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Egg Recall: Salmonella Found In Feed At Two Iowa Egg Farms; Feed Mill Under Review

AP/Huffington Post   First Posted: 08/27/10 12:19 PM ET Updated: 05/25/11 06:30 PM ET

Salmonella Iowa Farm Wright County Egg Recall
FDA investigators jave found salmonella in chicken feed at Wright County Egg (pictured) and Hillandale Farms. (Photo from AP)

UPDATE: Feed Mill At Center Of Egg Recall Under Review:

Associated Press: DES MOINES, Iowa -- A state Department of Agriculture inspector will visit the Iowa feed mill where investigators found salmonella linked to the massive egg recall to check whether it is operating legally.

The mill, at Wright County Egg, hasn't been regulated by the state Department of Agriculture and Land Stewardship. Its owners say it qualifies for an exemption allowing farmers to make feed for their own livestock.

But the FDA reported Thursday that feed mixed at the mill was fed to chickens at Wright County Egg and Hillandale Farms in New Hampton.

State agriculture spokesman Dustin Vande Hoef says if the mill provided feed to other farms, it wouldn't qualify for the exemption. He says the inspector will visit next week to comb through its records.

The mill is among Iowa's largest.

Previously: Salmonella Found In Feed At Two Iowa Egg Farms

Associated Press: WASHINGTON — Food and Drug Administration officials say they have found positive samples of salmonella that link two Iowa farms to a massive egg recall.

Investigators found salmonella in chicken feed at Wright County Egg that was used by that farm and also Hillandale Farms, the FDA said. Authorities also found additional samples of salmonella in other locations at Wright County Egg. More than 550 million eggs from the two farms were recalled this month after they were linked to salmonella poisoning in several states.

One of the positive samples for salmonella was found in a feed ingredient sold to Wright County Egg from a third party supplier, Central Bi-Products, according to Wright County Egg, raising new questions as to whether other egg farms also could have received contaminated feed. The FDA could not confirm that the feed element came from a third party, but so far has said it doesn't believe the salmonella outbreak will expand beyond the two farms.

Also Thursday, the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said there could now be as many as 1,470 illnesses linked to the outbreak, about 200 more than previously thought.

Sherri McGarry of the FDA's Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition said the salmonella found at Wright County Egg matches the fingerprint of the salmonella found in many of those who were sickened. She said the tests indicate that contaminated feed is a source of the outbreak but possibly not the only source.

McGarry and other FDA officials emphasized in a briefing for reporters that the agency's investigation is ongoing, and that they do not yet know how the feed became contaminated. Investigators are analyzing as many as 600 samples from 24 locations at the two farms.

Wright County Egg said one of the feed ingredients from Central Bi-Products was held separately in a bin that was tested by FDA officials. Wright County Egg spokeswoman Hinda Mitchell said Central Bi-Products has no ties to the two farms and they receive the feed ingredient, which contains meat and bone meal, from a distributor.

"We will work with FDA as they expand their review of feed ingredients purchased from outside vendors for our farm, as well as for their ongoing review of our farms," said the Wright County Egg statement attributed to unidentified company officials.

FDA spokeswoman Siobhan DeLancey said, "FDA did collect samples of feed ingredients and did identify a salmonella enteritidis positive result from a feed ingredient collected from an unmarked bin. Because the bin was not marked, the agency cannot confirm if the product came from a third-party supplier."

A company listed as Central Bi-Products in Redwood Falls, Minn., that produces "poultry raw material" did not immediately return a call seeking comment Thursday.

Wright County Egg's statement also asserted that a positive environmental test does not mean eggs from that barn would have salmonella. Mitchell said the company had tested some eggs from one of the barns where salmonella was found since July, and those eggs did not test positive for salmonella. The company began testing under new rules put in place for the egg industry this summer to reduce occurrences of the disease.

The feed mill where the salmonella was found operates as part of the Wright County Egg facility and also provides feed to Hillandale Farms. Officials said they are not yet sure whether the feed came to the farm contaminated or was contaminated at the farms. They said there is no evidence at this time that the feed went to any other farms.

FDA Deputy Commissioner Dr. Joshua Sharfstein said the investigators are not just looking at the feed, but at the "overall contamination of the facility." Contamination found in the feed could be a part of a larger problem there, he said.

