Fresh Produce Discussion Blog

Created by The Packer's National Editor Tom Karst

Wednesday, July 2, 2008

CU: Congress should mandate traceability

Pressure is building for mandated traceability. When will the industry make a case for its own initiative? Sliding across the inbox July 1:



Consumers Union calls on Congress to mandate traceability for fruits and vegetables and for the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to establish strong safety standards for produce in light of FDA’s continued difficulties in determining the source of the recent outbreak of salmonella in food. 

As the number of identified salmonella infections topped 800, the FDA announced today that it had still not identified the cause of the problem and was broadening its investigation from tomatoes to include other produce that might be eaten with tomatoes.  

“The FDA should not have to spend its modest resources trying to track down the source of food contamination for weeks and even months, while more consumers continue to get sick," said Jean Halloran, director of food policy initiatives at Consumers Union.  “When foodborne illnesses do occur, it shouldn't be so hard to trace them back to the source.  Congress should require modern electronic recordkeeping systems that go from farm to table.  If Fed Ex can keep track of all its packages moving around the country, the produce industry should be able to do the same," Halloran added. 

 

Consumers Union has called for more funding for the FDA to perform yearly inspections  of processing plants, for the agency to develop operating plans for food processing  facilities that insure safety, and for domestic and foreign food producers to be required to be certified as in compliance with these safety plans and with U.S. food safety standards.  In addition, trace-back systems that include package identifiers allowing each product to be traced back to the field in which it originated are needed to further protect consumers from contaminated food.  CU has also called for consolidation of the 15 agencies that oversee our food safety system.

 

“The FDA needs to be much more effective in enforcing food safety standards,” added Halloran.  “We are in a global economy, with tomatoes from Mexico and fish from China for sale on a daily basis in our supermarkets," said Halloran.  "The FDA needs to be upgraded and modernized to meet these challenges."

 

For the latest information on the tomato situation and other safety issues, see

http://blogs.consumerreports.org/safety/.

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1 Comments:

At July 3, 2008 at 12:08:00 PM CDT , Anonymous Anonymous said...

Traceability will bring two important benefits: not just faster trace back, but also the ability for brand owners who are not impacted to communicate to customers that their product is safe. Right now every product is 'tarred by the same brush'. For this to be truly effective, requires traceability at the item, as well as the case level.

 

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