The anti-GMO litigation in Hawaii is
dead.
Earthjustice attorney Paul Achitoff
acknowledged in a Tuesday afternoon webinar that he “would be
reluctant" to ask the current Supreme Court “to rule on an issue
like this, but I doubt the court would be interested, whether we
asked them or not.”
The 9th Circuit Court of Appeals
affirmed District Court rulings that prevent the litigation from being referred to the Hawaii Supreme Court, leaving SCOTUS as the only
option to keep the three defeated bills alive.
With further appeals now apparently out of the
question — despite funding pleas to the contrary — the
activists plan to focus all their fury on the Legislature and Gov.
Ige's administration. Oh, joy!
Ashley Lukens, director of the Hawaii
Center for Food Safety, said the group will be pushing some bills
supported by its partners — Sierra Club, Surfrider and Farmers
Union United, which represents primarily foodies and yardeners, not
commercial farmers. CFS, meanwhile, will be lobbying for mandatory
“public” disclosure of pesticide use, and buffer zones around
“sensitive areas,” such as homes, schools and waterways. But curiously, only
for agriculture.
Her comment echoes a challenge issued
by failed politician Gary Hooser in his blog:
The chemical companies will rue the day
they took on this battle with our community.
It would have been much easier for them
and for our community if they simply would have accepted the modest
provisions contained in Bill 2491 – Disclose to us your pesticide
usage, don’t spray next to schools, hospitals and homes and let us
do a comprehensive study to determine health impacts on our
community.
But instead they have fought us every
step of the way.
Bullshit. The seed companies are
voluntary disclosing their pesticide use, which is posted on a
government website, as well as notifying neighbors prior to pesticide
applications. They also stopped cultivating fields nears schools, and
none of them are growing crops near hospitals, though they give those
facilities prior notification of spraying just as a courtesy.
As for a comprehensive health study, as
I previously reported, anti-GMO activist Pat Gegen and others asked the Agency
for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry to “perform a Public
Health Assessment on the west side of Kauai due to environmental
health concerns associated with pesticide use by nearby agricultural
operations.”
The agency declined, noting:
“It is unlikely that residents of
Kauai west side communities are being exposed to pesticides at levels
of health concern when they swim in, have contact with, or drink from
local streams and rivers.”
“Overall, the scientific literature
does not provide strong support for an association of human
agricultural pesticide exposure with the birth defects of concerns.”
The seed companies are not stopping
anyone from doing a comprehensive health study. It's just that
there's no justification to warrant the expense of such an
undertaking. I guess it was naive to think Hooser would stop lying once he lost re-election.
Hooser then writes:
The focus now will be on the Governor
and the Hawaii State Legislature to put into place the necessary
regulations and conduct the needed testing and studies.
Again, solid regulations already are in
place, and both the Department of Ag and Department of Health have
agreed to conduct more testing and studies. What more do these people
want?
I mean, aside from the spotlight. And
the cash to keep their groups going.
Hooser closes with:
I have the freedom today to make new
choices, unfettered in a sense from the bindings of elective office.
#hooserunleashed
Yeah, well, there's a leash law, ya
know. I wonder if Hooser will now finally register as a lobbyist.
In fact, he's already at it, meeting
with newly elected Maui Councilwoman Kelly King on her home turf:
And he's such a class act that he let her pay for lunch. But then, he is unemployed now. (Oh, yeah! We be doing the happy dance!)
It's not surprising that these groups
have gotten so much favorable coverage in Civil Beat. Besides Pierre
Omidyar, they also enjoy shared funding from the Wallace A. Gerbode
Foundation — which CB describes as "our major benefactor" and “an activist grant-making
private foundation.”
Oh, so they're finally admitting they
aren't actually an investigative news site — they're an activist
group. That totally explains their biased coverage.
In closing, here's a little tidbit:
Eastdil Secured has been retained to
offer for sale the fee simple interest in the acclaimed St. Regis
Princeville Resort and the Makai Golf Club (collectively the
“Resort”) located on the scenic Hawaiian island of Kauai.
Wonder what changes that may entail?
Their mantra; If at first you don't succeed, fail fail again.
ReplyDeleteJoan, without the focus on the biotechs here by concerned citizens, which you refer to as "antis", spraying close to schools, homes and hospitals would still be happening now. We who live close to the fields are thankful to the watchdogs (some of them BULLDOGS AND PITBULLS) for their concern and efforts. Without the suit by the Waimea community, Waimea would still be the dust bowl of Kauai and the biotechs would still be using farm practices that are illegal. So, the concerned, steadfast minds (which you refer to as "antis") are angels to many who have been harmed by the biotechs here on Kauai!
