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Last month, a state attorney general took enforcement into his own hands, exposing a loophole the USDA’s National Organic Program (NOP) failed to address.
In a landmark settlement, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton stopped Albertsons and its subsidiary chains from secretly misting USDA certified organic produce with a synthetic pesticide — ProduceMaxx, an EPA-registered antimicrobial pesticide whose active ingredient is hypochlorous acid.
Under NOP rules, chlorine materials are permitted in organic handling, but any use in direct food contact must be followed by a potable water rinse that brings residual chlorine to or below the Safe Drinking Water Act’s limit of 4 parts per million. ProduceMaxx is sold as a 6,000 ppm concentrate; even at its label-directed misting range of 30 to 60 ppm, that is roughly 8 to 15 times the organic limit — and the required rinse cannot be performed on a live retail display.
According to the AG’s findings, Albertsons was misting the chemical on the retail floor with no clear-water rinse — a practice that strips the organic status from the produce on the shelf. Albertsons signed the agreement without admitting wrongdoing.
What makes the case critical is not just what Albertsons did but the regulatory loophole that allowed it to happen.
Whole Foods Market and Natural Grocers are USDA certified organic retailers and undergo certifier audits that vet their back-room and misting protocols.
Grocery stores that do not process food but sell organic produce, such as Albertsons, are generally exempt from mandatory USDA organic certification and, thus, operate in a blind spot.
Store managers may be connecting chemical drums to automated misting lines that spray organic produce, unaware that doing so puts the product out of compliance.
SIDESTEPPING THE USDA’S ENFORCEMENT ARM
Rather than wait for the NOP to act, Paxton bypassed the federal government entirely.
He used the state’s Deceptive Trade Practices Act, arguing that it is inherently deceptive to sell produce as organic once it has been handled in violation of organic rules. That a state attorney general had to step in is a glaring indictment of the USDA.
The industry knows the NOP’s record on enforcement — from years-long delays addressing organic grain fraud from abroad to the contested allowance of hydroponics, a direct violation of the soil-building requirements in the Organic Foods Production Act.
Further compounding the matter, the agency is under-resourced, with NOP staff reportedly cut by roughly one-third during the USDA’s reorganization late last year.
WHY IT MATTERS
If the NOP cannot or will not enforce organic integrity in the last mile of the supply chain, state-level consumer fraud litigation is the new frontier for protecting the organic seal.
Given that chemical suppliers market these misting systems to chains nationwide to reduce shrink, the practice is almost certainly happening in thousands of other conventional stores.
But the issue extends beyond illegal misting practices at retailers.
“Conventional pest control practices and chemicals, cross-contamination during cleaning, storage and display, and not verifying a certified source for produce arriving in generic boxes all threaten the integrity of the organic seal,” said Alan Lewis, vice president of advocacy & governmental affairs at Natural Grocers. “It is basically the honor system, leaving organic consumers deeply exposed.”
Until the NOP can guarantee integrity at the shelf, that honor system is only as strong as the retailer willing to enforce it — and shoppers are paying the organic premium on faith.
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With gratitude,
Max Goldberg, Founder |
* Whole Foods Market and Cherry Bombe are co-hosting a 2026 Supper Club series in Miami, New York and California.
* Patagonia has launched two new projects — a movie and a book — about people who refuse to stay silent and seek change in the world.
* Suja Life’s Slice Soda has come out with an all-new, non-GMO pineapple flavor.
* In Sierra Leone, Tradin Organic is deploying its Dynamic Agroforestry for Resilience and Prosperity initiative to scale regenerative agriculture.
* Led by Mad Agriculture, a coalition of 21 food companies is investing in Wilding.
* StarWalker Organic Farms held its very first Creator Day.
* On Thursday, June 4, IFOAM North America and Natural Grocers will host their next meeting to work toward an industry consensus on minimum regenerative standards for retail food label claims.
* Olney Friends School, a boarding school in Ohio, is celebrating its 10th year as a USDA certified organic farm.
* Primal Kitchen announced a partnership with Angel City Football Club.
* A new $150,000 endowment from Washington State University alumni Jim Huff and Sue Fairbanks will ensure that the school’s 30-acre Eggert Family Organic Farm continues to thrive well into the future.
* From coffee grounds to animal fat, Korea turns to organic waste to power airplanes.
Farmer Ground Flour, a farmer-owned company that mills all of its stone-ground flour in New York, just earned Regenerative Organic Certified® status. It mills for over half a dozen regenerative organic farms as a processing partner, with the goal of bringing back regional wheat. The brand's whole flours, sifted flours and whole berries are sold throughout the Northeast, as well as via the distributor Ace Natural.
According to a LendingTree analysis of USDA retail pricing data, organic produce prices increased 10%, while conventional produce prices rose only 0.3%.
Lawmakers cite studies linking weedkiller to Parkinson’s as pressure mounts for a wider U.S. ban.
"Cultivating the plots to prepare them for seeding ends 19 years of research and leaves a huge gap for organic growers," said Katie Fettes of the Canadian Organic Growers.
Chicago-based investment firm S2G, known for investments in Once Upon a Farm, Beyond Meat and Just Ice Tea, has closed the window for new investors in its $1 billion Solutions Fund I.
According to a federal lawsuit, Bayer used illegal and anti-competitive practices to monopolize the U.S. market for genetically-engineered corn seeds, reaping "hundreds of millions, if not billions, of ill-gotten dollars."
The grocer is charting a significant expansion into southern New England, with plans to open 30 to 40 stores in the region.
Major organic brands claim federal system regulating the sale of milk unfairly directs profits away from organic industry.
While the Trump administration has cracked down on artificial colors, its policies appear to be driving investment into companies that produce "natural colors" via precision fermentation.
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* Whole Foods Market and Cherry Bombe are co-hosting a 2026 Supper Club series in Miami, New York and California.
* Patagonia has launched two new projects — a movie and a book — about people who refuse to stay silent and seek change in the world.
* Suja Life’s Slice Soda has come out with an all-new, non-GMO pineapple flavor.
* In Sierra Leone, Tradin Organic is deploying its Dynamic Agroforestry for Resilience and Prosperity initiative to scale regenerative agriculture.
* Led by Mad Agriculture, a coalition of 21 food companies is investing in Wilding.
* StarWalker Organic Farms held its very first Creator Day.
* On Thursday, June 4, IFOAM North America and Natural Grocers will host their next meeting to work toward an industry consensus on minimum regenerative standards for retail food label claims.
* Olney Friends School, a boarding school in Ohio, is celebrating its 10th year as a USDA certified organic farm.
* Primal Kitchen announced a partnership with Angel City Football Club.
* A new $150,000 endowment from Washington State University alumni Jim Huff and Sue Fairbanks will ensure that the school’s 30-acre Eggert Family Organic Farm continues to thrive well into the future.
* From coffee grounds to animal fat, Korea turns to organic waste to power airplanes.