Program Will Continue To Look At Future Products and
Regulatory System
A grant for $2.5 million has been awarded by the
The Pew Charitable Trusts.
to the University of Richmond to continue the work of the
Pew Initiative on Food and
Biotechnology. This is the third grant received by the Pew
Initiative since it was established in 2001.
In recent years, the Pew Initiative on Food and
Biotechnology has produced reports, briefs and conferences to
examine the controversial issues raised by the application of
genetic engineering to agriculture. Topics have addressed the
risks and benefits of current and future products of
agricultural biotechnology, the adequacy of the U.S. regulatory
system, and the challenges of marketing GM crops in a global
marketplace deeply divided over acceptance of GM foods.
“We greatly appreciate the continued confidence
of the Pew Charitable Trusts,” commented Michael Rodemeyer,
executive director of the Pew Initiative on Food and
Biotechnology. “These new funds will allow us to continue
providing policymakers, stakeholders and the public with
resources and information that address the evolving regulatory
and market challenges presented by genetically modified foods
and emerging products of agricultural biotechnology.”
“We are delighted that PIFB has become an
important and respected player in highlighting the issues that
agricultural biotechnology raises for consumers, industry and
policy makers alike,” said Maureen K. Byrnes, director of Health
and Human Services and Policy Initiatives for The Pew Charitable
Trusts. “The Trusts’ latest investment in PIFB will ensure that
efforts to address those issues will continue to make progress.”
The new grant, which will cover the eighteen
months between October 2005 and March 2007, includes a robust
program that will:
* Continue to focus attention on, and provide
information to assist, USDA and other federal regulatory
agencies’ pending efforts to reexamine how they regulate
agricultural biotechnology;
* Take advantage of the growing interest at the
state level about a variety of issues raised by agricultural
biotechnology including the potential impacts on markets, the
interactions between state and federal regulatory partners and
ways in which adopters of different production practices can
coexist; and
* Highlight for public discussion the issues
unique to future products of biotechnology such as
pharmaceutical crops, transgenic animals and insects.
Additionally, the Pew Initiative will continue
to track consumer opinion, update fact sheets on transgenic
crops, and host public policy debates that respond to timely
developments.
Staff Changes
Commencement of work on the third grant will
coincide with several staff changes that become effective
October 1.
Michael Fernandez, currently the Director for
Science with the Pew Initiative, will assume the position of
Executive Director and manage day-to-day operations of the Pew
Initiative. Michael Rodemeyer, the Initiative’s founding
director, will continue to work part-time on a number of
Initiative projects while writing and consulting on other
projects.
Kara Flynn has rejoined the Pew Initiative as
Director of Communications after working with the National Pork
Producers Council for the past three years. Kimberly Brooks, the
current Director of Communications, will leave the Pew
Initiative at the end of September to pursue other projects.
Further information about the Pew Initiative on
Food and Biotechnology as well as its research and events is
available at
www.pewagbiotech.org.
The Pew Initiative on Food and Biotechnology
is a nonprofit, nonpartisan research project whose goal is to
inform the public and policymakers on issues about genetically
modified food and agricultural biotechnology, including its
importance, as well as concerns about it and its regulation. It
is supported by a grant from The Pew Charitable Trusts to the
University of Richmond.