• Show Search Options  • Search Tips


Section Front

Pure HorseracePure Horserace
CBS News PollsCBS News Polls
Poll PositionsPoll Positions
Political PlayersPolitical Players
Washington PostWashington Post
PoliticoPolitico

Opinion

Against the GrainAgainst the Grain
CBSNews.com's Dick Meyer has South Pole dreams and a literary solution for hotter-than-human temperatures.
Against the Grain

Interactive

Bush PresidencyBush Presidency
The president's agenda, plus facts, figures, major events and key personalities.
Bush Presidency

Interactive

The 109th CongressThe 109th Congress
Meet the leaders and follow the action in the House and Senate.
The 109th Congress




E-Mail This StoryPrintable VersionTag With del.icio.us

Bill Targets State Food Label Warnings

Food industry seeks to prohibit states from requiring food warnings tougher than federal law


WASHINGTON, Aug. 20, 2006
By LIBBY QUAID AP Food and Farm Writer
(AP)


(AP) California importer Frank Lettieri is being sued for not warning his customers that his balsamic vinegar contains lead. True enough, he says. But you would have to drink more than a pint of the vinegar every day to reach the government limit for safe exposure to lead. Most people just sprinkle a few drops onto salads or bread.

Regardless, a voter-passed law in California says consumers have a right to know about lead and other harmful chemicals. "The ironic part is, it will kill you in California, but it won't kill you in Nevada," Lettieri says. "It won't kill you anywhere else in the country."

Rather than wrestle with labeling laws that vary from state to state, the food industry wants Congress to prohibit states from requiring food warnings that are tougher than federal law.

In March, the House overwhelmingly approved legislation that would pre-empt state warnings. The Senate held a hearing on the issue in July.

As many as 200 state laws or regulations could be affected, according to the Congressional Budget Office. They include warnings about lead and alcohol in candy, arsenic in bottled water, allergy-causing sulfites and mercury levels in fish.

Opposition is fierce, especially in California, where voters put their right-to-know law on the books 20 years ago. Known as Proposition 65, the law has been used to reduce arsenic in bottled water, mercury in fish and lead in candy and dishes.

Sen. Barbara Boxer, D-Calif., said state warnings can fill critical gaps in federal law. Californians passed Prop 65 "because they wanted to know if dangerous contaminants were in their food and drinking water," Boxer said at the Senate hearing.

"And they knew such a law would encourage food manufacturers to provide a safer product _ because who wants to buy bottled water with an arsenic warning label?" Boxer said.

The food industry insists the California law is being exploited by bounty-hunting trial lawyers.

Exhibit A: Small-business owner Bill Stadtlander. He makes Wheatena, a hot breakfast cereal that is so wholesome, the federal government agrees it is good for your heart and bones and may reduce the risk of certain cancers.

But a lawyer in California says Wheatena could kill you.

Stadtlander is being sued because his cereal contains cancer-causing acrylamide, a chemical that forms naturally when starchy foods are baked or fried.

"I don't put acrylamide in my product. All I do is toast my product," said Stadtlander, whose company, Homestat Farms, is based in Dublin, Ohio. "If anybody has a stove or an oven, as soon as you start browning starches, you're creating acrylamide."

Acrylamide is giving the food industry heartburn. The chemical has a long history of industrial use, but four years ago, Swedish researchers discovered it can occur naturally in foods such as french fries, potato chips, cookies, crackers, cereal and bread.

As a result, California is suing McDonald's, Burger King, Frito-Lay and other companies to make them warn customers about acrylamide in french fries and chips.

California is not going after little guys like Lettieri and Stadtlander, said a spokesman for California's attorney general, Bill Lockyer.

The state targeted major burger and chip makers because their products have higher levels of acrylamide and are consumed to a greater degree, spokesman Tom Dresslar said. At the same time, Lockyer lobbied successfully for a law to curb abusive Prop 65 lawsuits, Dresslar said.

"You work to target the abuses and, as a result, strengthen the law," Dresslar said. "You don't junk it because some lawyers are out there abusing it."

Despite the reform measures, most companies decide it is far cheaper to pay the plaintiffs than to try to win, said Michele Corash, a lawyer who represents businesses in Prop 65 matters.

She said Lettieri and other balsamic vinegar companies could argue successfully that lead occurs naturally in grapes that are used to make vinegar.

Lettieri said he understands the need to protect people from harmful chemicals, but in California the law has gone from protecting consumers to harming businesses like his.

"Who wouldn't want to protect" kids? "I think that line's been crossed. It's being abused for financial purposes," he says.

The importer decided to settle the suit and began adding labels to warn grocery shoppers that his vinegar may contain lead. "It cost me a ton of money," Lettieri said. "And I don't think the public is going to be any safer."

___

On the Net:

Food industry coalition: http://www.uniformityforfood.org/

Center for Science in the Public Interest: http://www.cspinet.org/

Congress: http://thomas.loc.gov


MMVI The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


Back To Top  Back To Top



E-Mail AlertsRSS FeedsPodcasts
Advertisement

Go To CBS News Video

POLITICS VIDEOSAll Politics Videos


Watch VideoWar Plan Criticized | Email this video

Watch VideoIraq Strategy Analyzed | Email this video

Watch VideoIraq Is Again A Partisan Issue | Email this video

Watch VideoPetraeus Gets Bush's Blessing | Email this video

TOP VIDEOSAll Videos


Watch VideoObama Heckler At Palin Event | Email this video

Watch VideoReport: Palin Abused Power | Email this video

Watch VideoMcCain Links Obama To Ayers | Email this video

Watch VideoWall Street's Weeklong Wipeout | Email this video

More Video


  • Show Search Options  • Search Tips
Wireless Alerts:  CBS News To Go  E-Mail Sign-Up:  Breaking News  |  Today On CBS News  |  60 Minutes  |  48 Hours  |  The Early Show  |  CBS Sunday Morning  |  News Summaries

Recommended Sites:  CBS Corporation  |  The ShowBuzz  |  Wallstrip  |  CBS.com  |  CBSSports.com  |  CWTV.com  |  ETOnline.com  |  The INSIDER  |  CBS Store  |  CBS Careers  |  CBS Cares
Breaking News© MMVII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.