Public Policy & NGOs
Here's a look at documents from public policy and non-governmental organizations
Featured Stories
Secrets of Evolution Found in Ancient Plant DNA
COLD SPRING HARBOR, New York, March 14 -- The Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory issued the following news:
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Secrets of evolution found in ancient plant DNA
The Takeaway
CSHL Professor & HHMI Investigator Zachary Lippman and colleagues have identified more than 2.3 million conserved non-coding sequences across 314 genomes from 284 plant species--some more than 400 million years old. Their research provides an invaluable tool for plant breeders and a new understanding of plant evolution.
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You've heard of deep space, but what about deep time? Today's geneticists and evolutionary biologists
... Show Full Article
COLD SPRING HARBOR, New York, March 14 -- The Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory issued the following news:
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Secrets of evolution found in ancient plant DNA
The Takeaway
CSHL Professor & HHMI Investigator Zachary Lippman and colleagues have identified more than 2.3 million conserved non-coding sequences across 314 genomes from 284 plant species--some more than 400 million years old. Their research provides an invaluable tool for plant breeders and a new understanding of plant evolution.
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You've heard of deep space, but what about deep time? Today's geneticists and evolutionary biologistscan extend their investigations further back in time than ever imagined. Still, many mysteries remain. One has vexed biologists for decades. In both plants and animals, gene sequences and functions are often conserved across species over hundreds of millions of years. However, this breaks down when comparing DNA that controls gene activity. And no one has been able to pin down whether this "regulatory DNA" is conserved in plants at all. It got to the point where many thought such conservation simply does not exist. Think again.
A new study published in Science by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory (CSHL) and international collaborators reveals the discovery of more than 2.3 million regulatory DNA sequences conserved across 314 plant genomes from 284 species. These "conserved non-coding sequences" (CNSs) were identified using a new computational tool called Conservatory, developed between the labs of Idan Efroni at Hebrew University, Madelaine Bartlett at Sainsbury Laboratory Cambridge University, and Zachary Lippman at CSHL. Amazingly, the team found that some of these CNSs date back to before flowering plants split from their non-flowering ancestors over 400 million years ago.
Talk about deep time! How did their approach yield such a bounty of discovery?
The key was to examine and compare the order and makeup of all gene groups on a tiny scale, from one ancestor to the next, across hundreds of genomes. CSHL postdoc Anat Hendelman, a co-first author of the study, was amazed to see how many of the CNSs they found have been around all along. "Picking apart and genetically editing these CNSs confirmed they're essential for developmental function," Hendelman says.
The team's research revealed three core principles of CNS evolution in plants. First, though the spacing of these sequences varies, the order in which they appear on the chromosome is conserved. Second, when genomes get rearranged, CNSs start associating with different genes. Finally, ancient CNSs tend to persist when genes become duplicated, a crucial feature of plant genome and gene family evolution.
"This was actually one reason CNSs could not be discovered using the same approaches used in animals," Lippman explains. "We didn't just find CNSs using this innovative approach. We found that new regulatory sequences often come from old CNSs that were modified after gene duplication. This helps explain how novel regulatory elements emerge."
With the Conservatory project, plant biologists like CSHL project collaborator David Jackson can now access what the researchers call a "comprehensive atlas of regulatory conservation across plants, including dozens of crop species and their wild ancestors."
That's a huge resource for plant breeders looking to meet major challenges, such as droughts and food scarcity. But the implications go far beyond agriculture. As Lippman puts it, "It's a new lens on the evolution of life across eons and will make genome editing far more efficient for engineering crop traits."
Funding
Binational Science Foundation, Israeli Science Foundation, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, National Science Foundation Plant Genome Research Program, USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture, Gatsby Foundation
Citation
Amundson, K.R., Hendelman, A., et al., "A deep-time landscape of plant cis-regulatory sequence evolution", Science, March 12, 2026. DOI: 10.1126/science.adt8983
Core Facilites
"The Sequencing Technologies and Analysis Shared Resource provides access to an array of high throughput Next Generation Sequencing (NGS) technologies. We offer cutting-edge technology alongside convenient in-house services for a broad range of genetic analysis." -- NGS Director Sara Goodwin, Ph.D.
