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Laws & Politics
Tell USDA No Drugs in Rice!
By news release
Mar 27, 2007 - 12:17:09 PM

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The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) is close to approving a request to grow up to 3,200 acres of genetically engineered (GE) pharmaceutical rice.  The rice, developed by California-based Ventria BioScience, is set to be grown and processed in Kansas, after the company was chased out of other states, including Monsanto's stomping grounds, Missouri, and Ventria's home-state, California. Ventria has developed three varieties of rice, each engineered with a different modified human gene to produce one of three recombinant human proteins. Two of them -- lactoferrin and lysozyme -- are bacteria-fighting compounds similar to natural versions found in breast milk and saliva. The third makes recombinant serum albumin, a blood protein used in medical therapies.

 
Drug-producing food crops grown out-of-doors pose great risks to public health and the economic well-being of farmers because they are likely to contaminate the food supply.  In fact, while Southern rice growers were still reeling from last year's contamination of long-grain rice with an unapproved GE variety,  a second variety of rice was found to be contaminated with a second unapproved GE line this month, throwing the rice market into further turmoil.  As a result, Southern rice growers are facing a severe shortage of uncontaminated seed for planting this spring.  Incredibly, USDA appears poised to approve Ventria’s request even though the pharmaceutical substances in Ventria’s drug-producing rice have not been approved by the FDA.
 
Tell USDA enough is enough, and to reject this risky proposal!
http://ga3.org/campaign/Ventria_KS/i7gb3xn4zww877i?

Please take a moment to send your comment today - we need to have your comments by March 28th to get them to USDA by the close of the comment period on the 30th!







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