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USDA Office Closures Raise Safety Concerns

By MICHAEL J. CRUMB   01/ 9/12 11:11 PM ET   AP

Usda

DES MOINES, Iowa -- The U.S. Agriculture Department announced Monday it will close nearly 260 offices nationwide, a move that won praise for cutting costs but raised concerns about the possible effect on food safety.

Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack said the goal was to save $150 million a year in the agency's $145 billion budget. About $90 million had already been saved by reducing travel and supplies, and the closures were expected to save another $60 million, he said.

The plan calls for 259 offices, labs and other facilities to be closed, affecting the USDA headquarters in Washington and operations in 46 states. Seven foreign offices also will be shut.

Some of the closures had been previously announced. The USDA said last year it would shut down 10 agricultural research stations, including the only one in Alaska, where scientists were seeking ways to use the vast waste generated by the largest wild fishery in the nation to make everything from gel caps for pills to fish meal for livestock feed.

Other parts of the announcement were a surprise. Andrew Lorenz, deputy district manager for the Food Safety and Inspection Service in Minneapolis, learned his office would be closed, along with those in Madison, Wis., and Lawrence, Kan.

"They wiped out the entire Midwest," said Lorenz, whose office handles all federal inspections of meat, poultry and egg products in Minnesota, Montana, the Dakotas and Wyoming.

FSIS offices in Chicago and Des Moines will remain open. It was not immediately clear whether work from the other offices would be shifted to them.

Lorenz said about 16 people work in his office, and he expected 12 to 14 of their jobs to be eliminated. A USDA spokeswoman said employees would be given the opportunity to transfer to other offices whenever possible.

Elisabeth Hagen, undersecretary for food safety, said the closures would affect management and support staff as FSIS offices are consolidated from 15 to 10, but that there wouldn't be a reduction in inspectors or inspection work.

"There will be no reduction in inspection presence at slaughter and processing facilities and no risk for consumers," Hagen said.

"Not only do we have a statutory obligation to be in every facility, we have an unwavering commitment to food safety," she added. "We will still be on the job, in every facility, every day."

Vilsack said he didn't anticipate widespread layoffs, in part because 7,000 USDA employees took early retirements over the past year. He said the agency is trying to do more with less in light of federal cutbacks, and many of the offices to be closed had few employees or were near other offices.

"Our workload is at record highs, we have less money and fewer people and work to do and we tried to address how do you do that without interrupting service," Vilsack said in a phone call from Honolulu, where he was speaking to the American Farm Bureau Federation.

The USDA manages a wide array of programs, from emergency aid for farmers to grants for rural development and food assistance programs for the poor. Along with the Agricultural Research and Food Safety and Inspection services, six other departments will be affected by closures, including the Farm Service Agency and Rural Development.

Kevin Ross, 31, a sixth-generation farmer in Iowa, expressed concern about how services would be affected. Farmers could drop out of programs if they have to travel long distances, he said.

"Access to agencies is a big deal, especially in rural areas," said Ross, who grows 400 acres of corn on his farm near Minden. "It's easy to say it looks like great cost savings, but I hope they are careful and strategic in their decisions."

Vilsack said public hearings will be held in counties where Farm Service Agency offices are to be closed. That department handles disaster assistance, farm loans and crop subsidies, among other programs. The USDA plans to shut 131 FSA offices in 32 states, with largest number of closures in Arkansas, Tennessee and Texas.

Bruce Babcock, a farm economist at Iowa State University and director of the school's Center for Agricultural and Rural Development, said consolidation was a long time coming, given that advances in technology made it possible to file applications and do other tasks over the phone or online. He said he's more concerned about the USDA's ability to maintain programs that deal with disease prevention.

"The capability to collect data and do the behind the scenes activities that really help U.S. agriculture stay safe, that should be concerning," Babcock said.

Colin Woodall, a spokesman for the National Cattlemen's Beef Association, which represents more than 147,000 ranchers nationwide, applauded the USDA for trying to save taxpayers' money in tight economic times but also expressed concern about food safety.

