Sonoma County Ordinance to Prevent
Agricultural and Environmental Contamination from
Genetically Engineered (Transgenic) Organisms
Proposed anti-GMO Initiative Filed
with the County Clerk of Sonoma County on 21jun04
Section 1. Name.
The name of this Ordinance shall be "The Sonoma County Ordinance to
Prevent Agricultural and Environmental Contamination from Genetically Engineered
(Transgenic) Organisms".
Section 2. Authority.
This Ordinance is adopted and enacted pursuant to the authority granted to
the people of Sonoma County by all relevant state and federal Constitutions and
laws, including, but not limited to, the following:
- The California Constitution, Article XI, Section 7, which states: "A
county or city may make and enforce within its limits all local, police,
sanitary, and other ordinances and regulations not in conflict with general
laws."
- The California Constitution, Article I, Section 1, which states: "All
people are by nature free and independent and have inalienable rights. Among
these are enjoying and defending life and liberty, acquiring, possessing,
and protecting property, and pursuing and obtaining safety, happiness, and
privacy."
- The California Constitution, Article II, Section 1, which states:
"All political power is inherent in the people. Government is
instituted for their protection, security, and benefit, and they have the
right to alter or reform it when the public good may require."
- The people’s historical memory of Article XII, Section 8, found in the
California Constitution for almost a century, from 1879 to 1972, which
stated: "…the exercise of the police power of the State shall never
be so abridged or construed as to permit corporations to conduct their
business in such a manner as to infringe the rights of individuals or the
general well-being of the state."
- The United States Constitution, and the 9th Amendment to the
United States Constitution, which recognize and secure the fundamental and
inalienable right of people to govern themselves.
- The 14th Amendment to the United States Constitution, which
states: "No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the
privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States…"
Section 3. Purpose and Findings.
The People of Sonoma County, desiring to protect our agricultural heritage,
our natural environment, our public health, and our inalienable constitutional
rights, deem it necessary to prevent the introduction of transgenic crops,
plants, seed, trees, fish, livestock, and other organisms into our county. We
feel compelled to take such action for the following principal reasons:
- The United States government has failed to establish adequate protocols
and safeguards for the research, testing, and monitoring of transgenic
crops, fish, trees animals, and other organisms. None of the three federal
agencies charged with protecting our agriculture, ecosystems and public
health – the USDA, EPA and FDA – have required enough basic scientific
review of transgenic technologies to assure no harm will occur. None of
these agencies have required adequate public research or testing, peer
review of industry claims of safety, or multi-generational studies of the
impacts on public, environmental or agricultural health from long-term
exposure to transgenic organisms.
- The State of California has no regulatory structure in place to monitor
where or which transgenic crops are grown, or what their short or long-term
impacts on public, environmental or agricultural economic health might be.
Rather than assume responsibility for sorting out the opportunities from the
dangers of transgenic organisms on our farms and in our foods, the State of
California has solely relied on inadequate federal oversight.
- While it is preferable that sound agricultural and environmental policy be
coordinated at the state and federal levels, in lieu of meaningful
protections from either, the People of Sonoma County, with this ordinance,
are assuming the responsibility of protecting the health and welfare of our
people, farms, environment and economy. A decision to release transgenic
organisms into our farms and ecosystems cannot be a decision made by just a
few private biotechnology corporations, but must be a public decision,
decided after rigorous, public scientific review and extensive public
debate.
- The United Nations Biosafety Protocol has 85 signatory nations and became
international law on September 11, 2003. This protocol, not signed by the
United States, regulates the transboundary movement of transgenic organisms.
At the core of this Protocol is the "Precautionary Principle",
which requires that when a new technology poses threats of serious or
irreversible damage to human or environmental health, the burden of proof is
on the promoter of the technology to prove scientifically that the
technology is safe, not on the public or governments to prove that the
technology is unsafe. The People of Sonoma County are choosing to implement
the Precautionary Principle regarding the introduction of transgenic
technologies into our farms and environment.
- While as of 2004 there have been only four transgenic crops commercialized
at a large scale (soy, cotton, canola and corn), over the next five years,
according to the biotechnology industry, there will be dozens of fruits,
vegetables, nut, ornamental and other transgenic crops approved for
commercialization by the federal government. Many of these new transgenic
varieties will be in crops which are grown in Sonoma County.
