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			 In visits to six affected sites in Iowa last week, a Reuters 
			reporter found procedures at three in Sioux County did not comply 
			with USDA or state protocols for restricting access to infected 
			sites, providing protective gear to workers and cleaning the wheels 
			of vehicles leaving the sites. 
 Burke Healey, the USDA's national incident commander coordinating 
			response to the bird flu, said he was concerned about the findings 
			of lax biosecurity in Iowa after hearing about them from Reuters. 
			Shortfalls in biosecurity can violate agreements signed by farm 
			owners, he said. "If they're allowing you to drive in and out of 
			that property unrestricted, then that's going against what we've 
			requested of them and what they've agreed to do for us," Healey 
			said.
 
 The U.S. Department of Agriculture and state officials have 
			established quarantine zones and mandated strict biosecurity 
			procedures at and around farms in Iowa and other affected states. 
			Steps include controlling access and minimizing traffic at infected 
			farms; requiring protective clothing for workers; killing all 
			poultry and securely disposing of carcasses, litter, feed and any 
			other appropriate materials, including manure; and cleaning and 
			disinfecting the affected premises, equipment and vehicles.
 
			 The USDA is meeting with industry trade groups in Washington 
			Thursday, and with state and poultry groups on Friday in Des Moines, 
			the state capital, to talk about improving biosecurity on affected 
			farm sites, according to people familiar with the situation.
 Infected farms must create a "clean and disinfect line," and all 
			vehicles must be sanitized as they enter and leave the property, 
			according to Iowa state agriculture officials. Any farmer who wants 
			to move poultry or poultry products off an infected site must get a 
			permit from the state.
 
 In Iowa, the USDA has agreed to enforce compliance with the "clean 
			and disinfect" line. "USDA has been overseeing operations on the 
			affected sites and they have agreed to oversee the enforcement of 
			that line," said a spokesman for the Iowa Department of Agriculture 
			and Land Stewardship.
 
 In compliance with USDA guidance on restricted access, Reuters was 
			not permitted access to two sites owned by Daybreak Foods near Eagle 
			Grove, or to a site near Harris, Iowa, run by Sunrise Farms, an 
			affiliate of Sonstegard Foods Company. Daybreak Foods did not 
			respond to a request for comment. Sonstegard declined to comment.
 
 However, at a Center Fresh Group facility near Sioux Center, which 
			housed about 4.9 million hens, a worker cleaning the tires of 
			vehicles exiting the property waved a reporter's car in to the site 
			without inspection. On a public road running alongside the facility, 
			passenger cars drove by unstaffed barricades at a site meant to 
			control access, one of which lay on the ground. Center Fresh, based 
			in Sioux Center, is one of the largest U.S. egg producers.
 
 At another Center Fresh facility near the town of Ireton, workers 
			were observed dumping hen carcasses from a rectangular blue gas 
			chamber into a front-end loader. The workers wore short sleeves and 
			hospital masks, not the protective suits and air-purifying 
			respirators recommended in a USDA directive.
 
 At that same farm, a worker who asked the Reuters reporter to leave 
			did not disinfect the visitor's shoes, which had come in contact 
			with the farm's feather-covered grounds.
 
			
			 Center Fresh has at times modified standard USDA protocols on access 
			and protective gear to speed up culling of flocks, while still 
			ensuring safety on the farms and in the community, Chief Operating 
			Officer J.T. Dean said in a statement to Reuters. "This has been a 
			process that is evolving every day, and that work is ongoing as we 
			learn more about our response," he said.
 At an infected farm owned by Fedders Poultry near Orange City, the 
			tires on the reporter’s car were not disinfected when he left.
 
 "I am not involved," said Mark Fedders, the farm owner. He said it 
			is up to government officials regulate traffic on and off the farm, 
			disinfect vehicles, protect the perimeter and store dead birds. "I 
			personally am not the one in charge of security."
 
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			At the Fedders farm, a truck driver wearing a Clean Harbors baseball 
			cap also left the site without having his wheels cleaned. Clean 
			Harbors Inc, an environmental services company based in Norwell, 
			Massachusetts, has a contract with the USDA to help clean infected 
			farms in Iowa and Minnesota. 
 Clean Harbors said it is charged with removing poultry from infected 
			barns, disposing of carcasses and decontaminating infected 
			facilities. Spokesman Eric Kraus said he was not there to see the 
			truck driver at the Fedders farm, but that the company cleans and 
			sanitizes all of its vehicles on infected farm sites and provides 
			necessary biosecurity equipment to its staff.
 
			Feathers are a concern because they are believed to be carriers of 
			the virus, potentially blown by the wind from farm to farm. Wild 
			birds also are thought to carry the flu virus, which can be tracked 
			onto poultry farms by people or trucks that come into contact with 
			their contaminated feces.
 The highly infectious bird flu virus has not crossed over to humans 
			in the United States, as it did in Asia following a 2003 outbreak, 
			but transmission to humans is possible, according to the Centers for 
			Disease Control and Prevention.
 
 Concerns about the USDA's effectiveness in leading efforts to 
			contain the outbreak have been raised in Congress, by the states and 
			in the poultry industry.
 
 "The reality of this situation requires us to engage in an 
			all-hands-on-deck approach, developing a strategy in which we put 
			all of the resources we have at our disposal together with all 
			resources possible from states and producers to best stop the spread 
			of this disease," said USDA spokesman Brian Mabry.
 
 In Iowa, 60 farms have been infected so far by bird flu, according 
			to the Iowa Department of Agriculture and Land Stewardship. It is 
			not known if conditions like those observed by Reuters exist at 
			other infected Iowa farms, or those in 15 other states with 
			commercial or backyard flocks affected by bird flu.
 
			
			 
			CONTROL MEASURES VITAL
 Iowa, the nation’s largest egg producer, has suffered the largest 
			bird-flu losses of any state, 25.5 million birds out of more than 38 
			million dead birds nationwide, according to the USDA. Officials in 
			Iowa, like those in other states, are working with USDA to contain 
			the outbreak.
 
 As soon as a USDA lab confirms a bird flu case, Iowa officials move 
			to quarantine the affected farm, establishing an “infected zone” 
			with a minimum radius of 10 kilometers, or 6.2 miles.
 
 The USDA, meanwhile, enters into a “flock plan” agreement with 
			responsible parties, which typically include the state, the farmer, 
			or the company that owns the birds, if the farmer is a contract 
			grower. According to a seven-page agreement template reviewed by 
			Reuters, such agreements lay out responsibility for killing and 
			disposing of the birds, cleaning and disinfecting the site, and 
			protective equipment for workers. . The workers’ employer is 
			responsible for providing the gear and making sure it is worn – 
			whether that employer is the farmer, the state or USDA.
 
 Reuters has not seen the individual agreements for any of the 
			infected Iowa farm sites it has visited.
 
 
 (Reporting by Tom Polansek in Ireton, Iowa, and P.J. Huffstutter in 
			Chicago; editing by David Greising, Jo Winterbottom and John 
			Pickering)
 
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