
About a month ago, I reported on the false connection of tomatoes to the salmonella outbreak, and how it turned out to be peppers imported from Mexico that were the source of the infection. Now it seems that not only were the Mexican peppers the source of the problem, but that Federal border inspectors have been turning back Mexican produce imports for months.
FDA officials told reporters during the salmonella crisis that they hadn’t looked at Mexican produce imports because they didn’t know there were problems there. Yet according to an Associated Press analysis, the FDA’s own records clearly show that shipments of Mexican peppers and chilies were regularly turned away at the border for being literally filthy and disease-ridden for months prior to the outbreak.
Between January and the AP’s record review in August, 88 shipments of fresh or dried chilies and peppers were turned away at the border. Ten percent of those shipments were turned away because they were contaminated by salmonella. In July alone, six shipments of fresh jalapenos were found to be contaminated with salmonella. The FDA has offered no explanation for the discrepancy between these statistics, and the statements of Dr. David Acheson, FDA’s food safety chief, that peppers and chilies had not been a source of concern for the FDA because they hadn’t seen problems with those products.
Almost 500,000 tons of Mexican peppers are imported annually, and only about 1% of those shipments are inspected. In August, the FDA finally put about a dozen Mexican food producers on its watch list, meaning that their products would have a higher chance of being screened.
Again, I believe that this points to the importance of produce labeling requirements – (Country of Origin Labeling; COOL) - consumers have a right to know where the food they are eating came from. When particular countries have health risks associated with their products, then consumers need to be able to make informed and rational decisions about what to buy.




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