Washington, DC
April 14, 2006
The U.S. Department of
Agriculture today announced that a Jefferson, Oregon, seed
company has paid USDA $2,450 to settle alleged violations of the
Federal Seed Act.
The company, ProSeeds
Marketing, Inc., settled the case in agreement with officials
from USDA’s Agricultural Marketing Service. The company neither
admitted nor denied the charges.
The case resolved by the
settlement involved four shipments consisting of annual
ryegrass, perennial ryegrass, and lawn mixture seed alleged to
be in violation of the Federal Seed Act; there were three
shipments to Missouri that were reshipped to Arkansas, and one
shipment to Ohio.
The alleged violations,
while not the same for all shipments, were:
-
false labeling as to
pure seed, other crop seed, and weed seed;
-
false labeling as to
germination;
-
failure to test for
germination prior to interstate shipment; and
-
failure to keep and/or
supply a complete record of the seed.
AMS administers the act with
the help of state seed officials. Seed regulatory officials in
Arkansas and Ohio cooperated with AMS in making the
investigations. The Federal Seed Act is a truth-in-labeling law
designed to protect farmers and consumers who buy seed. |