USDA EXTENDS COMMENT PERIOD UNTIL MAY 29

In the face of blistering critiques of its proposal to largely outsource poultry inspections functions and radically speed up the visual inspection process, the U.S. Department of Agriculture announced this morning that it’s extending the comment period for another month.

All comments on the proposed regulation now are due by May 29. The original comment period was scheduled to end today, April 26.

A total of 839 comments had been filed as of April 25. You can submit your own comment by clicking here.

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

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“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

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“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

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“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

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“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

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“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

CONCERNED CONSUMERS, EMPLOYEES SPEAK OUT ON PROPOSED RULE CHANGE

More than 130 comments have been submitted so far regarding the proposed regulation that would partially privatize the poultry inspections process and allow the companies that slaughter the chickens do their own inspections.

Below are excerpts of some of the comments submitted:

“A poultry company will do all it can to get its products out. I know, because I worked on that side of the fence for more than 10 years as a line worker and in management. It’s all about profit for these companies. USDA needs to take an honest look at this proposal that will undoubtedly allow unwholesome products to make there way to the kitchen table.”

– Concerned FSIS Employee

“The Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS) would have you believe that inspectors are no more than sorters that the plants can do just as well; where is the public trust that they (are) supposed to uphold when the inspectors are removed to a position on the inspection line prior to the critical control point where action is supposed to take place? The public trust and the nation’s food supply will be in the hands of people whose only position is to meet the high profit expectations of their share holders. Talk about the fox in the hen house!

– Randy Anderson

“Already the plant I’m at is chopping at the bit to start. It’s about money. Always has been, always will be! To think you can inspect a product without looking at it is absurd. The reason there are few problems is because of front line inspection by trained personnel.  That won’t be the case if the plant is in charge. If I don’t pull a bird the plant lets it go. They won’t drop, pull or throw anything unless we direct them. I fear a lot of bad poultry will enter the system. With two-hour clorine baths, no one would know the difference. Both come out looking the same. Only, I know I would not want my family to eat that bird.”

– Charles Grell

“I am a CSI 7 at a pork facility that also utilizes a pull pattern to a turkey processing plant at the same duty station. At times I have witnessed fecal contamination so bad that the line speed was reduced for over an hour. I have also been on the line when both the CO2 and the electric stunners went down at the same time and yet an hour’s worth of birds were killed (not according to the company’s GMPs) before anything could be done. It is more often than not the online inspector that takes the action needed to stop production and locate an offline to pursue the matter further. Fewer eyes on the company and fewer inspection personnel at proposed higher line speeds will only hurt consumers.

– Mary Thornton

“I am currently a inspector online in a chicken plant. I can with confidence say that the 35 of 140 birds per minute passing my stand have been inspected and are safe for human consumption. If this new law is passed and 1 inspector is to be expected to watch 175 to 225 birds per minute, there is no way they will be able to say the same thing. That workload on one person will greatly increase the risk of food safety for the public. I fully understand that our government needs to make spending cuts but to put our food safety at risk to do so is just unacceptable.”

– Jason Auxier

“The proposition of a new inspection system seems questionable, even if businesses get to choose between the traditional system or the new inspection system. While it may improve efficiency of slaughter, it seems like it lowers the standard of inspection. By reducing the number of online carcass inspectors, ensuring that only carcasses likely to pass inspection will be presented, and increasing line speeds, businesses may be able to skirt a higher level of inspection.”

– Lauren Woodburn