Tuesday, October 31, 2017

Haig’s recalls Taboule Salad recalled for E. coli O157:H7 risk

Hayward, CA-based Haig’s Delicacies recalled 342 cases of Taboule Salad for risk of E. coli O157:H7 contamination.

Public health officials and the company are concerned that some consumers may have the product in their home. Anyone who purchased the Haighs Delicacies Tabouli Salad are urged not to consume it. The salad should be thrown away or returned to the place of purchase for a full refund.

The recalled salads have an expiration date of Nov. 16 and the lot code number 17298. The company shipped the salads to retail stores in California, according to its recall notice posted Tuesday with the Food and Drug Administration.

Haig’s Delicacies Taboule Salad subject to recall are:

  • 10-ounce plastic tubs with UPC number 7-08756-77055-9;
  • 3-unit multi packs with UPC number 7-08756-37055-1; and
  • 6-pound bulk foodservice bags with UPC number 7-08756-77077-1.

The recalled products have the “Haig’s Delicacies” brand logo on the label.

The possible contamination was discovered after routine testing by the company. No confirmed illnesses had been reported as of the posting of the recall

E. coli O157: H7 is a potentially deadly bacterium that can cause dehydration, bloody diarrhea and abdominal cramps that usually begin two to eight days after exposure to the organism. While many people recover within a week, some develop a type of kidney failure called hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS).

This condition can occur among people of any age, but is most common in children younger than 5, older adults, pregnant women and people with suppressed immune systems. HUS is marked by easy bruising, pallor, and decreased urine output. People who experience these symptoms should seek emergency medical care immediately.

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Saturday, October 28, 2017

Consumer reports of a fishy taste results in anchovy discovery and recall

Consumer complaints about unwanted anchovies led Orlando-based Taylor Farms to recall approximately 732 pounds of salads with chicken products Saturday due to misbranding and undeclared allergens, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS).

Recalled products contain fish (anchovies), a known allergen, which is not declared on the product label. The recalled ready-to-eat (RTE) salad with chicken items were produced and packaged on Oct. 22, 2017 and Oct. 23, 2107.  Subject to recall are:

  • 9.75-oz. plastic bowls containing “Taylor Farms American Style Pasta Salad” with a “USE BY 11/01/17” and case code of TFFLD 295 L5 EA.
  • 9.75-oz. plastic bowls containing “Taylor Farms American Style Pasta Salad” with a “USE BY 11/02/17” and case code of TFFLD 296 L5 JP.

The products subject to recall bear establishment number “EST. 44818” inside the USDA mark of inspection and were shipped to retail locations in Florida.

The mixup was discovered on Oct. 26, 2017, when Taylor Farms Florida received a consumer complaint about the fishy taste of the salad dressing.  After conducting an internal investigation, the firm determined that the products incorrectly contained Caesar salad dressing instead of Bacon Ranch salad dressing. The Caesar salad dressing contains anchovies.

There have been no confirmed reports of adverse reactions due to consumption of these products. Anyone concerned about an injury or illness should contact a healthcare provider.  Consumers who have purchased these products are urged not to consume them. These products should be thrown away or returned to the place of purchase.

FSIS routinely conducts recall effectiveness checks to verify recalling firms notify their customers of the recall and that steps are taken to make certain that the product is no longer available to consumers.

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Friday, October 27, 2017

FDA, CDC won’t release details on tuna Salmonella outbreak

Although a county epidemiologist reported extensive details this week on a multi-state outbreak of Salmonella linked to tuna, federal agencies won’t release information on the investigation, which began more than a month ago.

Before the epidemiologist’s presentation to the Clark County, WA, health board on Wednesday, no agencies at the local, state or federal levels had gone public with any information on the outbreak, which is ongoing and has sickened at least 31 people in seven states from Hawaii to New Jersey.

Representatives from both the Food and Drug Administration and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention confirmed Friday for Food Safety News that the federal agencies are involved in the outbreak investigation. Both said their respective agencies had not informed the public about the ongoing outbreak because they haven’t found anything worth revealing.

“CDC is working with several states and FDA to investigate 31 infections of Salmonella Paratyphi B variant L (+) tartrate (+) infections reported from seven states,” the CDC spokeswoman said. “The investigation is ongoing and has not yet indicated a specific source of this outbreak.

“CDC communicates about an outbreak when we have actionable information we can give people to protect themselves. At this time, CDC does not have enough evidence to warrant issuing advice to the public for this outbreak.”

