Friday, April 20, 2007

We're blessed with the safest food in the world

If you think this is a “flag-waving, high-fiving, I’m proud to be an American” salute to the quality of the U.S. food supply, do yourself a favor and stop now. You’re going to be sorely disappointed.

OK, so I am proud to be an American. I owe that bit of luck to my ancestors who had the good sense to flee England in the early 1800’s and settle in eastern Tennessee.

But this “safest food supply in the world” nonsense? We’ve been patting ourselves on our collective backs with that old saw for so long that we took our eyeballs off the target. And the target moved. To the other side of the world.

Sure, during the first two thirds of the twentieth century, that was a defendable statement. We grew most of our own food. After stumbling during the first decade of the 1900’s, the responsible government agencies were well-funded and anxious to prove their worth. The rest of the world was struggling through the causes and effects of two massive wars and the great American Midwest was truly the world’s breadbasket.

Now, as we enter the early stages of the twenty-first century, we’ve become the world’s leading glutton, inhaling a disproportionate share of all the food crops and energy resources the planet can muster. We’ve become enamored of fruits and vegetables the year around, forgetting that it’s all a seasonal thing. Much of our food supply now comes from exotic ports of call.

We import grapes from Chile, beef from Argentina and Australia, poultry from Brazil, cattle and hogs from Mexico and Canada, wheat from Asia – the list is staggering. The controls are geopolitically correct, meaning unverifiable in to many cases.

Remember President Reagan’s famous ‘borrowed-from-Damon Runyon’ statement about dealing with our trading partners? “Trust, but verify.”

We trust but we can’t verify.

The responsible government agencies are under funded for the work they have to do so they rely more and more on U.S. based food suppliers to be vigilant about self-policing about the ingredients they're importing. Call me naïve but I really think 95% of them can be trusted to do the right thing. That last 5%, though, scares the hell out of me. The #1 item driving their corporate decision-making process is the bottom line for the next quarter. The health and welfare of the consuming public is to far down on their list and they will take dangerous shortcuts to make sure their products find their way into your cupboard.

The real problem we have to face is the fact that the American food supply has become a world-sourced food supply. It’s grapes from California and grapes from Chile - beef from Texas and beef from Alberta - wheat from Kansas and wheat from China – ham from Virginia and ham from Eastern Europe. And all of it finds its way into the same huge mixing bowl.

If we want to make that “safest food supply in the world” mantra a true and accurate statement again, we’ve got to seriously ramp up our internal oversights and become absolutely persnickety about Mr. Reagan’s comment. We must carefully select trading partners that we can trust…but verify, verify, verify nonetheless.

So, please, until we can get back to where we were a half century ago, let’s put that “safest food” thing on the storage room shelf where it belongs.

The bad news? The list of recalls, withdrawals and alerts for human and pet foods during the last 60 days is long and troublesome. The good news for our industry? Only 8 items involving meat and poultry for human consumption have been recalled this year.

Recalls, Withdrawals and Alerts in the Last 60 Days:
This list includes the most significant product actions of the last 60 days, based on the extent of distribution and the degree of health risk. The recalls on the list are mainly Class I. A record of all recalls can be found in the FDA Enforcement Report.

Pet Food Recall Information

FDA's Pilot Program to Better Educate Consumers About Recalled Food Products
2007

Menu Foods Voluntarily Recalls Additional Pet Food made with ChemNutra Wheat Gluten (April 10, 2007)

Del Monte Pet Products Modifies Voluntary Recall List (April 6, 2007)

Harry & David Issues Nationwide Allergy Alert on Harry and David Dark Chocolate Clusters The Ultimate Walnut Cherry Caramel Indulgence for Undeclared Peanuts And Cashews (April 6, 2007)

All Menu Foods Pet Food with ChemNutra Wheat Gluten Voluntarily Recalled (April 5, 2007)

FDA Issues Health Hazard Alert for Pet Chews Due to Contamination with Salmonella (April 5, 2007)

Sunshine Mills, Inc. Issues Voluntary Nationwide Recall of Certain Branded and Private Label Branded Dog Biscuits (April 5, 2007)

Energy Club, Inc. Issues Allergy Alert Due to Undeclared Sulfites in their Healthy California Mix and Raisin Nut Mix (April 4, 2007)