- We seek to prevent national and international market losses for products
from Sonoma County’s farms, ranches and fisheries which would likely
result from genetic contamination by transgenic organisms of our fresh
produce, poultry, wild caught fish, and our value-added agricultural
products such as wine, dairy products, juices and processed foods.
Currently, dozens of California’s significant trading partners have legal
bans on the planting of transgenic crops, the importation of products
containing transgenic DNA or ingredients, and/or requirements that all
imported products containing transgenic ingredients be labeled as such.
Those countries currently include the European Union (25 countries), Japan,
China, South Korea, Russia, Brazil, Mexico, Australia, Indonesia, and
others.
- We seek to protect the right to farm, so that those farmers who choose to
farm without transgenic crop varieties can do so without having their crops
and seed stocks genetically contaminated by pollen or seed brought by wind,
insects, birds, animals, water, trucks or farm machinery from neighboring
farms with transgenic varieties. If we allow transgenic varieties of crops
to be introduced into our county, those farmers who choose to not use
transgenic varieties will in time, very likely suffer genetic contamination
of their crops and seed stocks, and suffer loss of their markets for
non-transgenic products. For the many certified organic producers in our
county, such contamination may result in a loss of organic certification,
and loss of premium sales for organic products.
- We seek to protect public and private property owners from expensive
eradication and environmental clean-up associated with decontamination of
their land from transgenic organisms brought by pollen, or seeds brought by
wind, insects, birds, animals, water, trucks or farm machinery.
- We seek to protect public and private property owners from the liability
associated with their land or animals becoming contaminated with transgenic
organisms, which may then become vectors to contaminate other neighbors’
land or livestock through cross pollination or seed dispersal (in plants or
trees) or interbreeding (in animals, insects or fish).
- We seek to protect the wild salmon, oyster, crab, urchin, and other ocean
fisheries and ecosystems of the Pacific Ocean, from contamination by
transgenic varieties being developed for private "fish farms".
Because past and current "fish farms" in the US have often
accidentally – and illegally – released large amounts of farmed fish
into our public rivers and oceans, we must assume that new, transgenic
varieties in "fish farms" will inevitably escape into our public
rivers and ocean.
- We seek to protect the public health of the People of Sonoma County from
any negative impacts by exposure to poorly tested transgenic organisms. Such
exposure might occur through transgenic pollen inhaled or eaten, or to
increased exposure to increasingly toxic herbicides and pesticides used to
kill new "super weeds" and "super bugs" – those farm
pest species which quickly evolve and developed herbicide tolerance or
pesticide resistance due to continuous exposure to transgenic crops bred to
express an herbicide tolerance or a pesticide.
- We seek to protect Sonoma County’s extraordinary diversity of native
ecosystems – and the plants, fish, trees, and soil flora and fauna found
in them – from the possibility of irreversible genetic contamination by
species-related transgenic organisms. Such "back-crossing" of
transgenic DNA from a transgenic crop to a native relative of the
domesticated crop has already been observed in corn, cotton and canola.
Section 4. Prohibitions.
- It is unlawful for any person to engage in the propagation, cultivation,
raising, growing, sale or distribution of transgenic organisms in Sonoma
County.
- It is unlawful for any corporation or other legal entity to engage in the
propagation, cultivation, raising, growing, sale or distribution of transgenic
organisms in Sonoma County.
- Any act in violation of paragraph (a) or (b) of Section 4 of this Ordinance
is declared to constitute an imminent endangerment of agricultural health and
environmental health and as such is declared a public nuisance.
- It is beyond the authority of the governments of the United States or the
State of California, or any of their agencies, to deny the right of the people
of Sonoma County to prevent Agricultural and Environmental contamination from
transgenic organisms.
Section 5. Exemptions.
- Nothing in this Ordinance shall make it unlawful for a person or other legal
entity in Sonoma County to purchase, sell, distribute or use human food or
animal feed which contains transgenic ingredients (eg: with transgenic corn,
soy or cotton seed, or their derivatives).
- Nothing in this Ordinance shall make it unlawful for state or federally
licensed medical or agricultural research institutions, medical or
agricultural laboratories or medical or agricultural manufacturing facilities
in Sonoma County to conduct licensed medical or agricultural research or
production involving transgenic organisms whose reproduction in the
environment can be physically contained (following USDA protocols and
guidelines at the BSL-3-Ag containment level or greater as outlined in USDA
Departmental Manual No. 9610-001).
- Any person or other legal entity seeking to use transgenic organisms under
the exemption allowed in paragraph (b) shall provide the Agricultural
Commissioner with proof of compliance with BSL-3-Ag containment level
practices or greater.