ReplyDeleteWow Joan! You are monitoring Gary's Facebook pages and having him followed on Maui and taking pictures to boot. I guess Monsanto is every where and he can get away with nothing. Very cool.
ReplyDelete@8:37 So if you've gotten what you wanted, and now it's all good, then why are you still complaining?
ReplyDelete@8:39 Actually, I'm blocked from Gary's Facebook page. He posts his blog publicly on the Internet, just as I do. And really? You actually think I'm having him followed? And that Monsanto is everywhere? Paranoia reigns.
Joan said "Then why are you still complaining?"
ReplyDeleteBecause they want to DESTROY AG!!!
Great post Joan. I don't understand how Gary and his crew can keep posted false statements about what the seed companies are doing to poison Kauai and (despite the JFFG report) people still eat it up! -Obviously none of them have read the report, or facts just don't matter anymore. I think they do, but more and more it looks like the anti's and American's just don't care about the facts in our post-truth society.
ReplyDelete@8:37 AM, the seed companies were voluntarily spraying near schools after school was over and wind was blowing AWAY from the schools, towards the spray rig; keeping a buffer zone away from the hospital and only spraying when wind was blowing away from hospital towards spray rig; and as far as spraying near homes, homeowners were notified in advance and applications only occurred if wind was blowing away from homes toward spray rig. And this was happening before 2010. The dust problem was here during sugar, and no evidence of harm has ever been shown from dust or pesticides on Kauai. Practically all of the complaints on the West side came from either people who had been terminated with cause from the seed companies, or transplants from mainland urban areas who have no clue about agriculture.
ReplyDeleteI challenge anyone to come up with one documented case of anyone who was in a hospital and was negatively impacted by agricultural pesticides in the entire history of modern agriculture in Hawaii.It sounds good on paper but there's nothing behind these claims.
ReplyDeleteYou sir or ma'am is by far the most ignorant slave. Please do not have children and if you do then please let someone adopt your kid(s).
DeleteAnd from the picture, it's not likely the former councilman is accustomed to light lunches.I might have to attend the festivities to celebrate a Hooser-free Council today. Maybe he'll "seek other opportunities" on Maui.
ReplyDeleteIf I were she, I'd pay for lunch. I'd have first hand info on how to screw oneself as a politician and an individual. Then I would do everything opposite.
ReplyDeleteCurious Joan why you don't post pictures of Brun and Kagawa meeting with the Syngenta reps for lunch recently on the west side?
ReplyDeleteIf you have pictures to prove it, send them my way.
ReplyDeleteKelly King, new Maui Council Candidate --- major hypocrite. Perfect for her to get tips from Hooser.
ReplyDeleteShe's proud of being an anti, panders to the antis, has promised a new anti-GMO bill, but makes her living from her biodiesel company that uses GMO plant oil!
What a joke. But these are the kinds of people that we are entrusting with our future. Along with the self-proclaimed alchemist and new Maui Councilmember, Alika Atay, who delayed invasive species experts access to his 1.5 acre "farm" until they could get a court order to go in, while the devastating Fire Ants proliferated.
And Atay's new office staffer, Trinette Furtado, the welfare recipient who, in advertising for her own unsuccessful bid for the Council, says she's a "technical entrepreneur" but on her financial disclosure claims she is unemployed with no income. But she found time to be a part of every anti-everything cause and sued to help put 700 farm families out of business. She's still gloating about it.
Yeah, these are our new leaders.
Yea right. Like I am going to take a chance taking those guys pictures. The thugs would beat the living shit out of me. You got luck on Maui I guess. You must know the restaurant management or the chem guys just have a huge network and they are all on the lookout for Hooser.
ReplyDelete@ 12:55 " or ma'am" is a parenthetical expression and should be set off by either commas, or by parentheses. Also, ""is" by far" should actually be "are". In addition, "and if you do" is also a parenthetical express that you failed to punctuate. Normally, a comma is used after "please" when it starts a sentence; but, since the sentence is a boarder-line run-on, I hardly see the point. That beings said, based on your lack of grammar (and punctuation) skills, I have determined that you are ill qualified to make any determination in regard to Joan's intelligence. Quite frankly, her eloquent writing skills, and vast knowledge of a vast array of topics, makes her over qualified to write this humble blog.
