U.S. senators have reached a deal that would require food companies to disclose which products contain genetically modified ingredients, although not necessarily directly. The plan would allow a variety of different ways to make the disclosure, including a text statement, QR code, phone number, or URL:
Just a week before a Vermont law kicks in requiring labels on food containing genetically modified ingredients, U.S. Senate agriculture leaders announced a deal Thursday that takes the power out of states' hands — and sets a mandatory national system for GM disclosures on food products.
Sen. Pat Roberts, R-Kansas, the chairman of the U.S. Senate Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry, unveiled the plan that had been negotiated for weeks with U.S. Sen. Debbie Stabenow, D-Michigan. Senate Democrats from farm country called it a win for consumers and families, while Roberts said it would end "denigrating biotechnology and causing confusion in the marketplace" brought on by Vermont's state law.
But it was clearly an uneasy compromise, with critics of the plan making for strange bedfellows on opposite ends of the political spectrum. Both Sen. Bernie Sanders, the Vermont Democrat who supports his state's mandatory law, and the American Farm Bureau Federation, which wants a voluntary GMO labeling standard, announced their opposition to the Roberts-Stabenow deal.
For those who may not already be aware, a GMO is a Genetically Modified Organism.
(Score: 1, Interesting) by Anonymous Coward on Friday June 24 2016, @06:41PM
Sounds like a useless plan. A QR code that no human can ready and could take you to who knows where. A phone number that can make you sit through an hour of phone menus and holds until the operator pretends to not know what you're talking about. A URL which will likely just be the company's main site and they you'll have to shift through their horrible UIs to find the data completely buried, likely behind a bunch of "join our newsletters" pop-ups with no noticeable way to close them except subscribing. They'll probably try to get you to make an account too so you (they) can track what you're buying and give you the nutrition info for only the items you've added.
Labels are supposed to help you identify things while you're looking at them. The proposed plan is near completely useless.