Is your organic food really organic?
- added August 7, 2008
- 41 responses
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- goldenways
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Half of federally accredited organic certifiers recently audited were put on probation after foods were found with unacceptable pesticide levels.
When you buy food with a "USDA organic" label, do you know what you're getting? Now is a good time to ask such a question, as the USDA just announced Monday it was putting 15 out of 30 federally accredited organic certifiers they audited on probation, allowing them 12 months to make corrections or lose their accreditation. At the heart of the audit for several certifiers were imported foods and ingredients from other countries, including China.
Chinese imports have had a bad year in the news, making headlines for contaminated pet food, toxic toys, and recently, certified organic ginger contaminated with levels of a pesticide called aldicarb that can cause nausea, headaches and blurred vision even at low levels. The ginger, sold under the 365 label at Whole Foods Market, contained a level of aldicarb not even permissible for conventional ginger, let alone organics. Whole Foods immediately pulled the product from its shelves.
Ronnie Cummins, the national director of the Organic Consumers Association, emphasizes that most organic farmers "play by the rules." They believe in organic principles and thereby comply with organic standards. Unfortunately, Congress' pitifully inadequate funding for enforcement, including for organic imports from countries like China, "guarantees it'll be easy for unscrupulous players to cheat, and that's obviously what's going on here."
Farms that produce USDA-certified organic food are not personally inspected by anyone from the USDA National Organic Program (NOP). As a small and underfunded agency within the USDA (it has fewer than a dozen employees), NOP relies on what it calls Accredited Certifying Agencies -- ACAs -- to do the legwork. The ACAs take responsibility for ensuring that any farm or processor bearing the organic label meets the strict requirements for certification.
Since the Chinese government does not allow foreigners to inspect Chinese farms, an extra step is involved for oversight of organics from China: Chinese companies, which are allowed to inspect Chinese farms, subcontract with foreign ACAs. Cummins believes "the safest course of action is ... to say we won't certify imports from China because their law won't allow inspections."
For Americans who shop at the growing number of farmers markets springing up around the country, the status of organics from China -- or even organics from faraway U.S. states -- may be irrelevant. Just as the hippies who founded the movement intended, ethical eating extends beyond pesticide-free food for these shoppers, some of whom call themselves locavores, meaning "one who eats food produced locally." They wish to support small farmers and to ensure their food was produced in an environmentally friendly manner by workers who were treated well and paid fairly.
And not matter how strict a law may be, there will always be those who game the system. Even if a Chinese inspector notices illegal pesticide use, he or she might feel pressured to stay silent, says Dr. Robert E. Hegel, professor of Chinese and Comparative Literature at Washington University in St. Louis. "Everybody there is so proud of increased production that few people ask much about the farmer's production methods," says Hegel. "And there's no 'organic' food tradition in China." According to Hegel, in China "everything was just 'food' and it was, until the 1950s, mostly 'organic' by our contemporary definitions -- fertilized with human and animal waste, compost ... and ashes."**continues, click link to read the rest**
When you buy food with a "USDA organic" label, do you know what you're getting? Now is a good time to ask such a question, as the USDA just announced Monday it was putting 15 out of 30 federally accredited organic certifiers they audited on probation, allowing them 12 months to make corrections or lose their accreditation. At the heart of the audit for several certifiers were imported foods and ingredients from other countries, including China.
Chinese imports have had a bad year in the news, making headlines for contaminated pet food, toxic toys, and recently, certified organic ginger contaminated with levels of a pesticide called aldicarb that can cause nausea, headaches and blurred vision even at low levels. The ginger, sold under the 365 label at Whole Foods Market, contained a level of aldicarb not even permissible for conventional ginger, let alone organics. Whole Foods immediately pulled the product from its shelves.
Ronnie Cummins, the national director of the Organic Consumers Association, emphasizes that most organic farmers "play by the rules." They believe in organic principles and thereby comply with organic standards. Unfortunately, Congress' pitifully inadequate funding for enforcement, including for organic imports from countries like China, "guarantees it'll be easy for unscrupulous players to cheat, and that's obviously what's going on here."
Farms that produce USDA-certified organic food are not personally inspected by anyone from the USDA National Organic Program (NOP). As a small and underfunded agency within the USDA (it has fewer than a dozen employees), NOP relies on what it calls Accredited Certifying Agencies -- ACAs -- to do the legwork. The ACAs take responsibility for ensuring that any farm or processor bearing the organic label meets the strict requirements for certification.
Since the Chinese government does not allow foreigners to inspect Chinese farms, an extra step is involved for oversight of organics from China: Chinese companies, which are allowed to inspect Chinese farms, subcontract with foreign ACAs. Cummins believes "the safest course of action is ... to say we won't certify imports from China because their law won't allow inspections."
For Americans who shop at the growing number of farmers markets springing up around the country, the status of organics from China -- or even organics from faraway U.S. states -- may be irrelevant. Just as the hippies who founded the movement intended, ethical eating extends beyond pesticide-free food for these shoppers, some of whom call themselves locavores, meaning "one who eats food produced locally." They wish to support small farmers and to ensure their food was produced in an environmentally friendly manner by workers who were treated well and paid fairly.
