The USDA Can't Stop Organic Food Fraud
It's time to return oversight to industry groups and the states.

Amended U.S. Department of Agriculture rules announced last month suggest the agency has high hopes for plans to crack down on fraud in the organic food sector.
"The amendments protect integrity in the organic supply chain and build consumer and industry trust in the USDA organic label by strengthening organic control systems, improving farm to market traceability, and providing robust enforcement of the USDA organic regulations," the agency explained in a January 19 notice in the Federal Register. The new final rule, dubbed Strengthening Organic Enforcement, is set to take effect next month (with enforcement delayed until next year).
Some are hailing the USDA's stance.
"The Organic Trade Association, which lobbied for rule, said it represents the biggest change to organic regulations since the creation of the USDA organic food program," the Associated Press reports. "OTA officials said in a statement the regulation 'will do much to deter and detect organic fraud and protect organic integrity throughout the supply chain.'"
Organic food is a big business in this country, and the organic label helps to fetch a premium price.
"To consumers, the symbol means an assurance that an agricultural product such as beef or celery has been produced using only naturally occurring fertilizers, pesticides, and other inputs," I explain in my book Biting the Hands that Feed Us: How Fewer, Smarter Laws Would Make Our Food System More Sustainable. "To producers, the USDA organic seal means higher costs, but also the opportunity to charge consumers more for that beef or celery."
Because of that price premium—and the fact that organic food may be indistinguishable from conventionally raised versions of those same foods—fraud in the organic food sector isn't hard to find. For example, a 2018 case saw two South Dakota grain farmers sent to federal prison for defrauding buyers to the tune of more than $70 million. Two years ago, the New Yorker detailed a scheme involving tens of millions of dollars in fraudulent organic grain sales. Just last month, the Justice Department charged a Minnesota farmer with fraudulent grain sales of nearly $50 million.
So would greater USDA oversight of organic food solve those problems? Call me skeptical.
The amended rules have some producers and sellers concerned they will increase costs for them and consumers. That'll mean higher prices, and higher prices likely mean more incentives to cheat.
A more glaring problem is this: the USDA has been aware for many years that its oversight of organic food has been a massive failure—but that knowledge hasn't spurred the agency to act. For example, a 2010 report by the USDA Office of Inspector General found the agency's "enforcement of federal laws governing organics is abysmal," Food Safety News reported at the time. A subsequent USDA OIG report in 2017—this one focusing on organic-food imports—found (per Buzzfeed) that "consumers who make a point of buying organic food may be getting ripped off" due to lax USDA oversight and other problems.
As I've explained, when it comes to these and other problems plaguing organic food, the USDA is much more a cause than the solution. That's why having the agency become more involved in organics will likely only exacerbate that problem.
It didn't have to be this way. Hippies, homesteaders, and other counterculture types helped to popularize organic foods and farming in this country decades ago. As a result of their efforts, organic food certifiers and labels sprouted up in this country and existed for decades before Congress muscled its way into the sector.
"Organic certification programs began in the early 1970s, when small producers using natural and sustainable farming methods in states such as Oregon and California banded together to establish minimum standards for themselves and their peers," I explain in Biting the Hands that Feed Us. "Certifiers and the small farmers worked with states to pass laws supporting the standards."
Fraud was a problem even in those days. In fact, fraud in the sector was why Congress handed oversight of the industry's labeling and marketing to the USDA.
"Accusations of fraud surrounding organic foods led Congress to scrutinize the certification process," I explain in Biting the Hands that Feed Us, noting Congress passed an organic-labeling law in 1990 that didn't come into force until more than a decade later. "But if the USDA's involvement in organic certification was intended to prevent fraud, its success has been a mixed bag."
For example, as I note in the book, citing numerous reports, "the agency has used its congressional mandate to water down the meaning of the term 'organic' to the benefit of large agricultural producers." I also detail how the Cornucopia Institute, a group that's "one of the nation's strongest supporters of organic farming," is also "one of the leading critics of USDA organic standards."
