Local food doesn’t mean safe food

By Caroline Scott-Thomas

- Last updated on GMT

Related tags Food safety Food

Local food doesn’t mean safe food
All food, if not properly handled, has the potential to cause foodborne illness – so why does local food get special legislative treatment?

Last week, an amendment was added to the Food Safety Modernization Act, which has finally reached the Senate floor after being stuck in legislative no man’s land for more than a year. If passed, the bill would give the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) the right to order product recalls, give it better access to company records, and require food manufacturers to keep detailed food safety records.

The amendment, put forward by Senator Jon Tester (D-MO) would exempt businesses that bring in less than $500,000 a year, and sell their products within state lines or a maximum of 275 miles from where they are produced. It is intended to protect small producers from regulation that could prove to be financially burdensome – although funding details for the bill have yet to be decided. But what about food safety?

How much of this is about the perceived relative quality of food at the farm gate and the type that comes in a package, or indeed, from further afield? S. 510 may be a bill to improve food safety, but in this instance, food safety has very little to do with it.

Rather, it is about the romantic notion of the ruddy-faced farmer touting his soil-encrusted produce at the local farmers’ market in an era when many of us have become distanced from our food supply.

I am very nearly swayed by it.

I understand why people want to stick up for the little guy. I think of the vendors at my local market, and find it hard to imagine that their produce could be unsafe. It is certainly insulting to suggest that Farmer Joe doesn’t care about the safety of his produce – of course he does – but it doesn’t mean that his food is necessarily any safer than that in the supermarket, just that if it is contaminated, fewer people will get sick.

This is a reality that Tester has acknowledged, saying that if a mistake is made “it doesn’t impact hundreds of thousands of people.”

But hang on – this isn’t any version of small-scale and local that I recognize. Half a million dollars’ worth is a lot of produce. And after some protest that a 400-mile radius was too broad, the definition of ‘local’ in the Tester Amendment was narrowed to 275 miles. Since when was Washington, D.C. (comfortably) local to New York City? Even if it is, where’s the evidence that local, family businesses make safer food?

Look at Estrella Family Creamery, the Washington-based artisan cheese maker that refused an FDA request to recall its cheeses after its facility and cheese was repeatedly found to be contaminated with listeria. Listeria is a potentially lethal pathogen to which the elderly, infirm, children, pregnant women and unborn babies are particularly susceptible.

Think about it: If a large-scale cheese maker refused to recall potentially tainted products for financial reasons, as the Estrella Family Creamery is doing, would it inspire dewy-eyed sympathy? I doubt it.

Nevertheless, the Tester Amendment is now part of the Food Safety Modernization Act. It’s a big compromise and one that should help the passage of a long-awaited bill.

While federal oversight of food safety could get a major overhaul, state and local authorities will continue to be responsible for food safety at smaller facilities.

For the rest of the American food supply, let’s hope this bill passes before we tuck into our respective Christmas dinners, whether they’re sourced from the local farm or the local Wal-Mart.

Caroline Scott-Thomas is a journalist specializing in the food industry. Prior to completing a Masters degree in journalism at Edinburgh's Napier University, she had spent five years working as a chef.

Related topics Policy Views

3 comments

Listeria at Estrella Family Creamery

Posted by Caroline Scott-Thomas,

@Margaret Collins
More information on the repeated discovery of listeria at the Estrella Family Creamery can be found here: http://www.justice.gov/usao/waw/press/2010/oct/estrella.html.
Also, it should be noted that the FDA had to request a warrant to seize the potentially contaminated cheese because, under existing law, it does not have the right to order a recall.

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Local food doesn’t mean safe food

Posted by Ben Moulto,

I agree totally what you are saying. As "small" farms don't have to do anyting how can they proof the stuff they sell is from their farm? Some are buying the produce at big stores on the way to the farmers market. Mr. Tester has a reason for his amendment: His size of farm fits underneath the exemption if he gets his way.
Food safety has noting to do with the scale of an enterprise.

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Small farms have greater accountability

Posted by Margaret Collins,

I agree with the need for strong food safety regulations across the board. However, the amendments to S-510 do not exempt small producers/facilities from existing FDA food safety requirements. And directly marketed food (which is the food affected by the amendment) brings the consumer and the producer literally face to face: you can't ask for greater accountability. The farmer is also generally eating her own food in addition to selling it, so on top of the high level of visibility, they have a pretty vested interested in only distributing very safe food.

One note: The Estrella family dairy you mention did not test positive for the bacteria in any of its products around the time of the FDA raid, as I understand it. Seattle Local Food said of the situation, "There was apparently a positive test for Listeria at a point in the past, and so the FDA decided to shut down the dairy on the claim that the cheese might have Listeria, with no burden of proof to demonstrate they do, or to acknowledge records that show this is no longer a problem."

-Margaret, eatyourplanet.com

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