
National Meat Association
Marler: Speech Before The National Meat
Association Source of Article: http://www.marlerblog.com/ Thank you NMA for inviting me here to Once again another food poisoning outbreak, perhaps slightly more
outrageous than the ones before, now with over 650 sickened, 150 hospitalized
and nine deaths, but eerily similar to those that have
come before it. There is the familiar crush of the media for a picture or a
quote of a victim, the vows by politicians to see this never happens again,
and there is the anguish of burying a parent because they ate a
quintessential American food – this time peanut butter. I spent last week in The time has long past to do something to stop the tape and to prevent the
next outbreak. There are now several pieces of food safety legislation in the
halls of the House and the Senate – some newer, most are dusted off every
time that there is another outbreak that requires another press conference
and media opportunity. Yet also in the halls of congress, are those that say
the timing is not right to do things on food safety – the economy takes
priority – or, some other reason that continued, cautious inaction is
required and the various proposals remain shelved. Frankly, the time has come to act and not continue simply to react.
Consumers, Farmers, Suppliers, Manufacturers, Retailers, Regulators and
Politicians need to work together to make our food supply safe, profitable
and sustainable. When a quarter of our population is sickened yearly by
contaminated food, when thousands die, we do not have the “safest food supply
in the world.” When a whole industry looses hundreds of millions of dollars
because government picks tomatoes when it really was peppers, we should,
must, and can do better. First, create a local, state and national public health system that
catches outbreaks before they balloon into personal and business catastrophe.
Surveillance of human bacterial disease is lacking. For many foodborne illnesses, for everyone culture positive case,
20 to 40 other cases are missed because of lack of surveillance. Most people
who become ill with a bacterial or viral disease are either seldom seen or
never cultured. The more people are tested, the greater the likelihood that a
source, accidental or not, will be found sooner. Second, governmental departments, whether local, state or federal, need to
learn to “play well together.” Turf battles need to take a back seat to
stopping an outbreak and tracking it to its source. That means resources need
to be provided and coordination encouraged so illnesses can be promptly
stopped and the offending producer - not an entire industry - is brought to
heel. Third, we cannot completely regulate ourselves out of this. Standards need
to be set with the entire food chain at the table – from farmer, to
manufacturer, to retailer and customer. Standards must also be based upon
good science. Fourth, promote research to develop better technologies to make food safe.
Provide tax breaks for companies that push food safety interventions and
employee training. We need to use our technology to make food more traceable
so that when an outbreak occurs authorities can quickly identify the source
and limit the spread of the contamination and stop the disruption to the
economy. Fifth, improve consumer understanding of the risks of food-borne illness.
Industry cannot rely on working parents or the minimum wage worker to be the
last “kill step” – not without an investment in real education. Sixth, there are too few legal consequences for recklessly sickening or
killing customers by selling contaminated food. We should impose stiff fines
and prison sentences for violators, and even stiffer
penalties for repeat violators. None of this will stop bacterial and viral illnesses entirely. These
invisible poisons have been around a long time. However, these six steps will
enable us to help prevent it, help detect it far more quickly, to alert
stores and families, and to keep our most vulnerable citizens - kids and
seniors - out of harm's way. Thank You.
|
Copyright (C) All rights reserved under FoodHACCP.com
If you have any comments, please send your
email to info@foodhaccp.com