| As of February 1, 2008, it will
not be legal to sell dairy products in Pennsylvania if the label
states—even truthfully—that the product comes from cattle
not treated with rBGH. Recombinant bovine growth hormone, marketed
by Monsanto under the brand name Posilac©, is a synthetic replicate
of a natural hormone. It is injected into lactating cows to increase
production and extend their days in lactation.
The labeling change came suddenly this month from the state’s
department of agriculture, allegedly to clear up “consumer
confusion” caused by so-called “absence claims”
of what’s not in dairy products. The secretary says shoppers
could unjustly think that milk not labeled rBGH-free would be somehow
less safe to drink.
The new wording from the department is comprehensive, however,
in disallowing all claims relative to rBGH. This includes untrue
claims (“No hormones,” when all milk contains natural
BGH), claims without substance (“No antibiotics,” when
no milk is legally allowed to be marketed with detectable antibiotic
residue) and also true claims (“This product comes from cows
that were not treated with synthetic bovine growth hormone.”)
More and more conventional milk processors in the past year have
asked their producers to stop using the production-enhancing synthetic
hormone, and consumers have responded well. Monsanto and its supporters
have made repeated attempts across the United States to prevent
consumers from knowing whether rBGH was used to treat cattle producing
labeled dairy products. This Pennsylvania initiative falls in line
with corporately determined food messaging control, usually to deprive
consumers of knowing precisely what is done to produce crops or
livestock for the mass market.
There are many reasons farmers don’t want to use rBGH, especially
if they respect the natural production cycles of their cattle, or
even if they just want their cattle to last a long time in their
herds.
There are many reasons why consumers want to know if the herds
producing their milk receive rBGH. For all of us, the “precautionary
principle” would have us avoid a non-natural addition to our
food production system. The EU, Japan and Canada all do not allow
rBGH to be used, testifying to the level of scientific uncertainty
of its health impact on humans and cattle.
Below, you can read more… and if you want to stand with the
citizens of Pennsylvania who want to be able to know when their
milk comes from rBGH-treated cows, take action in the national or
state campaigns below.
Whether or not you even drink milk, this stealth attempt to distort
food labeling rules in favor of undetectable technological intervention
must not stand.
| News
stories |
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STLtoday.com: Monsanto
scores win in Pennsylvania
Wire story with quotes from Pennsylvania Secretary of Agriculture
Dennis Wolff, Rick North of the Oregon Physicians for Social Responsibility,
and Todd Rutter, president of Rutter’s Dairy Inc., which sells
milk labeled as being free of artificial hormones – a label
that would be banned by the new order.
New York Times story: Consumers
Won’t Know What They’re Missing
Op-ed with quotes from Dennis Wolff, Todd Rutter and Leslie
Zuck, Executive Director of Pennsylvania Certified Organic.
| Action
Alerts |
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Pennsylvania Association for Sustainable Agriculture (PASA)
Take
action on the milk labeling debacle in Pennsylvania
Focal points: animal welfare, human health risk potential, farmer
freedom of speech, consumer information, ethical consistency on
performance-enhancing drugs
Rutter’s Dairy
Your right to
know about the milk you are drinking
Company statement focusing on consumers’ right to know, verified
non-use claims.
The Center for Food Safety’s The True Food Network
Pennsylvania
Restricts rBGH-Free Dairy Labels
Focal points: Consumers’ right to know, farmers’ right
to label, rbGH health impact on cattle

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