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- AR-News is an international e-mail list covering Animal Rights news. Some
- subscribers have pointed out that some postings may leave them somewhat
- confused as to what the post's country of origin is. Many posts to AR-News
- are direct copies of newspaper articles and, while quite clear within
- context of the newspaper, the country of origin may be very confusing
- outside of that context. This can greatly affect what action(s)
- subscribers may wish to take (letter writing, phone calls, protests, etc).
-
- Two examples...on one occassion, someone pointed out that s/he was confused
- which "prime minister" an article referred to (many countries have prime
- ministers) and, on another occassion, someone had no idea who Chelsea
- Clinton was and why her (possibly) becoming vegetarian was so significant
- (how many of us know the names of children of heads of states of various
- countries?).
-
- As a possible solution, I am asking those who post to AR-News to "tag" the
- subject line with the accepted two-letter country codes used on the
- internet, as in: "All Hunting Banned!! (US)" (okay, that's fictional, but
- just an example). Such codes can be found in many sources (check out the
- e-mail addresses on this list) or in various books (Internet for Dummies,
- etc.). Some codes are: US/United State, UK/United Kingdom, FI/Finland,
- CA/Canada, NZ/New Zealand, etc. On the web, see URL:
-
- http://dutian.twi.tudelft.nl/~maarten/GeographicZones.shtml
-
- Please note--this is only a _request_, not a requirement! And, if anyone
- is in doubt about the country of origin of a particular post, please
- (privately) e-mail the original poster for details.
-
- Again, this is only a _request_, not a requirement (for participation on
- this list).
- Date: Wed, 25 Jun 1997 21:58:35 -0700
- From: Andrew Gach <UncleWolf@worldnet.att.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: EU defeats U.S. in milk growth hormone war
- Message-ID: <33B1F6FB.7CB8@worldnet.att.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- EU defeats U.S. in milk growth hormone war
-
- Reuter Information Service
-
- GENEVA (June 25, 1997 10:26 a.m. EDT) - The European Union has fought
- off a U.S. attempt to allow the use of a genetically engineered growth
- hormone that encourages cows to give more milk, health officials said
- Wednesday.
-
- World Health Organisation spokesman Valery Abramov said the United
- Nations Codex Alimentarius Commission, meeting in Geneva, voted late on
- Tuesday to defer a decision on the contentious issue for two years to
- allow in-depth scientific research.
-
- The joint WHO and Food and Agricultural Organisation body sets
- international food safety standards and meets every two years. Under
- international trade rules, higher standards must be justified
- scientifically or risk challenge as protectionism.
-
- Tuesday's heated debate pitted the 15-member EU against the U.S., also
- backed by Canada, which supported a Commission proposal allowing the use
- of genetically engineered growth hormone to boost milk production in
- cows, diplomats said.
-
- This was also opposed by international consumer groups attending the
- meeting of the 150-plus member governments as unnecessary and possibly
- unsafe.
-
- "The debate was more about political posturing than scientific
- evidence," said one diplomat.
-
- The dispute could potentially strain transatlantic trade relations if it
- became more heated, diplomats said.
-
- The standards set by the Codex Alimentarius Commission are important
- because they serve as a reference for the World Trade Organization
- (WTO).
-
- The United States and EU have disagreed over an EU ban on U.S. beef
- grown with the aid of synthetic growth hormones.
-
- The European Union is desperate to fight off the U.S. bid because the
- adoption of a standard that would allow the use of genetically
- engineered growth hormone in milk production could pave the way for a
- U.S. challenge against the EU at the WTO.
-
- The body adopted by 38 votes, with 21 against and 12 abstentions, the EU
- offer tabled by the Netherlands to return the Commission proposal to
- experts for reconsideration on grounds of possible safety and animal
- welfare implications.
-
- Another contentious issue under debate at the Commission, which ends its
- current session on Saturday, is a U.S. attempt to have unpasteurised
- cheese and other dairy products banned as a health risk, opposed
- fiercely by France and Switzerland.
- Date: Thu, 26 Jun 1997 14:33:19 +0800
- From: bunny <rabbit@wantree.com.au>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: rabbit haemorrhagic disease (RCD) news (Aust and NZ)
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970626142921.131f8df6@wantree.com.au>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- RCD/RHD NEWSFLASH 1. (26th June 1997)
-
- Rabbit virus decision to be announced next week (New Zealand).
