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Local Food Advocates Hold Up Food Safety Bill In Senate

MARY CLARE JALONICK   11/17/10 04:53 PM ET   AP

WASHINGTON — The Senate voted Wednesday to move forward on a far-reaching food safety bill that would give the Food and Drug Administration more power to prevent foodborne illnesses.

The Senate voted 74-25 to proceed with the bill. Supporters needed 60 votes because Sen. Tom Coburn, R-Okla., had objected, saying the legislation's $1.4 billion cost isn't paid for.

The bill would give the FDA more authority to recall tainted products, increase inspections of food processors and require producers to follow stricter standards for keeping food safe in the wake of outbreaks of contaminated peanuts, eggs and produce that have sickened hundreds.

Also on Wednesday, the Senate blocked a measure designed to reduce wage disparities between men and women. The 58-41 vote to take up the Paycheck Fairness Act fell short of the 60 needed to overcome GOP opposition.

Civil rights groups, labor leaders and the Obama administration all supported the bill, which would make employers prove that any disparities in wages are job-related and not sex-based. Republicans and business groups said the bill would expose employers to more litigation by removing limits on punitive and compensatory damage awards.

President Barack Obama said he was "deeply disappointed" at the pay equity vote and blamed "a partisan minority of senators" for blocking the measure. A similar bill passed in the House last year.

"As we emerge from one of the worst recessions in history, this bill would ensure that American women and their families aren't bringing home smaller paychecks because of discrimination," Obama said in a written statement.

Whether the food safety bill could make it to the president's desk during the brief lame-duck congressional session is unclear since the House passed a different version of the legislation in 2009. Even if the Senate passes the bill, the two pieces of legislation would have to be quickly reconciled before the end of this session sometime after Thanksgiving.

Several amendments could complicate the Senate bill.

Coburn has again threatened to hold up the bill unless the Senate votes on an amendment to place a moratorium on earmarks, or federal spending for pet projects in lawmakers' states and districts. In a statement, his office said Coburn "will use all procedural tools available to him to force the Senate to vote on an earmark moratorium. Dr. Coburn is confident a vote will occur."

Supporters are also negotiating with Sen. Jon Tester, D-Mont., who is concerned the food safety legislation will be a burden on small farms. Tester's amendment, which would exempt some smaller farms from the bill's requirements, has gained support among grassroots advocates for buying food produced locally.

While the bill is designed to give the Food and Drug Administration greater authority over the nation's food supply, supporters of the Tester amendment say it could bankrupt some small farms that don't have the means to comply with new standards the bill would impose.

Those standards could include registering food safety plans with the FDA and documenting efforts to show food is not contaminated as it is produced.

Food safety advocates have objected to some of the exemptions, saying Tester's concerns are overblown and the size of the farm is not as important as the safety of the food.

Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., has said she will not offer an amendment to ban plastics chemical bisphenol-A from baby bottles and sippy cups. She issued a statement Wednesday saying the chemical industry had blocked her efforts.

Obama issued a statement in support of the Senate food safety bill Tuesday, saying the legislation would address "long-standing challenges" of the FDA by helping producers prevent foodborne outbreaks and giving the government more tools to keep food safe.

Recent outbreaks have exposed a lack of resources and authority at the FDA as the embattled agency has struggled to contain and trace contaminated products.

Currently, the FDA does not have the authority to order a recall and must negotiate recalls with the affected producers. The agency rarely inspects many food facilities and farms, visiting some every decade or so and others not at all.

___

Associated Press writer Sam Hananel contributed to this report.

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WASHINGTON — The Senate voted Wednesday to move forward on a far-reaching food safety bill that would give the Food and Drug Administration more power to prevent foodborne illnesses. The Senate...
WASHINGTON — The Senate voted Wednesday to move forward on a far-reaching food safety bill that would give the Food and Drug Administration more power to prevent foodborne illnesses. The Senate...
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07:54 PM on 11/26/2010
The Food Safety Crisis was coldbloodedly manufactured by the Food Cartel.

"The sudden discovery of a global pandemic of international cartels in the mid 1990s, after a hiatus of a half century, is puzzling. That the greatest number and most injurious conspiracies should be clustered in the food and feed ingredients industries...." - Purdue University

When did “the safest food supply in the world” change? I can pinpoint the time. The 1995 ratification of the WTO. This opened up the USA to foreign food WITHOUT ADEQUATE INSPECTION.

"Aims to ensure that governments do not use quarantine and food safety requirements as Unjustified trade barriers..." WTO

The second cause was the adoption of HACCP in 1996.

"USDA “officials initially described HACCP to the industry in the mid-90’s..

* “Under HACCP, the agency will implement a ‘Hands Off’ role in meat inspection.
* “Under HACCP, the agency will no longer police the industry, but the industry will police itself.
* “Under HACCP, the agency will disband its previous command and control authority.
* “Under HACCP, each plant will write its own HACCP Plan, and the agency cannot tell plants what must be in their HACCP Plans." agpolicy.org

Even the Food Inspectors are complaining about this new system!

