Well the biggest job we had was to get an environmental friendly senator
to replace Sen. Harkin.  If we lose we can expect worse than just an anti
environmental House.  It matters who we ask to support our issues.  I did
what I could.  Phyllis

On Sun, 2 Nov 2014 08:36:25 -0500 Wallace Taylor
<[log in to unmask]> writes:
No Congressman from Iowa signed on, naturally.

Wally Taylor







-----Original Message-----
From: l <[log in to unmask]>
To: IOWA-TOPICS <[log in to unmask]>
Sent: Sat, Nov 1, 2014 8:20 pm
Subject: Fwd: GMW: 49 Members of US Congress protested against 2,4-D
crops approval


Crops resistant to 2,4-D would add a new dark chapter to the
chemical-drenched history of US agriculture.

Tom Mathews






From: GMWatch <[log in to unmask]>
To: Thomas <[log in to unmask]>
Sent: Sat, Nov 1, 2014 2:16 pm
Subject: GMW: 49 Members of US Congress protested against 2,4-D crops
approval


 Forward to a friend View it in your browser

49 Members of US Congress protested against 2,4-D crops
approvalDeregulating 2,4-D crops will "spur the evolution of 2,4-D
resistant weeds and cause a three- to seven-fold increase in 2,4-D use"

Earlier this year, 49 Members of the US Congress wrote a strongly-worded
letter to the US Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack asking him not to
allow the approval of Enlist Duo 2,4-D/glyphosate mix herbicide and the
approval of GM crops engineered to withstand the herbicides.

The US agencies ignored these concerns and allowed commercialisation of
all these products.

You can read an article about this letter and the 2,4-D related issues it
raises here:
http://www.foodconsumer.org/newsite/Safety/chemical/highly_toxic_compound
_superweed-killers_1031140950.html

The letter can be read below.
---
Letter from 49 Members of Congress to US Agriculture Secretary Tom
Vilsack
July 31, 2014
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B8gyxHH4EWoBZ2ItOWtQOXRyMjQ/view?pli=1

[To:] The Honorable Thomas J. Vilsack
Secretary, Department of Agriculture
1400 Independence Avenue, SW
Washington, DC 20250

[To:] The Honorable Gina McCarthy
Administrator, Environmental Protection Agency
1200 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW
Washington, DC 20460

Dear Secretary Vilsack and Administrator McCarthy,

We write to you to express our grave concerns regarding your agencies’
proposed decisions to register the Enlist Duo herbicide as well as
deregulate new varieties of genetically engineered (GE) crops engineered
to withstand exposure to the active ingredients glyphosate and 2,4-D. We
believe that the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and U.S.
Department of Agriculture (USDA) have failed to thoroughly analyze and
address the risks of Enlist Duo and the multiple adverse human health,
environmental, agronomic, and socioeconomic harms that approval of 2,4-D
crops will likely cause.

We currently stand at an agricultural crossroads. The first generation of
“Roundup Ready” GE crops increased herbicide use by 527 million pounds
between 1996 and 2011, triggering an epidemic of glyphosate-resistant
“superweeds” which now infest over 61 million acres across 36 states.
2,4-D crops are among the “next-generation” of GE crops engineered to
withstand applications of older, more toxic herbicides. While they are
often touted as a solution to herbicide-resistant weeds, even the USDA’s
Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) recognizes in its
draft Environmental Impact Statement (DEIS) that deregulating 2,4-D crops
will spur the further evolution of 2,4-D resistant weeds and cause a
three to seven fold increase in 2,4-D use.

The scientific community has sounded alarms about exposure to 2,4-D for
decades. 2,4-D has been linked to multiple adverse health effects
including cancer (especially non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma), decreased sperm
count, liver disease and Parkinson’s disease. Further, exposure has also
been shown to negatively impact the hormonal, reproductive, neurological
and immune systems. In addition, EPA has reported that 2,4-D is the
seventh largest source of dioxins in the United States. Dioxins are
extremely toxic chemicals, and their bioaccumulation in the food chain
may potentially lead to dangerous levels of exposure.

We are also concerned that EPA failed to thoroughly examine all of the
significant health and environmental risks of 2,4-D including that of
inhalation and aggregate exposure; the risks of 2,4-D exposure to
threatened and endangered species; and the risks posed by shifts in use
patterns of 2,4-D as a result of the GE cropping systems. Most alarming
is EPA’s failure to apply the additional safety factor of 10x, as
mandated under the Food Quality Protection Act, to protect children, who
are especially susceptible to harm from pesticide exposure. The 10-fold
safety factor is required by law to safeguard against the potential
health risks for young children and infants that would result from the
widespread use of 2,4-D on GE crops.

In deciding to prepare a DEIS before proceeding, USDA APHIS recognized
that its proposed approval of Dow’s 2,4-D crops will likely cause
significant environmental, agronomic and socioeconomic harms.

Despite acknowledging these significant harms, in the DEIS, APHIS alleges
it “must” approve the proposed crops pursuant to the Plant Protection Act
(PPA), because they do not create “plant pest” harms.

However in so doing APHIS has narrowly constrained its interpretation of
its regulation. This overly narrow and arbitrary interpretation of
APHIS’s authority is contrary to common sense and good governance
principles, as well as contradicts prior acknowledgments by APHIS that
its GE crop review is “considerably broader” than its review of
“traditional” plant pests. Rather, APHIS has authority over broadly
defined harms to agriculture and the environment that it must apply to
Dow’s crops and their acknowledged adverse impacts.

Surveys of state pesticide regulators establish that 2,4-D drift is
already responsible for more episodes of crop damage than any other
pesticide. Vastly increased use with approval of 2,4-D crops would
correspondingly increase crop damage, putting farmers of sensitive crops
at grave risk. Wild plants, waterways and wildlife – including pollinator
– habitat would also be threatened. 2,4-D is a quite potent plant-killer,
even at levels typical of drift. EPA tests show that 2,4-D is over 400
times more toxic to emerging seedlings and 12 times more toxic to growing
plants than glyphosate.

While APHIS admits that transgenic contamination because of its proposed
action is possible, even likely, it refuses to analyze it. We believe
that contamination will occur and it will result in significant economic
harm to conventional, organic and even some growers of the first
generation of glyphosate-resistant GE crops. Yet, the agency wrongly puts
the entire burden on non-2,4-D crop farmers to attempt to avoid
contamination.

We request that USDA and EPA fully review the facts, law, and science in
this case. As the over 400,000 public comments indicate, the risks of
approving 2,4-D crops are simply too great and benefits too few to
jeopardize public health, the environment and the long-term
sustainability of our food supply. We therefore request EPA not register
Enlist Duo for use on 2,4-D crops and USDA maintain the regulated status
for 2,4-D resistant crops.

Sincerely…
__________________________________________________________
Website: http://www.gmwatch.org
Profiles: http://www.powerbase.info/index.php/GM_Watch:_Portal
Twitter: http://twitter.com/GMWatch
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/pages/GMWatch/276951472985?ref=nf


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