[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 20 (Thursday, February 5, 2015)]
[Senate]
[Page S830]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
SAFE FOOD ACT OF 2015
Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, I rise today to talk about the issue that
impacts the lives of every American--food safety.
In 1997, I introduced a bill to consolidate at one agency the Federal
oversight of food safety, and I have introduced that bill seven times,
including most recently just last week. So I found it heartening to see
the President's proposal to consolidate most of those responsibilities
into one agency as part of the fiscal year 2016 budget.
Today, 15 different Federal agencies have food safety
responsibilities. This patchwork of oversight makes it harder to focus
on the highest risks in our food system and makes foodborne illness
outbreaks more difficult to manage. President Obama's budget puts in
motion a plan to create the efficiencies we have been talking about
since 1997.
The President's plan would create a single new agency within the
Department of Health and Human Services. That agency would have primary
responsibility for food safety inspections, as well as enforcement,
applied research, and outbreak response and mitigation. And the
proposed agency would be the Federal point for coordinating with State
and local entities and food safety stakeholders. This is an important
step toward creating a single food agency.
I first got involved in updating our food safety system in response
to a letter from constituent. The letter shared the story of a mother
purchasing, cooking, and serving her 6-year-old son a hamburger. Very
few foods are more basic in American than hamburger, but on this day
that hamburger was contaminated with E.coli. This simple hamburger
ended up taking her son's life. This story, as sad as it is, is only
one of many. Each year, 48 million Americans become sick as a result of
foodborne illnesses. That is one in every six people. Mr. President,
128,000 of those will be so sick they will need hospitalization, and
3,000 of those will not survive their illnesses.
While we have made significant reforms to our food safety system with
passage of the FDA Food Safety Modernization Act--which will improve
our food safety--we have still not solved this problem.
Recently, the New Yorker ran an article called ``A Bug in the
System.'' The story details the experience of Rick Schiller, who had
contracted a form of the salmonella bacterium, known as Salmonella
Heidelberg. The condition led to multiple days in the hospital. After
his release, he was contacted by the Centers for Disease Control, and
the U.S. Department of Agriculture collected some chicken from his
freezer as a potential source for the foodborne illness. More than a
year later, he had not heard back from the investigator and he still
wasn't sure that it was the chicken that almost killed him.
This New Yorker article highlights problems that have been identified
by the Government Accountability Office, the National Research Council,
and the Institute of Medicine for decades. Simply determining which of
15 Federal agencies is responsible for inspection of a particular food
can leave the average citizen scratching their head.
In the current regulatory regime, a pepperoni pizza--because it
contains meat--has ingredients that will be inspected three times
before the product hits the grocery store freezer. A vegetarian pizza
produced at the same facility, however, will probably not undergo any
inspection.
For eggs, it is even more scrambled. If it is a fresh egg, it is
inspected by U.S. Department of Agriculture. But if that egg is part of
premade product like a breakfast biscuit, it is the Food and Drug
Administration. It just does not make sense. The experts said it, the
data reflects it, and we can be left with only one conclusion.
The fragmented nature of our food safety system has left us more
vulnerable to risk of foodborne illness and too often forced consumers
to go it alone in the case of outbreak. I agree with the President that
it is time for a new governmentwide approach. I would like to take it a
step further and establish a single food safety agency.
The Safe Food Act I introduced last week would transfer and
consolidate food safety authorities for inspections, enforcement,
labeling, and research into a single food safety agency. That will
allow us to prioritize system-wide food safety goals and targets. With
a single food safety agency, food producers and manufacturers will just
have a single Federal regulatory structure.
An egg is an egg is an egg and will be regulated by the same agency
regardless of how you cook, process, or serve it. This should make it
easier for those in the food industry to comply with food safety laws,
even if those laws are no less stringent. The bill also modernizes
certain aspects of our federal food safety laws to protect and improve
public health.
Specifically, the bill would authorize mandatory recall for all
foods. Today, it is easier to recall toys than tainted meat. The bill
requires facilities to use risk-based analysis to identify and protect
against potential hazards at their facility. The bill will authorize
performance standards for pathogens like salmonella and campylobacter
and for the first time authorize the agency to prevent products that
are not meeting those standards from entering the market. The bill will
provide for full trace-back of foods to better identify and stop the
outbreak at its source. Finally, the bill provides a single point of
contact for families harmed by foodborne illness to turn to for
answers.
This new agency will help those families navigate the differing
Federal, State, and local food safety agencies to get the answers they
deserve. It is bad enough to suffer severe illness or lose a loved one
to foodborne illness; you should not have to spend months going from
agency to agency trying to get as simple an answer to a question like,
Did this chicken make me sick?
This is not the only approach to creating an agency with the primary
responsibilities for overseeing and directing food safety, but we think
it will help close existing gaps in our food safety system, reduce the
likelihood of foodborne illness, clarify our inspection regimes for
industry, and provide more clear assistance to people made sick by
foodborne illness.
In closing, I want to take a moment to thank some of my colleagues. I
would like to thank Senators Feinstein, Blumenthal, and Gillibrand for
joining me in introducing this bill, and I stand ready to work with any
Member on either side of the aisle who wants to tackle this issue.
I commend the administration for embracing this idea of consolidating
oversight of food safety. I hope it doesn't take another serious
foodborne outbreak before we decide to act.
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