Dozens rally against agricultural company Monsanto in Santa Rosa
BY CLARK MASON
THE PRESS DEMOCRAT
May 23, 2015, 9:29PM
More than 150 demonstrators took to the streets of Santa Rosa on Saturday in a “March Against Monsanto,” part of an international event intended to draw attention to genetically engineered foods that they said pose health and environmental risks.
The demonstration was part of a campaign of similar peaceful protests planned in more than 400 cities in 38 countries against the agricultural biotechnology company, which specializes in genetically engineered seeds and herbicides.
Organizers said they focused on Monsanto because they view its products as a threat to organic farming, native plants and even bee colonies.
Led by the Hubbub Club marching band, the marchers went on about a 2-mile route from Old Courthouse Square to the South A and Brown Street neighborhoods, carrying signs with such slogans as “Save our seeds, Save our bees, No Monsanto,” and chanting “Listen up corporate dudes, we don’t want your frankenfoods.”
Back at Old Courthouse Square, the crowd was exhorted by speakers including Frank Egger, a former seven-time Fairfax mayor, to help pass a Sonoma County ban on genetically modified organisms, similar to ones in neighboring Marin and Mendocino, as well as Trinity and Santa Cruz counties.
“We want a North Coast GMO-free zone. We’re missing Sonoma,” he said.
Marin County, he said, has more than 40,000 acres in organic cultivation. “The same thing can happen here in Sonoma County,” he said, adding that if the Board of Supervisors doesn’t place it on the ballot, proponents should.
In 2005, Sonoma County voters rejected a ballot measure that would have banned certain GMO products for 10 years, ostensibly to allow more time for testing.
The Food and Drug Administration does not require genetically modified foods to carry a label, and attempts to change that at the federal level have failed. A California ballot proposition to require labeling of GMO foods went down to a narrow defeat in 2012.
Most corn, soybean and cotton crops grown in the United States today have been genetically modified.
Critics of GMOs say they have been linked to health problems ranging from allergies to cancer, and that babies, in particular, are at risk of getting sick.
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