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View Full Version : GM Crops Go to US High Court, Environmental Laws on the Line



Ponce
27th April 2010, 09:29 AM
First post of the day.................good morning to one and all.
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GM Crops Go to US High Court, Environmental Laws on the Line

Monday 26 April 2010

by: Matthew Berger | Inter Press Service

Washington - The U.S. Supreme Court will hear arguments Tuesday in its first-ever case involving genetically modified crops. The decision in this case may have a significant impact on both the future of genetically modified foods and government oversight of that and other environmental issues.
The case, Monsanto Co. v. Geertson Seed Farms, revolves around an herbicide-resistant alfalfa, the planting of which has been banned in the U.S. since a federal court prohibited the multinational Monsanto from selling the seeds in 2007.
That decision found that the U.S. Department of Agriculture did not do a thorough enough study of the impacts the GM alfalfa would have on human health and the environment and ordered the agency to do another environmental impact statement (EIS) review.
Though a draft was released in December, "there is no anticipated date" for the final EIS, Suzanne Bond, a spokeswoman with the USDA division charged with regulating GM organisms - the Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) - told IPS.
The law under which organic farmers were allowed to challenge USDA's oversight of the GM alfalfa, the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), is what may suffer the most from the court's eventual decision, which is expected in June at the earliest. The law "requires federal agencies to integrate environmental values into their decision-making processes by considering the environmental impacts of their proposed actions and reasonable alternatives to those actions", said Bond.
It is also a key legal tool for environmental groups seeking to challenge those agencies' decisions. The vulnerability of NEPA is a key reason so many such groups have joined the plaintiffs by filing amicus briefs against Monsanto in this case.
The Centre for Biological Diversity, one of those groups, does not normally get involved in GM issues, said the Centre's Noah Greenwald, but this case "has broad implications for how governments do environmental analysis and when they need to prepare impact statements".
"The broader implications are why we got in this," he told IPS.

More.......http://www.truthout.org/genetically-modified-crops-go-us-high-court58876

Awoke
27th April 2010, 09:38 AM
This may be their first time going to Supreme court in the USA, but Percy Schmizer took them to supreme court in Canada, fighting against GMO Canola and extortion.

Monstanto won the right to patent a life-form, in the supreme court. >:(