And not matter how strict a law may be, there will always be those who game the system. Even if a Chinese inspector notices illegal pesticide use, he or she might feel pressured to stay silent, says Dr. Robert E. Hegel, professor of Chinese and Comparative Literature at Washington University in St. Louis. "Everybody there is so proud of increased production that few people ask much about the farmer's production methods," says Hegel. "And there's no 'organic' food tradition in China." According to Hegel, in China "everything was just 'food' and it was, until the 1950s, mostly 'organic' by our contemporary definitions -- fertilized with human and animal waste, compost ... and ashes."**continues, click link to read the rest**
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- goldenways
- 14 days ago
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This information is critical and thank you for posting it here. I buy only organic and try to have it be local yet I had no idea that it was so loosely inspected. Farmer's market works during spring/summer and then what?
Hopefully with a new administration more funding will be available to protect our national food source.-
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- MeganMcKenzie
- 14 days ago
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Tell Monsanto to stop their RoundUp poisons from blowing on everyone's crops. Now watch this make TV while anything even remotely related to Monsanto is hushed. I personally wish we had guidelines in place for all food that were enforced, even down to the FDA approving genetically modified foods knowing they cause allergies and cancer.
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- JanforGore
- 14 days ago
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Despite trying to buy organic as much as possible, I've always been suspicious of just how closely the certification process was monitored... this is a disconcerting development for Whole Foods shoppers everywhere...
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- Bookshepherd
- 14 days ago
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The lesson of the day is: buy local!
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- PersonaNonGrata
- 14 days ago
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The NOP apparently needs more funding to be a legitimate arm of the USDA.
And who were the naive bureaucrats who thought China's product certifications could be trusted?-
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- rightbrain
- 14 days ago
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I think that unless China allows inspections by our own inspectors they don't deserve organic accreditation. Same goes for any other country, who won't allow our ACA's in. Of course there's going to be corruption if government friendly non-independent inspectors are in charge.
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- AndreaKnoll
- 14 days ago
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It upsets me that the USDA is so underfunded by Congress. I regard the USDA far more important than National Security. And the fact that National Organic Program has less than 12 individuals trying to uphold laws and regulations put on imports...that's just sad.
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- MyDigitalSin
- 14 days ago
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GROW YOUR OWN! Then you know what's in it. Tastes better too!
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- joshua2310
- 14 days ago
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- HolyCity2012
- 14 days ago
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There should be no legal loophole about what is organic or not. This ruins the credability of a health concious movement. Gotta love capitolism.
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- regjoeschmo
- 14 days ago
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as i drink my free trade organic coffee right now. maybe thats why this coffee was cheaper at the store. I knew something didn't quite make sense.
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- thewarnerla
- 14 days ago
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Once upon a time in this country we had laws. The government and most of the people tried to follow them. Now that other countries can import any kind of poison they choose to, it seems the laws that were meant to protect our citizens no longer apply. Focus and vote.
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- bluestranger
- 14 days ago
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It all comes down to deregulation courtesy of Ronald Regan era politics.
Demand re-regulation of
corporations,
media
& foreign trade.-
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- HolyCity2012
- 14 days ago
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have to agree with joshua2310, if you grow your own , then you know what your getting. I love working in my garden and enjoying the fruits of my labor
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I read a book about a year ago called, "My Year of Meats" (by Ruth L. Ozeki) and, while it's a fictional book, it tells the true story of the meat/food industry and how hormones and GMOs are destroying our environment, the food chain and our bodies. On the whocontrolstheworld.com website, there's also a great introduction to how governing bodies like the WTO continuously overrule health and safety standards countries put on their food to keep increasing trade. It has led to increased outbreaks of breast cancer and infertility, among other things.
I tried to start eating completely organically after reading and learning about how dangerous our food is, without us even knowing it, and it's so hard. Even, like the article says, the things we buy that say "organic" are often produced using feed and seeds that contain even traces of pesticides, hormones, antibiotics and GMOs.
I think Bren589 and joshua2310 are right - maybe it does come down to needing to grow stuff on our own.-
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- whocontrolstheworld
- 14 days ago
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Thanks for sharing. This is worrying. The Goal of my Diet is Detox and stay Toxin free and fuel my body. So I need organic food to be just that. I should look into to local produce rather than using supermarkets.
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Not everyone is capable of living "off the grid" and growing their own food.
It's a feel-good, fruit cake response coming from a bunch of people who are detached from the rest of the people that they share the world with...
Re-regulation was and always will be the blanket solution to issues such as this...
Inner city people eat the food that they do because it is their only option.-
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- HolyCity2012
- 14 days ago
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Yes interesting. When I was working for Gordon Food Service I remember when we were discussing hamburgers. And how "natural" burgers aren't really natural. The cows still get hormones--but they stop giving it to them so many months before slaughter. Dont you just love it when lables aren't what they seem to be?
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i was going to say that everyone should try growing their own food if they can, that way they need not worry about what crap they are paying for, and fresh food is so much better, but i guess this is just "a feel-good, fruitcake response," coming from me, "who is detached from the rest of the people that i share the world with" so never mind, clearly i don't deserve an opinion.