ChemNutra Announces Nationwide Wheat Gluten Recall (April 3, 2007)

Consumer Alert: Undeclared Sulfites in Energy Club Brand Healthy California Mix (April 3, 2007)

Greenleaf Issues Allergy Alert on Undeclared Milk in Lemon Bars (April 2, 2007)

Del Monte Pet Products Voluntarily Withdraws Specific Product Codes of Pet Treats and Wet Dog Food Products (March 30, 2007)

Eight In One Announces Nationwide Recall of All Lots Of Dingo® Chick’n Jerky Treats for Dogs, Cats And Ferrets (March 30, 2007)

Alpo® Brand Prime Cuts In Gravy Canned Dog Food Voluntary Nationwide Recall (March 30, 2007)

FDA Finds Melamine in Wheat Gluten used by Hill's Pet Nutrition (March 30, 2007)

Hills Pet Nutrition, Inc. Voluntarily Recalls Single Product, Prescription Diet™ m/d™ Feline Dry Food, Only Product Containing Wheat Gluten (March 30, 2007)

Consumer Alert: Undeclared Milk in Lorenzo's Brand Mexican Breads (March 29,
2007)

Consumer Alert: Undeclared Milk in Certain Healthy Corner Foods Salads and Sandwiches (March 29, 2007)

Guida's Milk and Ice Cream Withdraws Guida Label Lowfat Chocolate Half-Pint Containers Due to Possible Presence of Food Grade Sanitizer (March 28, 2007)

Nationwide Recall of Cerignola, Nocellara and Castelvetrano Olives Because of Possible Health Risk (March 27, 2007)

Southeast Asian Foods Issues Allergy Alert on Undeclared Liquid Egg White In Fish Paste, Fish Ball and Fish Cake Products (March 27, 2007)

Drug Safety Information: Ketek (telithromycin) (March 26, 2007)

Menu Foods Initiates Market Withdrawal of All Varieties of Recalled Wet Pet Food to Ensure Consumer Protection (March 24, 2007)

FDA Warns Again About Arsenic in Mineral Water (March 24, 2007)

Petrapport Issues Recall of Pig Ear Dog Treats Because of Salmonella Contamination (March 23, 2007)

Harry London Candies and Macy's Issue Nationwide Allergy Alert on Frango® Cheggs Chocolate and Chocolate-Covered Egg-Shaped Candies (March 23, 2007)

FiberChoice Plus Multivitamins Issues Allergy Alert Fish Allergen Not Declared on Label (March 20, 2007)

Hill's Pet Nutrition, Inc., Announces Voluntary Participation in Menu Foods' Nationwide U.S. recall of Specific Canned Cat Foods (March 17, 2007)

Recall of Pet Foods Manufactured by Menu Foods, Inc. (March 17, 2007)

MDA Issues Consumer Advisory on Potato Salad (March 16, 2007)

Purina to Voluntarily Withdraw Mighty Dog® 5.3 Ounce Pouch Products in Response to Menu Foods Recall (March 16, 2007)

Hill’s Pet Nutrition, Inc., Announces Voluntary Participation in Menu Foods’ Nationwide U.S. and Canadian recall of Specific Canned Cat Foods (March 16, 2007)

P&G Pet Care Announces Voluntary Participation in Menu Foods' Nationwide U.S. and Canadian Recall of Specific Canned and Small Foil Pouch 'Wet' Cat and Dog Foods (March 16, 2007)

Menu Foods Issues Recall of Specific Can and Small Foil Pouch Wet Pet Foods (March 16, 2007)

Ben & Jerry’s Issues Allergy Alert on Undeclared Wheat in Ben & Jerry’s Country Peach Cobbler Ice Cream: Peach Ice Cream With Cinnamon-Sugar Shortbread Pieces & A Peach Swirl (March 16, 2007)

Cosmos Trading, Inc. Issues Voluntary Nationwide Recall of Rhino Max (Rhino V Max), a Product Marketed as a Dietary Supplement (March 16, 2007)

Barodon SF Issues A Voluntary Nationwide Recall of V.MAX, a Product Marketed as Dietary Supplement (March 15, 2007)

Gretchen's Shoebox Express Issues Allergy Alert on Undeclared Soybean in Tuna and Garden Salad Mixer, Sold Exclusively to Amtrak (March 15, 2007)

