Organic Consumers Fund
Candidate Survey
Ohio 2006
Build the Organic Consumers Political Candidate Survey!
This survey is a cooperative effort by thousands of grassroots organic consumers like you. With your help, we can make the organic movement a strong political force.
Step 1 Find Your State Page
Find your state on the left navigation bar and click on it.
Step 2 Scroll Down to Read Your State's
Survey Results
The survey results page for your state lists all of the political
candidates currently in our database for state and national offices
and their responses (or lack thereof) to the survey.
To add missing candidates, see steps three and four.
Step 3Lookup Missing Candidates in Your
State
Gather the contact information for missing candidates in your state by
using the extensive listings of candidate websites at www.politics1.com/states.htm.
When you arrive at politics1.com, click on the candidates' names to to
go to their websites, then find and record their contact information (especially emails)
to complete the next step.
Step 4 Add Candidates and Automatically Send Them the Survey
Automatically add missing candidates in your state to our records while
sending them the survey by entering their information into our form.
Click Here to Add Candidates
Step 5 Contact Candidates Who Haven't
Yet Answered the Survey
If candidates have been sent the survey, but their responses are still "pending,"
please send them the survey again by clicking the "Send Survey" link near their name.
Each time a candidate is contacted by people in their area,
they will be more likely to fill out the survey - and to realize
that organic issues are important issues.
Please Send the Survey to Ohio Candidates.
If candidates are missing, enter their information and send them the survey at http://www.organicconsumersfund.org/candidateinfon2.cfm
US Senate
| Party | Candidate | Campaign Phone |
Campaign Address |
survey status |
Score |
| Democrat | Sherrod Brown | 1-800-587-4180 | 2280 Kresge Drive Amherst 44001 |
send survey |
-- |
| Republican | Mike DeWine | 614-229-5380 | PO Box 340188 Columbus 43234 |
send survey |
-- |
US House
| Party | Candidate | Campaign Phone |
Campaign Address |
survey status |
Score |
| Democrat District 01 |
John Cranley | 513-241-1777 | 3621 Harrison Ave Cincinnati 45211 |
send survey |
-- |
| Democrat District 03 |
Dick Chema | 216-533-0324 | Address Needed City Needed Zip Needed |
send survey |
-- |
| Democrat District 05 |
Robin Weirauch | 419-842-4338 | P.O. Box 301 Napoleon 43545 |
send survey |
-- |
| Democrat District 06 |
Charlie Wilson Email Needed |
740-635-2006 | 800 Main Street Bridgeport 43912 |
send survey |
-- |
| Democrat District 10 |
* Dennis Kucinich Email Needed |
440-845-2707 | P.O. Box 110475 Cleveland 44111 |
send survey |
-- |
| Democrat District 11 |
* Stephanie Tubbs Jones | 216-751-9022 | 3729 Silsby Road Cleveland 44118 |
pending | -- |
| Democrat District 12 |
Robert Shamansky | 614-849-0260 | PO Box 09748 Columbus 43209 |
send survey |
-- |
| Republican District 12 |
Pat Tiberi | 614-847-2000 | 2021 E Dublin Granville Rd #2000 Columbus 43229 |
send survey |
-- |
| Democrat District 13 |
Betty Sutton | 330-835-4262 | 1700 W. Market Street, #155 Akron 44313 |
send survey |
-- |
| Democrat District 14 |
Lew Katz | 440-946-5289 | 38123 W. Spaulding Willoughby 44094 |
send survey |
-- |
| Independent District 14 |
werner lange | 814-732-1788 | P.O. Box 422 Hiram 44234 |
survey response |
100% |
| Democrat District 15 |
Mary Jo Kilroy | 614-267-2006 | 3391 North High St. Columbus 43202 |
send survey |
-- |
| Republican District 15 |
