Tomato Growers Report Salmonella Scare Damages Industry

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STEVE SZKOTAK | 07/19/08 11:44 AM | AP

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RICHMOND, Va. — The 6,000 acres of tomatoes grown on Virginia's sea-swept Eastern Shore were never implicated in the national salmonella outbreak _ they were still on the vine weeks after people starting getting sick.

Still, that hasn't made much difference to tomato broker Batista Madonia III, who has seen sales and prices plummet in the wake of a salmonella outbreak that sickened people in 42 states and left the nation's tomato industry feeling woozy as well.

Since the government announced it was investigating whether tomatoes caused the outbreak that began in April, the nation's tomato industry estimates it has lost more than $100 million. Health investigators have not able to find tomatoes that contained the salmonella strain that sickened 1,220 people, and the government on Thursday lifted its salmonella warning involving tomatoes.

The move hasn't brightened the outlook of the $1.3 billion industry, and the stigma and uncertainty of the salmonella's origin are likely to add to its losses.

"The damage has been done. I don't think we'll ever get over it," said Madonia, sales manager for East Coast Brokers & Packers, which grows 4,000 acres on the Eastern Shore.

At height of summer, when tomatoes are a staple of the picnic season, growers have seen their plump red produce pulled from fast-food menus and passed over by shoppers.

"Summer is our biggest window of opportunity. If we miss this season, we can't get it back," said Tom Deardorff, a farmer in California, which grows the most tomatoes in the U.S. "It's hard to force people to eat tomatoes at Christmastime."

Deardorff, a Ventura County farmer who grows 600 acres of beefsteak and Roma tomatoes, worries it could take a year or more for consumers to regain their appetite for tomatoes.

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An Associated Press-Ipsos poll conducted July 10-14 found that while three in four people remain confident about the overall safety of food, 46 percent said they were worried they might get sick from eating tainted products.

U.S. Food and Drug Administration officials believe that consumers may now enjoy all types of fresh tomatoes available without worrying about salmonella Saintpaul, the outbreak strain.

The elderly and people with weak immune systems _ those most vulnerable to food-borne illnesses _ should avoid fresh jalapenos and serranos, and any dishes that may contain them such as fresh salsa, federal health officials have advised.

Growers in Florida and Georgia, the No. 2 and 3 tomato-producing states, respectively, agreed the damage may be too much to overcome. The harvest is winding down or has ended in those states, and growers are deciding how many acres to devote to tomatoes during the fall.

"We're glad for Virginia, for North Carolina growers," said Charles Hall of the Georgia Fruit and Vegetable Growers' Association. "But it's not going to help Georgia growers."

For states where tomatoes will be harvested in the weeks to come, the challenge will be overcoming consumer suspicion of the industry.

Kathy Means, spokeswoman for the Produce Marketing Association, said the industry will have to win back consumer confidence through lower pricing and pitching the health benefits of fresh tomatoes.

The Virginia Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services has worked to spread the news that the state-grown tomatoes are safe, even offering "Virginia Grown" labels to producers.

"I think people may still be a little leery about tomatoes of unknown origin, but the overwhelming reaction I've heard or heard about from the public is that they think Va. tomatoes are safe and they are enjoying them fully," the department's spokeswoman, Elaine Lidholm, said in an e-mail.

Madonia said it took too long for the government to rule out tomatoes in the salmonella outbreak.

"Every lot of tomatoes we pack we test for salmonella and e-coli," Madonia said. "God knows what I spend on rubber gloves and hairnets."

California broker Sam Carswell, who has been in the tomato business for 50 years, said he's lost 75 to 80 percent of his sales this season.

"From the beginning I had my suspicions it wasn't tomatoes because the only time they're touched is when they're picked and packed," said Carswell, who is shipping tomatoes for the Central California Tomato Growers Cooperative. "The government needs to put out the information as best they can. They put out the bad information quite a bit, but they just need to make sure everybody knows tomatoes are safe."

A fourth generation tomato grower in Florida said farm workers were already preparing 2,500 acres for the August planting.

"You deal with the elements, you deal with the cards your dealt, and you just move on," said Jim Granger, owner of Taylor and Fulton in Palmetto, Fla., on the central-Gulf Coast of the state.

____

Associated Press writers Tracie Cone in Fresno, Calif., and Greg Bluestein in Atlanta contributed to this report.

RICHMOND, Va. — The 6,000 acres of tomatoes grown on Virginia's sea-swept Eastern Shore were never implicated in the national salmonella outbreak _ they were still on the vine weeks after people...
RICHMOND, Va. — The 6,000 acres of tomatoes grown on Virginia's sea-swept Eastern Shore were never implicated in the national salmonella outbreak _ they were still on the vine weeks after people...
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- FZliveson I'm a Fan of FZliveson 82 fans permalink
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A couple more like this and food irradiation will become mandated and the full power of the Codex Alimentarius will be applied in full. Big brother grows

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:13 AM on 07/24/2008
- preatorius I'm a Fan of preatorius 8 fans permalink
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Now that there is a surplus, cause everyone is scared, maybe they can drop their prices.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:52 PM on 07/21/2008
- Bettysdad I'm a Fan of Bettysdad 57 fans permalink
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I will guarantee that the loudest screams are coming from the Republican businesspeople that hate taxes and govt regulation.

