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Bill Marler's Food Safety Naughty and Nice List 2009

by: Jill Richardson

Wed Dec 23, 2009 at 21:10:22 PM PST


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Here is the Food Safety News 2009 Naughty and Nice List, printed here with the permission of the author (Food safety lawyer Bill Marler). NOTE: The opinions expressed in the list are his. I understand that not everyone shares his views on things like raw milk... feel free to express your disagreements in the comments.
Jill Richardson :: Bill Marler's Food Safety Naughty and Nice List 2009
For a version with clickable links, please visit Food Safety News (Naughty) or Marler Blog (Nice)

Naughty

Stewart Parnell, President of Peanut Corporation of America, for asking for nearly $1 million from his bankrupt business for his own criminal defense fund after shipping peanuts his own tests showed were contaminated with Salmonella that sickened over 700 and killed at least nine. (See "PCA Executives To Divide $875,000," Dec 11, 2009)

President Obama
for NOT appointing a new permanent U.S. Department of Agriculture Under Secretary for Food Safety. ALSO NAUGHTY: USDA Secretary Tom Vilsack for making excuses about it. (See "FSIS Remains Leaderless," Oct 16, 2009)

Some raw milk, small and sustainable agriculture advocates who confused the entire food safety debate by making and circulating false claims about the bills. It really is about food safety, and is not a gigantic conspiracy by Monsanto to wipe out organic and backyard farms! (See "Small Ag Organizes to Amend Senate Bill," Nov 17, 2009)

FDA's Office of Criminal Investigations and the U.S. District Attorney in Georgia for moving so slowly with the criminal investigations of the Peanut Corporation of America and its executives, including Stewart Parnell. (See "One Year Later, Still No Charges for PCA," Nov 7, 2009)

President Obama and Vice-President Biden for ordering undercooked hamburgers for the Press Corps at a DC restaurant with less than stellar inspection reports.

Washington State University for removing Michael Pollan's "Omnivore's Dilemma" from the Common Reading Program.

The FDA for caving to political pressure and backing down on oyster regulations.

The Senate for being too slow on health care reform to pass meaningful--and decades overdue - food safety legislation before the Holidays.

Weston A. Price Foundation for more denial of outbreaks and giving consumers false information about raw milk safety.

FDA for its failure to control ridiculous health claims like Kellogg's claiming that Cocoa Krispies are a "Smart Choice" because it "helps support your child's immunity." (See "Do Krispies Boost Kids' Immune Systems?" Nov 1, 2009)

J. Patrick Boyle of the American Meat Institute for trying to dynamite the Senate food safety bill even though it doesn't have anything to do with the meat industry.

State public health department officials attending the Interstate Shellfish Sanitation Conference in October who put industry profits ahead of public health.

Rep. Charlie Melancon for declaring the death of 15 people a year is not too high a price to pay for a U.S. Senate seat in an oyster growing State. (See "Under Pressure, FDA Puts Oyster Policy on Hold," Nov 14, 2009)

Secretary Vilsack and White House for trying, in the name of free trade, to roll over Rep. Rosa DeLauro's efforts to assure that the US does not permit poultry processors from shipping raw poultry meat from the US to China for processing and shipping back to the US for sale until USDA has determined that China's inspection program is equivalent to ours. (See "Deal Reached on Poultry Imports," Sep 27, 2009)

FDA Commissioner Margaret Hamburg for urging Congress to give the Agency authority to reduce the intensity of inspections if they don't get all the money they ask for.

The FDA staff that keeps appealing to consumer advocates, "don't set us up to fail," when consumer advocates push for more inspection. They never say, "help us get the law and resources we need to protect people."

Nice

Rep. Rosa DeLauro and Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand
for being consumer champions and persistent advocates of food safety reform.

Food & Drug Administration Commissioner Margaret Hamburg for improving public access to information, including "Warning Letters" and 483 Reports.

Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack for USDA's new outreach programs, like "Know your farmer, know your food."

New York Times writer Michael Moss for his Pulitzer-worthy article on the dark origins of ground beef and the terrible impact of E. coli O157:H7.

The quick work of the U.S. House Energy and Commerce Committee, whose members worked quickly and got their hands on incriminating email traffic between the PCA executives, who took the Fifth Amendment when called to testify.

President Obama for setting up the Food Safety Working Group.

The public, for an outpouring of support for WSU's Common Reading Program (hat tip, Food Democracy Now).

Sen. Dick Durbin for being the driving force behind food safety legislation in the Senate and the HELP Committee for passing S. 510 out of committee with bipartisan support.

The makers of Food, Inc, who introduced the country to the underside of food production, and made a very watchable - if frightening - film about it.

Michelle Obama, for planting a kitchen garden at the White House, and getting kids involved in (very) local food and for getting a local DC farmer's market through the red tape.

FDA for getting a guilty plea by Mark McAfee of OPDC to criminal charges of misbranding raw milk and selling across state lines as "pet food."

Marion Nestle for, among other things, her persistent and common sense critique of how junk food and soda is marketed to children.

Mike Taylor and Don Kraemer at FDA
for boldly putting public health ahead of Gulf Coast oyster industry profits.

The consumer and public health groups that have joined with produce growers and food processors and retailers to support FDA reform legislation, making its passage possible.

Dedicated writers whose excellent articles gave insight and context to food safety issues: Lyndsey Layton of the Washington Post for her piece on Linda Rivera's struggle with E. coli O157:H7 from cookie dough, Peter Eisler, Elizabeth Weise, and others of USA Today for their reporting on school lunches, and Nick Grube of the Daily Triplicate for his three-part series on Mari Tardiff's struggle to recover from the Campylobacter infection and ensuing Guillain-Barre Syndrome she got from drinking raw milk.

Food Bloggers
- Simple, Good and Tasty, Cold Truth, Ag and Food Law, Civil Eats, Grist, Weaversway, Food Politics, Ethicurean, La Vida Locavore, Obamafoodorama, Food Shield, efoodalert, Fanatic Cook, Fresh Talk, Center for a Liveable Future, Chuck Jolley, Food Law, Buy Safe Eat Well and Barf Blog.

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Naughty and Nice (4.00 / 2)
Jill, while folks are reading this, perhaps they should have some eggnog - see this recipe:

http://www.marlerblog.com/2009...


very funny... (4.00 / 1)
good information, but a batch of eggnog has never lasted three weeks in my home.

[ Parent ]
Thanks (4.00 / 1)
I assume the recipe calls for some raw eggs and milk, plus some extra campolybacter and salmonella to spice it up?

"I can understand someone from Iowa promoting corn and soy, but we are not feeding the world, we are feeding animals and soft drink companies." - Jim Goodman

[ Parent ]
What were the results? (4.00 / 2)
I tried to watch the video but I could only get half of it to load after over half an hour - I'm on a funky slow dialup.

Regarding locavores as elitists - explain to me how supporting local business is elitist....

[ Parent ]
To answer my own question - (4.00 / 2)
Rockefeller newswire article on the experiment

Regarding locavores as elitists - explain to me how supporting local business is elitist....

[ Parent ]
In the video (0.00 / 0)
the experiment is extended beyond 24 hours. When eggnog is dosed with a high salmonella level, plate counts decrease daily and the eggnog is sterile after three weeks.

[ Parent ]
We Are What Our Meat Eats (0.00 / 0)
A plus for 2009, we are what our meat eats, which World Consumed 71 million Tons.

We Are What Our Meat Eats at Agriculture Guide

Haven't We Learned by Now ?
ex: mad cow disease


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