* Deborah Pryce | 614-469-5614 | 145 E. Rich St, 2nd Floor Columbus 43215 |
send survey |
-- |
| Democrat District 16 |
Tom Shaw | Phone Needed | P.O. Box 343 Medina 44258-0343 |
send survey |
-- |
| Democrat District 17 |
* Tim Ryan Email Needed |
330-652-6900 | 1600 Roosevelt Avenue Niles 44446 |
send survey |
-- |
| Democrat District 18 |
Zack Space | 330-343-2430 | 714 North Wooster Ave. Dover 44622 |
send survey |
-- |
| Republican District 18 |
Joy Padgett | 740-450-7954 | 871 Walnut Street Coshocton 43812 |
send survey |
-- |
| Republican District 3 |
* Mike Turner Email Needed |
(937)225-2843 | 120 W. Third Street Dayton 45402 |
send survey |
-- |
| Democrat District 4 |
Rick Siferd | 419.224.7200 | 140 N. Main St. Lima 45801 |
send survey |
-- |
| Republican District 7 |
* Dave Hobson | 937-322-0045 | 82 W. Columbia Rd. Springfield 45502 |
send survey |
-- |
| Republican District 8 |
* John Boehner | (800) 582-1001 | 7969 Cincinnati-Dayton Road West Chester, OH 45069 |
send survey |
-- |
| Democrat District 9 |
* Marcy Kaptur | 419-693-0078 | PO Box 899 Toledo 43697 |
survey response |
96% |
| Democrat District OH2 |
Victoria Wulsin | 513-233-4180 | 7440 Montgomery Road Cincinnati 45236 |
send survey |
-- |
| Republican District OH2 |
* Jean Schmidt | 513-791-5326 | 8280 Montgomery Road, Suite 204 Cincinnati 45236 |
send survey |
-- |
Governor
| Party | Candidate | Campaign Phone |
Campaign Address |
survey status |
Score |
| Democrat | Ted Strickland | 614-857-0700 | 309 South 4th Street, Ste. 100 Columbus 43215 |
send survey |
-- |
| Republican | Ken Blackwell | 614 221-8552 | Ohioans for Blackwell, 211 S. Fifth St., Columbus, OH 43215 Columbus 43215 |
send survey |
-- |
| Independent | Jim Lundeen | 419-522-9310 | 1 Marion Avenue Suite 108 Mansfield 44903 |
survey response |
74% |
| Green Party | Bob Fitrakis | 330-562-4637 | 8832 Nairn Court Dublin 43017 |
survey response |
95% |
| Libertarian | Bill Peirce | 440-471-0322 | 30628 Detroit Rd #174 Westlake 44145 |
survey response |
37% |
Lieutenant Governor
| Party | Candidate | Campaign Phone |
Campaign Address |
survey status |
Score |
| Independent District |
Viagra Viagra | 0234233434356 | Milano |
send survey |
-- |
Secretary of State
| Party | Candidate | Campaign Phone |
Campaign Address |
survey status |
Score |
| Democrat | Jennifer Brunner | 614-255-4254 | 545 E. Town Street Columbus 43215 |
send survey |
-- |
| Republican | Greg Hartmann | 614-358-0796 | 211 South Fifth Street, 29th Floor Columbus 43215 |
send survey |
-- |
State Representative
| Party | Candidate | Campaign Phone |
Campaign Address |
survey status |
Score |
| Democrat District 28 |
Connie Pillich | (513) 792-9322 | 7815 Cooper Road, Suite A Montgomery 45242 |
send survey |
-- |
| Republican District 28 |
* Jim Raussen | (513) 742-4830 | 77 South High Street - 11th Floor Columbus 43215 |
send survey |
-- | * signifies incumbent candidate |
Organic Consumers Political Candidate Survey 2006
Send the Organic Consumers Survey to candidates in your area to see where they stand on these important issues
1. Organic products make up a 2.5 percent share of all grocery store sales.
Q: Do you think organic agriculture should receive a fair share (at least 2.5%) of government resources spent on agriculture?
2. As the consumer demand for, and profitability of, organic products grows, there is increasing pressure to lower organic standards. Recently, this has taken the form of increased allowances for synthetic substances in processed food products labeled "organic" and the certification of "organic" dairies where the cows have little or no access to pasture.
