Soon you might know if your food has genetically modified organisms — but you'll have to do a little digging.
And it's the digging that had protesters throwing money on the Senate floor Wednesday.
New measures would force companies to disclose whether their products contain GMOs — but how they disclose that is up to them. For example, they could use a symbol or print a QR code on the label.
SEE MORE: Genetically Engineered Food Isn't As Evil As You Think It Is
But anti-GMO advocates don't think the measure goes far enough. They want labels to clearly print the disclosure without requiring smartphones.
Despite protests, the Senate passed the bill Thursday. Next it heads to the House of Representatives for consideration.
The Senate did get a positive nod from the Organic Trade Association, which has strongly advocated for GMO disclosure on labels.
Right now there's no federal standard on labeling GMOs.
Vermont passed a law earlier this month that requires grocery stores to use GMO labels, but these federal measures would replace the state's requirements.
This video includes clips from Just Label It, CBS, C-SPAN, CNN, Ralph Roberts / CC BY 3.0 and images from Getty Images.
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