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I try not to buy food from China.
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i never fully trusted the label of "organic". this makes me even more skeptical
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- diabolical44
- 14 days ago
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Organic Trade Association Public Statement
Pesticide Residues and Organic Products
August 5, 2008
On July 24, WJLA News in Washington, D.C., reported low levels of pesticide detected in organic ginger, and followed with a subsequent story airing Aug 5. Like shoppers, the organic community is very concerned about reports of such pesticide contamination in the food supply. Consumers choose organic products because they trust organic farmers to not use toxic and persistent pesticides that can end up in the food chain.
The Organic Trade Association (OTA) supports the steps taken by the companies involved to move quickly and remove products from the shelf and provide rapid trace back to the source in China. OTA also urges the National Organic Program (NOP) to quickly determine specifically how the contamination occurred. OTA would urge the organic community to use the findings to take steps to improve the system to help prevent such incidents in the future.
The way organic foods are grown and processed is more closely monitored than other types of food production, and organic foods must meet or exceed all federal organic regulations as well as all applicable food safety regulations. For over 12 years, OTA has been advocating for proper funding for NOP, so that it has the resources it needs to create and enforce the organic regulations that cover all organic food and beverage products sold in the U.S. OTA continues to support the work of the National Organic Program.
Organic crops, like any crops, may be inadvertently exposed to agricultural chemicals that are now pervasive in rain and ground water due to their overuse during the past fifty years, and due to drift via wind and rain. In the United States alone, more than one billion pounds of pesticides are released into the environment each year. As a result, consumers are exposed to them daily in the food they eat, the water they drink, the air and dust they breathe, as well as on surfaces inside their homes and at work, and in public places. Aldicarb, like many toxic and persistent pesticides, remains in the environment long after application.
Organic agriculture is about the process of production, and cannot guarantee that all farm products are free of pesticide contamination that already pervades the planet. And yet, organic farming is part of the solution to reduce reliance on potentially dangerous pesticides and fertilizers highly dependent on oil and natural gas for their production. Supporting organic farmers, no matter where they are on the planet, helps to take care of the water and soil resources.
It is really important that such incidents as the one reported come to light and that a determination is made on went wrong so the findings can be used to improve the system. Strict enforcement of organic standards can bolster consumer confidence in the integrity of organic products they buy. -
This is very disdurbing however I talked to a freins how works foe the USDA and he says that the funding is just to low to really wacth e erything that is put on the shelfs, also buying local isn't always a better idea, really the only way under that current stTe of the USDA and their level of funding to make sure that you have true organic is to grow it yourself .
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cant wait till i'm dead. then i wont have to worry about this shit anymore.
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- stephenthomson
- 14 days ago
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I was already suspicious of buying any organic food from outside my community. There really is no oversight of how growers in other countries use pesticides and other farming methods.
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- panamacanalzone
- 14 days ago
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The whole thing is a joke.I bet there's a law by now saying Monsanto is organic, and another law which says they don't have to tell us when they change the laws.
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- Egnatius212
- 14 days ago
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I quit a job a couple of years ago because I was bullied into creating fake documents in photoshop for non-organically grown produce to submit for approval of organic status. I was extremely disturbed at how easy it was.
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- crazykatlady
- 14 days ago
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Do not be deceived either regarding farmer's markets and locally grown foods... They are certainly not all from organic methods... One should enquire before purchasing... Well then, I certainly hope we get some legitimate organic representatives and not just new thugs from places like Monsanto who are hell bent on selling us poison...people in the USDA need to be more carefully appointed! This article gives me some hope... Thanks for posting it!
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For now, try to buy as much as you can locally where you can actually visit the farm & see the farming techniques used in their operations, especially if they claim to be growing organic. It’s no guarantee, but at least you’re supporting the local farming community & giving them the opportunity to start or continue their organic farming efforts. The closer to the source of production that consumers can purchase food means using less energy overall getting food to your table in the growing & distribution process.
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- darkhorsejim
- 14 days ago
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I am amazed at the level of incompetence, still. Thanks for the article.
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Ugh, it's so hard to be healthy in a supermarket world. I'm with the grow-it-yourself people.
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I am amazed at the level of incompetence, still. Thanks for the article.
You know its funny this came out; I grew up on a farm In South America. My father owned and worked the whole plantation, he was in charge of it all. Most of what I remember at such a young age was no chemicals what so ever. We exported bananas, plantains, passion fruit, yucca (Spanish potatoes) and cattle. Cattle were grass fed in fields with no pesticide chemicals of any kind, rotated every other day from field to field. You have to understand my family has a long tree going back as far as I have been able to track "1702". This farm has been in my family all this time, this is a lot of “history, pride” and my father was the old school gentle man (very rare) and a very accomplished architect. And yes he was a true believer in making it work with Mother Nature. I remember the bad seasons, but that's the way it is you deal with it.
I remember when I came to the United States and my father said something funny "The meat here tastes like cardboard" this is in 1978 so you can only imagine how bad it was. And probably still is!!!
