[Pollinator] SFGate: Organic, small farmers fret over FDA regulation
Jennifer Tsang
jt at pollinator.org
Tue Apr 27 12:58:31 PDT 2010
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2010/04/27/MNKM1D3C5H.DTL
Organic, small farmers fret over FDA regulation
Carolyn Lochhead, Chronicle <mailto:clochhead at sfchronicle.com> Washington
Bureau
Tuesday, April 27, 2010
<http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/object/article?f=/c/a/2010/04/27/MNKM1D3C5H.D
TL&o=0&type=printable> Earthbound Farm, an organic grower in San Juan
Bautista (...
(04-27) 04:00 PDT Washington -- Small farmers in California who have led a
national movement away from industrial agriculture face a looming crackdown
on food safety that they say is geared to big corporate farms and will make
it harder for them to survive.
The small growers, many of whom grow dozens of different kinds of vegetables
and fruits, say the inherent benefits of their size, and their sensitivity
to extra costs, are being ignored.
They are fighting to carve out a sanctuary in legislation that would bring
farmers under the strict purview of the Food and Drug Administration, an
agency more familiar with pharmaceuticals than food and local farms.
A bill before the Senate is riding a bipartisan groundswell created by
recent outbreaks of E. coli, salmonella and other contamination in
everything from fresh spinach to cookie dough.
And the small farmers face opponents in consumer groups, victims of food
contamination, large growers and the Obama administration, who say no farm
and no food should get a pass on safety.
An even tougher version of the legislation passed the House last summer.
Now, a behind-the-scenes battle is raging in the Senate over how to regulate
small and organic growers without ruining them - and still protect
consumers.
If two versions of the overhaul pass, Congress would work to merge them.
The legislation would mandate a range of programs intended to bolster food
safety. The FDA would gain greater authority to regulate how products are
grown, stored, transported, inspected, traced from farm to table and
recalled when needed.
Pinpointing problems
But biologically diverse and organic growers argue that the problems that
have plagued the food industry lie elsewhere.
They point to the sale of bagged vegetables, cut fruit and other processed
food in which vast quantities of produce from different farms are mixed,
sealed in containers and shipped long distances, creating a host for harmful
bacteria.
The legislation does not address what some experts suspect is the source of
E. coli contamination: the large, confined animal feeding operations that
are breeding grounds for E. coli and are regulated by the U.S. Department of
Agriculture, not the FDA.
"It does not take on the industrial animal industry and the abuses going
on," said Tom Willey of T&D Willey Farms in Madera, an organic grower of
Mediterranean vegetables. "The really dangerous organisms we're dealing with
out here, and trying to protect our produce and other foodstuffs from, are
coming out the rear end of domestic animals."
No one in Congress or the administration has yielded in a bureaucratic turf
battle between the Department of Agriculture, which regulates meat, poultry
and eggs, and the FDA, which regulates all other food.
The controversy began with the spinach E. coli outbreak near San Juan
Bautista in 2006 that left four people dead, 35 people with acute kidney
failure and 103 hospitalized. The bacteria, known as E. coli O157:H7, first
appeared in hamburger meat in the early 1980s and migrated to produce,
mainly lettuce and other leafy greens that are cut, mixed and bagged for the
convenience of shoppers.
Contamination
Since then, there have been dozens of contamination cases, leading Congress
to rewrite food safety laws by giving much more power to the FDA. But small
growers worry that they, and consumers, will suffer in the sweep of reform.
"How do we trust that the FDA is going to know about things that the San
Francisco Bay Area has been very progressive on - the field to fork, fresh,
grow local, buy local - all of that?" said Rep. Sam Farr, D-Carmel. "The
organic people are feeling that the regulations the FDA may promulgate will
be so safety oriented, it'll put them out of business."
Consumer groups say they care about small farmers but that safety comes
first.
"Our principle is that food should be safe, whatever the source," said
Sandra Eskin, director of the Pew Health Group's food safety campaign, one
of the Pew Charitable Trusts, which Monday sponsored a public meeting on the
issue with federal officials in Seaside (Monterey County).
"People care profoundly about all these issues: feeding their families, food
safety, local agriculture," Eskin said. "It's a passionate discussion and
understandably so. Everybody eats."
Tom Nassif, head of Western Growers, which represents large produce growers,
said small growers should not be exempt.
"If the small guy who sells to a farmers' market gets a family sick, it's a
blip on the radar screen," Nassif said. "There's not a big hue and cry,
because it didn't affect hundreds of people. What about those people?
Doesn't their food safety count?"
Protocols
The tension that has come with food safety reforms was on display after the
spinach outbreak rocked California. Large growers embraced costly
science-based safety protocols for all leafy greens - guidelines that
federal regulators are considering taking nationwide.
However, a UC Davis study last year by Shermain Hardesty and Yoko Kusunose
found that the rules have put smaller growers at a disadvantage because
their compliance costs are spread over fewer acres. Hardesty said costs may
be as high as $100 an acre.
Large produce buyers such as Wal-Mart and McDonald's have gone much further
than the industry standards. They have imposed rules of their own that have
forced many California farmers who supply them to fence off waterways,
poison wildlife to keep animals out of fields and destroy crop hedgerows
that support beneficial insects.
Deputy Agriculture Secretary Kathleen Merrigan said Monday the
administration is keeping a "close watch" on these so-called "super
metrics," acknowledging that they have harmed the environment but said,
"nobody gets a pass on food safety."
Increasing the danger
Willey, the Madera farmer, argued that many food safety rules tend "to push
us to embrace a paradigm of sterility," which, in the long run, increases
the danger.
"When you create microbial vacuums, they can be even more easily taken over
by pathogenic organisms," he said. "In organic agriculture, we depend
tremendously on a cooperative effort with beneficial microorganisms. My
whole soil fertility system is based on that. Actually, soil fertility
planetwide is based on that."
Efforts to modify proposed rules to make compliance easier for biologically
diversified farms have been more successful in the Senate than in the House.
New language that requires the FDA to consider farm size, crop diversity,
organic requirements and other issues has been added.
"While none of these things in themselves solves the cause for concern, they
certainly point strongly in the direction of the FDA needing to take into
account these considerations," said Ferd Hoefner, policy director for the
National Sustainable Agriculture Coalition.
Hoefner called the House bill a one-size-fits-all approach that would be a
"complete disaster" for small farms.
E-mail Carolyn Lochhead at clochhead at sfchronicle.com.
http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2010/04/27/MNKM1D3C5H.DTL
This article appeared on page A - 1 of the San Francisco Chronicle
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