In 1995 California did 10,576 TB tests, then cut to 1,425 by 1999. USA borders were opened and a Mexican Assoc runs the NM port-of-entry”- RESULT TB found in USA.

So S510 means lots of red tape no food safety.
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jukesgrrl
Stop the Republican war on women's bodies.
07:28 PM on 11/21/2010
Once again, the baby is drown in the bathwater.
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11:42 PM on 11/18/2010
People who are familiar with FDA tyranny know there is good reason to figure that this bill will be used to help corporate fat cats and hurt the competition.

People who are not familiar with FDA tyranny should look into how they keep consumers in the dark by opposing labeling laws for milk with bovine growth hormone, genetically modified foods, etc. Given their history of corruption, it is logical to assume they are acting in bad faith. The FDA is NOT on our side.
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undrgrndgirl
using bitchyness for good
09:13 PM on 11/18/2010
this bill is hardly a food safety bill...in many ways it will take away the rights of consumers in favor of large agribusiness...
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SupremeIdiot
Bowdown and worship me, trolls. For I am your king
09:45 AM on 11/19/2010
Can you show how it will do that by citing specific passages in the bill?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Hydra8
CEO, Monkey Business
06:50 PM on 11/18/2010
Tell us why the FDA needs more sweeping power to shut down a factory farm like Wright County Egg, which they slapped on the hand. Not one egg was thrown away even though they were contaminated with poisonous salmonella. The eggs were sent to breaking factories and used in baked goods so the FDA thought that was perfectly all right. Cooking eggs does not make them clean again they are still poisonous. This bill if it succeeds will make it illegal for small organic local farms to compete, and they will be shut down by this "new authority". Really this bill will make factory food the norm, and organic farms will be outlawed. Wake up people your govt is not working for your health or safety. This a major con game to help corporate farms outlaw natural foods and your the one paying this government to take away your rights to grow your own food.
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SupremeIdiot
Bowdown and worship me, trolls. For I am your king
09:53 AM on 11/19/2010
Of course you know all about the Tester amnedment that exempts small famrs right?
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Pandoras Folly
This Micro-bio is of legendary quality
10:34 AM on 11/18/2010
you know every time i hear of a problem with food born illness it is with a factory style food processor and not a local fruit stand.
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mlaiuppa
Pres. Sarcasm Society. Like we need your approval.
01:55 AM on 11/18/2010
In the meantime, I can't get local meat because there is no USDA approved slaughterhouse close enough. None of the approved ones will take small amounts like a few cows. And even if they did, they couldn't guarantee that the ranchers would get their same meat back.

Why raise grass fed pastured cows if you're likely to get any old cr@p back from the processor?

At least I can buy local eggs and produce.
02:08 AM on 11/18/2010
Hunt deer and process it yourself.
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Pandoras Folly
This Micro-bio is of legendary quality
10:32 AM on 11/18/2010
there are butchers who operate out of trailers that con process a single cow, true it is more costly but if you are willing to go in on it with several people at a time it can be worth it.
01:48 AM on 11/18/2010
Actually something I can agree and work with you guys on. I oppose this and will be putting pressure on not just my Senator but the bills sponsor Drubin and any and all co sponsors.
09:34 PM on 11/17/2010
There should be an exemption for small producers.
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SupremeIdiot
Bowdown and worship me, trolls. For I am your king
09:54 AM on 11/19/2010
There is. Its called the Tester amendment.
12:00 PM on 11/19/2010
That is good.
08:45 PM on 11/17/2010
Well considering Obama's pick for head of the FDA is a former Monsanto executive, I think its pretty clear that the FDA will be stepping up their assault on small farmers who grow for farmer's markets and will look the other way when it comes to the hormones, steroids, and anti-biotics, that small scale, organic farmers do not use because their produce is not contaminated in the first place. Monsanto will be wiping out their competition, raking in millions more with the sale of their GMOs, pesticides, fertilizers - all of which are not only harmful to the consumer and promote animal and human rights abuses, but are unsustainable and damaging the environment as well. I'm all for regulating large agri-businesses because they need it, but it is sad that the only alternative to them will soon be gone.
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undrgrndgirl
using bitchyness for good
09:17 PM on 11/18/2010
this article indicates taylor is to "plan implementation of new food safety legislation"...BEFORE it's passed? could mons(ter)anto know something we don't? ...
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BreezyinVA
Be True!
07:59 PM on 11/17/2010
This bill will cut into the heart of America. Eating local is the most green thing we can do and is what we WANT to do.
07:44 PM on 11/17/2010
Call your senators today and tell them to vote NO on the Monsanto Bill S510.
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jasonedward
All ways are my ways.
06:42 PM on 11/17/2010
As it is, it's hard enough to gain access to raw milk, which is AMAZING! I've been struggling with a tooth that needs a root canal and keeps a minor infection in it. :( Root canals are expensive. Last round of antibiotics didn't fare so well. Changed to raw milk and it's amazing how much easier it is to control.
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amber15
06:35 PM on 11/17/2010
CALL YOUR SENATORS TODAY!

tell them to support the Tester Amendent.

http://action.fooddemocracynow.org/call/stand_up_for_small_farmers/