Fixing our food
The best way to protect consumers and producers is a system that
will track what we eat.
June 14, 2008
Los Angeles Times Editorial
Salmonella-contaminated tomatoes -- the latest evidence that all is not
well with our food -- have not only sickened at least 228 people but
unnecessarily tainted the reputation of an entire agricultural sector.
As consumers recoil from all tomatoes, and restaurants pull them off the
menu, perfectly good produce is unsalable. That includes tomatoes grown
here in California, whose farms have been exonerated.
To some extent, this is simple panic. The
U.S. Food
and Drug Administration announced that cherry and grape tomatoes and
those with the vine still attached are not implicated, but people are so
frightened that they don't hear much beyond the words "tomato" and
"warning."
But consumers also shun tomatoes because they can't get all the
information they need to make safe choices. And that is the failure of
the FDA and the industry to implement systems to track food from farm to
grocery bag.
FDA investigators believe the bad tomatoes came from either Mexico
or central Florida. They still have not located the trouble spot. Even
if they had, it would not clear up consumers' questions. What good is it
to consumers to know that California's tomatoes are in the clear? Unless
they shop at a farmer's market, they have little way of learning where
their fresh produce comes from.
We all have to peel those annoying
stickers off most of our fresh produce before eating it. What if
those stickers gave stores and consumers useful bar-coded information
about the origins of their food? In the event of food poisoning,
inspectors could determine almost immediately what producer was at fault
and pull the bad food from the market, saving people from suffering --
and also saving the harvests of innocent growers.
In an interview with The Times' editorial board this week, FDA
Commissioner Andrew C. von Eschenbach pointed to
McCormick & Co., which buys most
of its spices in India, as a company that already is tracking
ingredients, using a low-tech labeling system on plastic bags that can
trace peppers, for instance, back to their many producers. The
simplicity and economy of the system allows it to be used even by a poor
farmer tilling an acre of land.
It's up to Congress to provide the FDA with the funding for more
inspection and safety technology. But a
Government
Accountability Office report released Thursday also blamed Von
Eschenbach for failing to move on with the food protection plan he put
forth in November 2007. Food poisoning acts quickly, and so must the
federal government.