Thursday,
February 14, 2008
Rachel
Racusen (Miller), 202-226-0853
Adriana
Surfas (DeLauro), 202-225-3661
George
Burke (McCarthy), 202-225-5516
Max
Gleischman (Durbin), 202-228-5244
Lawmakers
Call for Independent Government Investigation into Meat Safety in the
Nation’s Schools
California
meat processing company under investigation for abusing cattle was a top
supplier of beef for the National School Lunch Program
The
request, which was sent to the U.S. Government Accountability Office by U.S.
Reps. Rosa DeLauro (D-CT), George Miller (D-CA), and Carolyn McCarthy (D-NY)
and Senator Dick Durbin (D-IL), comes after the release of an undercover video
by the Humane Society of the
“Along
with all Americans who watched the Humane Society’s disturbing videos, we
are concerned with the mistreatment of animals at Westland Meat Co. We are
writing today because of urgent concerns this incident raises about food
safety in the National School Lunch Program and the implications for our
children’s health and well-being,” the lawmakers wrote in their letter.
The
Humane Society’s footage showed employees using inhumane practices to force
non-ambulatory cows to stand so that they would pass federal inspection in the
slaughterhouse. Meat from non-ambulatory or “downer” cows presents a
higher risk of E. coli, salmonella, and other dangers, and it is banned under
federal law from entering the food supply.
The
Inspector General for the U.S. Department of Agriculture is now investigating
the company’s abuses, and the company’s production is currently suspended.
The USDA, which oversees the National School Lunch Program, has also asked all
schools to put beef products on hold until its investigation can determine
whether unsafe meat entered the food supply.
Despite
these steps by the USDA, the lawmakers cited serious concerns about the
overall effectiveness of the federal government’s effort to ensure the
safety of meat on the school food supply. To date, no independent
investigation has been launched into the safety of the schools’ meat supply.
DeLauro
is the chair of the House Appropriations Subcommittee on Agriculture and the
Food and Drug Administration. Miller is the chair of the House Education and
Labor Committee, which has jurisdiction over school nutrition programs, and
McCarthy is the chair of the panel’s Subcommittee on Healthy Families and
Communities. Durbin is a member of the Senate Agriculture Appropriations
Subcommittee and is the author of several pieces of food safety legislation.
Below
is the full text of the lawmakers’ letter to the GAO.
***
February
14, 2008
The
Honorable David M. Walker
Comptroller
General
Dear
Mr. Walker:
Late
last month, the Humane Society of the
The
video showed employees using forklifts, electric shocks, and other inhumane
means to force non-ambulatory (or “downer”) cows to stand so that they
would pass federal inspection in the slaughterhouse. Because meat from
non-ambulatory cows presents a higher risk of E. coli and salmonella
contamination and bovine spongiform encephalopathy, federal law bans it from
entering the food supply.
Along
with all Americans who watched the Humane Society’s disturbing videos, we
are concerned about the mistreatment of animals at Westland Meat Co. We are
writing today because of urgent concerns this incident raises about food
safety in the National School Lunch Program and the implications for our
children’s health and well-being.
The
U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), which oversees the National School
Lunch Program, immediately alerted school districts to pull and hold all
suspected beef from
While
these initial steps by USDA were appropriate, they leave unanswered a larger
question about the overall effectiveness of the federal government’s effort
to ensure the safety of meat in the school food supply. We request that GAO
thoroughly examine: (1) the process for protecting our students from dangerous
food; (2) how quickly and accurately schools can assess and pull potentially
contaminated products; and (3) the information, guidance and resources about
inspections, suppliers’ histories, and safe handling practices the USDA
provides to local authorities.
This
review will help us to determine what steps are necessary to ensure our
children’s health by preventing tainted beef from entering the school food
supply.
Thank
you for your attention to this issue. Please direct your staff to
coordinate GAO’s investigation with the Education and Labor Committee’s
Chief Investigative Counsel, Michael Zola, who can be reached at (202)
XXX-XXXX.
Sincerely,
George
Miller
Chairman
Committee
on Education and Labor
Carolyn
McCarthy
Chairwoman
Subcommittee
on Healthy Families
Rosa
DeLauro
Chairwoman
House
Appropriations Subcommittee On Agriculture
Richard
J. Durbin
United
States Senator
Cc:
Edward Schafer
Howard “Buck” McKeon
Ranking Member, Committee on Education and Labor