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Food safety chief defends raw milk raids
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Bill  
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 More options Jun 8 2011, 2:25 pm
From: Bill <certainkindoff...@gmail.com>
Date: Wed, 8 Jun 2011 13:25:23 -0500
Local: Wed, Jun 8 2011 2:25 pm
Subject: [Foodcouncil] Food safety chief defends raw milk raids

http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/blogs/nov05election/detail?entry_id=90472

Obama food safety chief and former Monsanto lawyer Michael R. Taylor today
defended the FDA's sting operations and armed raids against raw milk
producers, including Pennsylvania Amish farmer Dan Allgyer, who is facing an
injunction for selling milk across state lines. None of Allgyer's milk was
contaminated. The agency's actions are likely to put him out of business.

"We believe we're doing our job," Taylor said at a presentation at the
Ogilvy Washington public affairs group. He promised to "keep doing our
public health job," and described his agency's campaign against raw milk
producers as based on a "public health duty" and "statutory directive."
Taylor said he had a "quibble" with the notion that the agency is spending
too much of its resources targeting boutique raw milk producers even as huge
contamination outbreaks have occurred among large Iowa egg farms and
elsewhere.

The FDA is in the midst of writing the critical regulations that will
implement the Food Safety Modernization Act Congress passed last year with
applause all around from the Obama administration, Democrats and Republicans
despite ferocious opposition from small-farm advocates. The sweeping new law
gives the agency extraordinary powers to detain foods on farms. It also
denies farmers recourse to federal courts.

On July 3, the agency will issue its new rule to detain any food it believes
is unsafe, or, more critically, "mislabeled." In Allgyer's case, the entire
FDA case rests on a technical violation of a ban on interstate commerce in
raw milk and alleged mislabeling.

Before the new law, the FDA could only impound food when it had credible
evidence the food was contaminated or posed a public health hazard. The
detention powers are part of what Taylor described as a new agency focus on
preventing food poisoning outbreaks rather than responding to them after the
fact. Taylor described the new law as giving the agency "farm to table"
control over food safety.

Taylor outlined an aggressive approach, saying he would seek a "high rate of
compliance" with new food safety rules, touted the agency's "whole new
inspection and compliance tool kit," including access to farm records,
mandatory recall authority, and enforcement actions that can be accomplished
administratively, "without having to go to court." He said the agency can
now also revoke a farm's mandatory registration (also a new requirement
under the law), meaning the FDA can put any farm it finds in violation of
any food safety rule out of business.

Big new regulations are coming down the pike on produce. Taylor said these
would to some extent follow existing industry safety standards, some of
which seek an almost sterile farm environment and have reversed many
taxpayer-financed farm conservation efforts.

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