Informal production and distribution, from small farms and homes, were once not only common, but the backbone of everyday life.
Today, there’s a revival of much of this, as people begin to realize that corporate practices have increasingly relied upon putting additives in foods and plastics in other products.
I have sad news for locavores and other health food fans hoping to buck the trend of corporate practice: H.R. 875, the Food Safety Modernization Act of 2009. This new bill, now worming its way through the corridors of Capitol Hill, would require anyone who stores or sells any food products to any third party to register with the federal government and keep extensive records about every product bought, produced, modified, or sold.
How far will the law reach? I suspect it will have no limit, which one section clarifies: “In any action to enforce the requirements of the food safety law, the connection with interstate commerce required for jurisdiction shall be presumed to exist.”
In other words, the federal government will, if this bill is passed and “successfully” administered, regulate everything, including (and down to) your local organic truck farm, festival, or bake sale.
This bit of food totalitarianism thus takes its place in a long line of federal government regulations that, in the name of safety, regulates small operations out of existence.
It makes no sense.
This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.
1 reply on “Washington to Regulate Your Bake Sale”
Yes this Bill is almost as ridiculous as H.R. 645. Washington has been dramatically over stepping their bounds people are getting fed up. They FDA did not properly test GMO food and now they want to take away our farmers markets!?!?
The way Washington is acting is case and point for why the Tea Parties are going on and why big government does not work.