In the body care industry, shampoos and other products whose ingredients are mostly synthetic often misuse the word "organic" while regulators do little to discourage the practice. These policies and practices could have disastrous effects on confidence among organic consumers.
Q: Do you support strict standards for processed foods, dairy, and body care products that are labeled or marketed as organic?
3. Many of the commonly used pesticides in agriculture today are associated with decreasing male fertility, fetal abnormalities, chronic fatigue syndrome in children, and Parkinson's disease. Pesticides are ranked among the top three environmental cancer risks.
Q: Do you support more aggressive government action to assess the harms of pesticides, take harmful pesticides off the market, and hold companies responsible for diseases and environmental damage caused by pesticides?
4. This year, the US House of Representatives passed a controversial "national food uniformity" law, that would nullify 200 state and local food safety and food labeling laws. State laws eliminated would include those in California and other states that identify ingredients likely to cause cancer, birth defects, allergic reactions, or mercury poisoning.
Q: Should people have the right to pass consumer safety laws at the state or local level that require food labels to include information on dangerous ingredients?
5. Food sold in US supermarkets averages 1,500 - 3,500 miles from farm to plate-more than a 25 percent increase from 1980. Last year 10 percent of all certified organic food was imported from overseas. Twenty-five percent of US global greenhouse gasses come from industrial food production and long-distance food transportation.
In the US there is a growing movement of consumers to buy local foods to reduce food miles and greenhouse gas pollution.
Qa: Do you support Country of Origin labels and other labeling that helps consumers choose Made in the USA and local products?
Qb: Do you support government action to help US farmers develop local and regional markets and to reduce non-renewable energy use on their farms?
6. The use of genetically engineered organisms in agriculture has proven to be a controversial and likely hazardous experiment.
In a recent USDA poll, 80% of Americans stated that they want genetically engineered foods to be labeled, as they are in Europe and many other countries.
Qa: Do you support mandatory labeling of foods containing genetically engineered ingredients?
Qb: Do you support mandatory pre-market safety testing for all genetically modified foods and crops?
7. Mad Cow disease has spread to the United States. Livestock are exposed when they are fed blood, manure, and slaughterhouse waste, a common practice in industrial beef production (prohibited under organic standards). Humans are exposed when they eat the meat of a diseased animal.
Testing all cattle at slaughter is the only way to prevent meat eaters from being exposed to the human form of the disease, a fatal, brain-wasting illness. Nevertheless, the USDA tests only 40,000 of the 35 million cattle slaughtered annually. The US's inadequate precautions are closing markets for US beef around the world. Making things worse, the USDA has prevented independent beef producers from initiating their own comprehensive testing regimens.
Q: Do you support universal testing for Mad Cow disease and a ban on feeding slaughterhouse waste to farm animals?
8. US farm subsidies were meant to protect the US food supply and make food affordable to US residents, but they've turned into a trade-distorting mechanism that allows US exporters to "dump" (sell at prices below the cost of production) overproduced commodities on developing nations. The result is millions of Third World farmers who can't compete with dumped commodities being forced from their land and US farmers being precariously dependent on unsustainable subsidies.
Q: Do you support a restructuring of trade-distorting US farm subsidies?
9. Industrial agriculture, the number-one source of water pollution in America, is cheaper than organic, but only because the true costs are passed on to the consumer in the form of toxicity and environmental destruction. Sewage sludge and chemical fertilizers cost less than compost and animal manure. Spraying herbicides is less expensive than hand weeding. Conventional grain and animal by-products are less expensive livestock feeds than organic grains and grass. Farmers making the transition to organic often experience a temporary reduction in yields.
The Organic Certification Cost Share Program, part of the 2002 Farm Bill, was allocated $5 million to make one-time direct incentive payments of $500 each to farmers to assist with the costs of initial organic certification. This is the only subsidy ever given to organic farmers. Industrial agriculture, by contrast, received over $23 billion in subsides in 2005 alone.
