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[PEN-L:36279] You Pay
U.S. WILL SUBSIDIZE CLEANUP OF ALTERED CORN
March 26, 2003
Washington Post
Justin Gillis
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A29223-2003Mar25.html
The U.S. Agriculture Department's settlement with a Texas company
that mishandled gene-altered corn, portrayed three months ago as a
stringent crackdown designed to send a message to other potential
violators, actually, according to this story, involved a no-interest
$3.5 million government loan that means American taxpayers will
effectively subsidize cleanup efforts.
The story says that the payment terms, worth as much as $500,000 in
interest and other savings to the company over the next three years,
are contained in a document newly uncovered in government files by
the Washington-based Center for Science in the Public Interest.
The story says that the Agriculture Department did not release the
information at the time it announced the settlement with ProdiGene
Inc. of College Station, Tex.
Alisa Harrison, spokeswoman for the Agriculture Department, was cited
as saying there was no intent to deceive the public, adding, "It
wasn't that we made a conscious decision not to release it. It didn't
occur to us."
But Gregory Jaffe, director of biotechnology issues at CSPI, was
cited as saying he thought the government misled the public, adding,
"I think there was a conscious decision to create an illusion that
this was a more severe penalty than it really is. This situation
strongly suggests to me that the government is going to say one thing
in public and do something different to help this industry as best it
can behind closed doors."
The story explains that when it outlined the settlement last fall,
the government said it was fining ProdiGene $250,000 and requiring it
to reimburse the cost of destroying a warehouse full of potentially
adulterated soybeans in Aurora, Neb.
Buying, transporting and burning the beans ultimately cost $3.5
million. Under the arrangement Jaffe discovered recently, the
government paid for the cleanup. The company is not required to begin
making payments for a year, and it will have two years to pay the
money in quarterly installments, owing the government no interest on
either the fine or the cleanup -- totaling $3.75 million.
Harrison was further cited as saying that the Agriculture Department
had little choice but to accept extended payment terms, adding that
the government "took a look at their financial situation, and it was
very clear that the company could not pay the fine immediately. If
the company had gonebankrupt, we wouldn't have gotten anything. We
would have had to foot the entire bill."
--
--------------------------------------------------
Drop Bush, Not Bombs!
--------------------------------------------------
"During times of universal deceit,
telling the truth becomes a revolutionary act."
George Orwell
---------------------------------
END OF THE TRAIL SALOON
Live music, comedy, call-in radio-oke
Alternate Sundays, 6am GMT (10pm PDT)
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"I log on, therefore I seem to be." -- Rodd Gnawkin
Visit Cool Hand Uke's Lava Tube:
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- Thread context:
- [PEN-L:36287] Re: safe banks? FDIC????, (continued)
- [PEN-L:36284] Halliburton,
Ian Murray Sun 30 Mar 2003, 01:08 GMT
- [PEN-L:36283] Re: Perle before Swine,
Michael Pollak Sun 30 Mar 2003, 00:48 GMT
- [PEN-L:36280] company town,
Ian Murray Sat 29 Mar 2003, 18:43 GMT
- [PEN-L:36279] You Pay,
Dan Scanlan Sat 29 Mar 2003, 18:14 GMT
- [PEN-L:36278] T T Hipp on Perle,
Dan Scanlan Sat 29 Mar 2003, 17:23 GMT
- [PEN-L:36277] war coverage and more, from India,
Ian Murray Sat 29 Mar 2003, 17:21 GMT
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