Rodents, other contamination found at 2 egg farms
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[August 31, 2010]
WASHINGTON (AP) --
Food and Drug Administration investigators have found rodents, seeping manure and even maggots at the Iowa egg farms believed to be responsible for as many as 1,500 cases of salmonella poisoning.
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FDA officials released their initial observations of the investigations at Wright County Egg and Hillandale Farms on Monday. The two farms recalled more than half a billion eggs after salmonella illnesses were linked to their products earlier this month.
The reports released by the FDA show many different possible sources of contamination at both farms, including rodent, bug and wild bird infestation, uncontained manure, holes in walls and other problems that could have caused the outbreak. Several positive samples of salmonella have been found at both farms.
The agency released the initial observations as their investigations concluded Monday. Officials said they still cannot speculate on the cause of the outbreak but said the farms not only violated their own standards but also new egg rules put in place this summer.

Among the observations of the investigators:
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Live rodents and mice at
both farms.
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Structural damage and
holes in many locations at both farms, allowing wildlife access.
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Escaped chickens tracking
manure through the houses.
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Employees not changing
clothing properly when moving from one location to another and not
sanitizing equipment properly.
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"Live flies too numerous
to count" on egg belts, in the feed, on the eggs themselves at Wright
County Egg.
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Dead and live maggots "too
numerous to count" on the manure pit floor in one location at Wright
County Egg.
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Manure piled 4 to 8 feet high in five locations
at Wright County Egg, leaning against and pushing open doors that
allowed wildlife to enter the laying houses.
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Non-chicken
feathers in a laying house and wild birds flying in and out of
two facilities at Wright County Egg.
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Manure seeping
through the foundation to the outside of laying houses in 13
locations at Wright County Egg.
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Rusted holes in feed bins and birds
flying over the feed bins at Wright County Egg.
Animal feces and access to wildlife are normally the main concern of investigators looking for causes of an outbreak, as illnesses such as salmonella originate from feces. Michael Taylor, the FDA's deputy commissioner for foods, said in a briefing for reporters Monday that the agency cannot say how these conditions compare to other egg farms around the country but he believes they are "significant deviations from what is expected."
The agency has not traditionally inspected egg farms until there has been a problem. But the FDA will now inspect all of the nation's largest farms by the end of next year, the Obama administration announced last week.
[Associated
Press; By MARY CLARE JALONICK]
Copyright 2010 The Associated
Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
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