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Senate Passes Landmark Food Safety Bill, Heads For Reconciliation

AP / The Huffington Post   First Posted: 11/30/10 11:31 AM ET Updated: 05/25/11 07:15 PM ET

Scroll down to read key points from S.510, the Senate's food safety bill.

The Senate passed legislation Tuesday to make food safer in the wake of deadly E. coli and salmonella outbreaks, potentially giving the government broad new powers to increase inspections of food processing facilities and force companies to recall tainted food.

The $1.4 billion bill, which would also place stricter standards on imported foods, passed the Senate 73-25. Supporters say passage is critical after widespread outbreaks in peanuts, eggs and produce.

Those outbreaks have exposed a lack of resources and authority at the FDA as the embattled agency struggled to contain and trace the contaminated products. The agency rarely inspects many food facilities and farms, visiting some every decade or so and others not at all.

The bill would emphasize prevention so the agency could try to stop outbreaks before they begin. Farmers and food processors would have to tell the Food and Drug Administration how they are working to keep their food safe at different stages of production.

Despite wide bipartisan support and backing from many major food companies, the legislation stalled as it came under fire from advocates of buying locally produced food and operators of small farms, who said it would could bankrupt some small businesses. Senators eventually agreed to exempt some of those operations from costly food safety plans required of bigger companies, rankling food safety advocates and larger growers but gaining support from farm-state senators.

Senate sponsors further softened the bill's impact on the food industry – including eliminating some fees processors would have to pay and reducing the number of required inspections – to gain votes in the Senate and to make the bill more palatable in the House. Members of both parties voiced concern about the legislation's impact on small farms and businesses when a different version of the bill passed that chamber in 2009.

The bill's prospects are unclear since there is little time during the brief lame-duck congressional session for the House and Senate to reconcile different versions. Iowa Sen. Tom Harkin, the sponsor of the Senate legislation, said he has agreement from some members in the House to pass the Senate bill, which would send the legislation straight to President Barack Obama's desk.

Senators rejected several unrelated amendments to the bill, including an amendment to place a moratorium on earmarks, or pet projects in lawmakers' states and districts, and one to repeal an arcane tax provision that helps pay for President Barack Obama's new health care law. Supporters said the amendments would have killed the bill's chances in the House.

The Senate legislation would:

_Allow the FDA to order a recall of tainted foods. Currently the agency can only negotiate with businesses to order voluntary recalls;

_Require larger food processors and manufacturers to register with the Food and Drug Administration and create detailed food safety plans;

_Require the FDA to create new produce safety regulations for producers of the highest-risk fruits and vegetables;

_Establish stricter standards for the safety of imported food;

_Increase inspections of domestic and foreign food facilities, directing the most resources to those operations with the highest risk profiles.

The bill would not apply to meat, poultry or processed eggs, which are regulated by the Agriculture Department. Those foods have long been subject to much more rigorous inspections and oversight than FDA-regulated foods.

The federal Centers for Disease Control has estimated that tens of millions of Americans are sickened and thousands die from foodborne illnesses each year.

Click here for a comparison of the Senate bill and H.R.2749, the food safety bill passed by the House.


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Scroll down to read key points from S.510, the Senate's food safety bill. The Senate passed legislation Tuesday to make food safer in the wake of deadly E. coli and salmonella outbreaks, potentially ...
Scroll down to read key points from S.510, the Senate's food safety bill. The Senate passed legislation Tuesday to make food safer in the wake of deadly E. coli and salmonella outbreaks, potentially ...
 
 
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06:24 PM on 12/06/2010
Outside of big business interests, which as we know, tend to override safety, security and decency, there is no reason for this bill not to pass. These guidelines are long overdue.
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rikster
buy the ticket-take the ride
10:17 PM on 12/04/2010
is it safe...?
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Alison Rose Levy
Connect the Dots www.healthjournalist.com
09:11 PM on 12/03/2010
A heads up that Harry Reid is keeping the Senate over the weekend. The bill has not yet been blue slipped or sent to the House-- so those wishing to take action would be well advised to continue to contact their Senators and their Congressmen and women.

Alison
www.healthjournalist.com
06:00 PM on 12/03/2010
Big agribusiness supported this bill for 3 reasons:

1) they can absorb the costs of regulation because of their size

2) they gain good PR for supposedly improving food safety practices

3) the competition created by local food producers, which is rapidly growing, would be crushed by regulatory burdens.

