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Monday, May 28, 2012

COUNTY WANTS TO BAN GMO'S


Ok, I HAD to comment on this one:


This is an article about a county... yes a COUNTY, that wants to ban GMO's in their county. Here is the article below if the link does not work:

County could ban modified crops

By Ryan Pfeil
Mail Tribune
May 25, 2012 - 2:00 AM
A few months after the discovery that genetically modified crops were being grown in the Rogue Valley, Jackson County officials have confirmed they have the authority to ban them.
Joel Benton, senior assistant county counsel for Jackson County, said counties that have banned the crops — also called GMO (genetically modified organisms) — across the U.S. often do so by defining them as noxious weeds. That makes their ordinance a county code enforcement issue.
Benton said the county also can criminalize growth of the plants, meaning police would handle the violations.
"It looks like 17 or 18 states have actually passed laws at the state level to say local governments don't have the authority to regulate GMOs," Benton said. "Oregon hasn't done that."
Benton, along with County Administrator Danny Jordan and the Board of Commissioners, discussed banning GMOs at a Thursday work session. Currently, the county's Natural Resource Advisory Committee is taking comments from GMO opponents and proponents.
"Then they'll formulate some sort of recommendation," said board Chairman Don Skundrick, adding the board will then take additional public comment on the issue before deciding whether to consider the ordinance.
The discussion follows a recent outcry from a local group of farmers — many of them organic farmers — and activists who say they have identified several fields of genetically modified plants within the area, including sugar beets and corn. The group, called GMO-Free Jackson County, requested earlier this month that the commissioners pass an ordinance banning the genetically altered crops.
Multinational corporation Syngenta AG confirmed it has been growing the crops in Ashland, Medford and Grants Pass.
The crops are close to John Muir Middle School's Organic Garden and the Organic Village Farm in Ashland. Organic Village Farm owners have said the cross pollination means they have to stop production on chard and beets, as both can be corrupted by the GMO sugar beets.
Opponents say the GMO crops can cross pollinate with organic crops, corrupting the yield and possibly mutating them. Opponents also say there are potential GMO health hazards for those eating the crops, but the World Health Organization says GMO foods "currently available on the international market have passed risk assessments and are not likely to present risks for human health."
Proponents say the genetically engineered plants are easier to grow and can produce greater quantities because of their resistance to pests and weeds.
Reach reporter Ryan Pfeil at: 541-776-4468 or by email at: rpfeil@mailtribune.com.


I personally think this is a wonderful idea and that more counties across the US need to do this. This might be the way to show the “Big M” and the other companies that we don't want these “things” near our food crops... or in them for that matter.

I have heard whisperings of a wheat GMO on the horizon... I hope that maybe the US can get it's collective head together and do something about it before we have that coming at us.

2 comments:

  1. Although I'm thrilled to hear about this, one thing does concern me; the fact that they have the authority to act upon it just because it's considered a "noxious weed". That's leaving a HUGE area open for other plants to be outlawed. Kind of like the "feral" pigs up in Michigan.

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  2. you have a point there on it making it way to open. However tech they already have the statement "noxious weed" as an meaning just about anything they want it to be.

    So I guess we'll have to watch it... BUT, it thrills me to see a community trying to stop the spread of GMO's

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