WHAT THE CLUCK?!?

IMPORTANT: This information should not be downloaded using government equipment, read during duty time, or sent to others using government equipment, because it suggests action to be taken in support of and/or against legislation. Do not list your government email or government address in filling out this message, and do not use a government provided phone for this action.

The following message is from Bob Nicklas, director of the American Federation of  Government Employee’s Political Action Committee and Issues Mobilization Department:

If we can get 10,504 more signatures before June 1, the Obama Administration will be forced to issue a response to our We the People petition to keep dirty, unsafe chicken off of your kitchen table and stop the USDA from cutting the jobs of over 800 AFGE chicken inspectors. But time is running out and unless the proposed rules are changed, this is what you could be eating for your next dinner:

Tumors, feces and bile. The new white meat?

If you’ve already taken action, thank you and please forward this email to everyone you know who eats chicken! If you haven’t signed our We the People petition yet, here’s what we need you to do:

    • If you have an account, sign-in and sign the petition.
    • If you don’t have an account, just click this button and enter your information. This does not mean the White House will start emailing you:
Create an account
  • You’ll then be taken back to the petition to sign, or you can follow our link in step 1.

The USDA is considering this pilot program to eliminate federal inspection and mandatory training simply to allow private poultry processing plants to do whatever they can to save a buck.

This won’t take more than 5 minutes, but your signature will help ensure that President Obama hears about the threat to clean food on our dinner tables.


TELL THE WHITE HOUSE TO DROP USDA’S POULTRY PLAN

IMPORTANT: This information should not be downloaded using government equipment, read during duty time, or sent to others using government equipment, because it suggests action to be taken in support of and/or against legislation. Do not list your government email or government address in filling out this message, and do not use a government provided phone for this action.

 

AFGE and consumer groups deliver petitions to the USDA on April 26.

Last week, AFGE and other concerned consumer groups delivered 150,000 signatures to the U.S. Department of Agriculture protesting the agency’s proposal to dismantle the current poultry inspections process. Under the USDA’s plan, private poultry processing plants would be put in charge of regulating themselves, while a single federal inspector would have literally one second to review three chickens to make sure they are free of diseases, feathers, tumors, bile or other contaminants.

There is no way even the most highly trained federal inspector can perform an thorough inspection of chickens and turkeys under this plan. That’s why we’re asking the White House to intervene.

A new petition on the White House’s “We the People” website asks the USDA to withdraw this proposed rule. If we can get 25,000 signatures, the Obama administration has pledged to issue a personal response.

But time is of the essence. The deadline to issue official comments on the proposed rule is May 29, so we need to trigger the White House response before May 29.

Click here to go directly to the petition. It only takes a minute out of your day, and it can literally save your life.

CONSUMER GROUPS, FOOD INSPECTORS DELIVER SAFE POULTRY PETITIONS

Nearly 150K petitions delivered served as USDA extends comment period

WASHINGTON (April 20, 2012) – Consumer watchdogs, concerned citizens and federal food inspectors represented by the American Federation of Government Employees today delivered nearly 150,000 petitions to the U.S. Department of Agriculture opposing proposed changes to the poultry inspections process that will impact the health and safety of the American public.

USDA official Sally Liska accepted the petitions on behalf of USDA Secretary Tom Vilsack.

AFGE's chicken waits inside the doorway of the USDA headquarters building in Washington, waiting to deliver 150,000 signed petitions.

The petitions, which were circulated by AFGE and other groups, denounce a regulation proposed by Agriculture’s Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS) that would partially privatize the poultry inspections process and drastically increase the number of birds federal inspectors must examine.

“Budget cuts are driving the USDA to take this drastic step, which would reduce our highly trained teams of federal food safety inspectors to a skeleton crew who would have to review three birds every second – a humanly impossible task,” AFGE National President John Gage said. “This is a recipe that appears to be putting diseased chickens right on our kitchen tables, and we are urging the USDA to reconsider this foolish and dangerous proposal.”