WinCo Foods Recalls Bread in California and Nevada (March 9, 2007)

Safeway Recalls Bread in Parts of California and Nevada (March 9, 2007)

Continental Mills Issues Allergy Alert on Undeclared Egg in GFS Buttermilk Pancake Mix (March 9, 2007)

FDA Update on Peanut Butter Recall (March 9, 2007)

Frito-Lay Issues Voluntary Recall of 2 oz. Bags of Fritos Original Corn Chips in 2 States Due to Undeclared Milk and Wheat (March 9, 2007)

BJ's Wholesale Club Issues Recall of "Berkley & Jensen" Full-Cut Pig Ears Dog Treats Because of Potential for Salmonella Contamination (March 9, 2007)

Flora Foods Recalls “Cerignola” Olives Because of Possible Health Risk (March 8, 2007)

Consumer Alert: Undeclared Sulfites in "Dried Potato" (March 7, 2007)

FDA Warns Consumers Not to Drink "Jermuk" brand Mineral Water (March 7, 2007)

Cibo Specialty Foods Issues Nationwide Alert on Potential Botulism Risk Associated with Specific Lots from Eight Varieties of Dal Raccolto Brand Olives (March 6, 2007)

FDA Investigating Norovirus Outbreak Linked to Oysters (March 2, 2007)

PA Department of Health Warns Consumers of Tainted Raw Milk Sold by York County Dairy (March 2, 2007)

Consumer Alert: Undeclared Sulfites in Denise Brand Dyno Mix (March 1, 2007)

Simply Fresh Fruit Inc. Announces the Recall of Fresh Cut Fruit Trays Due to Possible Salmonella Contamination (March 1, 2007)

FDA Update on Peanut Butter Recall (March 1, 2007)

FDA Update on Salmonella Outbreak Linked to All Peter Pan Peanut Butter and Certain Lot Numbers of Great Value Brand Peanut Butter (February 23, 2007)

Castle Produce Announces the Recall of Cantaloupe Melons Due to Salmonella Contamination (February 23, 2007)

Daiei Trading-Chicago-Co. Issues Allergy Alert on Undeclared Peanuts in Bean Cracker (Itomo Mame Mix) (February 22, 2007)

Americas Kitchen Recalls "Wellsley Farms" Green Bean Casserole Because Of Possible Health Risk (February 22, 2007)

Media Statement on Voluntary Withdrawal of Giant Eagle Egg Free Pasta Ribbons (February 20, 2007)

FDA Warns Consumers Not to Use Certain Jars of Earth's Best: "Organic 2 Apple Peach Barley Wholesome Breakfast Baby Food" (February 16, 2007)

Update on Salmonella Outbreak and Peter Pan Peanut Butter and Great Value Peanut Butter (February 16, 2007)

Wild Kitty Cat Food Issues Nationwide Recall of Cat Foods Due to Salmonella Contamination (February 16, 2007)

Recall of Cantaloupes Due to Potential Health Concerns (February 16, 2007)

Vita Specialty Foods, Inc. Issues an Allergy Alert on Undeclared Milk in Certain Vita Specialty Foods, Inc.'s Sauces (February 16, 2007)

FDA Warns Consumers Not to Eat Certain Jars of Peter Pan Peanut Butter and Great Value Peanut Butter (February 14, 2007)

FDA Warns Consumers Not to Use Wild Kitty Cat Food Due to Salmonella Contamination (February 13, 2007)

Vintage Food Corp. Issues Allergy Alert on Undeclared Sulfites in Elmas Brand Apricots (February 12, 2007)

Complete Spinach/E. coli Information

Complete list of Almond Recalls

Complete List of Konjac Candy Recalls

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Sunday, April 08, 2007

Point/Counterpoint: Risk-based Inspection

Point: Risk Based Inspection will be a giant step forward in food safety (Pete Hisey)

Despite its clumsy implementation, USDA's risk based inspection program will improve food safety in the meat industry considerably, with little or no added cost to the industry. The program, which ranks slaughter and processing facilities by the inherent risk of their product and their safety track record over the years, will all FSIS to cluster its inspectors where major food adulterations are most likely to occur, while scaling back somewhat at less risky facilities.