-
- In a newspaper article titled "Rabbit decision to be announced next week"
- published in "The Dominion" (New Zealand 26/6/1997) it has been announced by
- the agricultural ministry that deputy director-general Peter O'Hara
- will announce his decision next Wednesday (2nd July 1997) on the failure or
- success of the application to import rabbit calicivirus (rabbit viral
- haemorrhagic disease) into New Zealand as a biological control agent of the wild
- European rabbit in New Zealand.
-
-
- News Flash 2 (26th June 1997)
-
- Rabbit industry sues for millions. (Australia)
-
- An article from the Adelaide Advertiser reports that up to 50 South
- Australians are demanding millions of dollars from the CSIRO after the
- escape of the killer rabbit virus from Wardang Island in September 1995.
- They say that
- their livelihoods have been destroyed and they claim that CSIRO was
- "negligent" in allowing the disease to spread from open air testing on
- Wardang Island in September 1995. Within months the entire rabbit industry
- collapsed. Melbourne solicitors Slater and Gordon are mounting a class
- action for the former rabbit industry workers on a "no win, no fee" basis
- and claim that their clients have a "good claim" for damages.
-
-
- ===========================================
-
- Rabbit Information Service,
- P.O.Box 30,
- Riverton,
- Western Australia 6148
-
- Email> rabbit@wantree.com.au
-
- http://www.wantree.com.au/~rabbit/rabbit.htm
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Date: Thu, 26 Jun 1997 20:25:38 +0800
- From: bunny <rabbit@wantree.com.au>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Gene foods- US takes tough line against segregation
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970626202140.210f4410@wantree.com.au>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- WHAT THE BIOTECH INDUSTRY SAYS, THE US GOVERNMENT SAYS!
- ______________________________________________________________________________
- US Dept. of Ag. Talks Tough on Proposed GMO Separation & Labeling
-
- By Christopher Lyddon
-
- LONDON, June 19 (Reuter) - The United States took a firm line against
- European misgivings about gene-modified crops on Thursday telling a
- conference it would not tolerate segregating them from other exports.
-
- ``As long as these products prove safe we will not tolerate their
- segregation,'' U.S. Agriculture Secretary Dan Glickman said in a speech at a
- meeting of the 44-nation International Grains Council in London.
-
- The executive Commission of the European Union had on Wednesday given formal
- approval to compulsory labelling of all genetically-modified farm products
- from July 31. Labels should specify that a product ``may contain or consist
- of genetically modified organisms''.
-
- Segregation of shipments would make it easier to use labelling to distinguish
- genetically-altered crops. Grain analysts says that if there is no such
- segregation it risks making the EU regulation meaningless.
-
- Glickman in his London speech urged the value of biotechnology as a solution
- to the world's future food supply problems.
-
- ``Sound science ought to be the only arbiter,'' he said. ``The greatest
- threat to free trade is bad and phoney science...We know that biotechnology
- holds out our greatest hope of dramatically increasing yields.''
-
- ``I know biotechnology is an extremely sensitive issue in Europe,'' he said.
- But the U.S. consumer movement was stronger than ever and this underlined
- confidence in science-based decisions on food safety.
-
- Another warning to importers about curbing trade in gene-modified products
- came from Ralph Goodale, minister with responsibility for the Canadian Wheat
- Board.
-
- Goodale also hailed the use of biotechnology as a way of improving the
- efficiency of agriculture.
-
- ``Canada's crop industry is in the midst of a second green revolution,'' he
- said.
-
- 08:02 06-19-97
- _____________________________________________________________________________
- Agribusiness Letter to Clinton: Get Tough on Biotech
-
- June 18, 1997
-
- The President
- The White House
- Washington, DC
-
- Dear Mr. President:
-
- As you prepare for the upcoming G-8 meeting, we respectfully request
- that you include agricultural biotechnology in all bilateral
- discussions with the member countries of the European Union (EU).
-
- The entire U.S. agricultural food and fiber distribution chain is our
- nation's largest single industry, accounting for nearly 1 out of
- every 6 jobs, and approximately 16% of the Gross Domestic Product
- (GDP). Exports, which account for as much as one-third of domestic
- agricultural commodity production, are key to agriculture's overall
- economic health and future growth. This is especially true uner the
- new farm bill (Federal Agriculture Improvement and Reform Act of
- 1996), which gradually reduces domestic farm programs and increases
- the importance of maintaining continued access to foreign markets.