"We can't say this is all great news because some offices will be closed," he said. "We have to make sure we have the process in place to keep food safe."

Vilsack said the closures and other cost-cutting measures will allow the agency to keep investing in programs that make agriculture more productive, including maintaining credit to farmers, providing aid to beginning farmers and scientific research.

"Over the long haul, we believe farmers and ranchers across the country will be better served by the choices we made," he said.

But that was of little consolation to California cotton growers mourning the loss of the 80-year-old agriculture research station at Shafter, which solved many of the industry's pest and fungus issues.

Calcot, a growers' co-op that sells more than a million bales annually, had lobbied officials to keep the center, which lately has been working to address fusarium wilt, a soil-dwelling fungus that attacks cotton plants.

"This is going to be to the detriment of the U.S. cotton industry and ultimately the world because so much research there has benefited growers everywhere," Calcot spokesman Mark Bagby said.

___

Associated Press writers Tracie Cone in Fresno, Calif.; Doug Glass in Minneapolis; Dan Joling in Anchorage, Alaska; and Justin Juozapavicius in Tulsa, Okla., contributed to this report.

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DES MOINES, Iowa -- The U.S. Agriculture Department announced Monday it will close nearly 260 offices nationwide, a move that won praise for cutting costs but raised concerns about the possible effect...
DES MOINES, Iowa -- The U.S. Agriculture Department announced Monday it will close nearly 260 offices nationwide, a move that won praise for cutting costs but raised concerns about the possible effect...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
exile
07:02 AM on 01/12/2012
the republicans continue
the race to the bottom
in wages and consumer safety
since they sold out they can afford the best
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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07:40 PM on 01/10/2012
They are closing ARS offices and I assume labs too. No funds for research. I think I just might be more outraged at that if indeed all they eliminated was a bunch of paperpushers or USDA meat graders, since meat grading hasn't anything to do with safety.

The race to the bottom continues.
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baxtron
tek phlarpt
05:21 PM on 01/10/2012
"Our workload is at record highs, we have less money and fewer people and work to do and we tried to address how do you do that without interrupting service," Vilsack said in a phone call from Honolulu.

LMAO!

Guess the flying to Hawaii budget is still in tact.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
sacmom3
ENOUGH! Remember the children of Sandy Hook
04:08 PM on 01/10/2012
You wanted less government, you got it. Good luck with that next bag of salad or jar of peanut butter.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Karelh
When fact is fiction and TV reality
03:36 PM on 01/10/2012
Here's my prediction. The profits of the major corporate Ag & Meat conglomerates will see a nice bump in the next 12 to 18 months. Withing 24 to 36 months, we'll see our exports of Ag and Meat related products threaten or blocked by Japan, Europe, China, Canada, etc. because of safety concerns about the quality of US Ag and Meat products. The Right will claim that the USDA is another agency that has failed as a government run bureaucracy and should be privatized and outsourced. In 5 years, this will be run by a private inspection contractor, paid for by US tax dollars, at twice the cost of the current USDA budget.

And to think this was done under a so-called Democratic Administration.

I really try to pull for Obama, but time and time again, he let's me down and shows us all what he's really all about.
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baxtron
tek phlarpt
05:22 PM on 01/10/2012
Congress and Senate vote and amend the budget. there are 3 branches of govt.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Karelh
When fact is fiction and TV reality
10:03 PM on 01/10/2012
This was a cabinet level decision, not something that was dictated by Congress. The judicial branch has almost nothing to do with the passing or approving of budgets either.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
hopingheart
We can succeed only if we find a way together...
03:36 PM on 01/10/2012
People, people! Be reasonable. These decisions reflect the GOP agenda of focusing on the safety of our corporate citizens rather than the safety of our little people-people. Priorities, priorities!!!
03:19 PM on 01/10/2012
Their assurances aren't very reassuring. It looks like we have yet another reason to buy organic, pastured meat, dairy, and poultry from your local sources!
06:50 PM on 01/10/2012
Agreed!
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
07:35 AM on 01/11/2012
Guess what? Buying organic makes more people sick than any other products you can buy. Just imagine eating and drinking products produced by sewer water and waste matter. Thats organic. Thats why people get sick eating the stuff - yikes.
08:42 AM on 01/11/2012
Come on, really? Are you really saying you have more consumer confidence in Monsanto-driven food production and factory farms for your food sources? I have never heard of a recall of organic meat (or produce for that matter) and the advantage of buying locally is going to visit the farm so that any statements of confidence or lack thereof are informed. With that said, I do have concerns about the ability of the USDA (who oversees the organic certification program) to conduct enforcement activities and actually verify that the standards of the organic program are being met.
03:13 PM on 01/10/2012
Just think about what's next folks, The Closing of CDC and WHO !
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mlaiuppa
Pres. Sarcasm Society. Like we need your approval.
03:11 PM on 01/10/2012
Vilsack was a bad choice and this only confirms it.