All, however, will receive daily inspections. The advantages to this plan are both obvious and subtle. Obviously, more scrutiny at places where pathogens are most likely to reach the American consumer will be good for food safety in general and the public image of the meat industry as well. More important, it will send a message to our export markets that the U.S. government is taking concrete steps to guarantee that our meat products are the safest in the world. In most other markets worldwide, the government plays a larger role in overseeing food safety than in the U.S., and underlying their often obstructive behavior regarding our exports is a suspicion that slaughter and processing facilities are essentially unsupervised. You probably won't hear it spoken aloud, but most of the opposition to RBI is led by the largest players, who see the plan as a return to government regulation that the HACCP program was supposed to end.

HACCP is essentially self-policing, with inspectors reduced to reviewing paperwork once the company itself has conducted its own inspections. The suspicion among consumers and export partners alike is that companies will inspect only when they are certain no violations will be found. RBI offers some reassurance that the largest and most potentially risky operations will have extra eyes observing their procedures and in-plant behavior. That, in turn, will make reopening our export markets much easier, as we will be providing their governments with an argument that will reassure their constituents. It will also reassure consumer advocates, who have urged USDA for years to keep closer tabs on meat processors.

Counterpoint: Risk based inspection will be a giant stumble forward (Chuck Jolley)

There's an old adage often tied to the U.S. Army: "Hurry up and wait." The USDA managed to reverse the order when they made the surprise announcement that RBI is a done deal. For years, they've asked the industry to wait while they tried to figure out the intricacies of such a program. On February 22, FSIS Under Secretary Dr. Richard Raymond announced the 'hurry up' part.

With almost no warning and beginning in April, RBI will roll out at 30 "prototype" sites representing about 250 pure processing facilities of varying geography and product type. Slaughterhouses will remain exempt from the program, a puzzling exemption in itself. Is e.coli not a risk to be considered? If all goes well, Raymond said, FSIS will increase its coverage to as many as 150 prototype locations by Jan. 1, 2008, and work to fully implement the program by mid-summer of the same year. "Full implementation" wasn't defined.

The odds that all will go well are slim to none. The politics proved much more dangerous than either Secretary Johanns or Under Secretary Raymond expected. Witness their all out push for NAIS and their sudden reversal when thousands of cattlemen said, "Hell no, we won't go."

So my first thought when reading about RBI and the fast responses from such odd bedfellows as the American Meat Institute and Center for Science in the Public Interest condemning the initiative as ill-thought out and to quick on the draw was the politics will kill it. Much like NAIS, this looks like an idea that's still-born. Or it should be.

Caroline Smith DeWaal, food safety director for C.S.P.I, and a long-time Washington insider said, "One of the concerns is that this is simply an effort to save money in a tight budget year. We want to make sure a budget shortfall is not what's driving these important inspection decisions." Even the inspectors, the guys on the line who have to do all the actual work, fear the added workload will be staggering.

Stan Painter, chairman of the National Joint Council of Meat Inspection Locals said, "Too many plants, too little time, too little authority. Tell me how we could do a better job when we already have the flexibility to do what they're talking about?"

My second thought was spurred by what looks like a surprising lack of direct stakeholder support. If the USDA has any hope of pushing a program forward, it has to have the backing of a majority of the people and institutions involved. According to a third party report by Resolve, stakeholders would have a better understanding of the RBI if the agency did a better job of detailing its "vision, plans and described the work it has already conducted and continues to conduct" Resolve concluded that most stakeholders support the general concept of RBI, based on criteria that adequately and accurately reflect risk.

The major problem they had, though, is the FSIS is establishing an "elaborate scoring system" without clear data—or a way to gather them. And businesses large and small could face significant losses, even closure, if they fall on the short side of that scoring system. An important question to ask: Does the USDA have the legal standing to create such a program? We already know the FSIS lacks authority to enforce performance standards so wherein lays the clout to make the program effective?

Maybe if the "scoring system" was better understood and there was some general agreement that RBI would be a positive force in advancing food safety, it might work. As it stands now, RBI is not a run batted in.

Point: Baby...bathwater (Pete Hisey)

The most remarkable thing about RBI is that virtually every segment of the industry and its outside critics agree it's a good idea. The last time that it happened, the subject was, “Resolved: Babies Are Cute.”