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Original text here: https://www.cshl.edu/secrets-of-evolution-found-in-ancient-plant-dna/
[Category: Science]
Maria Lazar Continues Courting Extreme Right-Wing
MONONA, Wisconsin, March 14 -- A Better Wisconsin Together, a state-based research and communications hub for progressives, posted the following news release:
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Maria Lazar Continues Courting Extreme Right-Wing
Lazar's close ties to radical right-wing extremists continue to get more bizarre by the day
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Judge Maria Lazar continues to court extreme right-wing groups and election conspiracy theorists as she campaigns for a seat on the Wisconsin Supreme Court. This weekend, Lazar is advertised as a featured guest at an event hosted by the 5Riders and Lake Country Patriots.
"Maria Lazar's
... Show Full Article
MONONA, Wisconsin, March 14 -- A Better Wisconsin Together, a state-based research and communications hub for progressives, posted the following news release:
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Maria Lazar Continues Courting Extreme Right-Wing
Lazar's close ties to radical right-wing extremists continue to get more bizarre by the day
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Judge Maria Lazar continues to court extreme right-wing groups and election conspiracy theorists as she campaigns for a seat on the Wisconsin Supreme Court. This weekend, Lazar is advertised as a featured guest at an event hosted by the 5Riders and Lake Country Patriots.
"Maria Lazar'sclose ties to radical right-wing extremists continue to get more bizarre by the day," said Lucy Ripp, a spokesperson for A Better Wisconsin Together.
In addition to hosting Lazar this weekend, 5Riders has also hosted other polarizing figures in the recent past, including members of the book-banning group Moms for Liberty and election conspiracy theorists. Notably, 5Riders also has a history of endorsing failed right-wing candidates for Wisconsin Supreme Court, including Brad Schimel in 2025 and Dan Kelly in 2023.
In January of this year, 5Riders published a group of songs and videos with highly questionable, racially charged lyrics in the song "Separate but Equal" that apparently misconstrues the three co-equal branches of the government and includes lyrics, "It's about keeping the dark from killing the light."
Lazar's weekend appearance is just the latest in her long dalliance with the extreme right. Previously she has:
* Been endorsed by Wisconsin's most radical anti-abortion groups, including Pro-Life Wisconsin, whose mission is to ban abortion with no exceptions and criminalize doctors and nurses for providing abortion care;
* Ruled in favor of allowing far-right election conspiracists access to personal voting data;
* Embraced election deniers like Michael Flynn, Jim Troupis, and Michael Gableman; and
* Praised members of Moms for Liberty, a group notorious for their book banning agenda and designation by the Southern Poverty Law Center as an extremist antigovernment group.
Most recently, Lazar dodged answering questions about whether or not she would have supported Donald Trump's campaign lawsuit that came before the Wisconsin Supreme Court that tried to overturn his 2020 election loss by throwing out ballots cast by 220,000 Wisconsinites in two counties.
"Cozying up to people and groups who would undermine our rights and freedoms is a huge red flag when the person doing it is a sitting judge who aims to sit on Wisconsin's highest court," said Ripp.
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A Better Wisconsin Together is a state-based research and communications hub for progressives and is an affiliate of ProgressNow.
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Original text here: https://abetterwisconsin.org/maria-lazar-continues-courting-extreme-right-wing/
[Category: Economics]
Institute for Clinical and Economic Review Releases Draft Evidence Report on Treatment for Narcolepsy
BOSTON, Massachusetts, March 14 -- The Institute for Clinical and Economic Review issued the following news release on March 12, 2026:
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Institute for Clinical and Economic Review Releases Draft Evidence Report on Treatment for Narcolepsy
-- Public comment period now open until April 7, 2026; Requests to make oral comment during public meeting also being accepted --
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The Institute for Clinical and Economic Review (ICER) today released a Draft Evidence Report assessing the comparative clinical effectiveness and value of oveporexton (Takeda Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd.) for narcolepsy type
... Show Full Article
BOSTON, Massachusetts, March 14 -- The Institute for Clinical and Economic Review issued the following news release on March 12, 2026:
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Institute for Clinical and Economic Review Releases Draft Evidence Report on Treatment for Narcolepsy
-- Public comment period now open until April 7, 2026; Requests to make oral comment during public meeting also being accepted --
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The Institute for Clinical and Economic Review (ICER) today released a Draft Evidence Report assessing the comparative clinical effectiveness and value of oveporexton (Takeda Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd.) for narcolepsy type1.
