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Genetically Modified Food: Deal or No Deal?

Genetically Modified Food: Deal or No Deal?
Monday, February 1, 2016
Related Practices & Jurisdictions
Vermont | The Daily Intake

USDA reportedly unable to broker GM labeling compromise.

  • The food industry faces the impending July 1 effective date for Vermont’s labeling requirement for genetically modified (GM) foods with no imminent reprieve in sight.  Hopes of a 2015 federal legislative solution did not materialize.  The food industry’s legal challenge to Vermont’s law is still pending.  And recently, a major food company broke with many of its peers to announce its support for federally mandated GM labeling requirements.

  • It has now been reported that consumer activists and food industry representatives have been meeting with the Secretary of Agriculture, Tom Vilsack, to try to negotiate a GM labeling compromise.  Unfortunately, after two meetings, discussions appear to have led nowhere.  Although Secretary Vilsack has not openly acknowledged his involvement in this process, a consumer activist blog reported that there was not enough common ground between the different groups to facilitate a resolution.

  • The reported breakdown of informal discussions regarding GM labeling may not come as a surprise to either side in the debate.  As food companies continue their preparations to comply with Vermont’s labeling requirements later this year, many wonder what — if anything — will emerge as a workable solution for both sides.

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