The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) will advise foodmakers to
start internal investigations when they receive customer complaints
and to notify the government within 24 hours if contaminated
products are in the marketplace, Carmen Rottenberg, administrator of
the USDA's Food Safety and Inspection Service, said in an interview.
The voluntary guidelines, in the works for months, are designed to
ensure companies meet pre-existing regulatory requirements, she
said.
USDA records show that since the beginning of 2018, Tyson Foods Inc,
Smithfield Foods Inc and other companies have launched more than 25
recalls involving millions of pounds of chicken nuggets, calzones,
sausages and other foods that potentially contained dangerous
materials.
Consumer advocates say increased automation in meat processing
plants has contributed to more machine parts breaking off and
contaminating food. The meat industry says producers are reluctant
to recall food until they investigate whether consumer complaints
about foreign objects are legitimate.
Multiple consumer complaints have often preceded recalls, the USDA
said in the agenda for a monthly meeting that two consumer advocates
provided to Reuters last week.
In an interview to answer questions about the meeting agenda,
Rottenberg said recalls may have increased because the USDA has put
more focus on ensuring that food companies and government inspectors
know the requirements for recalling products.
The new guidelines will advise foodmakers on how to investigate and
process complaints and apply information from them to subsequent
reports of contaminated products, she said.
"Taking very prompt action is what's really critical to the agency,"
Rottenberg said.
A trio of recalls of Tyson Foods, Perdue Foods and Pilgrim's Pride
Corp chicken products that may have contained rubber or wood put a
spotlight on food-safety risks in January and February.
Perdue launched an investigation that did not conclusively determine
how wood may have ended up in its chicken nuggets, spokesman Joey
Shevlin said. The company subsequently made changes and keeps wood
away from unpackaged products on its manufacturing floor, he said.
In a separate recall on Feb. 23, frozen food maker Bellisio Foods
said there may have been pieces of glass or hard plastic in Boston
Market brand barbecue pork prepared meals. The recall affected about
173,376 pounds of products.
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On Saturday, privately held Agri Beef recalled about 30,260 pounds
of ground beef products produced in its Washington Beef facility in
Washington state. Two days earlier, a consumer complained about
finding blue plastic in a product, according to the company, which
said it was auditing its procedures to prevent future contamination.
"Foreign matter contamination, it's a reflection on something going
awry in the inspection process and the quality control process of a
company," said Thomas Gremillion, director of food policy for the
Consumer Federation of America.
Representatives for Pilgrim's Pride, JBS, and WH Group's Smithfield
Foods did not respond to requests for comment. Tyson said instances
of foreign materials in its products were rare.
"If they happen we move quickly to notify those affected and take
corrective action," Tyson spokesman Worth Sparkman said.
The North American Meat Institute, an industry group that represents
Tyson and other companies, in August published its best practices
for handling customer complaints about foreign materials in meat and
poultry. The USDA reviewed those recommendations.
"Frankly a lot of consumer complaints are bogus," said Mark Dopp,
senior vice president of regulatory and scientific affairs for the
group. He said companies often need time to analyze the veracity of
complaints before taking action. Technology also helps meat
companies detect foreign materials in food before it is shipped to
consumers, according to the meat institute.
Rottenberg said food companies must alert the USDA quickly if they
receive customer complaints, which sometimes come with photos of
meat and poultry products containing foreign materials.
"Companies know whether there's a legitimate concern or whether
someone's taking a picture of something that never could have been
in their product," she said.
Tony Corbo, a senior lobbyist for Food & Water Watch, said recalls
have ticked up partly because more food in meat plants is being
prepared by machines with parts that can break off.
"Obviously the agency is starting to see that this is an alarming
trend in terms of all these recalls," Corbo said.
(Reporting by Tom Polansek; editing by Caroline Stauffer, David
Gregorio and Diane Craft)
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