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PATEX
04-28-2007, 07:46 PM
http://www.consumeraffairs.com:80/news04/2007/04/pet_food_future.html

More Food Poisonings to Come, Expert Warns
FDA 30 Years Behind, Unable to Deal with Globalization


By Mark Huffman
ConsumerAffairs.Com

April 28, 2007


The traumatic pet food contamination that has sickened and killed thousands of animals over the last few months, is not an isolated incident, according to an agriculture expert. Rather, it’s indicative of a serious breakdown in the system.

“Uncontrolled distribution of low-quality, imported food ingredients is a great threat to U.S. public health,” said Dr. Gary Weaver, Director of the Program on Agriculture and Animal Health Policy for the University of Maryland’s Center for Food, Nutrition, and Agriculture Policy.

The problem, says Weaver, is the U.S. has very little direct, hands-on control over the pet food industry.

Incidents like pet food contamination will continue, he says, until the U.S. completes an effective overhaul of its food safety programs.

“FDA appears to be some 30 years behind as they use pre-global economy border food inspection strategies in our new global economy world of massive international food trade from many countries with food safety standards much lower than ours,” Weaver said.

“Billions of dollars' worth of foreign ingredients that Americans eat in everything from salad dressing to ice cream get a pass from overwhelmed FDA inspectors, despite a rising tide of these imports from countries with spotty food safety records.”

Not All Accidental
And it’s not just substandard manufacturing standards and less than optimum workplace conditions that can result in toxic ingredients ending up in food products. Weaver maintains that some contamination is actually by design.

“Unscrupulous people know that adding the industrial chemical, melamine, to food products and ingredients can make that food product and ingredient test as having a higher protein content,” he said,

So how did that melamine get into animal food?

In the most recent case of pet food contamination, several hundred tons of melamine-contaminated wheat gluten was purchased by an import company in Nevada from an animal feed exporter in China. The animal feed exporter mixed together multiple batches of wheat gluten that had been purchased from several unidentified wheat gluten producers in China.

In the U.S., the Nevada-based company that imported the melamine-contaminated wheat gluten sold it to several pet food manufacturers including the Canadian firm, Menu Foods, which manufactures pet food sold under more than 100 brand names sold in Canada, the U.S., and Mexico.

Chinese officials have since told the FDA that these several hundred tons of Chinese wheat gluten were solely intended for industrial use. It was never meant for animal or human consumption as food. Later, Chinese officials told the FDA that they never sold any wheat gluten to the U.S.

Why Wasn't It Screened?
Why wasn’t the wheat gluten screened for toxic substances?

Historically, FDA has never routinely screened food ingredients like wheat gluten or rice protein concentrate because they have not usually been contaminated. Also, Weaver says, FDA focuses on microbial – not chemical – contamination of food products and ingredients.

That could be a problem in the future.

Weaver and other U.S. experts say there are many other potential food ingredient melamine-tampering targets for unscrupulous sellers including whey protein isolates, soy protein isolates, soy protein concentrate, soy grits and soy lecithin.

Globalism Blowback
The pet food contamination is an example of one of the downsides to the global economy. The U.S. now imports many food products and ingredients including cheap wheat gluten from the global marketplace where food safety standards are oftentimes lower than what Americans are accustomed to and will accept.

Many of these imported food products and ingredients can and do change ownership many times, far away in distant lands, before arriving in the U.S.

Many of these particular food products and ingredients are virtually untraceable once things go wrong in the U.S. marketplace. It all adds up to an attractive environment for anyone who wants to cut corners and fatten the bottom line.

Weaver says FDA considers both wheat gluten and rice protein concentrate melamine-contaminations as aberrations because the food ingredients wheat gluten and rice protein concentrate historically have been contaminant-free, but it’s clear he doesn’t agree.

Without fundamental changes, he maintains, the hellish scenario of the last few weeks will happen again and again ... and not just to animals.

“The Congress should adequately increase FDA’s regulatory authority, budget, and workforce so that the FDA can properly protect all of the US food supply,” Weaver said.

“Currently FDA lacks authority to force a disclosure, a recall, or a plant closure except with extreme circumstances including FDA personnel actually finding a hazardous batch of product,” he warned.

Melody
04-28-2007, 08:22 PM
Lovely.

:(

ZenCat
04-29-2007, 05:46 AM
It's a good article. I'm relieved to see more and more stress being placed on how this incident (seemingly unending series of incidents) is just the tip of the iceberg...

We're all at risk. Dogs, Cats, Ferrets, Livestock, Men, Women, Children.

The FDA has a LOT to answer for.

3dognite
04-29-2007, 07:16 AM
I heard Dr. Weaver speak on the radio - he was slightly misquoted in the article:
The problem, says Weaver, is the U.S. has very little direct, hands-on control over the pet food industry. shouldn't include the word "pet" - which of course, makes it all the scarier. As is obvious from reading the entire article, this is about food safety in general.

The blame doesn't even lie directly with the FDA - although there is the perception that thousands of FDA emplyees were just sitting around on their behinds, the reality is that the agency is woefully underfunded, understaffed and limited in power.

Quoting Dr. Weaver again, Without fundamental changes, he maintains, the hellish scenario of the last few weeks will happen again and again ... and not just to animals.

“The Congress should adequately increase FDA’s regulatory authority, budget, and workforce so that the FDA can properly protect all of the US food supply,” Weaver said.

“Currently FDA lacks authority to force a disclosure, a recall, or a plant closure except with extreme circumstances including FDA personnel actually finding a hazardous batch of product,” he warned.

LoriLuvsLabs
04-29-2007, 11:47 AM
Well, imho, the thing isn't about the FDA sitting on its hands anyway...its about the fact that we simply cannot test every single shipment into the country..its not feasible...the only way to protect our food source is to NOT import ANYTHING for our food consumption at all.

Americans are going to need to take control of this themselves...as will all other countries....we simply need to stop buying anything that isn't grown organically, grown in our country, manufactured with ONLY domestically grown/supplied ingredients. Until we take this control back and start affecting the marketplace this will not end.

I don't buy anything that says "product of Mexico" or any other country. I don't buy meat that has been injected with artificial flavoring etc...I am starting to use only that produce that is grown in the farms here locally or in my own gardens.

IMHO, we have grown to rely too much on our government to take care of us from "cradle to the grave" ......no government can do this...it is beyond the scope of reality and feasibility...it always has been and is only getting worse in the global economy...its time to start taking personal responsibility for ones own health and safety again.

Even scarier for me is this: we live in a world of terrorism and what is terrorism? It is the business of instilling fear in the population..fear that affects how we live each day. We now have worldwide reporting of the "terror" that is being experienced by pet owners...and reporting of how easy it was for the tainted food stuff to get into our pet food industry in such a devastating way.....what about our human food industry at this point?

This was supposedly done just for a import/export company to make money by increasing the protein content falsely.......Terroists now have the knowledge of how easy it could be to contaminate the human food sources of our country and kill a few hundred thousand people before our country even realizes it has been attacked...just taint imported ingredients! Am I over-reacting? I don't think so.