
A
Summary of Selected DRC Positions Taken
at Annual Meetings
WHERE
WE STAND:
A
Summary of Selected DRC Positions Taken at Annual
Meetings
Fair
Trade
DRC opposes
the proposed Andean Free Trade Agreement, and any
other international trade agreements that encourage
shifting jobs and agricultural production to other
countries and allow foreign corporations to override
national laws, regulations, and court decisions.
(2002, 2004)
DRC supports
the removal of food and agriculture from the authority
of the World Trade Organization. (2005)
Safe
Food
DRC calls
for: suspension of government approval of genetically
manipulated products; a ban on the patenting of
seeds, plants, and animals; consumers' right to
know whether their food is genetically manipulated;
liability on the part of biotech corporations for
damages caused by their products; and disclosure
of sponsorship of research on genetically manipulated
products. (1999, 2002)
DRC urges
reconsideration of federal action deregulating Roundup
Ready alfalfa, and urges full environmental impact
statements for all genetically modified crops prior
to deregulation decisions (2005)
DRC opposes
federal legislative efforts to deny states the ability
to set their own food safety and labeling standards.
(2000)
DRC urges
repeal of North Dakota law denying political subdivisions
the right to zone regarding seeds. (2005)
DRC supports
strong enforcement of federal law requiring country-of-origin
labeling for all beef, pork, lamb, and fresh produce,
with the U. S. label reserved for meat from animals
born, raised, and slaughtered in the United States.
(2001, 2002)
DRC urges
a North Dakota inspection program for cattle imported
from Canada. (2005)
DRC supports
trace-back systems for all imported livestock, and
urges that trace-back systems for U.S. livestock
build on existing programs rather than creating
a duplicative and wasteful system, and protect the
confidential business information of livestock producers.
(2004)
DRC opposes
the use of irradiated foods in school lunch menus.
(2003)
DRC favors
a band on all feeding of animal byproducts or waste
to livestock. (1997, 2004)
Family
Farm Preservation
DRC opposes
any weakening of North Dakota's anti-corporate farming
laws. (1990, 1994)
DRC opposes
the permitting of large-scale contract confinement
hog operations in North Dakota, and urges counties
to enact zoning to protect local communities against
their environmental and economic impacts. (1997,
2005)
DRC urges
enforcement of antitrust laws against the meatpacking
industry, and the investigation of price discovery
in the livestock markets, and supports federal legislation
to outlaw formula-price forward contracts that prevent
competition in livestock markets. (1989, 1990, 1991,
1993, 1994, 2004)
DRC favors
replacement of the Freedom to Farm Act with legislation
that sets a floor price or loan rate at the cost
of production, manages supply, extends commodity
loans to 18 months, re-establishes a farmer-owned
grain reserve, and requires country-of-origin labeling
price reporting, and inspection of imported food
to ensure that it meets U. S. food safety, environmental,
and worker protection standards. (1999, 2000)
DRC favors
limitation of farm payments to $250,000 per year.
(2005)
DRC opposes
direct payments from state checkoff funds to private
commodity groups. (2005)
DRC supports
only those value-added agricultural projects that
are owned and controlled by producers, and benefit
them. (2000)
DRC supports
the federal legalization of industrial hemp production
and research to promote production. (2003)
DRC calls
for increased public funding of agricultural research
to counter the growing influence of agribusiness
interests. (2005)
DRC opposes
privatization of grain inspection and other inspection
programs that underwrite the quality of U.S. commodities.
(2005)
Don't
Waste the West
DRC favors
passage of a federal law allowing local communities
to bar the importation of out-of-state waste into
their landfills. (1991, 1993, 1994)
DRC urges
all counties to adopt solid waste zoning to require
county permits for new or expanding landfills, and
to require public hearings and a county vote prior
to approval. (1995)
DRC opposes
disposing of hazardous waste by mixing it with fertilizer.
