WASHINGTON — No more wondering where your hamburger came from, or where your lettuce and tomatoes were grown: Starting this week, shoppers will see lots more foods labeled with the country of origin.
The call is in response to President Donald Trump's recent trade agreement with Argentina, which allows the United States to ...
The Department of Agriculture already is throwing cold water on the new country-of-origin food labeling law — almost a year before the law is to take effect. Labeling, its advocates say, will inform ...
This is an archived article and the information in the article may be outdated. Please look at the time stamp on the story to see when it was last updated. JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. – The Independent ...
A segment of the beef industry is planning to petition the Trump administration to use a forthcoming review of a North American trade pact to revive mandatory country-of-origin labeling. But the ...
While the new country-of-origin labeling law is in effect as of Monday, the battle isn't necessarily over when it comes to giving consumers the complete lowdown of where their food comes from, said ...
The country-of-origin food labeling law will take effect next Sept. 30. It will cost an estimated $3.9 billion to implement the law, and millions more afterward to administer it. We should watch this ...