White House Dislikes Single Food Safety Agency
Hun Lee  |  by news.aol.com. All rights reserved. 6.11 | 20:41

WASHINGTON (Oct. 11) - A Bush administration official criticized the outbreak of E. coli in spinach and recalls of potentially contaminated lettuce and ground beef.



Richard Raymond, the Agriculture Department undersecretary for food safety, said the effort is unnecessary.

He was responding to a call from food safety advocates to make a single agency ensure that all food is safe. The Agriculture responsibility, but they don't have the same inspection and safety authority.



The call for a unified food safety agency follows a recent outbreak of E. coli in spinach that has killed three people and sickened nearly 200 in half the states. It was the 20th such outbreak in lettuce or spinach since 1995.



Combining food safety agencies "is an unnecessary solution," executives Wednesday.

"The USDA and the FDA have a long history of working together very well, and I think it's been improved even in recent years," Raymond said.

Raymond's department has a meat and poultry safety program that includes daily inspections of processing plants.

It also requires production chain and do constant monitoring of those points.

The rest of the food supply, such as spinach and other produce, falls mostly under the purview of the Food and Drug Administration, which does not have the same rules or authority.

Raymond acknowledged that food safety rules can be confusing and pizza.



In addition to the spinach outbreak, suspected E. coli beef.

"There is no real central agency that can go to a farm and immediately start addressing the problem," said Caroline Smith DeWaal, director of food safety for the Center for Science in the Public Interest.



Outbreaks of food poisoning linked to fresh produce are on the rise, Robert Brackett, director of the FDA's Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition, told the food industry executives. He said need" to respond.

Copyright 2006 The Associated Press.

The information contained in the AP news report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press. All active hyperlinks have been inserted by AOL.

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Keywords: Food Safety, Food Safety Agency, Associated Press, Safety Agency
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