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Let’s Take the False Labels Off Dairy Products

Dennis T. Avery

With the prevailing emphasis on truth in advertising and consumer rights, why isn’t the U.S. Food and Drug Administration banning the false and misleading labels and advertising of the organic milk and dairy products in our retail stores?

I’m looking at a set of “By Nature” brand milk and butter cartons, all stating that the organic products therein contain “No Pesticides. No Hormones. No antibiotics.” Such labels are becoming more and more common as organic dairy products become big business.

These labels are false and misleading under the very Federal Food and Drug Administration’s guidelines that have built nationwide consumer trust in labeling.

Labels that imply a dairy product is superior because of what it doesn’t contain are trying to frighten consumers (usually into buying more expensive products). Without FDA guidelines, a company could frighten lots of consumers by saying, “Our milk contains no lead-based paint.” Of course, no other milk contains lead-based paint, but the assertion implies that other milks do.

Why should a milk carton shout that it contains no pesticides when no pesticides are added to any milk or dairy products? Nor do dairymen feed pesticides to their animals. Milk is tested continuously as it moves from the farm to the consumer, for purity, safety, and quality. Any milk found to contain significant pesticide residues is barred from the market, and the dairy farm that produced it gets a quick visit from health officials.

The “By Nature” labels say their products contain no hormones. That’s silly–and wrong. All milk produced by cows contains hormones as part of the normal biology of the cow. No cow gives milk unless she’s had a calf, and all of her milk contains a growth hormone that is absolutely necessary for milk production. There is no such thing as hormone-free milk. Milk is Milk and it’s all produced the same way–by cows.

The “no hormone” labels are trying to frighten consumers about milk from cows that get extra growth hormone. But the milk from such cows contains the same growth hormone found in all milk, and no more of it than is found in other milk. The FDA says there’s no way to detect any difference. (The growth hormone is just protein, like steak, and is digested in our stomachs, like steak.)

The FDA even says that a label claiming the milk was produced without additional growth hormone might be required to explain: “No significant difference has been shown between milk derived from cows treated with recombinant bovine growth hormone and milk from those which have not.”

Milk is Milk

Thankfully, most of our milk (both organic and conventional) is fortified with Vitamin D–also a hormone, though few people realize it. This modern miracle prevents rickets in children and osteoporosis in adults. Those of us who live in northern short-winter-day latitudes, and/or use sunblock to protect against skin cancer, may not get enough Vitamin D without fortified milk.

Any milk carton that says it contains no hormones is trying to manipulate buyers–and is lying. Milk is Milk.

The big differences among the dairy products on the shelves are the clearly labeled processing techniques that somehow change the product, such as “salted butter” or “ultrapasteurized milk.”

Recent consumer surveys in New York and New Jersey showed that more than 50 percent of consumers at first believed the dairy products with the “no” labels were somehow better than the conventional dairy products. Then, after they got information on the issues, 42 percent thought the “no” labels were misleading.

We hope the FDA and state health authorities clean up this mislabeling, soon.

Abundant high-quality milk production results from the daily management of well-fed healthy dairy cows. Dairymen use a variety of technologies, but the milk remains the same nutritious product that provides us with important vitamins, minerals, protein, and calcium.

If you see scaremongering labels in your supermarket, complain to the store manager–or your local Health Department. Then relax and enjoy your healthful milk, butter, yogurt and cheese.

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