-
- Last year, U.S. agricultural exports reached a record high of nearly
- $60 billion--leading to a record agricultural trade surplus of almost
- $30 billion, strengthening farm income, generating billions more in
- related economic activity, and providing jobs for over one million
- Americans. Every billion dollars in additional U.S. agricultural
- exports will create as many as 17,000 new jobs.
-
- As one of the most productive industries in the world, U.S.
- agriculture is charged with the great responsibility to feed and
- clothe an ever-increasing world population. The World Food Summit in
- Rome underscored the fact that the U.S. must become even more
- efficient if the goal to eliminate hunger is to be accomplished. As
- the world population continues to expand, technology must be
- developed to enable the U.S. agricultural system to produce the
- needed food in a manner that fully utilizes our production capacity
- in an environmentally conscientious manner. Biotechnology is an
- important component of that needed technology.
-
- Because trade is so important to American agriculture and the U.S.
- food industry, it is imperative that policy and regulations governing
- international commerce of genetically modified food and agricultural
- products are based on sound science and not just emotion which often
- turns into pure hyperbole. It is also important to note that
- segregation of bulk commodities is not scientifically justified and
- is economically unrealistic.
-
- Some officials of the EU advocate requirements that could be
- considered non-tariff trade barriers to the U.S. and other countries
- exporting to the EU. It is critical the EU understand at the highest
- level that the U.S. would consider any trade barrier of genetically
- modified agricultural products, be it discriminatory labeling or
- segregation, unacceptable and subject to challenge in the World Trade
- Organization (WTO).
-
- Mr. President, agricultural biotechnology is an evolutionary
- technology with revolutionary potential to feed an ever-increasing
- world population, while enhancing environmental stewardship. Placing
- biotechnology on the bilateral agenda with member countries of the EU
- will help assure international trading rules will be based on sound
- science and allow the U.S. to continue providing the safest food
- supply in the world.
-
- Sincerely,
-
-
- AG for BIOTECH
- AgrEvo USA Company
- American Crop Protection Association
- American Farm Bureau Federation
- American Feed Industry Association
- American Meat Institute
- American Seed Trade Association
- American Soybean Association
- American Sugar Alliance
- Animal Health Institute
- Association of Sales & Marketing Companies
- Biotechnology Industry Organization
- Corn Refiners Association
- Fertilizer Institute
- Florida Sugar Cane League
- Grocery Manufacturers of America
- Hawaiian Sugar Cane League
- Louis Dreyfus Corporation
- Mid-America Dairymen, Inc.
- Monsanto Company
- Mycogen Corporation
- National Association of Wheat Growers
- National Barley Growers Association
- National Cattlemen's Beef Association
- National Corn Growers Association
- National Council of Farmer Cooperatives
- National Food Processors Association
- National Grain and Feed Association
- National Grain Sorghum Producers Association
- National Grange
- National Milk Producers Federation
- National Pork Producers Council
- Novartis
- Pioneer Hi-Bred International, Inc.
- Texas Sugar Cane League
- U.S. Beet Sugar Association
- U.S. Feed Grains Council
- U.S. Meat Export Federation
- United Fresh Fruit & Vegetable Association
- Wheat Export Trade Education Committee
-
-
- ===========================================
-
- Rabbit Information Service,
- P.O.Box 30,
- Riverton,
- Western Australia 6148
-
- Email> rabbit@wantree.com.au
-
- http://www.wantree.com.au/~rabbit/rabbit.htm
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Date: Thu, 26 Jun 1997 12:24:06 -0400
- From: "radioactive" <radioactive@bellsouth.net>
- To: "Animal Rights" <ar-news@envirolink.org>
- Subject: Fw: Rachel #552: Right to Know Nothing
- Message-ID: <199706261624.MAA28598@mail.mia.bellsouth.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain;
- charset="iso-8859-1"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- If you have the time, please send this out to whomever you can, and also an
- e-mail to the White House at: http://www.whitehouse.gov and an e-mail to:
- The House Of Representatives: http://www.house.gov
- ----
- From: Peter Montague <peter@rachel.clark.net>
- To: rachel-weekly@world.std.com
- Date: Thursday, June 26, 1997 7:09 AM
- Subject: Rachel #552: Right to Know Nothing
-
- =======================Electronic Edition========================
- . .
