Tech | November 14, 2011 | 21 comments

Maine Farmer Heads Group Challenging Genetics Giant Monsanto

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JanforGore
A fight to maintain consumer choice and farm independence has landed Maine farmer Jim Gerritsen on Utne Reader's list of "25 Visionaries Who Are Changing Your World," published in the November/December edition of the magazine on newsstands now.

Organic seed potato farmer Jim Gerritsen heads a trade association that is suing chemical giant Monsanto. (photo: Charlotte Hedley ) Gerritsen, wife Megan, and their four children run the Wood Prairie Farm in Bridgewater, which produces and sells organic seed potatoes to kitchen gardeners and market farmers in all 50 states. Gerritsen is also president of the Organic Seed Growers and Trade Association, and it was that role that led to the Utne recognition.

The nonprofit organization created a stir in food and farming communities when, with legal backing from the Public Patent Foundation, it filed a lawsuit in March against the chemical and biotechnology giant Monsanto. OSGATA has since been joined in the lawsuit by 82 other seed businesses, trade organizations and family farmers, which together represent more than 270,000 people.

The lawsuit questions the validity of Monsanto's patents on genetically modified seeds, and seeks protection from patent-infringement lawsuits for the plaintiffs should their crops become contaminated with Monsanto's transgenic crops.

"The viewpoint of Monsanto is that (in such a situation) we have their technology, even though we don't want it and it has zero value in the organic market," Gerritsen said. "We think they should keep their pollution on their side of the fence."

Laws prohibit certified organic crops from containing genetically modified ingredients, and Monsanto's patents prohibit farmers from growing its seeds unless purchased from the company. Yet pollen doesn't heed certification or patent laws, and regularly drifts from transgenic crops to contaminate nearby non-genetically altered ones.

To add insult to injury, Monsanto has a reputation for suing or threatening to sue farmers for patent infringement in cases involving its genetically altered seeds, action reported in numerous media outlets as wide ranging as the Columbia Daily Tribune, CBS News and the New York Times.

Despite this well documented legal tactic, Monsanto spokesperson Thomas Helscher stated in an email: "Monsanto has never sued and has publicly committed to not sue farmers over the inadvertent presence of biotechnology traits in their fields. The company does not and will not pursue legal action against a farmer where patented seed or traits are found in that farmer's field as a result of unintentional means."

"Inadvertent" and "unintentional" are the key words here, but for farmers to prove that Monsanto's transgenic seeds are unwanted invaders in a court of law is an expensive and time-consuming endeavor. A 2005 report from the Center for Food Safety, an organic-food and sustainable agriculture advocacy group, contends that Monsanto had at that time filed 90 lawsuits against American farmers. The report also contends that the corporation employed 75 people armed with a budget of $10 million devoted "solely to investigating and prosecuting farmers."

Pre-trial motions are still being filed in the lawsuit brought by OSGATA, with the most recent from Monsanto asking that the lawsuit be dismissed.

Helscher said the motion to dismiss results from the corporation's pledge to not sue farmers "where patented seed or traits are found in that farmer's field as a result of inadvertent means. Accordingly, there is no real controversy between parties and the OSGATA case should be dismissed."

Gerritsen views Monsanto's statements as part of a disinformation campaign designed to prolong the lawsuit.

"What they typically try to do is drag out lawsuits as long as they can, hoping the plaintiffs will run out of funding," Gerritsen said. He is confident OSGATA has the resources necessary to pursue this lawsuit for years, if necessary.

Unlike open pollinated crops such as corn and canola, which have suffered from widespread contamination by genetically modified seeds, potatoes remain relatively safe, Gerritsen said.

Monsanto developed multiple strains of transgenic potatoes in the 1990s under the name New Leaf. However, when major food companies such as McCain, which operates a french fry processing plant in Easton, and McDonald's rejected genetically-modified potatoes, Monsanto was forced to pull its transgenic strains off the market.

Gerritsen said the lawsuit will also seek to clarify what he sees as Monsanto's contradictory stance on its genetically modified seeds.

When arguing against labeling of transgenic food, Monsanto and other biotech companies claim that genetically modified seeds are substantially equivalent to traditional seeds. However, when seeking patents, the same companies claim the insertion of foreign genes creates unique seeds deserving of patent protection.

"Which is it?" Gerritsen asked. "It's one or other, but it can't be both. Is it the same? Or is it different?"

All genetically modified seeds are designed to do something different from the original seed. This can mean the modified seed will produce increased quantities of a particular substance inherent to the plant, manufacture chemicals foreign to the original plant, or withstand heavy applications of herbicides and pesticides manufactured by the same corporation seeking the seed patent.
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Citing the revolving door between corporations (including Monsanto) and the government agencies which purport to regulate them, Gerritsen said, "we basically have a dysfunctional government. The Occupy Wall Street concept is to try to give power back to the people."

In the same vein, the lawsuit against Monsanto seeks to restore the power of citizens and farmers to choose food free from genetically modified organisms.
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21 comments // Maine Farmer Heads Group Challenging Genetics Giant Monsanto

  • ecoalex
    • +2
      ecoalex  
    • Despite this well documented legal tactic, Monsanto spokesperson Thomas Helscher stated in an email: "Monsanto has never sued and has publicly committed to not sue farmers over the inadvertent presence of biotechnology traits in their fields. The company does not and will not pursue legal action against a farmer where patented seed or traits are found in that farmer's field as a result of unintentional means."

      Really?