This preliminary draft marks the midpoint of ICER's eight-month process of assessing this treatment, and the findings within this document should not be interpreted to be ICER's final conclusions.
Register for ICER's Early Insights Webinar
On March 24, as part of ICER's Early Insights Webinar Series, ICER's Senior Vice President of Research, Foluso Agboola, MBBS, MPH, will present the initial findings of this draft report. This webinar is exclusively available to all users of the ICER Analytics platform; registration for the webinar is now open (https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_rnZn5-oYRcK4HsVIFmw2sQ#/registration).
Submit a Public Comment
The Draft Evidence Report and Draft Voting Questions are now open to public comment. All stakeholders are invited to submit formal comments by email to publiccomments@icer.org, which must be received by 5 PM ET on April 7, 2026. Please submit public comments as a Word document in the following format:
* 12-point Times New Roman font
* Five-page maximum (not including references or appendices)
ICER's Patient Portal and Manufacturer Engagement Guide provide additional detail on what types of information may be most informative to the report.
ICER will review all comments and incorporate any necessary changes in the Evidence Report and Revised Voting Questions that will be posted on or about April 29, 2026. All comments and ICER's response to comments will be posted publicly along with the Evidence Report.
Register for the Virtual Public Meeting
The Evidence Report will be the subject of a virtual public meeting of the Midwest Comparative Effectiveness Public Advisory Council (Midwest CEPAC) on May 14, 2026. During the meeting, the independent council will vote on key questions raised in the report. Registration for the virtual public meeting is now open (https://events.zoom.us/ev/Ane6qfqjQDxa93TBlRcJZiuxqQ4KscZ8AvypqCIWEtYEszkiAInV~ArS_JPcoShmnFoFH7-arG6t3EEkdI8R1Dfb3QtydGx60ykdEgsGT605cfCSf6Se76fVNhVn0GArLSUk2Hsj_TrKWCQ).
Register to Make an Oral Comment
During the virtual public meeting, there will be a limited amount of time available for interested stakeholders to make an oral comment on the report. Requests to submit oral comments must be emailed to publiccomments@icer.org by 5 PM ET on April 7, 2026. Individuals who wish to deliver oral comments must separately register to attend the meeting. For more information about registering for oral comment, please visit our website.
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About ICER
The Institute for Clinical and Economic Review (ICER) is an independent, non-profit research institute that conducts evidence-based reviews of health care interventions, including prescription drugs, other treatments, and diagnostic tests. In collaboration with patients, clinical experts, and other key stakeholders, ICER analyzes the available evidence on the benefits and risks of these interventions to measure their value and suggest fair prices. ICER also regularly reports on the barriers to care for patients and recommends solutions to ensure fair access to prescription drugs. For more information about ICER, please visit www.icer.org.
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REPORT: https://icer.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/ICER_Narcolepsy_Draft-Report_For-Publication_031226.pdf
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Original text here: https://icer.org/news-insights/press-releases/institute-for-clinical-and-economic-review-releases-draft-evidence-report-on-treatment-for-narcolepsy/
[Category: Economics]
FOIA Documents Reveal Trump Administration Ordered Fish and Wildlife Service to Change Materials About Indigenous Peoples
WASHINGTON, March 14 [Category: Environment] -- The Sierra Club posted the following news release:
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FOIA Documents Reveal Trump Administration Ordered Fish and Wildlife Service to Change Materials About Indigenous Peoples
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WASHINGTON, D.C. -Official Trump Administration documents obtained by the Sierra Club reveal the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) took steps to censor materials at its headquarters in Virginia and at a wildlife refuge in Oklahoma as part of Donald Trump's attempts to whitewash history via the executive order "Restoring Truth and Sanity to American History".
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... Show Full Article
WASHINGTON, March 14 [Category: Environment] -- The Sierra Club posted the following news release:
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FOIA Documents Reveal Trump Administration Ordered Fish and Wildlife Service to Change Materials About Indigenous Peoples
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WASHINGTON, D.C. -Official Trump Administration documents obtained by the Sierra Club reveal the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) took steps to censor materials at its headquarters in Virginia and at a wildlife refuge in Oklahoma as part of Donald Trump's attempts to whitewash history via the executive order "Restoring Truth and Sanity to American History".