- . RACHEL'S ENVIRONMENT & HEALTH WEEKLY #552 .
- . ---June 26, 1997--- .
- . HEADLINES: .
- . RIGHT TO KNOW NOTHING .
- . ========== .
- . Environmental Research Foundation .
- . P.O. Box 5036, Annapolis, MD 21403 .
- . Fax (410) 263-8944; Internet: erf@rachel.clark.net .
- . ========== .
- .RIGHT TO KNOW NOTHING
-
- American corporations are successfully pursuing a new strategy to
- evade environmental laws and regulations. As the NEW YORK TIMES
- describes the new strategy, "Urged on by a coalition of big
- industries, one state after another is adopting legislation to
- protect companies from disclosure or punishment when they
- discover environmental offenses at their own plants."[1] In
- essence, state laws are giving corporations immunity from
- punishment if they self-report violations of environmental laws.
- Furthermore, any documents related to the self-reporting become
- officially secret, cannot be divulged to the public, and cannot
- be used as evidence in any legal proceedings. "This is a
- disaster for environmental enforcement," says David Ronald, chief
- of the environmental crimes division in the Arizona State
- Attorney General's Office. "It has been creeping through the
- states without anybody paying much attention."[1]
-
- The strategy took root in 1993 when the Oregon state legislature
- passed the first-ever "audit privilege" law, as they are called.
- Such laws --which have now been passed in at least 21 states and
- are pending in 13 or 14 others --typically contain the following
- provisions:
-
- ** Corporations that report violations discovered during a
- self-audit are immune from prosecution for their violations.
- They cannot be fined or otherwise punished if they disclose
- violations promptly to government authorities and take
- "reasonable" steps to achieve compliance.
-
- ** Individuals who participate in conducting an environmental
- audit cannot be called to testify in any judicial proceeding or
- administrative hearing.
-
- ** Perhaps most importantly, if a corporation conducts an
- environmental self-audit of its operations, the information in
- the self-audit cannot be disclosed to the public and cannot be
- used as evidence in any legal proceedings, including lawsuits
- and/or regulatory actions. Any information related to a
- self-audit becomes "privileged." This exemption typically covers
- any documents, notes, communications, data, or opinions related
- in any way to the audit. The corporation itself decides what is
- related to its self-audit and what is not. In essence, audit
- privilege laws allow a corporation to stamp any document
- "audit-related" and thus exempt it from public disclosure,
- discovery, or use as evidence in any legal proceeding. For
- companies facing Superfund lawsuits, or toxic tort actions, this
- exemption can translate into billions of dollars in avoided costs.
-
- ** Some states, such as Texas, have included additional
- provisions that make it a crime for employees or government
- officials to divulge anything related to environmental
- self-audits. In Texas, if a person divulges such information and
- it leads to penalties against a polluter, the individual who
- divulged the information must pay the polluters' fines,
- penalties, and other costs. This is a blatant
- "anti-whistle-blower" provision, clearly intended to silence
- individuals who might otherwise come forward with information
- about violations of law.
-
- Audit privilege laws --which are sometimes called Corporate Dirty
- Secrets Laws, or Right to Know Nothing Laws --apply not only to
- private corporations but also to governments as well. Thus
- citizens of a municipality can lose their right to know about
- pollution from their own local landfill when their state
- legislature passes an "audit privilege" law.
-
- The 21 states that have, so far, passed "audit privilege" laws
- include: Alaska, Arkansas, Colorado, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana,
- Ohio, Kansas, Kentucky, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi,
- Montana, New Hampshire, Oregon, South Carolina, South Dakota,
- Texas, Utah, Virginia, and Wyoming.
-
- The Clinton administration supports environmental self-auditing.
- They say that companies know how to audit their own facilities
- better than the government does, and can do a better job of it.
- However, initially the administration took the position that
- companies should receive no immunity from fines or other
- punishment if their self-audits revealed violations. Further,
- the administration initially took the position that self-audit
- information should not be privileged or secret, saying workers
- and communities had a right to know what local corporations were
- doing to the environment.