On Thursday, the day after ABC World News broadcast a story on the controversial proposal, FSIS announced it would extend the comment period on the proposed rule by an additional 30 days. The original deadline was April 26; nearly 600 comments have been submitted on the rule so far.

The USDA proposal would extend nationwide a pilot project that has allowed some poultry companies to inspect their own chickens. But an analysis released last month by the nonprofit Food & Water Watch, which partnered with AFGE on the petition drive, revealed that large numbers of defects are routinely being missed when inspection tasks are performed by company employees instead of USDA inspectors.

In addition, FSIS data obtained by AFGE under the Freedom of Information Act revealed that company inspectors operating under the pilot project remove far fewer diseased birds than federal inspectors operating under the traditional process. At one company, Pilgrim’s Pride, the condemnation rate for diseased birds is twice as high at the traditional plant as compared to the privatized plant.

Delivering petitions today were representatives from AFGE, AFL-CIO, Daily Kos, Food & Water Watch, American Rights at Work and the Government Accountability Project.

USDA DELAYS START OF NEW POULTRY RULE AS ABC AIRS REPORT

ABC World News with Diane Sawyer delivered a revealing report last night on the Agriculture Department’s proposal to mostly outsource poultry inspections and leave a single federal inspector responsible for examining up to 175 chickens per minute.

Despite the USDA’s argument that the proposal is intended to improve food safety, the agency admitted to ABC that the new system does not employ more lab tests that can see salmonella and other bacteria.

Here’s a link to the report: http://cdnapi.kaltura.com/index.php/kwidget/wid/0_b73rrbwa/uiconf_id/5590821

At the end of the segment, reporter Jim Avila told Diane Sawyer that the USDA has decided to delay implementation of the new rules pending further review. But don’t be fooled. USDA is simply buying time until the drumbeat dies down. We will not stop protesting until USDA agrees to withdraw the proposal.

Tomorrow (April 20), consumer watchdogs, concerned citizens and federal food inspectors represented by the American Federation of Government Employees will deliver more than 150,000 petitions to USDA opposing the proposed changes. It’s clear that the public values safe food over cost savings.

GROUPS REBUT USDA CLAIMS THAT WARP SPEED CHICKEN INSPECTION IS GOOD FOR CONSUMERS

Last Friday, the head of the Agriculture Department’s Food Safety and Inspection Service wrote a column on Huffington Post discounting critics of his plan to outsource most of the poultry inspections process and leave one federal inspector responsible for reviewing three chickens every second. FSIS Administrator Alfred Almanza blamed the media for reporting “misinformation” about the plan and claimed that the valid concerns being raised by FSIS inspectors and other knowledgeable groups are simply “myths…being touted by people who are not experts on the subject.”

Today, the executive director of Food & Water Watch — one of the chief organizations opposed to this dangerous proposal — has posted her own rebuttal. Wenonah Hauter correctly points out that this proposal is about saving money, plain and simple, not protecting the public health as FSIS Administrator Alfred Almanza claims.

The Food & Water Watch rebuttal follows on the heels of other critiques posted by concerned groups. Joe Hansen, international president of the United Food and Commercial Workers Union, wrote that ramping up line speeds to 175 chickens per minute will heighten the risk of workers being subjected to repetitive motion injuries and Musculoskeletal Disorders.

And Craig McCord, co-founder of the People Who Feed Us, points out that handing over inspection to the slaughterhouses will push more diseased and unsafe poultry onto dinner tables because they have a monetary incentive to sell as much of their product as possible.

There is one week left to submit your own comments on this plan. Tell the USDA you value safety over speed and believe poultry inspection shouldn’t be outsourced to the very companies who are trying to sell us their product!