Like I tell all my students; never EVER vote republican. This is what you get-corporate tyranny.
11:45 AM on 12/06/2010
The Tester Amendment excludes small producers so point 3 is off the board,

I don't quite understand how your last sentence is related. It appears you are against the bill, then go on to say you tell your students to never vote republican, but the bill you are against was widely supported by democrats.
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Alison Rose Levy
Connect the Dots www.healthjournalist.com
01:32 PM on 12/03/2010
A health blogger here since 2007, I've written on healthy nutrition since 1995, and have worked with Mark Hyman, David Ludwig, Sally Fallon, and Joe Mercola. Beginning with the Salmonella episode, I posted three stories critiquing S510. Every one of them had action links. ln the critical last daysm HP posted three pro-bill stories. There's confusion among well-intentioned people about these issues. So if you want to learn/ stand up for proactive health policy, please know that is my beat. Please check out my posts, and if you wish to, follow or fan me, or friend me on FB where I post, comment, and dialogue with folks. Obviously, it takes some chutzpah to write this, but I am because I fear we'll all live to regret that we could not stop this bill. I wish I'd had the following of a Michael Pollan to make a difference on this vote. I'd not have hesitated to throw it to those fighting this bill. I've been in the media for 25 years and there is a time when objectivity is called for and there is a time when advocacy is called for

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/alison-rose-levy/food-safety-do-we-need-mo_b_693979.html
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/alison-rose-levy/will-the-food-safety-bill_b_740312.html
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/alison-rose-levy/michael-pollan-issues-urg_b_784652.html

Alison
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farmilyman
everything is illusion
11:21 AM on 12/02/2010
Force labeling of GMO products!!!
09:03 AM on 12/03/2010
amen! The majority of American's diets are based on corn--most of it genetically modified to be pest resistant--be it through sweeteners like high fructose corn syrup, corn fed beef, corn starch, corn oils, the list goes on. Genetically engineered products have not been tested for human consumption, or environmental damage, and there are no labeling requirements. There has been a massive backlash in Europe, and it needs to happen here.
09:16 PM on 12/01/2010
"The bill's prospects are unclear since there is little time during the brief lame-duck congressional session for the House and Senate to reconcile different versions. Iowa Sen. Tom Harkin, the sponsor of the Senate legislation, said he has agreement from some members in the House to pass the Senate bill, which would send the legislation straight to President Barack Obama's desk." I read this to mean that if the House so much as adds a comma, the bill will have to be reconciled with the Senate again. If it goes back to the Senate, it dies. Call me cynical, but I think this is the scenario by which nothing happens. Media should stop reporting bill passages in one or the other chamber of congress as if it means anything. Tell us when it goes to the White House for signature. Otherwise you're wasting your readers' time.
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03:00 PM on 12/01/2010
This will be watered down and porked out until it bears no resemblance to the original bill. Then it will be tweaked and prodded and finally passed in a version that does us no good and doesn't take effect for ten years anyway.

If only we could pass the original version of this bill and other like it. Maybe we could even manage to achieve the level of food safety they've had in Europe for over a decade. That would be nice, wouldn't it?
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HerrMonk
Fighter, Trainer, Nat.Sec.Consultant, Libertine
03:09 PM on 12/01/2010
I take it you haven't read the original bill?
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03:31 PM on 12/01/2010
Now I'm expected to read every bill that comes up in its entirety? Why are you expectations of me greater than your expectations of senators and congressmen? Can't I just have my staff tell me what it's about?
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rikster
buy the ticket-take the ride
02:20 PM on 12/01/2010
Korporate Amerika strikes another blow it their aim of total control.....cause the disease....get the Big Pharma "magic pill"...hospital stay....it's all there......more of our money in their coffers... what does the Legislative get out of this.....$$$$ to get re-elected..by a compliant electorate. I wonder when the massive migrations from this country will start..
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Dangerous Dan
Because I can!
01:59 PM on 12/01/2010
Senate Dems.
You got to love them.
Who would think that they could take a bill with a title that guaruntees passage,
and they snatch defeat from victory!
 
The 2010 elections now highlight the fact that the HOUSE originates all tax bills!
 
All new legislation should be single purpose. 
 
With all the issues facing the lame duck, this bill is toast, again.
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HerrMonk
Fighter, Trainer, Nat.Sec.Consultant, Libertine
01:19 PM on 12/01/2010
So apparently the senate added some taxes to the bill, which is, as we all know, unconstitutional, since all taxation has to begin in the house.

If the senate doesn't get a 100% unanimous (forgive the redundancy) to drop those sections of the bill, it has to start all over in senate.

Good luck with that before the lame-duck session ends.
01:28 PM on 12/01/2010
Source please? I'm interested in more info on this. Thank you.
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HerrMonk
Fighter, Trainer, Nat.Sec.Consultant, Libertine
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MrDOB
06:05 AM on 12/01/2010
This bill was written by and for big Agra to choke out the local food movement. There is more than food safety here. It is food control
12:51 PM on 12/01/2010
That list was a load of garbage, have you even read the bill?
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Hirnlego
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03:01 PM on 12/01/2010
Paranoid much?
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JoeTroll
Prove your own claims. I'm not your intern.
11:13 PM on 11/30/2010
More government interference in our God-given right to die of salmonella!
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03:02 PM on 12/01/2010
Yes, and how dare they! Don't they care that we all want to feel queasy most of the time? Don't they realize that we're very into our irritable bowel syndrome? Once again they show how disconnected they are from the needs of the people. Darn them.
09:11 PM on 11/30/2010
you are what you eat..its about time our Senators got serious about something so important.
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Waldo the WonderCat
07:26 PM on 11/30/2010
I will be impressed with the FDA when they decide to regulate tobacco.