Opinion
Here in Lake County and all over the state, volunteers are circulating petitions to put genetically modified food – or GMO – labeling on the California ballot.
If the considerable body of scientific evidence pointing to health risks associated with GMO consumption is not sufficient motivation for you to sign, then please, do it to restore free market capitalism.
Do it to end the Corporate Agriculture Welfare State.
Eighty percent of all our GMO crops go directly to animal feed, mostly factory-farmed livestock and poultry. An industry which, like GMO crops themselves, is heavily subsidized by American taxpayers.
GMO crops would not be able to compete economically in a real free market (i.e., without government welfare checks) because the cost of producing the GMO end-product exceeds the value of that product on the market.
Yes, it costs more to plant, grow and harvest a bushel of GMO soy or corn than that bushel is worth, per the Chicago Board of Trade (CBOT). Taxpayers have been making up the difference.
Therefore, GMO crops are welfare crops.
Search the prices of GMO soy verses non-GMO soy and organic soy. You will find that, per CBOT, non-GMO soy sells for 10 to 30 percent more than what is paid for GMO soy per bushel and organic soy brings in at least twice the price of GMO soy.
American taxpayers have been carrying Big Ag on our backs for too long already. GMO labeling will correct many wrongs currently plaguing the Wall-Street-rigged US farming system.
And by the way, one fear-tactic you will hear from the Biotech lobbying industry is that GMO labeling would drive up the cost of food. Not true.
And here’s why:
While it may be true that a majority of processed foods on the average American supermarket shelf today contain GMO ingredients, the percentage of GMO is usually low, and usually from vegetable oil ingredients.
In every case where giant food manufacturers sell overseas, they are already making an equivalent product without GMOs, to avoid overseas GMO labeling laws.
Ergo, a vanilla wafer made for the US market contains GMO ingredients, while the same company’s vanilla wafer made for export is made without GMO veggie oil.
When GMO labeling passes here in the USA (and since no company wants to admit to GMO ingredients) it will be a relatively pain-free process for those food manufacturers to simply start using GMO-free vegetable oil in all their products, not just the ones they export to other countries.
Almost overnight (and well before any labeling deadline approaches) the 70 to 80 percent of processed foods currently using GMO veggie oil will no longer contain any GMO ingredients.
One industry that will be significantly impacted by GMO labeling is factory-farmed livestock and poultry, which is already the source of many health problems.
Even without E. coli and other outbreaks, standard operating procedures – such as daily hormone and antibiotic supplements – in these factory farms negatively impact our health. We are long overdue for a serious overhaul of that entire industry.
I am a meat and poultry eater myself, but I regard the health risks of eating factory-farmed food to be unacceptable. Also unacceptable: huge amounts of tax money needed to subsidize increased health costs resulting from chronic diseases associated with the factory-farmed meat that most Americans eat daily.
If GMO labeling can provide the impetus to clean up our factory farm situation, that will be an added benefit of passing this bill here in California.
Deb Baumann lives in Upper Lake, Calif.
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- Written by: Deb Baumann
TNR stands for “trap/neuter/release,” which is a program where unowned cats, whether feral (wild) or simply “strays” are trapped, spayed or neutered, vaccinated for rabies, and released back into the environment where they were found.
For years Lake County, like most parts of the country, has had a “trap and euthanize” policy which has completely failed to resolve our cat overpopulation problem.
As has been mentioned in previous articles, Lake County kills five times more cats per capita than any other county in the state. This is a shameful and embarrassing statistic.
Our cat problem has a negative impact on real estate values and the quality of life for our citizens. It generates strife between neighbors, poses health risks to people and their pets, and shocks visitors and prospective homebuyers coming to the area.
There are two types of cats the Lake County Animal Control shelter deals with: truly feral cats which fear humans and cannot be safely handled, and friendly strays which are lost or abandoned by their owners.
They all have one thing in common: most of them are being fed, either intentionally or not, by humans.
Yes, these cats can and do hunt for food, but most of them rely on food provided by well-meaning people who don’t want to see them starve.
Surveys show that 10 to 20 percent of households feed cats they don’t own. Because of this most experts are calling such unowned cats “community cats.” They are free-roaming cats, some too feral to touch, some very friendly, being fed by people who don’t consider themselves the “owners” but who feed them daily.