FOOD INSPECTORS, CONSUMER GROUPS TO DELIVER SAFE POULTRY PETITIONS

More than 150,000 signatures collected opposing USDA cost-cutting plan

The chicken will be roosting outside USDA headquarters on Friday to deliver petitions opposing changes to the proposed poultry inspection process.

WASHINGTON – Consumer watchdogs, concerned citizens and federal food inspectors represented by the American Federation of Government Employees will deliver more than 150,000 petitions to the U.S. Department of Agriculture opposing proposed changes to the poultry inspections process that will impact the health and safety of the American public.

The groups will gather outside the USDA headquarters at 11:30 a.m. Friday, April 20, to hand-deliver the petitions. Participants will make brief remarks before delivering the petitions and will be available for on-site interviews.

The petitions, which were circulated by numerous groups, denounce a regulation proposed by Agriculture’s Food Safety and Inspection Service that would partially privatize the poultry inspections process and drastically increase the number of birds federal inspectors must examine.

“Budget cuts are driving the USDA to take this drastic step, which would reduce our highly trained teams of federal food safety inspectors to a skeleton crew who would have to review three birds every second – a humanly impossible task,” AFGE National President John Gage said. “This is a recipe for putting diseased chickens right on our kitchen tables, and we are urging the USDA to reconsider this foolish and dangerous proposal.”

More information on the issue is available at www.LetThemEatChicken.com.

Details:

What: Gathering to hand-deliver petitions opposing proposed changes to poultry inspections process

When: 11:30 a.m. to noon Friday, April 20

Where: Jefferson Drive SW in front of the Agriculture Department building’s visitor’s entrance

Who: Food Safety and Inspections Service employees; members of the American Federation of Government Employees, Food & Water Watch, Daily Kos, American Rights at Work, AFL-CIO; other concerned citizens

Contact: Media wishing to cover this event can contact Tim Kauffman, AFGE communications specialist, at 202-639-6405 or kaufft@afge.org.

CONSUMER GROUPS AND CONCERNED CITIZENS PROTEST PROPOSED FOOD RULE

Consumer watchdogs and concerned citizens  joined federal food inspectors represented by the American Federation of Government Employees (AFGE) to protest proposed changes to the poultry inspections process that they fear could put the American public at risk. Representatives from several consumer groups took part in the protest outside Agriculture Department headquarters, Monday, April 2.  Organizations represented included Food and Water Watch, the Government Accountability Project  and the National Consumer League.

Participants hoped to raise awareness of a regulation proposed by Agriculture’s Food Safety and Inspection Service that will partially privatize the poultry inspections process and  increase the number of birds federal inspectors must examine from 35 to 175  per minute.

FEDERAL POULTRY INSPECTORS EVISCERATE PROPOSED RULE

Nearly 200 comments have been submitted to the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Food Safety and Inspection Service regarding a proposal to let slaughterhouses mostly self-inspect chickens and turkeys for diseases, feces and other potentially harmful contaminants.

Many of these comments come from the federal inspectors who now do this work. Letting the companies that slaughter the chickens do their own inspections is a recipe for disaster, the inspectors say. In addition, the proposal would require the few remaining federal inspectors to examine five times as many chickens as they do today — up to 175 chickens per minute, or nearly three chickens every second. Many inspectors point out that providing a thorough examination of chickens at such speeds is humanly impossible.

Comments on the proposed rule must be submitted by April 26. Let the government know what you think of this proposal by submitting your comment today.

Below are excerpts of comments already submitted by federal inspectors:

“This rule is a bad idea. I have worked as an inspector for 26 years and I can tell you from experience that while the plants talk a good game about food safety, when it comes right down to a choice between production and yield numbers and food safety and quality, production and yield comes first! They will cut corners and ignore obvious problems in food safety if they are behind due to break downs in equipment or if they have more production to do than they can do before the end of the shift. Even now at 35 poultry carcasses per minute per inspector, we only have a bit over a second and a half to inspect the carcass which is too fast and this rule will increase speeds. What is the sense in that? Our inspectors do not ‘sort’ carcasses for the plants and look for ‘scabs.’ That is a ridiculous over simplification. That is akin to saying a doctor only checks a patients temperature and throat when examining them. This is not a more ‘scientific’ approach to inspection, it is plain and simply a job cutting measure.”