If these parasites would handle their crops with the care they should be, we wouldn't need taxes or regulation.

It's their own fault.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:11 AM on 07/21/2008

Gee i wonder how the growers feel about place of origin labeling now?theyve been fighting it for years.Euro­pe has a system that goes from the farm to the table in restraunts,if someone gets sick they immediatly know who ,what,when and from where.Too bad we allow business interests trump the public interest almost always.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:08 PM on 07/20/2008
- DRaymond I'm a Fan of DRaymond 66 fans permalink
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That this has gone on for so long with still not a clue is the simple result of the FDA not keeping up with the industriaization of the food handling process.

In manufacturing an ISO9000 compliant firm can tell you, if a bolt failed on a product who made the bolt, in what batch, what tests were done on the batch, if any other bolts from the same batch are still in inventory and what customers other products made with the same batch of bolts were shipped to which customers when.

Now it would be impractical to do that with every tomato, but it certainly would not be to do it with all the tomatoes in a given farm in a given harvest. Either barcode or RFID tags would work fine. But to require that? Oh no! that would be too 'Big Government'! Until of course a screwup occurs and public faith is lost in an entire industry! So then do you put it in? No, you blame it all on a 'perception problem' because otherwise you would be admitting to your own massive incompetence!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:56 PM on 07/20/2008

Someone needs to notify L0u D0bbs

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:51 PM on 07/20/2008
- hugs4u I'm a Fan of hugs4u 11 fans permalink

A store brought tomato doesn't even a tomato taste to it any longer.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:16 AM on 07/20/2008
- hugs4u I'm a Fan of hugs4u 11 fans permalink

My last post was supposed to say

A store brought tomato doesn't HAVE a tomato taste to it anymore.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:15 AM on 07/20/2008
- charon I'm a Fan of charon 19 fans permalink

I agree, I supplement what I grow with produce from the Farmer's Market. Wintertime I mostly go without store-bought ones. Hope to get a cold frame built this year and try my hand at growing winter tomatoes, though.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:14 AM on 07/22/2008
- Trittydi I'm a Fan of Trittydi 66 fans permalink
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In less than a week, we'll have beautiful red ripe tomatoes in our own garden. REAL tomatoes - not like the kind they sell in the store nowadays. Can't wait.
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    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:02 AM on 07/20/2008

I agree, growing your own in potting soil filled holes in the ground produces great tomatoes. The ones in the store are just red. The only similarity. I also growing Iranian cucumbers. They are pale green and look like sponges but have less seeds and don't make you burp so much. Two of the good things in life. The people in my office walk around eating tomatoes and cucumbers and most of them have their own salt and pepper shakers. Beats the hey out of vending machines.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:21 PM on 07/19/2008

This entire poisonous food episode smacks of a cover up of permitting our truck farming business to be run over by foreign organizations, just as every other American business has been bankrupted by cheap and unfair mercantelistic trading . The corrupt economic and trade policies of this administration are being covered up. The public is being damned by its own government.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:38 PM on 07/19/2008
- Trittydi I'm a Fan of Trittydi 66 fans permalink
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"Poisoned" - by its own government.
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    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:06 AM on 07/20/2008

Are these the tomatoes that have spider DNA in them? just wondering.­.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:59 PM on 07/19/2008
- zizyphus I'm a Fan of zizyphus 110 fans permalink
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Anyone with a balcony that gets a half day of sun can grow their own tomatoes!

Nothing on the supermarket shelves that is called a tomato, bear any resemblance to a vine ripened tomato. They are but nerf tomatoes, pale, sad, spongy shadows of the real thing, not even deserving of being called a tomato.

Never put a tomato in the frig. If you should get a fresh one from the farmers market, eat it as soon as possible. Once chilled, it can never regain the fine flavor.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:56 PM on 07/19/2008
- JackNasty I'm a Fan of JackNasty 69 fans permalink
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That's not quite true. It's not possible to grow a decent tasting tomato here in the Pacific Northwest. The plants just don't like our long days and short summers. The best we can do is plead with friends visiting from almost anywhere else to bring the real thing with them. That was an unpleasant surprise after moving to this region where so many other things grow so well.

I've grown excellent tomatoes in Utah, Massachusetts, Connecticut and New York,. They just won't develop any tomato flavor here.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:10 PM on 07/20/2008
- Topfeeder I'm a Fan of Topfeeder 35 fans permalink

I grow my tomatoes in flower pots on my lanai. I figured out they cost about 8 cents apiece. Since I am in Florida, I can pretty much grow them year round. If my HOA would allow it, I would have an organic veg garden. It is so easy and cheap. I highly recommend all to try it. Nothing I buy in the grocery comes close in taste to my home-grown. Give it a shot.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:44 PM on 07/19/2008
- JackNasty I'm a Fan of JackNasty 69 fans permalink
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Tomato growers have been selling thick-skinned, flavorless, pulpy, bullet-hard products for years. Nothing has done more to harm the fortunes of tomato growers than their own decisions about what to sell.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:20 PM on 07/19/2008
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