Because these people don’t consider themselves owners, they don’t feel responsible to have the cats spayed and neutered, and in many cases the sheer number of cats being fed makes it financially impossible for them to do so.
If you take a feral cat to the shelter it will almost certainly die there. It is hard to make a case that they are somehow better off being brought to the shelter where they will sit huddled in a small cage, stressed and frightened, exposed to contagious viruses, for the mandatory three days before they are euthanized.
The modern TNR program stops the reproductive cycle and gets them back to where they came from within 24 hours. They can live out their lives and the population will decline over time due to natural attrition.
Opponents of TNR usually bring up the negative impact that cats have on wildlife – primarily song birds.
My reply to that is we’ve given “trap and kill” programs a chance for the last 30 plus years and it hasn’t worked. The cats are still there, the birds are still being killed. Do you want to just keep doing what we’ve been doing for the next 30 years?
Others say TNR does not work. Experts in the field say that if managed properly and given enough time, it does work.
Successful TNR programs have reduced euthanasia rates from 30 to 70 percent in Florida, New Hampshire, New Jersey, San Diego, North Carolina, Connecticut and Utah.
Still others say TNR is too expensive.
When you add up all the direct and indirect costs of the current “trap and kill” programs it costs the taxpayers about $100 per cat. When you consider how much the county has already spent on a program that hasn’t worked, doesn’t it make sense to try something else?
In our opinion the main reason “trap and kill” has not worked and will never work is that the public will not stand for it.
People who have been feeding stray cats so they won’t starve are certainly not going to participate in a cat extermination program.
In order to get our cat population problem under control we are going to need the help and cooperation of the public, which means finding an alternative to euthanasia.
In January of 2012 local veterinarians created the “Catsnip” program which offers a limited number of free spay and neuter surgeries for Community Cats for one year. After that time we expect the county to step up with a plan.
We would like to see the county fund a minimum two year TNR pilot program where vouchers would be issued for spay/neuter of community cats.
Lake County Animal Care and Control recently installed a spay/neuter facility for impounded/adopted dogs and cats. They are currently only performing surgery three days a week.
A county-funded TNR program would allow them to utilize their facility full-time. Vouchers could also be used at the SPCA spay/neuter facility on Highway 29, as well as any private practice willing to accept them.
What can you do to help?
1. If you are feeding community cats and you can’t afford to spay/neuter contact one of the Catsnip coordinators listed below to get on the waiting list for the Catsnip Free Spay/Neuter Program. Remember, only truly unowned cats qualify for this program.
2. If you can afford $50 to $65 to spay/neuter the community cat you are already feeding, DO IT! You will be doing yourself and your neighbors a favor. Spayed and neutered cats tend to keep newcomers away so your colony will not keep increasing in size. The SPCA and several private veterinary clinics around the lake offer spay/neuter for Community Cats at a significantly discounted rate. Contact Vicki Chamberlin for more information.
3. Kitten season is here. If you are feeding a community cat who has kittens, trap them ASAP so they can be socialized and hopefully adopted.
4. If you own a barn or warehouse in need of rodent control contact Lake County Animal Care and Control. There is no safer, more effective means of rodent control than a couple of hunting cats.
5. Microchip your cats! Many of the friendly cats brought to Animal Care and Control are owned but never recovered because there is no way to identify them. If you can, keep your cats indoors or inside an escape-proof yard. Studies have shown that confined cats live five times longer on average than free roaming cats.
6. Attend the next Animal Control Advisory Board meeting scheduled for Monday, March 26, at 1 p.m. at the shelter where this subject will be on the agenda.
7. Let your Supervisor know you support TNR.
8. Volunteer to help! The Catsnip program needs help with trapping and transporting cats.
Catsnip coordinators:
Vicki Chamberlin, Lakeport, 707-263-3958,
Kathy Langlais, Animal Coalition of Lake County, Clearlake, 707-995-0552
Erica Bergstrom, Middletown,
Susan A. Cannon, DVM, and Chris S. Holmes, DVM, work at Wasson Memorial Veterinary Clinic in Lakeport, Calif. Their guest commentary is endorsed by Main Street Veterinary Clinic, Clearlake Veterinary Clinic, Animal Hospital of Lake County and Middletown Animal Hospital.
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- Written by: Dr. Susan Cannon and Dr. Chris Holmes





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