-
- To give these views clout, Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
- administrator Carol Browner threatened to take enforcement
- authority away from any state that passed a typical audit
- privilege law. (Most U.S. federal environmental laws allow EPA
- to delegate enforcement authority to the states with the
- provision that federal standards must be met.)
-
- Specifically, EPA put Texas on notice that their audit privilege
- law was unacceptable because it would compromise the ability of
- all governments (federal, state, and local) to enforce
- environmental laws. However, in March, 1997, Ms. Browner reversed
- her position and said that the Texas law, with minor changes,
- would be acceptable to EPA. The Texas law gives both immunity
- from prosecution AND privilege to the information produced during
- a self-audit, and, as we have seen, it contains a blatant
- anti-whistle-blower provision.
-
- Most observers believe the administration cut a deal with Texas
- to appease anti-environment forces in the 105th Congress. As
- expected, EPA's stance in Texas has been widely regarded as the
- administration's acceptance of all states' audit privilege laws.
- More state laws are expected to pass, now that the threat of EPA
- sanctions has been withdrawn.
-
- However, the anti-environment forces in Congress have refused to
- be appeased. This month, they proposed national "audit
- privilege" legislation. Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott
- (R-Miss.) personally endorsed S. 866, "The Environmental
- Protection Partnership Act," which is a standard audit privilege
- bill.[2] It gives immunity to violators who self-report
- violations; and it gives a privilege of secrecy to all
- information related to self-audits. Notably, S. 866 specifically
- prohibits EPA from revoking enforcement authority of states who
- pass audit privilege laws. A companion bill has been introduced
- in the House of Representatives --H.R. 1884, the "Voluntary
- Environmental Self-Evaluation Act."
-
- For five years, corporations have been promoting environmental
- audit bills around the country, arguing that such laws would
- improve environmental protection and public health. Companies
- promoting audit privilege laws include AT&T, Caterpillar, Coors
- Brewing, DuPont, Eli Lilly, 3M, Pfizer, Procter & Gamble,
- Weyerhauser, and Waste Management, Inc. (WMI).
-
- However, protecting public health may not be the first priority
- for all these corporations. For example, as soon as Ohio passed
- its "audit privilege" law in December, 1996, WMI demanded that a
- citizens' group return documents --some of them dating back to
- 1988 --which the citizens had obtained during litigation aimed at
- forcing the cleanup of the ELDA landfill near Cincinnati. WMI
- says the documents are now "privileged" under Ohio law and cannot
- be used in a federal court case brought by local citizens.[3]
- Some of the documents in question are stamped "audit" and others
- were simply claimed to be "audits" after the fact. Thus WMI has
- revealed unmistakably what "audit privilege" laws are really
- about.
-
- Some 80 citizen groups have formed a vigorous coalition to fight
- audit privilege laws. Contact The Network Against Corporate
- Secrecy led by Sanford Lewis in Boston: (617) 254-1030; or
- sanlewis@igc.apc.org. Their informative Web site can be found at
- http://www.envirolink.org/orgs/gnp/nacs_toc.htm .
-
- As we step back and try to get this "right to know nothing" trend
- into perspective, it appears to us that this is just another
- aspect of the rapidly-growing power of corporations in America
- and worldwide.
-
- Big corporations approved the passage of all the major U.S.
- environmental laws now on the books. (If they had seriously
- opposed any of them, they would not be on the books.) These laws
- impose onerous requirements for gathering and reporting data.
- Large corporations complain about these features of our national
- laws, but in truth these reporting requirements provide a
- competitive advantage for large corporations vs. small. It is
- small businesses that get hurt by all the paperwork that our
- environmental laws entail. A big company just assigns a team to
- the task and gets it done. So big corporations created our
- complicated laws, partly for the competitive advantage that it
- gives them over their smaller, more nimble competitors.
-
- Occasionally, however, our environmental laws cost some big
- polluter a major fine of $50 or $100 million dollars. And toxic
- tort lawsuits can cost them hundreds of millions from time to
- time. To reduce the likelihood of bearing such costs, big
- polluters now want "audit privilege" laws to protect them from
- public scrutiny and to give them immunity against major
- penalties. This retains the burdensome paperwork in the laws,
- which gives them a competitive advantage, while reducing the
- risks of major costs. The anti-environment Congress is doing its
- part to carry out this corporate strategy. Passing a federal
- "audit privilege" law would clearly benefit the big polluters.
