which undermined consumer organic goods and
confidence in USDA’s labels.
In January of 2005, the First Circuit Court of Appeals ruled in
Harvey's favor. The court mandated that USDA had one year to re-write
their regulations. It looked like a win for the organic community. "The
decision said that synthetic substances were not permitted in any type
of product labeled as 'organic,’” Joe Mendelson, legal
director for the Center for Food Safety told reporters after the
decision. Such products could not be labeled with the official green
USDA 'Organic' stamp of approval.
But when big money is involved, justice won’t often prevail.
Democratic Senator Patrick Leahy of Vermont, who has stood up for
organic standards in the past, inserted the language in the Agriculture
Appropriations Bill of 2006, countered Mendelson, "The Harvey case
could have major impacts on the future of the organic industry, both
for producers and processors. That is why I added language to the
Senate bill instructing USDA to study the implications of the decision
and report back to Congress. I believe a deliberative process to
achieve consensus within the organic community would have been more
appropriate." Leahy received over $32,000 from the agribusiness sector
during the 2004 election cycle.
The Senator’s amendment now forces the U.S. Agriculture Secretary
to analyze, within 90 days of the bill’s passage, whether
reinstating the organic labeling standards set in 2002 “would
adversely affect organic farmers, organic food processors, and
consumers.” The secretary also has to analyze “issues
regarding the use of synthetic ingredients in processing and
handling” certified organic products.
This is where the Organic Trade Association (OTA) comes into the
picture. The OTA represents virtually all the companies hoping to turn
a profit in the organic foods market, regardless of their size. By and
large the OTA was not in the least bit happy with the court’s
ruling in the Harvey case. They want to make money for their clients.
The amendment had been opposed by many organic food growers, as well as
public health officials, environmental organizations, including
National Grocers Association, National Organic Coalition and Rural
Advancement, Beyond Pesticides, National Campaign for Sustainable
Agriculture, Organic Consumers Association among others.
According to the OTA’s number crunching, had rules of the Harvey
case gone into effect, 25 percent of organic manufacturers would have
left the business, which they estimated would account for almost $758
million in lost sales per year. Clearly the OTA was putting potential
profits over consumer and environmental health. The group also argued
that 20 percent of organic farmers would have had to abandon their
farming methods. So in effect, Harvey’s case will have no real
impact on the way USDA manages and labels organic food. Not
surprisingly, it wasn’t small organic farmers who opposed the
Harvey ruling, but rather it was industry Goliaths like General Mills
and Dean Foods, who, along with others, hold considerable sway over the
OTA.
The entrance of such big names into the organic market is a good
indication that organic foods have been corporitized. Of course, the
fear is that such companies are more concerned with fattening their
bottom lines than to adhering to any sort of environmental ethic. They
are in it to make big money and there are billions to be made. An
example of corporate influx: McDonald’s restaurants in the North
East will be carrying organic fair-trade coffee. General Mills owns
Cascadian Farms and the popular organic Muir Glen brand. Kraft, which
is owned by Phillip Morris, owns Boca, a popular soy burger company.
And as mentioned above, Dean Foods, the dairy giant, owns White Wave
and Silk soymilks, as well as Horizon Organic milk. And this is just
the tip of the ever-expanding iceberg.
As the organic food industry has matured, USDA standards have waned.
Consumers can no longer be confidant that their foods meet organic
standards, even if USDA gives it is green mark of approval.
Joshua Frank is the author of 'Left Out!: How Liberals Helped Reelect
George W. Bush', just published by Common Courage Press. Check out
Josh's radical news blog at www.brickburner.org. He can be reached at brickburner@gmail.com. This article published in the Jackson Progressive by the kind permission of the author who retains all rights.