– Steven Clarke

———-

“I am a GS-7 working at a poultry facility inspecting chickens. I have been doing so (for) 15 yrs. I have quite a bit of training in this field. It is not an easy job. At times (it is) very demanding. Sometimes the birds have a lot of pathology. A trained eyed and a professional person is needed to make sure a healthy bird leaves the facility. Please keep these people in there positions to ensure public health and safety. THANK YOU.”

Julie Murphy

———-

“Having worked in an establishment operating under the HACCP-Based Inspection Models Project (HIMP), which is what the modernized poultry slaughter inspection will be based on, I think it is critical to mention that the data contained in the Federal Register is out of context. When comparing the number of zero-tolerance tests for fecal contamination performed in a HIMP establishment versus the number of tests performed in a Non-HIMP plant, it is important to mention that in a HIMP plant the SI (System Inspector) can direct inspection personnel to perform additional testing as deemed necessary. In a Non-Himp plant, ONLY two tests per line are performed on each shift. PERIOD. This is because in a Non-HIMP plant, the IICs do not have such authority or leeway and additional testing is considered “over-inspection”. So, while the data is accurate, it is not altogether truthful. You are comparing apples and oranges.”

– Dawn Reyna

———-

“I have worked as an inspector with USDA, FSIS for more than 30 years. This whole idea of the plant employees making decisions is unreal. Before working for the USDA I worked in a pork plant and a beef plant for the company on the slaughter line. I know what the industry is capable of and how they operate. They can be sneaky trying to avoid losing money. No matter if it is a slaughter plant or processing plant, the company has control over what their employees do and don’t do. If they don’t listen, they will just find someone else off the street who will. None of them are trained the way USDA inspectors are trained, so what does that tell you? I worked on a turkey and a chicken line before and there is no way poultry can be inspected and safe with the increased line speeds. It is also a safety issue for inspectors or plant employees if they would get a finger caught in a shackle, which happens at the line speeds now. If the inspectors are going to be at the end of the line and the chickens viscera (guts) is missing, the inspector cannot ensure that chicken is safe to eat. The inspectors need to be able to inspect the viscera in order to be 100% sure. There are tons of ways to cut budgets and federal money; and it shouldn’t be at the expense of consumer’s health and safety. We are supposed to be trying to make food more safe and this is totally a ridiculous idea. As a processing inspector now, I have plants adding allergens to their products without them being on their product’s label. They don’t know enough to verify what there ingredients have in them, before they are added to their product. You would be surprised at the things plants are capable of doing, including sneak to produce product outside of their inspection hours to avoid paying reimbursable overtime. It is just unreal for anyone to trust these companies.”

– Cindy Huato

———-

“I am a CSI-7 that periodically works a poultry plant at my duty station. This plant runs at maximum speed with the number inspectors that it has at this time. Increasing line speed with less inspectors defies logic as the plant process is out of control much of the time now. Our purpose for being in plants is for consumer safety. How can we assure the public their food is safe if we are not present to inspect?

– Michael Thornton

———-

“The agency would have you believe that all line inspectors do is look for scabs and bruises; nothing could be further from the truth. Inspectors are charged with finding and rejecting diseased carcasses, including those that can be transmitted to humans, marking for further processing birds that are contaminated with feces, bile, metal from processing errors, and other hazards to public health. Allowing these duties to be turned over to plant employees who are often and forcefully reminded of who signs the paychecks is a bad thought process on behalf of USDA. The American public will in the end suffer the harm. The agency has misled Congress and consumer groups with junk science and lies. Please reject this poorly designed program for all consumers’ health.”

– Charles Wilkins