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U.S. Announces New
Beef Restrictions
Associated Press
ABC News
December 30, 2003
Agriculture Secretary Lists New Restrictions to Further
Enhance Safety of American Beef Supply
WASHINGTON Dec. 30 Agriculture Secretary Ann
Veneman on Tuesday announced a list of new restrictions
to further enhance the safety of the American beef supply,
including a meatpacking ban on the use of sick "downer"
cattle like the one discovered last week with mad cow
disease.
She also announced bans against the use of small intestines
and head and spinal tissue from older cattle in the
U.S. food chain, as well as changes in slaughterhouse
techniques with the aim of preventing accidental contamination
of meat with cow nerve tissue. Mad cow disease is spread
through such brain and spinal cord tissue.
"Sound science continues to be our guide,"
Veneman said.
Under the new regulations, the sick cow slaughtered
in Washington state on Dec. 9 would not have been allowed
to enter the U.S. food chain.
The meat from that cow was allowed to be sold for human
consumption after its brain and spinal column were removed
and a federal inspector saw no indication of neurological
disease. From now on no downed cow can be used for meat.
The Agriculture Department estimates that 130,000 down
cattle are sent to meatpacking plants each year.
USDA ordered a recall of more than 10,000 pounds of
meat from 20 cows slaughtered on the same day at the
same Washington state company. The recalled meat was
distributed to eight states and Guam, although officials
said 80 percent of it went to Oregon and Washington.
USDA officials have said they ordered the recall as
a precaution, insisting there was no threat to the safety
of the U.S. food supply. "The risk of BSE spreading
in the U.S. is extremely low and any possible spread
would have been reversed by the controls we have already
put in place," she said.
Veneman said the announced changes have been planned
for a while. But they come just as U.S. agriculture
officials in Tokyo are trying to persuade the Japanese
to lift that country's ban on American beef. The U.S.
officials went to South Korea after their stop in Japan.
"These actions are not being taken in response
just to our trading partners," Veneman said. "We
should take these actions that are appropriate and consistent
with actions that many other countries have taken."
The agriculture secretary called the regulatory changes
"very aggressive actions." She said they should
not impose any hardship on the cattle and meatpacking
industries, nor consumers.
"I don't expect an increase in the price to consumers,"
she said. "The number of cattle that enter the
food supply currently as downer animals is very small."
Gene Baur (formerly Bauston) , president of the New York-based animal
rights group Farm Sanctuary, which has been suing the
government for years to try to stop the use of downed
animals for food, said the changes were huge.
"This is a good thing for animals and a good thing
for people," said Bauston. "These animals
are made to suffer horribly, humans are put at risk,
and there has never been an excuse for this practice."
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