      So the suits against Percy Schmeiser in Canada ,which went to the Canadian supreme court and Schmeiser lost,didn't happen? How about the over 100 suits that Monsanto has won using trespassing to get samples of farmers crops didn't happen?

      Monsanto lies fron it's toxicological studies it submitted to the FDA ,to it's claims of benefits to farmers,to it's legal actions against farmers.

      Monsanto is evil,and ignorant.

      Greed blinds.

      It's psychopathic.

    • 7 months ago
  • coolplanet
    • 0
      coolplanet  
    • "The lawsuit questions the validity of Monsanto's patents on genetically modified seeds, and seeks protection from patent-infringement lawsuits for the plaintiffs should their crops become contaminated with Monsanto's transgenic crops."

      Jim Gerritsen (and organic farmers) will certainly win this case.
      This will help elliminate transgenic crops all together.

    • 7 months ago
  • JanforGore
  • bailey78
    • +2
      bailey78  
    • I so hope that these guys win the lawsuit and put monsonto out of busisness or at least cripple them so they have to put labels on food that have GMO's in them.

    • 7 months ago
  • JanforGore
  • bailey78
  • NeverTheSameColor
    • +2
      NeverTheSameColor  
    • If anyone personally knows this brave gentleman, I'd say tell him to guard himself pretty seriously, I wouldn't be surprised as with BP if there is a 'mysterious or suspicious death' ... corporate scum play that way.

    • 7 months ago
  • Gravity_Man
    • -3
      Gravity_Man  
    • Causing widespread genetic damage to White Caucasians rather evens the playing field for Blacks WHO WERE GENETICALLY DAMAGED BY SLAVERY eh? Obama!

      Obama! Obama! Obama! Obama! Obama! Obama! Obama! Obama! Now NOW => TOSS THE BALL TO HERMAN HE'S OPEN.

    • 7 months ago
  • JanforGore
    • +2
      JanforGore  
    • Dr. Vandana Shiva recently spoke in Washington Dc (Oct.16) at the end of the Right 2 Know March for GMO labelling. She is the heart and soul of this movement.

    • 7 months ago
  • coolplanet
  • Gravity_Man
    • 0
      Gravity_Man  
    • coolplanet:

      The Devil opposes peace, as in people agreeing to do smart things, like build free fuel engine systems. If we really wanted to PROVE the Devil doesn't exist all we'd have to do is field a few home runs he couldn't stop from going sailing over the center field wall.

      It would be just that easy. One Solar Cooker system would be much easier to make. It would work. One home running on a solar-generated steam-driven generator.

      The day they go on sale you can be right certain the Devil doesn't exist. I'm rather occupied at the moment with a cancer keeps hitting me in the left leg, then it goes away, then it comes back, plus no money. Plus I don't need to since I know he is real anyway.

      But if the non-believers really desired to be free they would go PAY-ENERGY-FREE and prove he no longer stands in the way.

      HAHAHA It's just that simple. It's a'Juicy Meatball.

    • 7 months ago
  • JanforGore
  • JanforGore
  • JanforGore
    • +3
      JanforGore  
    • "To add insult to injury, Monsanto has a reputation for suing or threatening to sue farmers for patent infringement in cases involving its genetically altered seeds, action reported in numerous media outlets as wide ranging as the Columbia Daily Tribune, CBS News and the New York Times.

      Despite this well documented legal tactic, Monsanto spokesperson Thomas Helscher stated in an email: "Monsanto has never sued and has publicly committed to not sue farmers over the inadvertent presence of biotechnology traits in their fields. The company does not and will not pursue legal action against a farmer where patented seed or traits are found in that farmer's field as a result of unintentional means."
      ~~~~~~
      Wow and baldfaced lies about not suing farmers when traces of their traits are found in organic crops... Percy Schmeiser actually went all the way to the Supreme Court in Canada because they sued him for their traits blowing on his organic canola.

    • 7 months ago
  • nikonwilly
  • JanforGore
    • +2
      JanforGore  
    • Image
    • nikonwilly:

      http://current.com/technology/89105677_saskatchewan-farmer-tells-of-the-dangers-...

      Percy Schmeiser has been travelling the world to tell people of Monsanto's manipulations, crimes and the dangers of these seeds to health and environment. I posted this three years ago here, and even though we know more about this and it has reached much of the world with a good response (and seeing a better response by people here because of spreading this news and information mainly through social media and websites) here we still sit in the U.S. looking at a government continuing to bow down to them as they continue to toxify our planet while our media totally blacks it out. The world is fighting this serious assault on our seeds and life itself while people in this media talk about ice cream flavors and pizza toppings. No wonder our political system is broken and that is dangerous to our future.

    • 7 months ago
  • JanforGore
  • JanforGore
  • nikonwilly
    • +3
      nikonwilly  
    • Whatever it takes to beat this sleazy corporation is worth it. We need to fight for labeling GMO's then boycott every product that uses them.

    • 7 months ago
  • JanforGore
    • +2
      JanforGore  
    • nikonwilly:

      http://labelgmos.org/

      The initiative to have GMOS labelled in California was sent to the Attorney General to be placed on the 2012 ballot. Other states are working on initiatives as well. I hope this is the start of it since the federal government isn't doing a damn thing about it. This is also why the OWS movement is so important.

    • 7 months ago
  • nikonwilly
    • +3
      nikonwilly  
    • JanforGore:

      There are so many truths coming out due to the availability of honest information over the internet....Our only power is in numbers...they also understand this..get ready for a onslaught of our source of this truthful information. I think this fight is going to be much harder than anyone can anticipate.

    • 7 months ago
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