I often buy organic food. And I hate when businesses defraud consumers. Under the USDA's watch, fraud in the organic food industry has spread. I have little faith that an agency first charged with preventing fraud in the organic food sector is finally getting around to solving that problem 33 years later.
As I've proposed before, a better plan than allowing the USDA more power over organics would have Congress rescind the agency's oversight over organic foods entirely. With that change, the private, state-based bodies (such as CCOF and Oregon Tilth) that have been responsible for certifying producers as organic since the 1970s would continue to verify a producer's organic status. States could also then hand oversight to such certifiers or to state, regional, or even national bodies, which could work with certifiers to ensure compliance with certifiers' rules and to punish bad actors.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
March to the beet of your drum and cultivate your own. Or buy from local growers where you can personally visit their operation.
There are independent organic watchdog groups that help root out bad actors.
You’re milking that one. Maybe we can pepper the comments here and lettuce entertain all the couch potatoes.
I get paid over 190$ per hour working from home with 2 kids at home. I never thought I’d be able to do it but my best friend earns over 10k a month doing this and she convinced me to try. The potential with this is endless. Heres what I’ve been doing..
HERE====)> http://WWW.NETPAYFAST.COM
You can't just leave things to the free market to see what will turnip, that's corny.
As Thoreau observed, you have to "Strike the Rootabaga."
🙂
+++
Most of them are dirt poor though. And yet more organic farmers keep sprouting up.
Retromingent biodynamic fertilization makes an important contribution to keeping organic produce rich in free range vermin, nutritious E. coli, and popular drug residues
Naturally there’s fraud with so much at steak.
"The USDA Can't Stop Organic Food Fraud"
Sure, they can. All it requires is more money, more staff, and more enforcement power. Just ask any bureaucrat.
And guns, don’t forget guns.
Google pay 200$ per hour my last pay check was $8500 working 1o hours a week online. My younger brother friend has been averaging 12000 for months now and he works about 22 hours a week. I cant believe how easy it was once I tried it outit.. ???? AND GOOD LUCK.:)
https://WWW.APPRICHS.com
Send lawyers, guns, and money ... $$$$!!!!
Though nitrogen-rich, organic guns are hard to compost.
Armed IRS agents will hunt down organic cheaters.
Sleepy Joe Biden's dismal foreign policy record thus far:
1) Lost the war in Afghanistan to the Taliban.
2) Losing the war in Ukraine to Russia, despite pumping in tens of billions of dollars seemingly every week.
3) Losing the hot air balloon war to China.
What a worthless gasbag full of hot air Joe, Blinken, and the rest of this fucking clown show is.
At least Biden (D) has been able to secure the southern border to prevent a foreign invasion of welfare recipients.
I bet you got all weepy with pride when Donnie French-Kissed Vlad in Helsinki, Mikey.
And how many wars did Putin start with Ukraine when “Donnie” was President there, turd?
Crimea did join Putin while Biden was VP.
my office employment multi month prior, I was disturbed and an ineffective go after a quest for new employment I was secured this online position. what's more, presently I am ready to win thousands from home. Everyone can carry out this responsibility and win more dollars online by follow See this article for more information————————>>>GOOGLE WORK
Google is by and by paying $27485 to $29658 consistently for taking a shot at the web from home. I have joined this action 2 months back and I have earned $31547 in my first month from this action. I can say my life is improved completely! Take a gander at it what I do…..
For more detail visit the given link……….>>> http://Www.Salaryapp1.com
NONE because during the time he was President "Donnie" upheld and honoured the solid aggreement that Ukraine would not join NATO nor allow any arms deployment or buildup on Russia's border. Biden did what he does with everything else hes told: he forgot.
Was there a penis for you to deflect with?
In Middle-School Biology,I was taught that organic matter was Carbon-based and that Carbon was the element around which Hydrogen, Oxygen, and Nitrogen bonded to form amino acids, which are the building blocks of life on Earth.
So, if you want to know whether a food is organic, just use Dr. "Bones'" Tri-Corder like they do in Star Trek.
