|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America
US: FDA knew of food contamination for years
By Naomi Spencer
28 April 2007
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
For years, the federal Food and Drug Administration knew about
contamination problems on California spinach farms and at a Georgia
peanut butter processor that sickened at least 600 people and
caused at least three deaths, according to agency documents and
interviews obtained by the Washington Post.
The spate of recent outbreaks in the US underscores not only
the vulnerability of the countrys human and animal food
supplies at every stage of production and distribution, but also
the role of government agencies, which are understaffed and rely
on the agriculture companies to voluntarily police themselves.
The Post reported on the documents in an article published
April 23 (FDA Was Aware of Dangers to Food, by Elizabeth
Williamson).
Food poisoning is excessively common in the US, with as many
as 81 million cases each year, according to federal Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention estimates, although for the most
part only very serious cases are reported.
The country has experienced numerous outbreaks and recalls
over the past nine months. Since August, thousands of reported
illnesses have been attributed to tainted spinach, lettuce, carrot
juice, tomatoes, candy, milk, green onions, ice cream, oysters
and peanut butter. Other products, including potato salad, cantaloupes,
and pancake mix have also been recalled.
Throughout these outbreaks, the FDA, which lacks the authority
to issue mandatory recalls, has relied on the food industry to
enforce its own voluntary safety standardsand what little
authority the federal agency does have is not regularly exercised.
A case in point, the FDA was aware of contamination problems
in Californias Salinas Valley agricultural region for years.
A particularly virulent strain of the food borne pathogen E. coli,
associated with manure and run-off from large industry cattle
farms, had repeatedly been detected in spinach and other leafy
greens fields in the region.
In 2005, Robert Brackett, director of the FDAs food safety
arm, wrote to California produce growers, FDA is aware of
18 outbreaks of foodborne illness since 1995 caused by [E. coli]
for which fresh or fresh-cut lettuce was implicated ... In one
additional case, fresh-cut spinach was implicated. These 19 outbreaks
account for approximately 409 reported cases of illness and two
deaths.
The following year saw an E. coli outbreak associated with
spinach from the region that sickened over 200, killed 3, and
prompted the largest produce recall in US history. No fines were
levied against Natural Selection Foods, the processor of the tainted
spinach, after the outbreak. In the months since, 35 lots of the
companys spinach have been found to have E. coli contamination.
Clearly, the problem is ongoing in spite of dangerous public health
consequences.
Likewise, in the case of the tainted peanut butter, contamination
problems found by agency inspectors were not pursued by either
the agency or the producer. In its report, the Washington Post
quoted a 2005 FDA review that described unsanitary conditions
at the Georgia ConAgra peanut butter processing facility pinpointed
in February as the source of tainted Peter Pan and Great Value
brands that sickened over 400 people.
A leaking roof and malfunctioning sprinkler system at the facility
had fostered the growth of the bacteria salmonella, and FDA inspectors
were looking into an alleged episode of positive findings
of salmonella in peanut butter in October of 2004 that was related
to new equipment and that the firm didnt react to ... insects
in some equipment, water leaking onto product, and inability to
track some product.
During that inspection, the FDA report said, ConAgra admitted
to inspectors that it had destroyed some peanut butter in October
2004, but did not explain why. When inspectors asked the company
to provide documentation, ConAgra representatives told the agency
to put the request in writing, which the FDA never did. We
did not receive a written request, a ConAgra spokeswoman
told the Washington Post, they filed the report and
that was that.
Brackett defended the lack of follow-up by saying, in the papers
words, that inspectors had not seen anything truly dangerous.
He told the Post that the unsanitary conditions found in
2005 do not necessarily connect to the salmonella outbreak
right now. Its not unusual to have it in raw agricultural
commodities.
The divisions medical officer, David Acheson, told the
Associated Press that the moisture in the facility was
a logical explanation for the salmonella, but added,
Whether its the sole explanation, I dont think
well ever know. Shrugging off the notion that the
outbreak could have been prevented or that the company bears some
responsibility, he said, It doesnt automatically follow
that a company, just because they had a recalled product that
made people sick, did anything wrong that they could have done
differently and did it deliberately.
Indeed, some responsibility for the outbreak is also owned
by the FDA, and in turn by the Bush administration, which has
appointed pro-industry figures to the agency and implemented drastic
cuts to its inspection budget.
Since 2003, the FDAs food safety division has had its
budget nearly halved, to $25 million. The number of full-time
positions in the division fell from 950 to 817, even as the number
of food processors in the industry has grown to 80,000 and imports
have exploded into the US market. Congress has approved a $10
million increase in food safety fundingyet the USDA received
an increase of ten times that amount to oversee far fewer facilities.
In response to the public distress over the rising incidence
of food contamination, Congressional Democrats have made various
gestures towards strengthening oversight. In January, the newly
Democratic-controlled Congress added the FDA to its high
risk list, suggesting that its inefficiencies left it open
to waste and fraud.
Connecticut House Democrat Rosa DeLauro, who chairs the subcommittee
appropriating the FDAs budget, suggested she would cut salaries
to top agency officials for fiscal year 2008 unless they immediately
articulated a plan to improve standards.
The posturing of the Democrats ignores the fact that the voluntary
self-policing of the agricultural industry has been a long-standing
policy of the US government, including under Democratic administrations.
In the late 1990s, the Clinton administration issued a series
of guidelines in response to the rise of E. coli and salmonella
illnesses that were entirely voluntary. The agricultural industry
has long resisted even the most minimal federal regulations for
fear that safety restrictions will cut into corporate profits.
In March of this year, in response to the more recent outbreaks,
the FDA issued another series of guidelines for fresh food processors,
likewise voluntary.
See Also:
US: Hundreds sickened
by contaminated food
[21 December 2006]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |