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Obama Budget Cuts Bacteria Testing For Produce

Obama Food Safety Budget

GARANCE BURKE   02/16/12 02:50 PM ET  AP

SAN FRANCISCO — President Barack Obama's proposed budget would eliminate the nation's only program that regularly tests fruits and vegetables for deadly pathogens, leaving public health officials without a crucial tool used to investigate deadly foodborne illness outbreaks.

The budget plan the president sent to Congress Monday would ax the Agriculture Department's tiny Microbiological Data Program, which extensively screens high-risk fresh produce throughout the year for bacteria including salmonella, E. coli and listeria.

If samples are positive, they can trigger nationwide recalls, and keep tainted produce from reaching consumers or grocery store shelves.

Food safety advocates and a top-ranking U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention official said the information also can help pinpoint foods tied to illness outbreaks, and would not easily be replaced by companies' internal tests or more modest federal sampling programs.

"It's the radar gun that keeps the industry honest and if that's eliminated, we don't have a program that will keep the industry in check," said Mike Doyle, director of the University of Georgia's Center for Food Safety, which works with the produce industry to improve safety measures on farms and in packinghouses. "This is really important because you and I eat that food and we don't want to get sick."

White House Office of Management and Budget spokeswoman Meg Reilly said the decision to cut the $5 million program was made after USDA decided it had limited impact. She said it also USDA determined it was not a good fit within its Agricultural Marketing Service division, which is partially funded by fees collected from produce growers.

"While food safety is a vitally important part of successfully marketing produce and other agricultural products, other federal and state public health agencies are better equipped to perform this function," USDA spokeswoman Courtney Rowe said in a statement.

Industry leaders from United Fresh Produce Association and other major trade associations have repeatedly pushed the government in recent years to get rid of the comprehensive testing program, saying it has cost growers millions in produce recalls and unfairly targeted farmers who aren't responsible for contaminating the food. They want the private sector to do more of its own testing, rather than allowing USDA to take random samples of fruits and vegetables at massive grocery store distribution centers, after produce has already left company control.

Last year, for instance, California firms recalled pre-packaged fresh cilantro and bagged spinach from the marketplace after MDP tests of random samples detected salmonella.

According to the CDC, nearly one-third of the major, multistate foodborne illness outbreaks in 2011 were caused by contaminated fruits and vegetables.

The 120,000 food samples the program has collected in the last decade have offered public health officials important clues when they are probing the source of food poisoning outbreaks, Dr. Robert Tauxe, the CDC's top food-germ investigator, said in an interview in October when the agency began offering the program's employees early retirement packages.

Last year, the program found lettuce and spinach contaminated with E. coli O157:H7, the strain most commonly responsible for food poisoning, and also started aggressively testing for listeria in cantaloupes in response to the nation's most deadly foodborne illness outbreak, in which 30 people died after eating listeria-tainted melons. In one instance in the last several years, a contaminated produce sample the program identified was later tied to an illness cluster, Tauxe said.

FDA Produce Safety Staff Director Samir Assar said in an October interview that while his agency also conducts targeted tests of certain high-risk fresh fruits and vegetables each year, cutting MDP would leave the regular testing of sprouts, tomatoes, cantaloupe and cilantro to industry and more modest state and federal efforts.

"I don't think this would be information that would be easy to replace," Tauxe said.

Rowe suggested the Food and Drug Administration, CDC and state agencies should collect similar data, but no agency reported having immediate plans to step in.

Ray Gilmer, a spokesman for the United Fresh Produce Association, said the industry also supported funding FDA to perform scientifically rigorous tests that would help to monitor public health.

FDA spokeswoman Siobhan DeLancey, however, said she could not speculate on whether FDA would set up a parallel program, or had the money to do so.

"We don't test produce," said Lola Russell, a CDC spokeswoman. "That's just not part of our mission."

State health departments are already facing tough choices as they try to come up with enough dollars to keep food safe after tens thousands of employees have been laid off in recent years. And the FDA has always been crunched for food safety dollars, receiving so little money for food inspections that some facilities are only inspected every five to 10 years. A new food safety law President Obama signed last year aims to increase the number of inspections in the United States and abroad, but emphasizes prevention rather than increased testing of foods.

Still, both the industry and government agree that tests alone won't keep the food supply safe from contamination.

Since the 2006 E. coli outbreak in spinach that killed three people and sickened more than 200, growers in California's lush Salinas River Valley have been trying out new farming and testing standards for leafy greens, some of which have since become national guidelines.

Nicknamed "America's Salad Bowl," the area grows much of the nation's lettuce, and the local industry collects reams of data about pathogens to improve their growing practices, said Hank Giclas of the trade association Western Growers.

Half a dozen major shippers are currently pooling their data about leafy greens and may share it with other businesses, the government and academic researchers in the future, Giclas said.

"It's possible that private sector testing could serve as a type of substitute. Industry has shown a willingness to share that information, so those are the kinds of things that we need to talk about," Giclas said.

___

Associated Press writer Mary Clare Jalonick contributed to this report from Washington.

