The Center for Food Safety has returned to a federal court in California
charging the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s (USDA’s) Animal and Plant
Health Inspection Service (APHIS) with violations of the law in partially
deregulating genetically engineered (GE) sugar beets. Center for Food Safety
v. Vilsack, No. 11-0831 (N.D. Cal., filed February 23, 2011). Details
about the agency’s action are included in Issue 381 of this Update.

Seeking declaratory and injunctive relief, the group and several other organizations concerned about the safety of GE crops and their alleged potential to contaminate conventional and organic crops, challenge the February 4, 2011, APHIS decision to approve an environmental assessment prepared in connection with the agency’s decision to issue an interim partial deregulation of Roundup Ready® sugar beets. According to the complaint, “The partial deregulation decision purports to allow planting and use of [GE sugar beets] pending the completion by APHIS of an Environmental Impact Statement (‘EIS’). This interim partial deregulation decision will authorize permits for the continued commercial production of [GE sugar beet] seed and the commercial planting and production of [GE sugar beet] root crops in 2011.”

The complaint recites the history of the litigation that led a district court
to order APHIS to complete an EIS before deregulating GE sugar beets and
to order the destruction in December 2010 of GE sugar beet seedlings that
APHIS had summarily allowed to be planted before completion of the EIS,
anticipated to occur sometime in 2012. The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals,
which conducted a February 15 oral argument on the government’s appeal,
stayed the lower court’s order to destroy the seedlings pending the appeal’s
outcome. The plaintiffs contend that APHIS has failed to comply with a
number of laws requiring it to assess environmental, economic and human
health effects before deregulating a plant pest and that the agency’s decision
“completes the remainder of APHIS’s interim commercialization plan for [GE
sugar beets] during the pendency of the . . . EIS.”

Among other matters, the plaintiffs seek a court order enjoining APHIS from allowing any GE sugar beets to be planted before it complies with the National Environmental Policy Act, Plant Protection Act and Food, Conservation, and Energy Act of 2008.

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For decades, manufacturers, distributors and retailers at every link in the food chain have come to Shook, Hardy & Bacon to partner with a legal team that understands the issues they face in today's evolving food production industry. Shook attorneys work with some of the world's largest food, beverage and agribusiness companies to establish preventative measures, conduct internal audits, develop public relations strategies, and advance tort reform initiatives.

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