*Read the FWS documents here
FWS staff flagged materials at more than 30 wildlife refuges, fish hatcheries, and agency offices for content on climate change, Indigenous peoples, wetland destruction, and other issues that may be inconsistent with the executive order. For the first time, these documents reveal the feedback provided by Interior on whether to change or keep materials -recommendations that include contradictory guidance about when to make changes. At one location, Interior recommended removing a line from a video about the "violent disruption" of Indigenous peoples, while at another location, Interior determined signage about Europeans forcing Indigenous peoples off their lands was "factual" and recommended no change.
"These documents expose the Interior Department's chaotic and contradictory approach to implementing Donald Trump's attempts to rewrite history. This effort continues to put career public servants in the difficult position of evaluating whether telling the full story of our public lands violates an executive order rooted in climate denial and hostility toward marginalized communities. Our public lands are landscapes of collective memory that are intended to serve as classrooms for democracy, not as vehicles for a whitewashed and sanitized version of history," Gerry James, deputy director for the Sierra Club's Outdoors For All campaign.
DOCUMENT DETAILS
The documents include nearly 300 public comments from more than 100 wildlife refuges and fish hatcheries in response to the QR codes seeking public feedback. Many comments reveal public opposition to the executive order. Several comments highlight positive support for the refuge system and the need for more funding for public lands.
The documents detail the following sites and materials flagged by FWS staff, alongside recommended changes by Interior:
* National Wildlife Refuge System Headquarters (Virginia): Interior recommended the removal of the following language in a video: "From the earliest days of colonization the delicate balance nurtured by indigenous peoples, the first stewards of these lands, was violently disrupted."
* Wichita Mountains Wildlife Refuge (Oklahoma) : Interior recommended the removal of a display title called the "Hall of Shame" for an exhibit that talked about the conditions that brought on the near extinction of American bison.
* Fort Niobrara National Wildlife Refuge (Nebraska) and Genoa National Fish Hatchery (Wisconsin): Interior is "researching the specifics to come up with a plan of action" related to signage flagged at both of these locations. No additional information was provided detailing the contents.
The documents detail the following sites where materials were flagged by FWS staff, but Interior recommended no further action, stating the materials were "factual statements about what occurred":
* Occoquan Bay National Wildlife Refuge (Virginia) and Elizabeth Hartwell Mason Neck National Wildlife Refuge (Virginia): Multiple signs addressing how Indigenous peoples were forced off their lands by Europeans.
* Windom Wetland Management District (Minnesota): Signage about the Slaughter Slough Waterfowl Protection Area, which includes an interpretive display about a deadly interaction between white settlers and Indigenous peoples. ( See photos. )
* Audubon National Wildlife Refuge (North Dakota): Signage about climate change.
* Bear River Migratory Bird Refuge (Utah): Multiple signs about wetland destruction. ( See photos. )
BACKGROUND
This is the third set of documents received by the Sierra Club as part of a FOIA and subsequent lawsuit seeking information from Interior about Trump's executive order. So far, the Sierra Club has published FOIA documents from FWS, Bureau of Reclamation, and Bureau of Land Management. Bureau of Indian Affairs also provided documents in February 2026, which contained emails stating its trust lands are not subject to the executive order, however, many of its public sites are managed by the National Park Service and subject to the order. Additional FOIA documents are expected from NPS and the Interior Secretary's office.
In recent months, reports of public lands signage either flagged for removal or ordered to be removed by the Trump Administration have picked up steam, including at Independence National Historical Park in Pennsylvania, Little Bighorn Battlefield National Monument in Montana, Medgar & Myrlie Evers Home National Monument in Mississippi, and Glacier National Park and Grand Canyon National Park.