- Congress has already taken other steps that fit into this
- strategy: the federal EPA is now so weak that it cannot possibly
- enforce all the laws on the books. Speaking of EPA's Carol
- Browner recently, the NEW YORK TIMES said in an editorial, "As a
- practical matter, the task of issuing individual permits for
- thousands of companies nationwide is beyond her staff's
- capabilities."[4] This weakening has not happened by accident.
- Congress has systematically reduced the capacity of the federal
- government to enforce our laws. In response, Ms. Browner has
- willingly formed voluntary "partnerships" with the states, giving
- them greater enforcement authority.
-
- State enforcement is weaker than federal enforcement because
- states compete with each other for jobs. Any state that becomes
- known as a "pollution haven" will be looked upon favorably by
- polluters. Conscientious states find themselves at a disadvantage
- under these circumstances.
-
- Sure enough, reports the NEW YORK TIMES, "Pennsylvania and some
- other big industrial states are reporting only a handful of major
- pollution violations, suggesting that inspectors in those states
- may be turning a blind eye to pollution problems.... Federal
- inspectors said the state [Pennsylvania] should have found at
- least 10 times as many violations as were reported in 1995."[5]
- The TIMES later said about 25% of all the states are failing to
- enforce the nation's environmental laws.[4]
-
- We must note once again that the fundamental problem is the
- unfettered power of the modern corporation. The Clinton
- administration bears as much responsibility as any in this
- department. As the TIMES has said, "Ever since Bill Clinton came
- to office, he has done more for the Fortune 500 than virtually
- any other President in this century...."[6]
-
- Corporations have limited capacity for self-restraint; they want
- it all and they want it now and they don't want anyone telling
- them what they can and cannot do. Until we recognize this --the
- nature of the corporate form --as the key problem of our time,
- the environment and human health will continue to deteriorate.
- --Peter Montague
- (National Writers Union, UAW Local 1981/AFL-CIO)
-
- ===============
- [1] John H. Cushman, Jr., "Many States Give Polluting Firms New
- Protections," NEW YORK TIMES April 7, 1996, pg. 1. See also,
- John H. Cushman, Jr., "Colorado and Ohio Accused of Skirting
- Federal Environmental Laws," NEW YORK TIMES January 30, 1997, pg.
- B7.
-
- [2] Trent Lott, "Voluntary Environmental Self-Audit,"
- CONGRESSIONAL RECORD June 11, 1997, pg. S5494.
-
- [3] The attorney representing the citizens is David Altman;
- phone: (513) 721-2180.
-
- [4] "Environmental Defiance [editorial]," NEW YORK TIMES December
- 20, 1996, pg. A38.
-
- [5] John H. Cushman, Jr., "State Neglecting Pollution Rules,
- White House Says," NEW YORK TIMES December 15, 1996, pg. A1.
-
- [6] David E. Sanger, "The Big One: Washington's Political
- Earthquake," NEW YORK TIMES September 24, 1995, Section 4 ("Week
- in Review"), pg. 1.
-
- Descriptor terms: enforcement; audit privilege laws;
- environmental audits; right to know nothing; corporate dirty
- secrets laws; corporations; Alaska; Arkansas; Colorado; Idaho;
- Illinois; Indiana; Ohio; Kansas; Kentucky; Michigan; Minnesota;
- Mississippi; Montana; New Hampshire; Oregon; South Carolina;
- South Dakota; Texas; Utah; Virginia; and Wyoming; bill clinton;
- congress;
-
- ################################################################
- NOTICE
- Environmental Research Foundation provides this electronic
- version of RACHEL'S ENVIRONMENT & HEALTH WEEKLY free of charge
- even though it costs our organization considerable time and money
- to produce it. We would like to continue to provide this service
- free. You could help by making a tax-deductible contribution
- (anything you can afford, whether $5.00 or $500.00). Please send
- your tax-deductible contribution to: Environmental Research
- Foundation, P.O. Box 5036, Annapolis, MD 21403-7036. Please do
- not send credit card information via E-mail. For further
- information about making tax-deductible contributions to E.R.F.