Plainly, concentrating inspection resources where the threat is greatest makes a great deal of sense and, as I have mentioned, would be reassuring to our trade partners, which is no small thing in the present business environment.The objections, at least publicly, revolve around implementation. USDA has decided to pull the trigger, and has been virtually silent as to why. However, a recent statement by Dr. Richard Raymond indicates, for those with the tea-leaf reading abilities necessary to decoding USDA releases, that certain segments of the industry oppose implementation until more data is available to measure risk and support the effectiveness of RBI.

USDA, it appears, feels that the only way to accumulate such data is to implement a pilot program, if its data from present operations are so unacceptable. Hence, 30 plants got the news in late February that they were participants in this pilot, like it or not.

Raymond thinks that the only way to produce a final product that will meet all objections is to show that it works. Admittedly, this reeks of a bull in a china shop, but where's the real hardship for anyone? Thirty plants will be subjected to greater or lesser inspection, and a comparison of data before and after will provide a metric that can prove or disprove RBI's effectiveness. And, parenthetically, it will give our negotiators with Korea, Japan and China something to talk about convincingly.

Raymond indicated in a brief statement that a couple of issues are holding up the entire program. One, stipulated by consumer groups, is measuring the severity of disease attributable to various products; i.e., E. coli in ground beef is more likely to cause fatalities than most other pathogens. Raymond feels that issue can be debated as the program is rolled out, then changes can be made to the algorhythm measuring risk as needed. I agree.

My suspicion is that most of the opposition to RBI is based on suspicion that it amounts to re-regulation of the meat industry after a decade of deregulation. In some degree, this is true. The meat industry as a whole has been commendable in its voluntary control of pathogens. Many processors have invested heavily in advanced technology such as robotics, more sensitive testing, pathogen reduction and the like to produce a safer product.

This has not, however, made the entire industry safer. There are rogue operators and under funded processors continuing to operate and these deserve greater supervision. The real weakness in RBI, from my point of view, is that processors receive no credit for their investments in intervention technology. If you look at what giants like Cargill and BPI have spent over the years on food safety technology, it's stunning. That they should not be credited for these advances is puzzling, and I assume that USDA is looking at ways to quantify this technology and include it in its rankings.

The important thing here, though, is that no one has a real beef with the concept of RBI, only its implementation speed and the less-than-public nature of its procedures and assumptions. I think those will work themselves out in time.Remember, Raymond only has about two years left in his tenure; there will likely be a complete shake-up of USDA after the 2008 elections. RBI, if not implemented now and perfected over the next two years, could die altogether under a new regime.Let's not throw the baby out with the bathwater. HACCP isn't going to go away in the interim, and most inspection will still take advantage of HACCP plans. If RBI is a dud, it can be abandoned.But it just makes too much sense to kill it at birth over a few technical objections.

Counterpoint: No. It’s Bathwater...baby. The government still has things in the wrong order (Chuck Jolley)

Pete’s argument reminds me of a way-to-truthful friend who, presented with a truly homely newborn at a party, felt compelled to say something nice. After all, a phalanx of politeness had preceded him. Dozens of people had already done the proper thing, cooed convincingly and marveled over the little fellow’s cuteness.

Bob couldn’t make himself take that path. He sucked it up and managed to say, “Wow, that’s some baby!”

“Wow, that RBI is some government program!”

Ugly beyond belief.

Everyone is for making advances in food safety. That’s a God, mother, apple pie and cute baby thing. But trying out what might be a half-baked concept in a public forum that could close plants and cost hundreds of jobs is not the way to do it.

It’s like putting a man on trial in the newspaper for a hideous crime, then taking him to court and, unfortunately, finding him innocent. I say “unfortunate” because the damage was already done in the public’s mind before the trial and it can never be erased. If a plant receives a damaging “score” then the algorithm is found to be defective, can it ever regain its reputation? Probably not.

To be fair, let me agree with the concept of risk based inspection. Most everyone does. But let me heartily disagree with foisting an ill-considered plan on an industry that’s already moved mountains to upgrade the quality of its product. There has been plenty of time to get the numbers right.

Why not take the time to get it right before inviting the hanging judge to sit on the bench? No one says RBI is a bad idea; almost everybody says it’s poorly thought out in its current guise. That should tell you something.

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