ReplyDeleteThat being said, please go TROLL elsewhere. You hate reflects poorly on the Anti's cause.
You white/brown/yellow Devils always think you know it all and it wasn't Joan that made that comment so the response was at the anonymous commenter. You can't even comprehend that but you're a grammar expert/farmer boy? You're probably a Chen/bio employee and it's easy to identify that you are because all of your comments suggest that you're just another white missionary trying to profit from the brown people while committing genocide like your ancestors.
DeleteYou mainland hacks just stumbled upon this blog within a couple of months or years and haven't been here since the start.
I have and all you slaves such as county, state, KCC, and many coworkers wouldn't have known about this blog site. I brought everyone of you here by using the dirty syndicate pigs to enslave you as stalkers.
I have to change my writing style and I've done in many times to confuse you white/brown/yellow devils.
#iAmDaKingOfKauai
@12:44 pm, it's possible they might have been discussing avoiding conflicts of interest, something Hooser repeatedly failed to do when he was a councilmember.
ReplyDeleteJoan, i am not complaining---i am saying, those people did some good for some of us!
ReplyDelete9:03; i have lived in Waimea for the past 35 years, next to Syngenta fields, next to Waimea Canyon School. I use to call for their spraying schedule cuz my doctor told me to use caution being that the fields were so close to my home. That was in 2002-2006 when i was not well. They didn't notify the school or public about their schedules. They sprayed whenever they had to as i could see them doing it at times---then came the outcries from the public and they shutdown their fields that were adjacent to the school and subdivision. You really have to live it to know it! Why can't some of you believe what some of us have witnessed and lived through?
You would think that if the spraying was safe then why would they move. The fact that they ran as soon as that took place is evidence to contradict the stink weed conclusion. If you're wrong then admit your mistakes but if you were right then practice what you preach and have studies and data to support your claim(s).
Delete1:48 They didn't run they were trying to respond to community fears
Delete@3:00 we don't believe you because we've lived here much longer than 35 years before corn when sugar would spray and burn with total impunity and we are still alright. We don't believe you because you're a liar.
ReplyDeleteWhiners and losers thick here.
ReplyDeleteImagine if Hoser and his asshole friends fought poverty, domestic violence, and the devastating meth problem on the west side of Kauai with the same zeal that they've gone after ag. Gee you can't because they never will. Or support the real non profits that work tirelessly with out recognition on the real problems on Kauai. These people have no shame!
ReplyDeleteThey ain't doing shit but collecting a pay check.
DeleteThat is the truth 8:05 PM!
ReplyDeleteDitto @ 8:05pm....my great grandparents came to kauai in the early 1900's because of sugar, lived well into their 80's and 90's.....so did my grandparents....my parents are alive and well in their 70's....still living in kekaha gardens with cane field in our backyard. And also ditto @ 8:05pm, da batu problem is sickening.
ReplyDelete6:01---i was born and raised in Waimea, lived on Oahu to go to school, came back here and lived in Kalaheo for a number of years and returned to Waimea 35 years ago! So, i lived a street away from the sugar fields, we grew up on the plantation! I loved the smell of burning cane and miss it today. Yes, sugar is very different from corn, if you really lived here a long time you would know that!!!!!! Sugar sprayed, but most of it was very close to the ground---men carried sapidong cans on their backs, sprayer few inches off the ground. They sprayed only the weeds and not the entire plant like they do corn---we never had planes spraying like they did at Olokele later on. You gotta go read up on how most gmo corn are made to withstand glophysate (roundup) and how the pesticide is used on corn! They didn't do that with sugar!!!!!! Maybe that's why you and I are still alive and doing okay.
ReplyDeleteFacts and not just Chem/Bio propaganda.
DeleteSorry meant to say ditto @ 3:00pm
ReplyDeleteAlso, I remember the cane fields in Kekaha were sprayed via airplane or helicopter
ReplyDelete@902 brah you are such a liar! They sprayed all kine like paraquat chlordane and simazine and they would spray from helicopters and planes. You went school not worked the fields.
ReplyDeleteFIYO, aerial application of pesticides by the sugarcane companies were not those mentioned. Paraquat, chlordane, and atrazine are extremely toxic. What was used was a sugarcane ripener to induce the plant to store sugar for harvesting, rather than growing further. Further, fertilizers were dropped by aerial means.
ReplyDeleteBradley would love to get his hands on that shit @ 6:37 for his big corn
ReplyDelete