- by credit card please phone us toll free at 1-888-2RACHEL.
- --Peter Montague, Editor
- ################################################################
-
-
-
-
- Date: Thu, 26 Jun 1997 17:35:25 -0400
- From: samanni@hem1.passagen.se (Marcus Samanni)
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Painful experiments with rats on homosexuality
- Message-ID: <v01520d03afd8ac51cb47@[195.100.24.34]>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Hi!
-
- In Gothenburg, Sweden there's a kind of dubious experiment with rats going
- on. The purpose of the experiments is to measure differences in sex in
- different areas of the brain during sexual activity. The goal is to find
- mechanisms which control sexual character of an individual.
-
- The rats go through a lot of pain. They are among other things isolated for
- two weeks (need I say that is very painful for such a social being as the
- rat?), castrated and injected with testosterone.
-
-
- Take a look at http://www.geocities.com/CapitolHill/Lobby/3327/ and write
- these scientists an e-mail!
-
-
- Marcus Samanni
-
-
- Date: Thu, 26 Jun 1997 22:00:41 -0400 (EDT)
- From: Debbie Leahy <DLEAHY@delphi.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [US] Land O'Lorin Makes Deal
- Message-ID: <01IKJL70VIQ095PPM1@delphi.com>
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-
- USDA SENTENCES ABUSED ANIMALS
- TO ANOTHER DECADE OF NEGLECT - 6/26/96
-
- A USDA official has confirmed that Land O'Lorin--despite previous
- suspensions and penalties levied by the USDA--is to be issued a brand
- new license with an unblemished record as a result of a settlement
- agreement between owner Lorin Womack and the USDA. Womack, a
- convicted felon, will simply arrange for the license to be issued
- under the names of his friends.
-
- Land O'Lorin located at 37W408 Main Street in Batavia, IL is a
- pitiful roadside zoo where over 100 animals suffer and die from
- extreme neglect and abuse. It is also Womack's home. Womack has been
- a chronic, serious violator of the Animal Welfare Act for nearly a
- decade. Re-issuing a new USDA license to Womack's backyard under a
- different name changes nothing for the animals who languish in
- miserable conditions. It will be neglect as usual while we wait
- another eight years for the USDA to enforce the minimum standards of
- care established by the Animal Welfare Act. This is yet another
- tragic example of the USDA's failure to put habitual violators out of
- business.
-
- USDA inspectors have found dead and dying animals, lack of veterinary
- care, filthy conditions, poorly maintained cages, insufficient
- shelter and space, and failure to provide food and water. Former
- workers charge intentional neglect is rampant. Womack complains
- frequently of lack of funding to excuse his substandard facility, yet
- purposefully breeds animals, acquires new animals at exotic animal
- auctions, and purchases $80,000 vehicles for his personal use.
-
- WHAT YOU CAN DO:
- In a letter dated May 8, 1997 to USDA Animal Care Inspectors, USDA
- Secretary Dan Glickman wrote (excerpts):
-
- "An increase in the number of incidences involving mistreatment of
- captive wildlife and exotic animals has raised the level of public
- concern for the proper handling of these animals." And "... go
- after the chronic violators--let's put them out of business."
-
- According to USDA internal documents, Land O'Lorin "has been in
- chronic non-compliance with the Animal Welfare Act since 1989."
- Another document states "... it appears that this licensee may be a
- candidate for an injunction to protect the health of the animals at
- his facility ... the Secretary may seek an injunction whenever
- there is reason to believe an exhibitor is 'placing the health of
- any animal in serious danger.' ... I recommend we seek an
- injunction against Mr. Womack ..."
-
- Due to the severity of the problems at Land O'Lorin, the USDA
- considered this a high priority case. Please write/fax polite
- comments to Dan Glickman and urge him to put his words into action
- by permanently closing Land O'Lorin's facility--to any licensee.
