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The Rural Voice, 1989-10, Page 26food. The CAC looks at the results of agricultural production; its mandate does not directly address problems on the farm. Farmers are consumers too, but their industry is often the target of CAC criticism. The CAC was set up in 1947 as an outgrowth of the Women's Division of the Wartime Prices and Trades Board. The Women's Division, made up of volunteers, had served during wartime to advise government and consumers how to use scarce rations well. When the war ended, the volunteers felt there was a need to continue with grassroots consumer input as the technology of war was converted into consumer goods. In the beginning, all the major women's organizations in Canada sent representatives to the CAC. Today, a national executive and board repre- sents the provinces. The association has about 130,000 members — as many members as there are subscrib- ers to the Canadian Consumer maga- zine associated with the CAC (there are 53,000 members in Ontario). The CAC works at local, provin- cial, and national levels through the activities of its volunteers — and on a limited budget derived from the $25 magazine subscription (most of which funds the magazine) and from govern- ment grants. In Ontario, for example, the annual grant from the Ministry of Consumer and Commercial Relations this year, plus the allocation from the CAC, added up to $80,000, most of which went to maintaining the Toron- to office and its 1 1/2 employees. The high profile of the CAC, then, is a result of the commitment of its volunteers. As Jackson puts it, "A lot of people work hard." One of those people is Jackson herself. Her work for the CAC costs her money — not all of her expenses are paid. But she has long served in the food industry as a volunteer CAC member, ever since the first meeting to set up a local CAC group in Kitchener in the late 1950s. Jackson has a B.A. in food chemistry and an M.A. in public health nutrition. She tells a story about why she went as a representative of the University of Toronto Women's Club to that inaugural Kitchener meeting. When she was growing up, she says, her mother was unwell, and Jackson was left with the task of shopping for food. She remembers being scolded for bringing home bacon that wasn't lean enough. Back then, she explains, bacon was rolled up and put in a package with red lines printed on it. Later she discovered an organization committed to preventing such problems for consumers. Since joining the CAC, Jackson has served on the Ontario Farm Pro- ducts Marketing Board, the Ontario Farm Products Appeal Tribunal, and the Minister of Agriculture's Ontario Food Industry Advisory Committee. The Ontario Food Committee of the CAC itself (there is also a national Food Committee on which the two Ontario co-chairs sit) has no formal agenda as such. Much of its work is commenting on proposed changes in the food industry. One major issue for the committee in recent years has been getting useful, accurate nutrition labelling on foods. In September, CAC representatives met with the Ontario Federation of Agriculture to express some concerns and ask some questions. Following are some of the subjects discussed at that meeting and some additional long-standing CAC policy positions. ST PST There is no chance in the near future that bovine somatotropin (BST) will be acceptable to the public, Jack- son says. From the CAC perspective, the safety of BST is not an issue, but the benefits of its use are. "As near as we can tell," Jackson says, "nobody can really come out for sure and say it (BST) does lower the cost of produc- tion." In other words, BST does not seem to offer benefits to the consumer. Porcine somatotropin (PST), on the other hand, may be accepted, Jackson says. The use of PST can be with- drawn before the animal goes to mar- ket, and there appears to be a benefit to consumers in PST that is lacking in BST. PST, Jackson says, is supposed to produce leaner animals — but BST doesn't improve milk quality. PESTICIDES: Reasoning backwards from the consumer's point of view is also characteristic of the CAC's position on pesticides that are banned in Canada but that have been used to produce food imported into Canada. The issue poses a dilemma for the consumer, Jackson says. Should we accept another country's standards? But the CAC, she says, has no policy on the issue per se — as long as there is no trace of chemicals banned in Canada on food imported into Canada. GRADING.F F`R I AND VE STABLES More innovative and rigorous are Jackson's comments on the grading criteria for fruits and vegetables. The CAC is asking whether those criteria should be changed, particularly now that consumers are leaning towards more "natural" products. The criteria as they stand are based largely on ap- pearance rather than on nutrition and taste (on sugar content, for example). "I feel that the grading criteria which exist in the fruit and vegetable industry was developed without the consumer in mind," Jackson says. Instead, she says, the criteria serve food processors rather than consumers and farmers. RCI The CAC position is that every- thing, including food, should be taxed (as it is in New Zealand, for example). It would be administratively cheaper to tax everything, Jackson says, because every time an exception is made to the tax the general tax rate must go up (although she says that personally she doesn't like the idea of a tax on food). But the CAC wants a much lower blanket tax, of five per cent, not nine per cent. PROGRA .......................... Stabilization, Jackson says, "should not interfere too much with market forces." The CAC is willing to see government involvement in stabilization, but says the amount pro- ducers might get is not known soon enough, which sometimes "tends to make the graph more violent rather 24 THE RURAL VOICE