Washington
,
D.C.
–
In a recent letter to Rep. Rosa DeLauro, D-Conn., and
Sen. Herb Kohl, D-Wis., from the American Meat Institute (AMI), AMI makes
several decisively false claims about country-of-origin labeling, a law
established in the 2002 Farm Bill that has yet to be implemented because of
political pressure by multinational
packers,
processors and retailers.
R-CALF
USA, in turn, sent a letter to
DeLauro and Kohl to counter AMI’s false claims.
The AMI letter asks, “If mandatory
country-of-origin labeling were truly a food safety issue, should not all food
products be covered through commerce?”
“The answer is ‘yes’, but for more than food
safety reasons,” said R-CALF USA President/Region VI Director Max Thornsberry.
“COOL provides consumers with basic information about where their food is
produced, and consumers deserve this information to use as they see
fit.”
AMI’s letter also states that “to assert that any
country-of-origin labeling regime would have an impact on food safety or the
integrity of a food product is absurd,” – a decisively false claim.
“The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) itself
has recently imposed COOL requirements on certain countries, such as
Uruguay,” Thornsberry pointed out.
“Fresh, chilled or frozen beef coming to the U.S. from Uruguay must be certified
as originating only from cattle that are born, raised and slaughtered in Uruguay
– the very same standards adopted by the COOL law for food products eligible to
bear the USA label.
“There you go – straight from USDA – food safety
and COOL
do go hand-in-hand as a
practiced and proven means of ensuring food safety and food product integrity,”
he continued. “USDA implemented this origin-based food safety standard for
Uruguay because of concerns related
to foot-and-mouth disease (FMD). Only with origin information can verification
be made that the final food product underwent the food production practices of a
particular country’s food production regime.”
R-CALF
USA’s letter also states: “The recent
melamine contamination problem further demonstrates that food production
practices within a particular country impact food safety and food product
integrity.”
AMI also claims there are 34 countries eligible to
ship meat to the
U.S., and
that each of those countries’ food safety inspection systems must be
USDA-certified to be considered equivalent to the federal food safety inspection
system in the
United
States.
“While this claim is accurate in terms of what the
current law requires, it has been proven decisively false in practice,”
Thornsberry noted. “A December 2005 report by USDA’s Office of Inspector General
(OIG) revealed that Canadian plants were allowed to circumvent
U.S.
equivalency requirements for nearly
two years – a
perfect example of how COOL would afford consumers an additional level of
protection against breaches in foreign food safety inspection
systems.”
Additionally, AMI claims that COOL supporters
“have, for too long, been mischaracterizing the mandatory labeling requirements
that currently exist in this country…FSIS has had, for many years, mandatory
country-of-origin labeling requirements for red meat that enters the
U.S.”
This claim also is accurate in terms of what the
law requires, but it, too, has been proven decisively false in practice. An
August 2003 General Accounting Office revealed the COOL information was
not being maintained on imported meat as
required by the Tariff Act of 1930, which requires imported products to maintain
its import identity through to the ultimate purchaser.
“Again, you see the disparity between what current
laws require and what actually is being practiced,” Thornsberry said. “The key
here is that the 2002 COOL law remedies these problems whereby country-of-origin
labels are not being properly passed on to consumers by packers, processors and
retailers. The 2002 COOL law expressly requires that ‘a retailer of a covered
commodity shall inform consumers, at the final point of sale of the covered
commodity to consumers, of the country of origin of the covered
commodity.’”
AMI also claims that the 2002 COOL law is
noncompliant with the World Trade Organization (WTO) and the North American Free
Trade Agreement (NAFTA) – again, a decisively false – and baseless –
claim.
“In fact, AMI itself discredits this claim by
stating that USDA’s Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS) has had, for many
years, mandatory country-of-origin labeling requirements for red meat that
enters the U.S.,” Thornsberry asserted. “The 2002 COOL law merely preserves this
label for the benefit of consumers after imported product enters the
U.S., and it requires that domestic
products be similarly labeled.”
Note: A copy of
R-CALF
USA’s letter to DeLauro and Kohl, as
well as AMI’s letter to the pair, are available under the “Country-of-Origin
Labeling” link at
www.r-calfusa.com, or by contacting R-CALF USA Communications Coordinator
Shae Dodson at the phone number or
e-mail address above.
# # #
R-CALF
USA
(Ranchers-Cattlemen Action Legal Fund, United Stockgrowers of
America) is a national,
non-profit organization and is dedicated to ensuring the continued profitability
and viability of the
U.S. cattle industry.
R-CALF
USA represents thousands of
U.S. cattle producers on both
domestic and international trade and marketing issues. Members are located
across 47 states and are primarily cow/calf operators, cattle backgrounders,
and/or feedlot owners.
R-CALF
USA has more than 60 affiliate
organizations and various main-street businesses are associate members. For more
information, visit
www.r-calfusa.com or, call
406-252-2516.