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Food & Water Watch

I Spy Salmonella

Is it in the tomatoes? The peppers? Perhaps the cilantro? Apparently, your guess of a random salsa ingredient may be as good as the FDA’s. Unfortunately. this is no game. Over 1000 cases of the recent salmonella strain have been reported while the hunt for the source continues.

Salmonella Outbreak

Is it in the tomatoes? The peppers? Perhaps the cilantro? Apparently, your guess of a random salsa ingredient may be as good as the FDA’s. Unfortunately, this is no game. Over 1000 cases of the recent salmonella strain have been reported while the hunt for the source continues.

The lack of progress and the inability to contain the spread of this bacterium for over a month now reveals the frightening state of the American food industry’s procedures and the Federal Government's food inspection system.  Instead of requesting the additional funds needed to hire more FDA food inspectors, Secretary of Health and Human Services Michael Leavitt would like to turn more of the inspection responsibilities over to the industry so that it can police itself.

This far-reaching problem not only threatens the health of citizens but that of the entire nation. It has resulted in significant losses to the economy. With the sinking of tomato sales, many farmers even resorted to allowing their crops to rot in order to save the money they would have otherwise spent in harvesting them for probably nothing.

''What Hurricane Katrina was to FEMA, this salmonella outbreak is going to be to the FDA,'' said one tomato grower.

Deplorably, this outbreak isn’t surprising. According to the CDC, illnesses caused by tainted food affect close to a quarter of the country’s population each year. Sick to your stomach yet?

This recent scare only further implicates the obvious and urgent need for action in order to improve the systems that are supposed to ensure our food’s safety. Read more about the issue here.

Have you cut tomatoes and peppers from your diet? Personally, I've been buying only local peppers and cherry or grape tomatoes. I look forward to a time where we can once again enjoy salsa without thinking about this nasty little thing called salmonella. Each of us can help bring that day closer: tell the FDA that it's long overdue for a system makeover.

- Elissar Khalek

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Excellent post!

Posted by Tara at July 15, 2008, 09:47 AM
Great briefing on the current salmonella scare! Very informative...I'll be steering clear of salsa until the whole thing blows over.

Salmonella

Posted by Maggie Fitz at July 18, 2008, 10:27 PM
I just got the email to take action and lobby the FDA to hire more inspectors to help prevent such outbreaks like the recent one with samonella. Another huge problem in food saftey, that isn't address very often, is the problem of scale. Huge production operations that support national supply chains are the source of these outbreaks and make them a nation-wide problem. I would be more interested in lobbying to support medium to small scale agriculture to supply local food systems as a permanent solution to such outbreaks. But in the mean time more inspectors would be good.

Small scale farming to prevent food illnesses

Posted by Claudia at July 21, 2008, 09:04 AM
We should ALL be supporting local agriculture. When operations of ANYTHING get too large, it is impossible to police, inspect, protect or whatever else needs to be done. I have heard that the problem is that produce from all different farms is pooled so it is practically impossible to track which produce came from what farm. This is ridiculous. Growing your own is another alternative, which is what my husband and I have been doing. No gas or time wasted going grocery store, no worries about illness or pesticides. It is quite a bit of work but so satisfying to know you did it yourself and it is the healthiest food you can feed your children and yourselves. If you cannot grow your own, local farmers markets or farm are the answer- not this horrible global system of farming.

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