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Peanut safety scare raises wider concerns about our food
Holes in America's food safety net are drawing high-level federal attention as the result of a worldwide recall of snack bars, crackers, frozen dinners, military meals and hundreds of other items made with processed peanuts or peanut butter. At least nine deaths are linked to an unsanitary plant in Georgia, ground zero in a food illness outbreak that has swept across North America since January and sickened an estimated 20,000 people - half of them children. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) accuses the Peanut Corporation of America of repeatedly shipping products it knew were contaminated by dangerous bacteria called salmonella -- pronounced SALL-MOHN-ella. The firm's president declined to testify at a congressional hearing last week to avoid providing evidence that could be used against him in a criminal case. The peanut outbreak is the latest in a series of incidents involving lettuce, beef, peppers and spinach that have eroded confidence in food safety and brought calls to strengthen the FDA. It currently can't order recalls of contaminated food, for instance. And despite the food industry's growth, agency inspections have declined. President Obama vows a full review of FDA operations.
Front Page Talking Points is written by
Felix Grabowski and Alan Stamm for NIEonline.com, Copyright 2013
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