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In The News
February 22, 2008
People's Weekly World
Beef that could kill
you!
by PWW Editorial Board
Parents around the country are trying to find out if any of the meat
involved in the biggest beef recall in U.S. history found its way into their
children’s school lunches, or still might show up there.
More than 140 million pounds of beef was recalled from a California
slaughterhouse after video showed crippled and sick animals being forced
onto the production lines.
The issue here is not whether an individual worker forced a sick animal into
the group that was slaughtered for human food. The question is how sick
animals, whose meat is unfit for human consumption, could end up on the
assembly line and then as food shipped out to our nation’s schools and
supermarkets.
The answer is as disturbing as it is simple. First President Bush cut the
U.S. Department of Agriculture, the government’s watchdog over the
meatpacking industry, to shreds. Then the remaining Bush appointees at the
USDA watered down workplace safety and food inspection regulations. Only
last month, the department’s Food Safety and Inspection Service announced
that it was removing maximum line speed regulations, thereby subjecting
meatpacking workers to even more dangerous workplace conditions, and that it
was removing on-the-line meat inspectors, thereby increasing the risk to the
public of food-borne illnesses.
The United Food and Commercial Workers union and the Safe Food Coalition,
which represents victims of food-borne illness, warned the USDA about this
when they joined hands in Washington last month to testify against the
safety cuts. With Bush though, such warnings fell on deaf ears. For him, big
business once again came before workers who suffer debilitating injuries and
school children who might fall ill from toxic food.
The union and consumer groups warn that, with the huge growth of the poultry
industry, we could face an even bigger danger to both workers and consumers.
The public interest demands that limits on meatpacking line speed must be
restored, and on-line inspectors must be put back in place at all meat
plants. All cuts made at the USDA, the Food and Drug Administration and
other regulatory bodies must be rescinded. Then fire and replace all the
Bush appointees at these agencies. The safety of the workers and the health
of the people come first.
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