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Original text here: https://www.sierraclub.org/press-releases/2026/03/foia-documents-reveal-trump-administration-ordered-fish-and-wildlife-service
Demand Progress Supports Bipartisan, Bicameral Bill to Close Surveillance Loopholes
SILVER SPRING, Maryland, March 14 -- Demand Progress issued the following news release on March 13, 2026:
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Demand Progress Supports Bipartisan, Bicameral Bill to Close Surveillance Loopholes
Washington, D.C. -- On Thursday, Sen. Ron Wyden (D-OR), Sen. Mike Lee (R-UT), Rep. Warren Davidson (R-OH) and Rep. Zoe Lofgren (D-CA) introduced the Government Surveillance Reform Act, a bipartisan and bicameral bill that would close loopholes in the law that allow the government to conduct warrantless surveillance on people in the United States and buy their private communications in bulk. Specifically,
... Show Full Article
SILVER SPRING, Maryland, March 14 -- Demand Progress issued the following news release on March 13, 2026:
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Demand Progress Supports Bipartisan, Bicameral Bill to Close Surveillance Loopholes
Washington, D.C. -- On Thursday, Sen. Ron Wyden (D-OR), Sen. Mike Lee (R-UT), Rep. Warren Davidson (R-OH) and Rep. Zoe Lofgren (D-CA) introduced the Government Surveillance Reform Act, a bipartisan and bicameral bill that would close loopholes in the law that allow the government to conduct warrantless surveillance on people in the United States and buy their private communications in bulk. Specifically,the bill requires the government to obtain a warrant to access Americans' data and bans the government from buying Americans' private calls, texts and emails from data brokers. Demand Progress has been leading a bipartisan coalition to reform Section 702 and close the data broker loophole under both Democratic and Republican presidents.
The following is a statement from Demand Progress Senior Policy Advisor Hajar Hammado:
"The federal government should not have the ability to bypass courts and obtain the private emails, texts and calls of Americans--especially when they are purchased from shady data brokers who sell our private information to anyone willing to pay. The Government Surveillance Reform Act protects Americans' privacy by finally closing the backdoor search loophole and closing the door on data brokers. Protecting Americans' privacy and civil liberties from these threats cannot wait, Congress must implement these reforms ahead of the April 20 expiration date. We thank Sens. Wyden and Lee, and Reps. Davidson and Lofgren for their steadfast leadership and we urge all members of Congress to enact critically needed privacy protections before renewing the government's spying authority."
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Original text here: https://demandprogress.org/demand-progress-supports-bipartisan-bicameral-bill-to-close-surveillance-loopholes/
[Category: Sociological]
Catholic League Issues Commentary: Muslim Woman Quits Trump's Religion Panel
NEW YORK, March 14 -- The Catholic League for Religious and Civil Rights, an organization that defends the right of Catholics to participate in American public life without defamation or discrimination, issued the following commentary on March 13, 2026, by President Bill Donohue:
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MUSLIM WOMAN QUITS TRUMP'S RELIGION PANEL
Sameerah Munshi has quit President Trump's Religious Liberty Commission. She cited "two deeply troubling developments: the official removal of Carrie Prejean Boller for her deeply held beliefs about Palestine and the federal government's illegal war against Iran, undertaken
... Show Full Article
NEW YORK, March 14 -- The Catholic League for Religious and Civil Rights, an organization that defends the right of Catholics to participate in American public life without defamation or discrimination, issued the following commentary on March 13, 2026, by President Bill Donohue:
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MUSLIM WOMAN QUITS TRUMP'S RELIGION PANEL
Sameerah Munshi has quit President Trump's Religious Liberty Commission. She cited "two deeply troubling developments: the official removal of Carrie Prejean Boller for her deeply held beliefs about Palestine and the federal government's illegal war against Iran, undertakenwithout clear constitutional or congressional authorization."
The Council on American-Islamic Relations, (CAIR), rushed to defend both women, saying they were the ones who "actually stand up for religious liberty." They commended Munshi for her courage and said it was "unconscionable" that the White House would remove Prejean for her remarks on "Israel's genocide in Gaza."
On February 11, the Catholic League called for the Religious Liberty Commission to oust Prejean Boller; minutes later it did. We did so for reasons that both Munshi and CAIR refuse to acknowledge.
In my news release about Prejean Boller, I noted that she is "a former Miss California and a convert to Catholicism. She does not run a Catholic organization, has no Catholic credentials as an author or instructor, and indeed represents no one but herself. For her to say, without qualification, that 'Catholics do not embrace Zionism' is presumptuous and arrogant."
