From foodconsumer.org
House to Consider Comprehensive FDA Reform Bill
By CSPI
Apr 17, 2008 - 3:58:42 PM
For Immediate Release: Thursday, April 17, 2008
Contact: Jeff Cronin, CSPI, 202-777-8370 or Patti Truant, 202-777-8316
House to Consider Comprehensive FDA
Reform Bill
Statement
of CSPI Food Safety Director Caroline Smith DeWaal
After numerous foodborne illness outbreaks
and scores of hearings on Capitol Hill, House Energy and Commerce Chairman
John Dingell, together with Representatives Frank Pallone, Bart Stupak,
and Diane DeGette, has introduced today a package of urgently-needed FDA
reforms that, if enacted, will go a long way toward restoring Americans'
confidence in the safety of our food supply.
Until the massive spinach outbreak of 2006,
most Americans probably assumed our food safety system was strong. But
with recalls and outbreaks occurring every month, consumer confidence has
dramatically eroded.
Dingell's FDA reform package requires written
food safety plans at FDA-regulated food processors. The bill requires
safety standards to help keep fresh fruits and vegetables free of harmful
contaminants, like
E. coliO157 and
Salmonella. Imported
foods get increased scrutiny and country-of-origin disclosure is required
on processed foods and produce. The package also gives FDA mandatory
recall authority and civil penalties. The Dingell bill contains common
sense reforms comprising modern tools that most Americans would be surprised
to learn that the agency doesn't have today.
As written, the bill only requires that FDA-regulated
facilities get a visit from an inspector once every four years. While
that's certainly an improvement over the status quo, the FDA needs the
resources to visit these farms and factories at least once every year.
The FDA has been on a starvation diet for far too long.
The Center for Science in the Public
Interest is a nonprofit health advocacy group based in Washington, DC,
that focuses on nutrition, food safety, and pro-health alcohol policies.
CSPI is supported by the 900,000 U.S. and Canadian subscribers to
its Nutrition Action Healthletter and by foundation grants.