Of course there will be more violations that will go undetected and unpunished. If business would self-regulate, we wouldn't need regulations and the USDA in the first place, now, would we?

People have very short memories and obviously slept through history class.
02:55 PM on 01/10/2012
Sooo let me get this straight: I think there must have been at least a dozen recalls last year alone, yet the U.S.D.A. is CLOSING offices to meet this... challenge??!! Not to mention, all those "pesky" exotic pets and foods being snuck into the country like some kind of bad SyFy movie, I guess we'll have to 'live in hope' that the TSA continues their inconsistent, yet 'earnest' approach in protecting us on that end...
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meglon978
Beware of gifts bearing Greeks.
03:14 PM on 01/10/2012
No. They're closing these offices to save money because half of our congress is trying everything it can to destroy this country because their ideology says government can't work, and they'll destroy any part of it that does regardless of how many people it ends up killing.
03:24 PM on 01/10/2012
Ain't that that truth!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cameron d
Good Guys Win
02:42 PM on 01/10/2012
As a Canadian I can say I kind of hope something really embarrassing happens due to the closure of all of those labs and headquarters just so I can say "I told you so." I love saying "I told you so."
02:47 PM on 01/10/2012
I am sure you have been saying it a lot over the past year.
03:14 PM on 01/10/2012
I have ! Wait until they start Budget cutting CDC and WHO !
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cameron d
Good Guys Win
03:24 PM on 01/10/2012
I say it all the time.
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baxtron
tek phlarpt
05:25 PM on 01/10/2012
it won't be embarrassing, it will involve death of children and old people. if it is my child, feel free to say "I told you so". I'll try to take it with good humor.
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rikster
buy the ticket-take the ride
02:40 PM on 01/10/2012
the USDA will become a subsidiary of Monsanto...oh..it already is...
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HazelPethigFan
I don't know until I know
09:07 PM on 01/10/2012
So why then are people on Hpost whining about USDA cutbacks?
April22
Some experiences in life are ineffable
02:37 PM on 01/10/2012
Eating just about anything in the US now is a possible risk to one's health.

Foods are being imported to the US and to your table from all over the world. How and under what conditions these foods are being grown, is anybody's guess.

Ever wonder what chemicals or fertilizers or what was in the water used in Mexico to grow egg plants, for example, or Chile to grow their grapes?

Here's a little known fact:

"In 1973, there were attempts to "dump" Agent Orange [another of Monsanto's claim to fame, as well as DDT, banned in the US since 1972] in Brazil, Paraguay and Venezuela by the U.S. government. According to some reports, however, the basic ingredients of Agent Orange have been sold and used in Latin America for more than 25 years."

Interesting!

http://www.culturalsurvival.org/publications/cultural-survival-quarterly/cameroon/some-pesticides-use-around-world
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Terri Skau
Se... sotto una splendida luna piena...
12:04 PM on 01/11/2012
No kidding...Who knows what they use on there products that they ship in for our consumption...

HMMMMMMMM? Possible link to ADHD, Autism, and several other things that now plague our young children.