___

Follow Garance Burke on Twitter at http://twitter.com/garanceburke

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SAN FRANCISCO — President Barack Obama's proposed budget would eliminate the nation's only program that regularly tests fruits and vegetables for deadly pathogens, leaving public health official...
SAN FRANCISCO — President Barack Obama's proposed budget would eliminate the nation's only program that regularly tests fruits and vegetables for deadly pathogens, leaving public health official...
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This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
09:36 AM on 02/20/2012
Obama wants to get rid of supposedly job-killing regulations and get right to killing people directly.
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jcolvin325
Ecclesiastes 10:2 (NIV)
02:07 PM on 02/19/2012
Does this mean he hates children or is that only the case if the GOP does something like this?
Sableknows
Button Pusher
10:11 PM on 02/17/2012
Well, don't look at me. You guys voted him in.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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09:28 PM on 02/17/2012
He could have saved more by getting of of business' backs. Those Dems - they don't care if your baby gets sick from eating tainted fruit !
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mat6and33
04:04 AM on 02/17/2012
BO! What a man. Most people didn't think he was concerned with out of control spending. But here he's proven them wrong. So what if there are increased salmonella, E coli and listeria outbreaks. Sure there might be some more deaths as a result. But BO is struggling to get the budget under control and this $5 million savings as a wonderful start.A few hundred examples like this and he'll make up the loss suffered in the Solyndra project.
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vixter72
Think for yourself
12:09 PM on 02/17/2012
Well, people dying from e-coli and listeria outbreaks, means less people to insure under O-care.....trickle down econ? LOL
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09:34 PM on 02/17/2012
Must be a non-union department...
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keedyk87
03:00 AM on 02/17/2012
I have managed to remain on the outside looking in so I can remain objective as I have no monetary self interest involved. Sort of like Plato did! My only interests have been truth, justice and knowledge.
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keedyk87
02:49 AM on 02/17/2012
I have said before the Corporations and money interests have so infiltrated government that you will find them in every department, Defence, agriculture, finance, budget etc, etc, etc. We have gone from a Government of, for and by the People to one that is for CORPORATE and MONETARY INTERESTS. People no longer run for office to represent their Nation, they do to fill their pockets with money from THEIR real INTEREST of making money from CORPORATIONS or ENTREPRENEURS!
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keedyk87
02:24 AM on 02/17/2012
The other problem is that those in charge of the F.D.A. are most likely former food industry managers and employees making a little under the table cash from their friends in the food industry.
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keedyk87
02:19 AM on 02/17/2012
It is Congress that ties such things to other contriversial bills and since this is something that will save the Corporations and growers money then it can probably be traced back to the Teapubs. They are the ones who always favor the PROFITS of entrepenurs over the well being of the consumer or popolus.We really do need to clean house folks. We have allowed incompetent, self serving egotisticaldollar lackeys into our government rather than those who could understand that they should be there serving us.
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mat6and33
04:09 AM on 02/17/2012
Let me see if I have this right. BO is a puppet of the Tea Party Republicans and they are the ones who told him to make these cuts? You libs are the masters of spin.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
09:40 AM on 02/20/2012
Ob has filled the FDA with drug people. They will profit immensely from this. It's not the TBaggers. It's the usual suspects in the form of corporate greed at the expense of real people.
TomMartin
Freedom and equality.
02:09 AM on 02/17/2012
This is very sad, but I blame mainly Bush for our deficits, when the economy is good, unemployment payments and food stamp payments are lower, so that is the time to balance the budget and get a surplus, and instead Bush got us a deficit even when the economy was still good. Shame on him. And shame on the Congress in his time.
02:40 AM on 02/17/2012
You clearly need to wake up and check out the deficit history it goes back farther than Bush.Then check out what this man has spend and he wants 3.8 trillion more.But this is about food testing does anyone understand anything about E-coli this could easily be a death sentence for thousands of people even Americans.If you want to cut the budget quit senting billions to countrys that hate us.
TomMartin
Freedom and equality.
02:44 AM on 02/17/2012
Bush inherited a surplus from Clinton and quickly converted it into a deficit, even though the economy was still good at the time. And as far as your comment about foreign aid, it is less than 2 percent of our budget. And there are other departments doing food testing, read the article above carefully.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
09:42 AM on 02/20/2012
I assume you mean our troops and weapons to countries that hate us. Empire America is the leading cause of death and misery to so many millions around the world.
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mat6and33
04:14 AM on 02/17/2012
BO has added as much to the deficit in his 3 1/2 years as Bush did in 8. But Bush is still your boogey man? Do you have to have the light on at night when you sleep?
TomMartin
Freedom and equality.
04:18 AM on 02/17/2012
With Obama it is normal, but Bush had a good economy in the first several years. One thing I learned in college economics is that governments need to have a surplus when the economy is good, because when it becomes bad, due to unemployment payments and food stamps deficits are expected.
02:05 AM on 02/17/2012
Seriously, Jalonick, an article on Obama's budget? You must be kidding, the budget is fake. Even the Dems in the Senate refuse to vote on it. They don't want to go through the embarassment of another 97-0 vote against it like his budget of last year.
01:56 AM on 02/17/2012
That should help justify forced Obamacare payments, with the increase of people getting sick and needing medical treatment.
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keedyk87
03:07 AM on 02/17/2012
Projecting I see! One cannot be honest with others until first doing so with one's self!
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joran111
God and science DO coexist!
01:21 AM on 02/17/2012
Oh, President Obama, stop caving to the no-regulations-are-good-regulations GOTP!
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mat6and33
04:18 AM on 02/17/2012
We need to elect a President who won't be controlled by the TP. Vote Santorum!
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joran111
God and science DO coexist!
08:13 AM on 02/17/2012
I'll stick with BHO. Just wish he'd toughen up a bit.
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09:43 AM on 02/20/2012
Santorum: a candidate controlled by the Inquisition and witch burnings. That's a great choice. ;)
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mlaiuppa
Pres. Sarcasm Society. Like we need your approval.
01:07 AM on 02/17/2012
I blame Vilsack. Which means I blame Obama for choosing Vilsack. (And Salazar. And Geitner. And...)
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tarzan322
12:24 AM on 02/17/2012
Well, time to grow my own garden. The President is trying to give everyone food poisoning.