HR-8157-119
Referred to the House Committee on Agriculture.
Sponsored by Tony Wied (R-WI)
What it does
This bill would amend the Organic Foods Production Act of 1990 to modernize how the USDA oversees certified organic farms and food handlers. It would allow domestic farms with good compliance histories to substitute virtual inspections for on-site visits in two out of every three years, while requiring all foreign operations to continue receiving annual on-site inspections. It would also direct the USDA Secretary to conduct a study within 12 months on whether a risk-based oversight system is feasible, and authorize the Secretary to issue new regulations based on that study's findings.
Who benefits
Domestic certified organic farms and handling operations — especially smaller, lower-risk operations with strong compliance records — that would face fewer mandatory on-site inspections. Certifying agents who would have more flexibility in allocating inspection resources. USDA, which could redirect oversight resources toward higher-risk operations. Organic consumers who could benefit if resources are better targeted at actual fraud risks. Rural agricultural communities where organic farming is a growing economic sector.
Who is hurt
Organic consumers and advocacy groups who believe annual on-site inspections are essential to maintaining the integrity of the organic label and may view reduced inspection frequency as weakening enforcement. Competing conventional food producers who argue the organic premium depends on rigorous verification. Foreign organic operations, which would face stricter annual on-site inspection requirements compared to domestic counterparts, potentially raising their compliance costs. Certifying agents that have built business models around annual on-site visits may need to restructure operations.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the current one-size-fits-all annual inspection model wastes limited oversight resources by treating low-risk, long-compliant domestic farms the same as high-risk or first-time operations. They contend that a risk-based approach — already standard in food safety regulation under programs like FSMA — would allow USDA to concentrate inspections where fraud is most likely, strengthening rather than weakening organic integrity. They also note that the bill requires stricter annual on-site inspections for all foreign operations, directly addressing documented concerns about imported organic fraud.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that reducing mandatory on-site inspection frequency for domestic farms — even to once every three years — creates gaps that bad actors could exploit, undermining consumer trust in the organic label and the price premium that honest organic farmers depend on. They contend that virtual inspections cannot reliably detect soil health violations, prohibited substance use, or commingling of non-organic products, and that the bill delegates broad discretion to the Secretary to define "risk" without sufficient statutory guardrails, potentially allowing future administrations to weaken oversight further.
Constitutional context
Congress's authority to regulate organic food labeling and certification rests on the Commerce Clause (Art. I, §8, cl. 3), as organic products move extensively in interstate commerce. The bill delegates rulemaking authority to the USDA Secretary, which under Loper Bright v. Raimondo (2024) means courts would independently assess whether any resulting regulations stay within the statutory boundaries set by this bill, rather than deferring to USDA's interpretation.
Checks and balances
The executive branch (USDA Secretary) gains new regulatory flexibility and rulemaking authority; checks include a mandatory congressional report within 18 months, a requirement to consult with the National Organic Standards Board and stakeholders, and a rule of construction preserving existing enforcement authority.
Historical precedent
The Food Safety Modernization Act (2011) similarly introduced risk-based inspection frequency for food facilities, shifting from fixed schedules to compliance-history-based intervals — a model this bill appears to adapt for the organic certification context.