🙂
Or you could recourse to Howard Stern's definition: "Organic" means "Let's tell people we didn't spray this shit and then charge them more for it."
🙂
...but using shit as fertilizer makes it "organic".
I use composted woodchips. Free raw material. Also does a great job retaining soil moisture. Others with livestock do compost the manure.
I was being somewhat facetious with that comment. More of a statement that many who believe commercially grown "organic" is special.
I've got nothing against organic home gardening. While growing up my grandparents regularly fertilized their gardens with manure
(just be sure to let it age before digging it in).
Wood chips make great mulch but so does compost as a top dressing.
The current NOP allows for variability, including practices labeled as organic that fall far from meeting the pre USDA intent. Big ag and big govt have their hands in it where that is a concern.
Some see food as fungible - an apple is an apple. Others see food labeled as organic as fungible - an organic apple is an organic apple. I don’t for either case. I also don’t care what other people eat as long as I’m not coerced into paying for it or their healthcare.
The woodchips come from limbs taken off trees turned into firewood. Composting them with lawn clippings does great at regulating soil temps, retaining moisture and adding carbon into the soil. The amount of mycelium present is nice. uncomposted chips do make great mulch but should not be turned into the soil. They scavenge nitrogen as part of breaking down, robbing that from plant roots. They only take maybe the top 1/8” when just laid on top so most crops are fine with that.
There’s a grower in Cali that uses woodchips exclusively. Probably has a book…iirc, the film is on YT and called Return to Eden.
After the circus came to our town each year, we could tell where the elephants had relieved themselves, since the grass was thicker and greener in those spots.
Which hits on something climate activists who want to eliminate cattle because of the greenhouse gases they produce are not understanding about how grasslands and grass eaters have co-evolved over millions of years.
Carbon activists like Biden’s climate tsar John Kerry (D) use copious amounts of carbon galavanting around the planet so they can attend climate control conferences. That diminutive Danish activist Greta is similar. It is about control.
or understand about how the God who made the cattle and sheep ALSO made the grasslands pastures, fields, etc, and planted them wit theperfect foods for the warm blooded critters that eat them. No "evolution" fairy tales necessary. One amaing mind made them both, and made them FOR each other.
No shit. We use chicken manure with wood chips or leaf mold for the garden. Goat and sheep manure we sell for 6 bucks a pound.
I’m on an inorganic diet. Water and salt. That’s it.
I bet you could sell it for a lot more if you claim to use celebrity shit as manure.
Gwynneth Paltrow is taking notes here. Then there will be a home gardening supplement to Goop Magazine called Poop Magazine.. Then there could be a product line of celebrity composts called Their Shit Don't Stink Brand Compost.
🙂
And don't forget, if we all go organic quickly enough, we can reduce the surplus population. From WEF fun facts.
Speaking of science v/s anti-science, how ‘bout that them thar ORGANIC food bein’ fer the birds?!?!? Excerpt from my web site, & keep in mind, in Scienfoology, GAWD = Government Almighty’s Wrath Delivers… Speaking of food, I must add a few notes about ORGANIC food. Did you know that organic food is NOT for the birds? See http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2010/05/100518230515.htm , our feathered friends would MUCH rather eat NON-organically grown seeds, DESPITE all that extra carbon-tetrachloride-plutoniumate-arsenate-cyanide that we ALL know is SO much more prevalent in the non-organic foods! So, non-organic foods are “for the birds”… Just so that you know… ALSO please note that GAWD mandates that organically-grown meats need to be FALSELY labeled, for your protection, concerning the FACT that they contain cancer-causing nitrates and nitrites (but sellers can’t tell you that). Because, after all, organic food is magically “better” all around… Yes, this is true, see http://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/02/business/02hotdog.html ... To their credit, some organic food providers would like for GAWD to allow them to tell us the truth… NOT that I am trying to slam GAWD, now!
All food is organic, or it wouldn't be food.
See my take on it above. P.T. Barnum said it best.
Everything organic is food?
I thought the AP said to not use “the”. They left it out in front of “rule”, yet used it elsewhere.