Section 6. Definitions.
- "Transgenic organism" means an organism whose DNA is modified by
transgenic manipulation. Such organisms are sometimes referred to as
"genetically engineered organisms" ("GE organisms") or
"genetically modified organisms" ("GMOs").
- "Transgenic manipulation" means the extraction of DNA from an
organism (the "donor organism") followed by its introduction into
the same or a different organism (the "recipient organism") in such
a manner that the introduced DNA can be transmitted through the reproduction
of the recipient organism. "Transgenic manipulation" does include
methods utilized to reduce the viability or fertility of the recipient
organism as a means of "biological containment", including but not
limited to so-called "genetic use restriction technologies" or
"terminator technology". "Transgenic manipulation" does
not include traditional breeding, conjugation, traditional fermentation (such
as in the making of beer, wine, bread and yogurt), hybridization, in-vitro
fertilization, or tissue culture.
- "DNA" means deoxyribonucleic acid.
- "Organism" means any living thing.
- "Physically contained" means following USDA protocols and
guidelines at the BSL-3-Ag Containment Level or greater as outlined in USDA
Departmental Manual No. 9610-001: "USDA Security Policies and Procedures
for Biosafety Level-3 Facilities".
- "Agricultural Commissioner" means the Agricultural Commissioner of
Sonoma County.
- "Person" means a human being.
- "Legal entity" means a corporation, limited liability company,
partnership, sole proprietorship, firm, club, government agency, or other form
of legal organization used by persons to engage in the acts of farming,
ranching, fishing, forestry, research, or any other activity.
- "Board of Supervisors" means the Sonoma County Board of
Supervisors.
Section 7. Enforcement.
- The Agricultural Commissioner is hereby designated to enforce this Ordinance
and shall exercise such powers as legal and necessary to carry out and
effectuate the purposes and provisions of this Ordinance.
- Within five (5) business days of having reason to suspect that a violation
of the prohibitions in Section 4 of this Ordinance has occurred, the
Agricultural Commissioner shall give written notice to the suspected person or
legal entity that any organisms in violation of this Ordinance constitute a
public nuisance and are subject to confiscation and destruction, and that a
violator is subject to the administrative and abatement costs and the civil
penalties set forth in this Ordinance.
- Any person who, or legal entity which, receives notification under paragraph
(b) shall have five (5) business days to respond to that notification with
evidence that such organisms are not in violation of this Ordinance, or that
such organisms have been destroyed or entirely removed from Sonoma County.
- Within two (2) business days of receiving notification under paragraph (c),
a notified person may request an administrative hearing before the
Agricultural Commissioner, to be held prior to the lapse of the five (5)
business days referred to in paragraph (c). Such a hearing shall provide all
due process legal safeguards.
- Within fifteen (15) business days of having given written notice to a person
or legal entity pursuant to paragraph (b), the Agricultural Commissioner shall
determine if the organisms are in violation of this Ordinance, or if they have
been destroyed or entirely removed from Sonoma County. The Agricultural
Commissioner shall consider evidence submitted under paragraphs (b), (c) and
(d), and any other evidence that is presented or which is relevant to the
determination of such violation.
- Upon making a determination that a violation of this Ordinance exists, the
Agricultural Commissioner shall thereafter promptly take all actions necessary
to ensure that such organisms are confiscated and/or
destroyed.
- The Agricultural Commissioner shall submit an annual report to the Sonoma
County Board of Supervisors describing all complaints received and enforcement
actions taken under this Ordinance, including information regarding the types
and amounts of organisms in violation of this Ordinance, the locations of any
violations, and the steps that have been taken to destroy or remove such
organisms. In this report, the Agricultural Commissioner shall also include a
list of all persons or legal entities who have sought and received exemptions
to the prohibitions in this Ordinance as allowed in Section 5, paragraphs (b)
and (c). This report shall be made available to the public by the Sonoma
County Board of Supervisors. This provision (g) shall not have effect in cases
of violations, or suspected violations, of this Ordinance where the
Agricultural Commissioner is bound by a court order or by state law to not
disclose facts in an ongoing investigation.
- The prohibitions in Section 4 of this Ordinance on engaging in the
propagation, cultivation, raising, growing, sale or distribution of transgenic
organisms in Sonoma County shall supersede any privileges and immunities set
forth in the Sonoma County Code which may exempt agricultural or other
activities from nuisance abatement.
