Chicago Tribune

Commentary: Organic farmers want their industry regulated. What's the holdup?

The National Pork Producers Council griped bitterly in January 2017 about "midnight" regulations approved by then-U.S. Department of Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack. Despite the whining of the Big Ag trade group, which regularly opposes organics, Vilsack was simply enacting the long sought after organic regulation clarifying the standards for animal welfare for organic livestock. Known as the Organic Livestock and Poultry Practices, these standards - 20 years in the making - would not in any way apply to the NPPC's conventional operations.

Repeat after me:

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Chicago Tribune

Chicago Tribune7 min read
Chicago Area’s Independent Bookstores See Revival
CHICAGO — Renting out a Lincoln Park brownstone for $200 may be considered unusual, but a 300-year-old vampire who wears three-piece suits and enjoys Taylor Swift music wouldn’t know any better. After all, he has also been imprisoned in a vampire dun
Chicago Tribune5 min readCrime & Violence
Chicago Police Officers Injured Or Killed While Off Duty Highlight Choice To Grant On-duty Benefits
CHICAGO — The Chicago Police Department and its pension board have now each determined that former Officer Danny Golden was performing official police duties just before he was shot and paralyzed outside a bar in the Beverly neighborhood nearly two
Chicago Tribune3 min readAmerican Government
Commentary: Deep Divides Over War In Middle East Couldn’t Come At A Worse Time For Democrats
It’s complicated. Student protests are taking over college campuses across the nation. The turmoil over the Israel-Hamas war has inspired youthful fervor that is reminiscent of the anti-war protests of the 1960s. The Middle East saga has infected Ame

Related Books & Audiobooks