Just a thought
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
CadOps
A small blue dot, in a big red state
02:35 PM on 01/10/2012
Dear Government,
You fricken idiots!
When we say "Cut Costs", we don’t mean from the stuff that keeps us safe.
We mean, your free health care, your vacations, your daycare, your comp meal tickets,
your junkets, your days off, your muffins, your parties, your earmarks. your pork and all of your Stepford Barbie’s Reconstructed Plastic Faces.

Lazy Fricken Thieves...All of You.!!!!
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mlaiuppa
Pres. Sarcasm Society. Like we need your approval.
03:14 PM on 01/10/2012
I guess some of us voted for the WRONG people to make those decisions.

We have a chance to correct that in 2012.

I know who I'd like to see tossed out. (Cantor, Böhner, and basically every Repub1%can't that is obstructing Congress and proposing the dismantling of this country.)
01:49 PM on 02/10/2012
Hum, as a Fed I think I can point out where you are on crack or suffer from being a complete idiot who will believe whatever is spoken on Fox
--I pay $285.42 a month for healthcare, $40 for supplemental dental, $32 for supplemental vision
-I started out earning 4 hours of leave every 2 weeks, at 10 years in of service I earn 6 hours every 2 weeks
-we don't get daycare paid for, we pay for it, however some of our larger office buildings have daycare facilities on site and run by private companies
-when I am authorized for work travel, I get a meals & incidental allowance which is often hard to find meals cheap enough to fit in the budget unless you search and go outside of your hotel
-junkets, that is an opinion, as a conference organizer would you rather try to attract people to a nice city with facilities or to a boring/cold/not cheap-to-fly-to location? Organizers pick the good cities as hosts, not the rust belt for a reason!
-we pay for our own coffee, water filter/hot water machine and our Muffins!
-parties, last time I checked we got our sheetcake from Costco for the most recent birthday party
-earmarks come from Congress, you really don't know how government works
April22
Some experiences in life are ineffable
02:16 PM on 01/10/2012
Sec. Tom Vilsack cares little about how safe our foods are or what they contain, for if he did, he would make sure that food packaging in the US, as throughout Europe, stated what ingredients were genetically altered or modified - dangerous and untested!

But why would he? Vilsack is Monsanto's best friend or should I say, shill!

Neither the USDA nor the FDA are working on the behalf of the health and wellbeing of Americans and their children!

In 2009, the FDA approved the use of transgenic animals in the nation's drug and soon to follow food supply.

Genetically modified goats, whose DNA has been altered by the addition of human DNA, are now being used to produce an anti-blood clotting drug.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/02/07/business/07goatdrug.html

http://www.counterpunch.org/2008/12/18/another-shill-for-monsanto/
02:58 PM on 01/10/2012
Gebnetically alter or modified does not atuomatically equate to being dangerous and untested. Just about every, single domestic animal and food plant that exists today is a hybred. Animals are crossed to create a strong offspring or to change certain basic traits. Isolating the geen for the single thing you want to change (draught resistance for example) will prevent changes in the aspect you didn't want to change (like flavor or color)

We have been using horse antibodies as anti-venin and pig derived insulin in human medicine for decades.
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mlaiuppa
Pres. Sarcasm Society. Like we need your approval.
03:15 PM on 01/10/2012
There is a difference between the hybrids that occur naturally through breeding and the GMOs created in the laboratory.
ByAndForThePeople
and corporations aren't people!
04:22 PM on 01/10/2012
Unfortunately, our ability to identify just a single gene (or even a combination of genes) that has precisely the effect that we want and no other effects simply isn't mature enough. It's incredibly common for one gene or one combination to influence a number of characteristics of the organism. Hybridization happens over many generations of the organism(s) and the negative effects of one selection over another are more noticeable (because of the time spans involved) than in the mere handful of years that laboratory genetic modification takes.
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disporting
Weapons not food, not homes, not shoes
03:13 PM on 01/10/2012
I wouldn't blame just Vilsack for this, i'd also blame the push on eliminating many of the federal agencies and cutting the federal budget so much by the tea party election. Not to say that Monsanto hasn't had their hand in eliminating the agency.
Monsanto is even worse than BP, in my opinion.