New shelf labels

This article was originally published in March 2015

PCC recently launched a new shelf label system at our stores to make it easier for shoppers to identify attributes that matter to them. More than 60 percent of our labeled products have at least one of four attributes — organic, non-GMO, local, gluten-free — each identified with a different color on the label. Products may display just one color but could show all four. Here’s an explanation of what the different labels mean:

Organic

A product with a green “Organic” tag has been certified organic according to U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) standards. At least 95 percent of the ingredients are organic, certified by a third party.

Non-GMO

A product can earn a blue “Non-GMO” tag if it’s certified organic by the USDA, since organic standards prohibit genetic engineering, or if it’s Non-GMO Project Verified.

Local

Products showing a purple “Local” tag are grown or produced in Washington, Oregon, Idaho or southern British Columbia.

Gluten free

If a product’s packaging claims that it’s gluten-free, you’ll find an orange tag. This encompasses products where you might traditionally expect to find gluten, such as crackers, as well as packaged products that are gluten-free naturally. 

Also in this issue

Chicken Soup Brigade: nourishing the chronically ill

PCC is happy to partner with the Chicken Soup Brigade, which improves the nutritional health of people living with chronic conditions and hunger in King County.

Letters to the editor, March 2015

Raw-milk cheese, Gluten-free in the deli?, Robots in the milking parlor, and more

News bites, March 2015

Soil-derived antibiotic without resistance?; Fast food, poor academics?; An avocado a day; and more