Industry Lobbyists Want to Topple California’s Prop. 65, but State Officials Fear Bioterror Implications
Congressional Republicans are mounting an assault on state
food-safety and labeling laws, according to the Center for Science in
the Public Interest. The House Energy and Commerce Committee is poised
to take up legislation that would summarily pre-empt almost 100 state
laws having to do with carcinogen labeling, seafood safety, and food
allergens and additives. The measure is opposed by many in the
California delegation since it would interfere with that state’s
Proposition 65, which requires warning notices on products that contain
ingredients known to cause cancer or birth defects. And state
officials, led by the Association of Food and Drug Officials (AFDO),
fear that the measure would hamper their abilities to respond to a
bioterror attack via the food supply.
“The food industry may find various state laws and
regulations inconvenient, but that’s not a good reason to torch these
laws in one fell swoop,” said Benjamin Cohen, CSPI senior staff
attorney. “Front-line public health officials should be getting more
cooperation and encouragement from Congress to protect public health,
not less. This bill is just payback to a politically powerful and
financially generous industry.”
According to the Congressional Budget Office, the bill would
adversely affect food safety and labeling requirements in almost 30
states and cost the FDA more than $100 million over five years to
implement a system of waivers called for in the legislation. A
Mississippi state law that requires catfish products be labeled as
farm-raised or wild would go by the wayside. Laws governing smoked fish
products would be scrapped in New York, Michigan, and Wisconsin. And
California’s program to place in-store notices about mercury in certain
fish would similarly be nullified if the National Uniformity for Food
Act becomes law, according to CSPI.
“Local and state regulatory agencies perform approximately 80
percent of the food safety work currently done in the United States,”
wrote Marion Aller, president of the Association of Food and Drug
Officials AFDO, in a December 5, 2005 letter to the committee. “When
you consider that local and state food safety programs are our first
line of defense against acts of terrorism involving the food supply,
AFDO respectfully suggests that now is not the time to dismantle our
national food protection program that maintains one of the safest food
supplies in the world.”
California Attorney General Bill Lockyer opposes the measure
because of its impact on Proposition 65 also. “Proposition 65 has an
excellent record of providing additional protection of public health
within California directly and by spurring greater action by FDA,”
Lockyer wrote in 2003. “Federal preemption of this law and similar
state requirements is bad federalism, bad science, and bad public
policy.”