I use organic labeling to avoid expensive versions of the same food.
The amendments protect integrity in the organic supply chain and build consumer and industry trust in the USDA organic label by strengthening organic control systems, improving farm to market traceability
Jesus Christ, did they lift this from the SUBSAFE Handbook?
It’s time to return oversight to industry groups and the states.
We did, and this is what they demanded:
when it comes to these and other problems plaguing organic food, the USDA is much more a cause than the solution...It didn't have to be this way. Hippies, homesteaders, and other counterculture types helped to popularize organic foods and farming in this country decades ago. As a result of their efforts, organic food certifiers and labels sprouted up in this country and existed for decades before Congress muscled its way into the sector...Fraud was a problem even in those days. In fact, fraud in the sector was why Congress handed oversight of the industry's labeling and marketing to the USDA...I often buy organic food. And I hate when businesses defraud consumers...
So your solution is to avoid dealing with the actual problem that caused the regulation in the first place. FRAUD. I agree a bunch of bureaucrats ain't gonna fix that. But you admit that it was the same before (and the reason why) the bureaucrats came into existence.
It IS up to the government - on our demand - to figure out how to deal with a fraud problem when the only existing alternative is for the fraudster to solve the problem because they are 'well-intentioned'. Free markets cannot exist without a workable solution for fraud. Without that solution - all you have is kleptocracy or kakistocracy.
Imo an executive agency can't deal with that. A court system maybe with both common law and statutory law to help judges adjudicate the conflict - and most important standing in a system where the product is eaten as evidence and the producer may not even be in the US.
People who advocate for some free market solution are often also the first to advocate for limiting standing or limiting a cost for fraud in the name of 'tort reform'.
There is no fraud - 'organic' means nothing.
It's like GMO - all your food has been genetically modified.
"‘organic’ means nothing."
An acquaintance grows organic rice for baby food producers. For him, organic means not using pesticides.
"It’s like GMO"
In some ways it's the opposite. Food producers are happy to put 'organic' on the labels of the food they market. Not the case with GMO.
Organic means one thing to him. Organic means something else to someone else.
Organic means nothing.
"Organic means nothing."
Because maybe you are a nihilist. Not the case with the organic farmer who was a decent man and felt fulfillment in providing the rice for baby food.
"Organic means something else to someone else."
Organic food is food grown without pesticides. If you meet someone who believes otherwise, please correct them.
As an aside - blockchain (though not bitcoin) could be a currency that deals with supply chain type fraud. But I suppose it's more profitable for that industry to be a part of fraud.
Not really.
Blockchain is great for 'man in the middle' type of attacks - where someone tries to intercept/alter information on route.
Most fraud is of the 'I lied about the original input' type - which Blockchain does nothing to prevent.
That's on top of the Blockchain info only being linked to some paperwork with a serial number - food doesn't come with unique identifiers.
Federal jury kicks Biden's minions in the ass, acquitting a prolife demonstrator whose son was harassed by a Planned Parenthood apparatchik:
https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2023/jan/30/mark-houck-acquitted-federal-jury-win-pro-life-mov/
Enter Here To Grab Your Deal Now! It is An Amazing chance to win $750 Here Why Are You Waiting Just Visit Here................ https://bit.ly/Getcash750
I see as little potential for expanded enforcement of organic regulations by turning the matter over to the states as I did with turning abortion over to the states.
Resistance to regulation is universal and a fact of life. Federal law must preempt state law on matters in which citizens have little power to enforce their own rights. States already have the power to establish a higher ceiling than the federal one.
You're assuming that there's any majority interest in regarding the use of the term 'organic'.
There is not.
In addition the US is constructed where the state's have the police powers and the federal government is enumerated and limited.
Then there's the issue of showing actual harm.
Finally, there are already existing examples of privately enforced standards for consumers that desire them - kosher, for example, is totally privately certified.
Finally, finally, with all that considered, where is the justification for making the majority bear the burden of standards enforcement for a tiny minority?