- Any person who, or legal entity which, knowingly violates this Ordinance
shall be held responsible for administrative and abatement costs associated
with actions taken by the Agricultural Commissioner mandated by this
Ordinance, including but not limited to:
- Costs of investigation;
- Costs of removing and destroying transgenic organisms, and of cleanup
and restoration of the environment;
- Cost of county employee enforcement time;
- Court and legal costs;
- Costs of monitoring compliance.
-
Any person who, or legal entity which, knowingly violates
this Ordinance shall also be fined a civil penalty of
$1,000 for each violation, payable to the County of Sonoma.
- Persons who, or legal entities which, possessed transgenic organisms
prohibited by this Ordinance prior to the effective date of this Ordinance
shall be in violation of this Ordinance and are subject to the enforcement
provisions in this Section. Such persons or legal entities, however, shall
not be assessed the administrative and abatement costs of paragraph (i), nor
fined the civil penalties of paragraphs (j), provided they 1) report to the
Agricultural Commissioner the fact of their possession of such prohibited
transgenic organisms within 20 days of the passage of this Ordinance, and 2)
can demonstrate to the Agricultural Commissioner’s satisfaction that they
have destroyed or removed from Sonoma County such prohibited transgenic
organisms within 30 days of the passage of this Ordinance.
- The provisions of this Ordinance are cumulative, and nothing in this
Ordinance affects any other remedies any individual or government entity may
have against any person resulting from a violation of this Ordinance.
Section 8. Citizen Suits.
This Ordinance hereby creates and vests a right in all citizens of the County
of Sonoma to sue the Agricultural Commissioner to compel compliance with this
Ordinance. All actions shall be filed in the California Superior Court, County
of Sonoma. Citizen-Plaintiffs shall provide written notice to the Agricultural
Commissioner of their intent to sue, and shall give the Agricultural
Commissioner five (5) business days to initiate the enforcement of this
Ordinance. Action by the Agricultural Commissioner to initiate enforcement of
this Ordinance following the notice by a Citizen-Plaintiff shall supplant the
Citizen-Plaintiff’s right to file a citizen suit. However, if the action by
the Agricultural Commissioner does not demand injunctive relief and sufficient
damages for a violation of this Ordinance, the right of the Citizen-Plaintiffs
to initiate a suit shall not be impaired by the actions of the Agricultural
Commissioner.
Section 9. Changes and Amendments.
- Changes or amendments to this Ordinance may be made by the Sonoma County
Board of Supervisors by unanimous vote with all five Supervisors present and
voting.
- Four (4) or more weeks before a final vote on a proposed change or amendment
of this Ordinance, the proposed changes or amendments allowed in paragraph (a)
shall be read aloud at a noticed, public hearing of the Board of Supervisors.
At that hearing, the Supervisors shall insure that sufficient time be
allocated for all public comment.
- Sections and provisions of this Ordinance that are not changed or amended by
an act of the Board of Supervisors as allowed in paragraphs (a) and (b) remain
fully valid and legal.
Section 10. Sunset.
- The legal enforceability of this Ordinance shall expire ten (10) years after
its date of passage, provided the Board of Supervisors do not extend
the legal enforceability of this Ordinance as allowed in paragraph (b).
- Twelve (12) or more weeks before the expiration date of this Ordinance, the
Board of Supervisors shall read aloud the text of this Ordinance at a noticed,
public hearing of the Board of Supervisors. At that hearing, the Supervisors
shall insure that sufficient time be allocated for all
public comment on the merits of renewing the legal enforceability of this
Ordinance for another ten (10) year term. Four (4) or more weeks before the
expiration date of this Ordinance, and after the hearing
provided in this paragraph (a) has been held, the Board of Supervisors may, by
a majority vote, extend the legal enforceability of this Ordinance for another
ten (10) year term.
Section 11. Severability.
The provisions of this Ordinance are severable. If any section, clause,
sentence, word, part or provision of this Ordinance or its application is held
illegal, invalid or unconstitutional, that invalidity shall not affect other
provisions or applications that can be given effect without the invalid
provision or application.
Questions or Comments about the Initiative? Contact Dave Henson,
Campaign Director GE-Free Sonoma County
dhenson@gefreesonoma.org
(707) 874-1557 x204
Want to Get Involved in Getting this Initiative Passed? Go to: www.gefreesonoma.org
or contact Daniel Solnit, Campaign Manager GE-Free Sonoma County
dsolnit@gefreesonoma.org
(707) 823-4410