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Rules on Mad Cow Diseased Violated Repeatedly
By LIBBY QUAID, AP
WASHINGTON
(Aug. 15) - Inspectors have found more than 1,000 violations
of rules aimed at preventing mad cow disease from reaching
humans, the Agriculture Department said Monday. No contaminated
meat reached consumers, the agency said. The
Agriculture Department said it cited beef slaughterhouses
or processing plants 1,036 times over 17 months.
The rules
were created in response to the nation's first case
of mad cow disease in December 2003. They require that
brains, spinal cords and other nerve parts - which can
carry mad cow disease - be removed when older cows are
slaughtered. The at-risk tissues are removed from cows
older than 30 months because infection levels are believed
to rise with age.
The Agriculture
Department said Monday it had cited beef slaughterhouses
or processing plants 1,036 times for failing to comply
with rules on removing those tissues, which are commonly
called specified risk materials or SRMs. The violations
occurred over 17 months, ending in May.
The number
of violations amounts to less than 1 percent of all
citations at those plants, said USDA spokeswoman Lisa
Wallenda Picard.
"At
no point in time did SRMs get to consumers," Picard
said. "There was not one example of that."
The department
released the information in response to requests made
by several groups under the federal Freedom of Information
Act. The records were from January 2004, when the rules
went into effect, through May of this year.
One of the
groups, Public Citizen, said the records showed serious
problems in enforcing the rules. For example, there
were mistakes in identifying animals' ages, which affected
whether at-risk tissues were removed.
"Time
and time again, they've said we have an SRM ban that
is the ultimate public health measure they can take,"
said Patty Lovera, deputy director of Public Citizen's
food program. "There are problems at a couple of
levels in that whole policy that they keep bragging
about."
Removal of
nerve tissues is important but doesn't guarantee the
safety of the food supply, said Jean Halloran, director
of food policy initiatives at Consumers Union.
"We've
always had a dispute with the bright line USDA seems
to draw between dangerous parts of the animal and safe
parts of the animal," Halloran said. "There's
a lot we don't know. There's nothing absolute about
30 months. It's not a magic number."
A meatpacking
industry official said the violations were minuscule
and should not be worrisome.
"The
truth is that these very low numbers ... demonstrate
a remarkable level of compliance with federal regulations
exceeding 99.9 percent," said Jim Hodges, president
of the meatpacking industry's American Meat Institute
Foundation.
Hodges compared
the public risk to the likelihood of being struck by
lightning and winning the lottery on the same day.
The United
States has confirmed two cases of mad cow disease. The
first, in 2003, was in a Canadian-born cow in Washington
state. The second, a Texas-born cow, tested positive
in June.
Mad cow disease
is medically known as bovine spongiform encephalopathy,
or BSE. In humans, consuming meat products tainted with
BSE is linked to a fatal disorder called variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob
disease. The disease has killed about 150 people, most
of them in Britain, where there was an outbreak in the
1980s and 1990s.
One human
case has been reported in the United States, but the
person was living in the United Kingdom during the outbreak
there.
8/15/2005
23:13:39
Copyright
2005 The Associated Press.
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