- Re-issuing a new license under a different name simply makes a
- mockery of the Animal Welfare Act and will set a precedence for
- other facilities to skirt the law. Contact:
-
- The Honorable Dan Glickman, Secretary
- U.S. Department of Agriculture
- 200-A Whitten Building
- 14th St. & Independence Ave. SW
- Washington, D.C. 20250
- Phone 202/720-3631
- Fax 202/720-5437
-
- -------------------------------------
- Illinois Animal Action
- P.O. Box 507
- Warrenville, IL 60555
- 630/393-2935
- Date: Thu, 26 Jun 1997 22:59:58 -0400
- From: Vegetarian Resource Center <vrc@tiac.net>
- To: Veg-News@envirolink.org
- Subject: Soybean Processing Solvent -> Chicken Dioxin Contamination
- Message-ID: <3.0.2.32.19970626225958.01f9e578@pop.tiac.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- From: jeff <jdickey@massmed.org>
- Subject: chicken & dioxins
- Date: Thu, 26 Jun 1997 09:31:03 -0700
-
- The following is exerpted from an article in
- Food Chemical News, June 23, 1997:
-
- "Soybean processing solvent may have led to dioxin
- contamination"
-
- Investigators have homed in on an Arkansas plant's soybean
- feed-processing operation as a possible cause of unusually
- high levels of dioxin detected in two chicken samples from
- Tyson Foods plants.
-
- An interagency federal investigation is underway into how
- dioxins may have entered feed and contaminated two
- chickens. The tainted samples - each made up of fatty
- tissues from three different birds - were discovered as
- part of a sampling effort for foods under the EPA's yet-to-
- be released dioxin reassessment effort. EPA is considering
- whether the govt should readjust the std. for dioxins
- emitted into the environment.
-
- Out of 80 chicken samples from 24 states, two were found to
- have unusually elevated dioxin levels. When measurements
- were converted to edible tissue, the two samples tested for
- dioxin at 3.9 and 3.2 ppt. The other 78 samples averaged
- 0.09 ppt on an edible basis - 30-40 times less. The two
- aberrant samples were traced to Tyson complexes in Pine
- Bluff AK and Seguin TX
-
- The traceback investigation is reportedly focusing on the
- processing of soybeans for feed ingredients at a Riceland
- Foods plant in Stuttgart AK. Riceland is the largest
- rice processor in the US but also processes soybean for
- feed ingredients.
-
- According to the company's WWW site, "Riceland's soybean
- processing plant located in Stuttgart AK has provided
- high-protein soybean meal and soybean mill run to many
- Delta and Southwestern poultry processors, catfish
- processors and livestock producers for many years."
-
- Officials suspect the dioxin contamination may be linked to
- solvent extracts used in processing soybean as a protein
- supplement for feed. Crushed soybeans are washed with
- chemical to extract soybean meal for processing.
-
- EPA, FDA,CDC, and USDA are coordinating with state health
- authorities in sampling the feed, sending samples off to
- EPA's Mississippi lab for analysis and conducting a hazard
- analysis. They've also been sent to an independent lab.
-
- Results of the tests have yet to be released and it is
- unknown how extensively the contamination was spread at the
- suspected feed processing operation. A federal official
- confirmed that contamination at the processing plant has
- ceased. Since the incident is subject to an enforcement
- action and a possible recall of feed or chicken products,
- details are scarce and official word is that the
- investigation is still underway.
-
- But govt sources acknowledge that new data on dioxins may
- place regulators in a dilemma. There is no standard or
- tolerance level for dioxin-like chemicals in feed or foods,
- so it is unknown what level would constitute a public
- health hazard. What level of dioxin in feed, other than
- zero, would be considered safe?
-
- USDA has reportedly eliminated the possiblity of a chicken
- recall after being unable to confirm that eating
- contaminated chickens could represent a genuine public
- health threat. A feed recall is still a possibility.
-
- Tyson Foods released a statement last week announcing that
- "we have been assured bu the govt agencies involved that
- these levels do not pose any immediated health risk to the
- public and no product "hold" or recall is necessary. Their
- concern, as well as ours, is identifying the source of the
- dioxin and eliminating it."
-
- Tyson is also doing its own independent testing but is
- hampered by a scarcity of labs equipped to perform dioxin
- testing in the region. Tyson tests are pointing toward a
- feed ingredient - that ingredient has been removed -
- according to Tyson's spokesperson.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- How long has this been going on?
-
- Has any of the soy extract been used for other purposes,
- such as infant formula?
-
- Why does USDA eliminate the possiblity of a recall? What
- is a "genuine public health threat" from dioxin?
-
- What are the implications of this discovery for the dioxin
- reassessment?
-
-
-
-
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