Jul 02, 2014
Voters in Oregon want to know what's in their food and in November they will be given the chance to have their voices heard.
Food safety advocates on Wednesday submitted over 150,000 signatures, nearly twice the amount required, in support of Ballot Initiative #44, which would require food manufacturers to label foods sold in Oregon that are produced with genetic modified organisms, or GMOs.
Earlier this year, voters in two Oregon counties approved ballot measures to prohibit the cultivation of GMO crops within county borders. In addition, Oregon governor John Kitzhaber signed a bill last year banning GMO canola in the Willamette Valley until 2019.
Should Ballot Initiative #44 pass, Oregon would join three other states (Connecticut, Maine, and Vermont) that have passed GMO labeling measures. As of June 10, 2014, there were 30 pieces of GMO food labeling legislation on the table in 16 states.
The campaign is expected to be a costly one. Last year, food labeling opponents contributed $22 million to help defeat a similar ballot initiative in Washington.
"We don't have any illusions that we're not going to be vastly outspent. We will be," Oregon GMO Right to Know campaign spokesman Sandeep Kaushik told The Oregonian. "We're confident given the strong positive reaction we've had during our signature gathering phase that we can be successful."
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Deirdre Fulton
Deirdre Fulton is a former Common Dreams senior editor and staff writer. Previously she worked as an editor and writer for the Portland Phoenix and the Boston Phoenix, where she was honored by the New England Press Association and the Association of Alternative Newsweeklies. A Boston University graduate, Deirdre is a co-founder of the Maine-based Lorem Ipsum Theater Collective and the PortFringe theater festival. She writes young adult fiction in her spare time.
Voters in Oregon want to know what's in their food and in November they will be given the chance to have their voices heard.
Food safety advocates on Wednesday submitted over 150,000 signatures, nearly twice the amount required, in support of Ballot Initiative #44, which would require food manufacturers to label foods sold in Oregon that are produced with genetic modified organisms, or GMOs.
Earlier this year, voters in two Oregon counties approved ballot measures to prohibit the cultivation of GMO crops within county borders. In addition, Oregon governor John Kitzhaber signed a bill last year banning GMO canola in the Willamette Valley until 2019.
Should Ballot Initiative #44 pass, Oregon would join three other states (Connecticut, Maine, and Vermont) that have passed GMO labeling measures. As of June 10, 2014, there were 30 pieces of GMO food labeling legislation on the table in 16 states.
The campaign is expected to be a costly one. Last year, food labeling opponents contributed $22 million to help defeat a similar ballot initiative in Washington.
"We don't have any illusions that we're not going to be vastly outspent. We will be," Oregon GMO Right to Know campaign spokesman Sandeep Kaushik told The Oregonian. "We're confident given the strong positive reaction we've had during our signature gathering phase that we can be successful."
_____________________
Deirdre Fulton
Deirdre Fulton is a former Common Dreams senior editor and staff writer. Previously she worked as an editor and writer for the Portland Phoenix and the Boston Phoenix, where she was honored by the New England Press Association and the Association of Alternative Newsweeklies. A Boston University graduate, Deirdre is a co-founder of the Maine-based Lorem Ipsum Theater Collective and the PortFringe theater festival. She writes young adult fiction in her spare time.
Voters in Oregon want to know what's in their food and in November they will be given the chance to have their voices heard.
Food safety advocates on Wednesday submitted over 150,000 signatures, nearly twice the amount required, in support of Ballot Initiative #44, which would require food manufacturers to label foods sold in Oregon that are produced with genetic modified organisms, or GMOs.
Earlier this year, voters in two Oregon counties approved ballot measures to prohibit the cultivation of GMO crops within county borders. In addition, Oregon governor John Kitzhaber signed a bill last year banning GMO canola in the Willamette Valley until 2019.
Should Ballot Initiative #44 pass, Oregon would join three other states (Connecticut, Maine, and Vermont) that have passed GMO labeling measures. As of June 10, 2014, there were 30 pieces of GMO food labeling legislation on the table in 16 states.
The campaign is expected to be a costly one. Last year, food labeling opponents contributed $22 million to help defeat a similar ballot initiative in Washington.
"We don't have any illusions that we're not going to be vastly outspent. We will be," Oregon GMO Right to Know campaign spokesman Sandeep Kaushik told The Oregonian. "We're confident given the strong positive reaction we've had during our signature gathering phase that we can be successful."
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