(1997)
Clean
Energy
DRC endorses
only new energy development consistent with a 60%
reduction in carbon dioxide emissions by 2030. (2005)
DRC opposes
any new power production that leaves costs and obligations
to future generations. (2005)
DRC supports
a public benefits fund payable through utility bills
to finance renewable energy research and development
in North Dakota. (2002)
DRC supports
state purchase of a set percentage of its electricity
from renewable sources. (2002)
DRC supports
setting a state goal of 10,000 megawatts of installed
wind energy turbine capacity by 2020. (2003)
DRC supports
a federal renewable energy portfolio standard for
all utilities, federal programs to encourage rural
energy conservation projects and farmer-owned renewable
energy projects, and use of Conservation Reserve
Program lands for wind energy development. (2001)
DRC supports
a fair price for small wind generators for the electricity
sold back to rural electric cooperatives. (2002)
DRC supports
state standards for bonding and reclamation of wind
energy sites, limitation of wind energy options
to three years or less, prohibition of secrecy clauses
in wind energy contracts, non-severability of wind
rights from surface ownership, a guarantee of collective
bargaining rights for landowners in wind energy
negotiations, and protection of adjacent property
rights. (2003)
DRC supports
closing the Clean Air Act loophole that allows grandfathered
power plants to pollute at a higher level than new
plants. (2000)
DRC opposes
weakening of federal New Source Review standards
for coal-fired power plants. (2002)
DRC supports
the establishment of a new North Dakota State Implementation
Plan to address violations of the Clean Air Act's
Prevention of Significant Deterioration standards,
and to reduce emissions from coal-fired power plants
that lack modern pollution controls. (2002)
DRC opposes
federal energy legislation that allows oil drilling
in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, or that
grants new subsidies to the fossil fuel and energy
industries. (2001)
DRC supports
a requirement that all diesel fuel sold in North
Dakota contain at least 2% biodiesel by 2010, and
all gasoline contain at least 20% ethanol by 2013.
(2005)
DRC urges
the use of sustainable practices in every facet
of biofuels production. (2005)
Law
and Order in the Coal, Oil and Gas Fields
DRC opposes
weakening state and federal reclamation laws, including
North Dakota's 100% productivity requirement for
all reclaimed agricultural lands, or federal enforcement
authority. (1990, 1995, 1998)
DRC urges
state rules to require mines to make public their
plans for final bond release. (2004)
DRC urges
federal standards for coalbed methane development
with protections similar to those provided under
the Surface Mining Control and Reclamation Act.
(2000)
DRC favors
a state law requiring coal and oil companies to
pay abstract fees resulting from mineral rights
transactions with parties other than the surface
owner, and a state law forbidding companies from
mortgaging surface mineral leases. (1991)
DRC favors
moving the seismic shot hole setback rule from 660
feet back to 1,320 feet. (2004)
DRC supports
repeal of the 50% "risk penalty" for non-leasing
mineral owners participating in oil extraction.
(2005)
DRC opposes
issuance of temporary water permits to oil and gas
extraction companies for industrial use. (2005)
Corporate
Accountability
DRC supports
a state requirement that businesses receiving public
business incentives pay a living wage to all employees,
that every such incentive be voted on by a publicly
elected body with the right of public hearing in
the locality affected, that businesses give a full
accounting of the benefits produced through incentives,
and that the state or political subdivision retain
the right to reclaim incentive payments if the terms
of the agreement are not met. (2001)
DRC supports
the WORC position on reform of the 1872 Mining Law
to include public involvement in hard rock mining
permitting on public lands, environmental standards
for reclamation and operation, and just public compensation.
(1994)
DRC opposes
legislation that makes corporate environmental self-audits
privileged information and grants complete immunity
from penalties for violations discovered in self-audits,
but it supports comprehensive audits whose results
are accessible to the public, and it supports the
concept of reduced penalties for companies that
assume responsibility for correcting violations.
(1995)
DRC opposes
legislation that expands the concept of takings.
(1995)
DRC urges
the state legislature to overturn the law preventing
the Department of Health from issuing regulations
more stringent than the U. S. Environmental Protection
Agency. (1992)
DRC opposes
legislation that makes risk assessment and cost-benefit
analysis the paramount consideration in public health
and safety rules, opposes the elevation of peer
review over public comment, opposes the administrative
determination of the monetary value of human life,
and opposes opening administrative channels for
challenging existing rules. (1995)
DRC supports
the expansion of the federal Toxic Release Inventory
to include the public's right to know what toxic
chemicals are used in the manufacturing process.
(1996)
DRC opposes
any weakening of the right of political subdivisions
to zone for industral facilities, including industrial
livestock production. (2003)
DRC opposes
the repeal of the federal Public Utilities Holding
Company Act of 1935, which limits utility company
investment in non-utility ventures and also limits
utility company campaign contributions. (2003)
Miscellaneous
DRC supports
protection of the landowner's rights against trespass
on unposted land. (2003)
DRC urges
amendment of state eminent domain laws to outlaw
the taking of private property for private development.
DRC disavows
the use of violence to achieve any of its goals.
(2003)
DRC urges
the support of locally-owned businesses. (2004)
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