"While they have found it in the feed they are not confirming any sort of cause and effect relationship," he said.

Congress is hoping to get more answers from the two farms, the FDA and the Agriculture Department in September. A House Energy and Commerce subcommittee announced it will hold a hearing on the recall Sept. 14.

The committee is inviting Austin "Jack" DeCoster, the owner of Wright County Egg, and Orland Bethel, the owner of Hillandale Farms, to testify. The panel is investigating the recall and has written both farms, asking about company operations, communications with the government and what they knew and when.

The panel has also written the FDA, which oversees the safety of shell eggs, and the Agriculture Department, which oversees other egg products and animal disease. The committee asked for records of inspections and past communications with the two farms, along with other documents. The FDA has said it has "no inspectional history" with the two farms.

Rep. Rosa DeLauro, D-Conn., who heads the spending committee that oversees the FDA and USDA, has also written letters to the two agencies.

Mitchell, the Wright County Egg spokeswoman, would not say whether DeCoster will attend the September hearing, but said the company is "working right now" to respond to the committee.

"We will approach it in the same forthright manner as we have in our cooperation with FDA to date," Mitchell said.

DeCoster, who has paid millions of dollars in fines over the last 20 years for health, safety, immigration and environmental violations, has not responded to interview requests.

A worker at his office's headquarters near Galt, Iowa, on Wednesday said he wasn't available, and in his home in Clarion, Iowa, on Wednesday, his wife, Patricia, also said he was not around. She said the last few weeks "have been quite a time for us" but declined further comment.

A spokeswoman for Hillandale Farms also said the company is reviewing the committee's questions and "expect to cooperate in the same open manner as we have with the FDA."

The number of illnesses, which can be life-threatening, especially to those with weakened immune systems, is expected to increase. No deaths have been reported due to this outbreak.

CDC epidemiologist Dr. Christopher Braden said this is the largest outbreak of this strain of salmonella since the start of the agency's surveillance of outbreaks in the late 1970s. The next largest was an outbreak due to raw eggs in ice cream in the 1990s that caused more than 700 illnesses.

Thoroughly cooking eggs can kill the bacteria. But health officials are recommending people throw away or return the recalled eggs.
___

Associated Press writer Ryan J. Foley in Des Moines, Iowa, contributed to this report.

___

Online:

Food and Drug Administration: http://tinyurl.com/25ot6ss

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention: http://tinyurl.com/27lla8y

Foodsafety.gov: http://www.foodsafety.gov

Egg Safety Center industry recall information: http://www.eggsafety.org

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UPDATE: Feed Mill At Center Of Egg Recall Under Review: Associated Press: DES MOINES, Iowa -- A state Department of Agriculture inspector will visit the Iowa feed mill where investigators found salmo...
UPDATE: Feed Mill At Center Of Egg Recall Under Review: Associated Press: DES MOINES, Iowa -- A state Department of Agriculture inspector will visit the Iowa feed mill where investigators found salmo...
 
 
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06:00 AM on 09/01/2010
Factory food? No thanks.
04:30 AM on 08/31/2010
Thanks so much for sharing this information. Greatly help me being a newbie.

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02:46 PM on 08/30/2010
After hearing all this bunk about the salmonella being the result of large-scale farming, it is nice to see some actual facts.

The infection stemmed from contaminated feed. Any chicken would have had the same reaction, whether it was raised in a cage, was cage free, or free range.

It's kind of scary seeing all the members of The Church of the Organic Chicken jumping to completely false conclusions. Democracy depends on an informed electorate. In this case,the loudest folks happened to be the ones with the poorest sources of information.
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HazelPethigFan
I don't know until I know
06:16 PM on 08/30/2010
Hey there Whatevah. Good to see we are all still commenting on these issues.

Found this link on some other eggs with salmonella in 2009 that didn't seem to get the same national press:

http://abclocal.go.com/kgo/story?section=news/consumer/recalls&id=6725373

Just one point about the contaminated eggs: they were organic.

I wonder how the food commisars will explain this?
06:02 AM on 09/01/2010
Who says? The chicken feed clearly wasn't.
07:44 AM on 08/30/2010
I like the design of those apartments. You listed above the most popular examples of custom printing.