It just wasn't just this remark that got Prejean Boller into hot water. She blamed Jews for killing Christ, again without qualification, and was known to show up at meetings wearing a Palestinian flag pin. In other words, she is an activist, not someone sincerely committed to religious liberty.
Munshi's comment about the "illegal" war against Iran makes her sound sophomoric. There have been five wars declared by Congress in American history: War of 1812, Mexican-American War, Spanish-American War, World War I, and World War II. There is nothing illegal about U.S. operations in Iran.
We are delighted that both of these women are no longer on the panel. How they got by those doing the vetting remains a problem.
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Original text here: https://www.catholicleague.org/muslim-woman-quits-trumps-religion-panel/
[Category: Sociological]
All Fizz, No Action: PepsiCo Slammed For Ignoring Abuse of Bulls in Its Sugar Pipeline
NORFOLK, Virginia, March 14 -- People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals issued the following news release:
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All Fizz, No Action: PepsiCo Slammed For Ignoring Abuse of Bulls in Its Sugar Pipeline
"Cut the Bull. Choose Cruelty-Free!" That's the message from PETA that will appear in a full-page spread in Crain's New York Business on Monday, blasting PepsiCo for failing to investigate whether its suppliers in India are contributing to the well-documented (and videotaped) suffering of bulls used to haul sugarcane that PepsiCo sources for its branded beverages.
PepsiCo's Indian bottling partner
... Show Full Article
NORFOLK, Virginia, March 14 -- People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals issued the following news release:
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All Fizz, No Action: PepsiCo Slammed For Ignoring Abuse of Bulls in Its Sugar Pipeline
"Cut the Bull. Choose Cruelty-Free!" That's the message from PETA that will appear in a full-page spread in Crain's New York Business on Monday, blasting PepsiCo for failing to investigate whether its suppliers in India are contributing to the well-documented (and videotaped) suffering of bulls used to haul sugarcane that PepsiCo sources for its branded beverages.
PepsiCo's Indian bottling partneris part of an industry where bulls are beaten and whipped as they struggle to pull carts illegally overloaded with up to 8,000 pounds of sugarcane under the blazing sun, without rest or water. Many are left with bloody gashes on their faces from barbed-wire spikes that rip into their skin if they "disobey" by turning their heads, restrained with nose ropes that tear their nasal septa, and collapse from exhaustion. Some are worked to death and left where they fall.
Last month, PETA Foundation attorneys sued PepsiCo after the beverage company attempted to block a shareholder resolution seeking a report on the treatment of animals in its supply chains. Less than a day later, PepsiCo reversed course and agreed to allow a vote on the proposal at its 2026 annual meeting. PETA alerted the company as far back as early 2025 that the abuse of bulls violates PepsiCo's own Global Policy on Animal Welfare--yet the company appears to have done nothing, despite the fact that humane options are already in use, including eco-tractors that can replace bulls and boost efficiency.
"Bulls used in the sugarcane industry are being worked to death, forced to pull massive sugarcane loads for hours under the blazing sun without water, rest, or shade," says PETA Founder Ingrid Newkirk, who has witnessed the cruelty firsthand. "It's time to replace suffering bulls with 100 percent humane, dependable, eco-friendly tractors, and PETA is making sure PepsiCo can no longer look the other way."
PETA encourages everyone to help spare bulls a lifetime of suffering and abuse on sugarcane farms by urging PepsiCo to require its partners and suppliers to switch to humane and modern eco-tractors.
Animal Rahat, a PETA-supported animal protection charity in India, has worked since 2011 to replace bullock-driven carts with more efficient and cost-effective mechanized alternatives through its Sugarcane Industry Mechanization Project. Through the project's influence, one-third of Maharashtra state's sugar production has been mechanized. A single tractor is capable of transporting up to 18 tons of sugar per trip, providing owners with improved income opportunities.
PETA--whose motto reads, in part, that "animals are not ours to abuse in any way"--points out that Every Animal Is Someone and offers free Empathy Kits for people who need a lesson in kindness. For more information, please visit PETA.org or follow PETA on X, Facebook, or Instagram.
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Original text here: https://www.peta.org/media/news-releases/all-fizz-no-action-pepsico-slammed-for-ignoring-abuse-of-bulls-in-its-sugar-pipeline/
[Category: Animals]