Agammamon beat me to the point re. kosher food. Observant Jews and Muslims don’t need government agencies to decide what’s kosher or halal and what’s not. Better to use independent certifying organizations, whose reputations ride on the honesty of their ratings, than on unaccountable government agencies that’re subject to political pressures.
Too, different people may have different definitions of “organic” foods. Agrichemicals, land use, labor practices, animal welfare, long-distance transportation, carbon footprint, and a host of other things might all be considered, with people caring intensely about some of these factors and indifferent to others. Multiple certifying organizations allow the consumer to pick the one that most closely matches his or her own preferences, whereas federal certification means everyone’s stuck with a single standard.
" different people may have different definitions of “organic” foods. "
Organic food means food grown without pesticides. I've yet to meet one of these 'different people' with another definition.
If " the fact that organic food may be indistinguishable from conventionally raised versions of those same foods", the FRAUD is the whole Organic Food business. People is paying more for the same thing in the wrong belief that it is better. Today, it is possible to detect toxic substances in the part per billion and part per trillion range. However, "organic food" is full of naturally toxic, allergenic and carcinogenic "natural" substances. In some cases, like micotoxins, "organic food" has more because innocuous synthetic fungicides are not used to kill the fungi that produces "naturally" the toxin. Ditto botulinum toxins and preservants. Not talking that "organic farming" (including USDA) consider synthetic biocides (e.g., copper salts) permissible because they were used before 1850!!!. They are more toxic and residual than modern organic (in the scientific sense!) biocides. The fraudster is not the individual that sells products of modern farming (conventional is the "organic" which is just old) as "organic" is the whole "organic food" cult.
Stop pretending 'organic' means anything.
I already informed you organic food is food grown without pesticides. Why is this so difficult to understand. It's as if you don't want or refuse to understand because you feel threatened by the idea. Like the children who plug their ears and sing to block unwanted or unpleasant news.
Fine, get the govt out of organic regulation, but don’t expect the result to be better than the nutritional supplement industry, which is rife with fraud.
It is hard to read and listen
Here's another example of 'The Iron Law of Liberalism:'
“Any market reform, government initiative intended to reduce red tape and promote market forces will have the ultimate effect of increasing the total number of regulations, the total amount of paperwork, and the total number of bureaucrats the government employs.”
In this case the proposal is to replace one federal body with 50 state bodies, and in case that's not enough, "States could also then hand oversight to such certifiers or to state, regional, or even national bodies, which could work with certifiers to ensure compliance with certifiers' rules and to punish bad actors."
Anyone who would trust the USDA is nuts or incredibly naif. Remember its THOSE GUYS brought us several iterations of their insane "food pyramids". those designs which were almost 100% directly opposite to reality. They are exacty why so many Americans are grossly overweight, cancerous, feeble, etc.
They also approved Roundup, GMO's, and the use of hormones in livestock. Ya think they'd be really honest about anything? Gummit poohbahs, overpaid, underworked, no real cnsequences for their decisions that affect US.
Or you could just eat a sensible, balanced diet of regular food and get some regular exercise.
"Or you could just eat a sensible, balanced diet of regular food "
People prefer cheap food. Health and taste take a back seat. Sensible means low cost and highly processed.
I am making a good salary from home $6580-$7065/week , which is amazing under a year ago I was jobless in a horrible economy. I thank God every day I was blessed with these instructions and now it’s my duty to pay it forward and share it with Everyone,
🙂 AND GOOD LUCK. 🙂
Here is I started.……......>> http://WWW.SALARYBEZ.COM
And the wardrobe costs are minimal too!
I earn $100 per hour while taking risks and travelling to remote parts of the world. I worked remotely last week while in Rome, Monte Carlo, and eventually Paris. I’m back in the USA this week. I only perform simple activities from this one excellent website.
view it, copy it here....>>>> http://Www.Salaryapp1.com
Great article, Mike. I appreciate your work, I’m now creating over $35,000 dollars each month simply by doing a simple job online! I do know You currently making a lot of greenbacks online from $28,000 dollars, its simple online operating jobs.
.
.
Just open the link—————————————>>> http://Www.SmartJob1.Com