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01:38 PM on 08/29/2010
the ills of factory farming
09:42 PM on 08/28/2010
Yup, that's right. The USDA lets chicken farms feed chicken byproducts to chickens.

They also let beef farms feed beef fat to herbivorous cows.

Cannibalism is a good way to spread disease, because the germs that infected the eaten animal are almost certainly capable of infecting the animal that eats it.
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Mark Bailey
02:32 PM on 08/28/2010
Hmmmmm...let's see....the product that went into the feed that was contaminated was from a place called "Central Bi-Products"?!?!?!?! Nice!......it's nice to know what is going into the chickens that people eat huh? This is the same crap that spawned the "Mad Cow" fiasco. The company has been fined MILLIONS for safety infractions, and the stupid public keeps right on buying the eggs. I'm glad i have my own chickens that I feed organic feed to and keep grasses growing for them to eat as well. I know what is going in my food, do you?
10:20 PM on 08/27/2010
The food supply has become dangerously compromised due to a demand for increased profit margins. Oversights on health regulations and exploited workers is making he food we eat more and more likely to be contaminated.

You should attempt to strengthen your immune system with natural methods in order to prevent the abundant germs and pollutants which are all around us from causing illness. The state of factory farming and the overall industrialized nature of modern day food production has been well documented and the results are all around us.

Alternative Cures
10:11 PM on 08/27/2010
Maybe the Republicans would take food quality seriously if these eggs show up in a meal at one of their fundraisers. The corporate take over of the food supply will lead to more poisonings. These aren't farms, they are factories.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
KriTiKiT
Says"play nice"
07:30 PM on 08/27/2010
the sad thing is the senators for their state want to disband the usda
02:47 PM on 08/30/2010
Alas, this movement is aided and abetted by all the anti-science, anti-biotech wingnuts who claim the USDA is part of some kind of conspiracy to do . . . something.
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Ohioan4truth
I'm just an average, ordinary guy.
06:02 PM on 08/27/2010
GIGO

Garbage in........Garbage out!

See? It's that easy!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
floodberg
Attorney (ret.)
05:24 PM on 08/27/2010
BACKGROUND ON THE FARM'S OWNER, JACK DECOSTER

Jack DeCoster, the owner of Wright Farms, is legendary for use abuse of animals and flaunting the rules. Iowa declared him an 'habitual offender,' first time ever.

Here's a link to this man's past history in agriculture...http://www.grist.org/article/food-a-habitual-offender-unleashes-nearly-half-a-billion-salmonella-t/
05:19 PM on 08/27/2010
Those chickens should be outside if people ever saw how they are living they would throw up. Americans should boycott eggs until the rules change!!
02:31 AM on 08/29/2010
I raise my own, they are healthy and happy.
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Mr MOTO
Three Strikes And You're Not Out!
04:51 PM on 08/27/2010
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04:17 PM on 08/27/2010
I do hope that the feed will be checked to determine if it was a Monsanto/Cargill genetically compromised product.
05:47 PM on 08/27/2010
I am not sure they can pin the salmonella to GMO ingredients; but I bet that there are a lot of GMO ingredients in this feed (just like they are in many foods for humans and pets):

Corn, corn gluten meal, soybeans, hexane-extracted soy bean meal, cotton seed meal, oil seed meals, 'dried bakery product', ...
and other yummy not directly GE 'natural' ingredients such as hydrolyzed poultry feathers, whole pressed safflower meal, poultry fat, D-activated animal sterol, meat and bone meal,
plus other yummies that are not 'natural' but synthetic such as mineral oil, ethoxyquin preservative, propionic acid mold inhibitor,...
and the usual slew of synthetic vitamins (many of them are GE)...
plus of course the synthetic antibiotics.....

Among these common poultry feed ingredients (I surely don't know and didn't list all and I have no idea which ones might be contained in THE chicken feed) are several ingredients that certainly could harbor salmonella.
02:48 PM on 08/30/2010
Read the article. GMOs have nothing - nothing - to do with this situation.

The infected animals ate pure organic feed.
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HazelPethigFan
I don't know until I know
06:03 PM on 08/30/2010
So what was the problem with the eggs in the story below in 2009? Was it GMO feed?

http://abclocal.go.com/kgo/story?section=news/consumer/recalls&id=6725373

Oh wait...did I tell you? The eggs with the salmonella are organic. ooops.