Q: Do you support a significant shift in US farm subsidies to help family farmers and ranchers make the transition to organic?
10. Industrial agriculture is a major source of pollution in the US-leaching the soil, poisoning the water, generating 25 percent of greenhouse gasses, and consuming 17 percent of all fossil fuels used. The Conservation Security Program (CSP) was designed to encourage farmers to adopt land, watershed and wildlife conservation practices on their farms. CSP subsidies reward farmers for protecting watersheds and reducing tillage in erosion-prone areas to stop excess nitrogen fertilizer from washing into streams.
Unfortunately, because of congressional budget cuts, fewer than 20,000 out of 2 million farms nationwide are signed up for the program. Lawmakers have placed a funding cap on the CSP while robbing it to pay for disaster relief, deficit reduction and to finance other areas of USDA's budget.
Q: Do you support a significant shift in subsidies to help US farmers adopt conservation and renewable energy practices on farms?
11. Until we shift government resources from industrial agriculture to organic agriculture, organic foods will remain unaffordable to many. Sadly, children and the elderly, the people who need healthy foods most, are also the most likely to live in poverty.
Q: Do you support increases for Food Stamps, the WIC (Women, Infant and Children) Farmers' Market Nutrition Program and other programs to help low-income Americans buy organic food?
12. Preventive health care and proper nutrition have been linked to a range of health and social benefits including disease reduction, increased academic performance and lower health care costs. Unfortunately, a large percentage of our population lacks access to health care and healthy foods. In the United States today, eight million people are jobless, 40 million are without health insurance, 35 million are living below the poverty line, and much of the population consumes an inordinate amount of cheap junk food.
Q: Do you support universal health care with a preventive focus and a major emphasis on better nutrition?
13. Science tells us that we face a grave risk of irreversible and devastating global warming if global temperatures increase by more than 3.6°F. We can keep temperatures below the danger zone by freezing emissions in 2010 and gradually reducing them each year with the goal of achieving an 80% reduction by 2050.
Q: Do you support an 80% reduction (by 2050) in climate destabilizing greenhouse gas pollution?
14. The Organic Consumers Association believes that increased market shares for organic and Fair Trade products will provide very little consolation in an era of permanent war, energy crisis and climate chaos.
Q: Do you support ending the Iraq war and redirecting funds from the $500 billion annual military spending in the US toward greening the US economy, reducing greenhouse gas emissions and converting US agriculture to organic practices?
15. Electronic voting machines with voter-verifiable paper records enable voters to verify that their votes have been accurately recorded and election officials to conduct meaningful manual recounts and audits of election results.
Voter-verified paper ballots also make it possible to recover from e-voting machine malfunctions, such as those experienced in recent elections in Ohio, Iowa, California, Georgia, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Florida and elsewhere, without having to re-run a costly election from scratch. Without hard-copy records of voter intent, neither election officials nor voters or candidates can be sure of the accuracy of the outcome.
Q: Do you support requiring electronic voting machines to produce voter-verified paper records and election officials to use these records to conduct mandatory audits of election results?
16. In 95 percent of 2004 House races and 91 percent of 2004 Senate races, the candidate who spent the most money won. It costs more than $1 million to win a House seat and over $7 million to be a Senator-roughly $1,500 and $3,000, respectively, for every day in office.
Q: Do you support eliminating the distorting effect of special interest money on our elections and politicians by requiring full public funding for all federal, state, and local elections?
17. The internet principle of "net neutrality" requires service providers to give all users of this public commons equal access. AT&T, Verizon, Comcast and other large companies want to turn the information super-highway into a private toll road. These companies have spent an estimated $100 million to manipulate public opinion and influence elected officials.
The loss of net neutrality would mean that telecom and cable companies could slow down or even cut off access to websites and email in order to increase their profits or eliminate content that was objectionable to them.
Q: Do you support legislation to prevent internet companies from rigging the system to serve only the highest-paying users and discriminate against users they don't like?
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