Between the lines
The FDA didn’t provide any new information Friday, except the fact that it has an open investigation into the outbreak. However, the FDA’s statement in effect named the supplier of the implicated tuna, Relish Foods Inc., of Culver City, CA.

“(T)his is an ongoing investigation, and we, together with our federal, state and local partners, have not yet identified a source,” according to the FDA statement. “During our traceback investigation and sampling, we did collect product samples that were positive for Salmonella, but these are not related to the outbreak strain.

“We worked with the firm to help initiate a recall of the lots associated with positive product samples. Proactively, the firm recalled more product than just the lot associated with the positive samples.”

Referred to Friday only as “the firm” in the FDA’s statement, the agency posted a recall notice Oct. 19 from Relish Foods for tuna loins. This week Relish Foods expanded the recall to include more sizes of tuna loins, as well as tuna steaks.

Both recall notices reported FDA testing returned positive results for Salmonella.

Victim wasn’t told about tuna
The FDA’s statement Friday, pointing to the fact that its tests did not show the specific outbreak strain of Salmonella paratyphi, leaves out an important fact, according to Seattle food safety attorney Bill Marler.

It’s not unusual for a food product to be contaminated with more than one strain of any given bacteria, Marler said. The neutral spin from the agency on that point isn’t as significant to the attorney as is the lack of transparency during the outbreak investigation.

“The fact that the public wasn’t informed and this (news) came out this way at a county health board meeting is perplexing,” Marler said Friday, “especially when you look at the amount of work public health did, investigating the seafood company, etc.”

Marler’s law firm, Marler Clark LLC, is representing one of the outbreak victims, Crystal McIntyre. The Oregon woman became sick in August after eating tuna sushi at a Hana Sushi restaurant in Tigard, OR.

She was infected with the outbreak strain of Salmonella paratyphi, Marler said, and when public health officials were notified — as is required by law for certain illnesses — they interviewed her.

“Health officials interviewed her but didn’t mention to her that tuna could be the source,” Marler said. “The information out of Clark County certainly confirms what the source was for our client.”

The victim’s lawsuit, filed in state Circuit Court in Oregon, names JL Hana Plus LLC doing business as Sushi Hana 10, and Sushi Hana LLC doing business as Sushi Hana LLC as defendants. McIntyre ate tuna sushi the Sushu Hana restaurant on Aug. 18.

Oregon officials had test results Sept. 8 confirming 12 people in the state had infections from Salmonella paratyphi, all with the same DNA fingerprint as five people in Washington state.

By Sept. 15, Oregon officials had positive test results for Salmonella from a specific tuna supplier, but they did not alert the public. The Oregon Department of Agriculture recommended that restaurants put a hold on tuna from that supplier.

The FDA and CDC joined the outbreak investigation Sept. 27, according to Clark County, WA, health officials.

For details on the outbreak investigation time line, please see:

Tuna linked to Salmonella outbreak; investigation just revealed

Editor’s note: Bill Marler, founding partner of Marler Clark LLP in Seattle, is publisher of Food Safety News.

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Tuna linked to Salmonella outbreak; investigation just revealed

An ongoing coast-to-coast outbreak of Salmonella paratyphi linked to tuna is apparently being investigated by federal officials, but as of Thursday night, a county public health officer appears to be the only person taking publicly about it.

To view the entire set of slides from the presentation before the Clark County Board of Health, please click on the image.

Madison Riethman, an applied epidemiology fellow at Clark County Public Health in Washington state, discussed the outbreak Wednesday during a county health board meeting. She said at least 30 people across seven states have been confirmed with infections.

Riethman told the Clark County health board that federal agencies have been involved in the outbreak investigation since Sept. 27.

“The fact that little, old Clark County was able to be one of the first people to pick up on this ongoing outbreak really highlights the strengths of this system we’ve developed,” Riethman said during a county health board meeting Wednesday, according to The Columbian newspaper in Vancouver, WA.

Riethman’s presentation included a series of slides detailing how the county’s public health department identified the outbreak. It all began on Aug. 29 when local laboratories reported five cases of Salmonella infection. Five reports inone day sent public health officials into scramble mode.

By Sept. 8, the Washington public health lab reported DNA testing showed all five of the Clark County victims were infected with the same strain of Salmonella. That same day, according to Riethman’s presentation, the Oregon Health Authority identified 12 additional Salmonella cases with “matching” DNA.

Of those 17 infected people, 14 had been interviewed by Sept. 8 and 11 of them reported eating sushi before becoming sick.

The Oregon Department of Agriculture began investigating “Seafood Company X” on Sept. 11, according to Riethman’s report. By that date, the case count had risen to 22.

Tuna tests positive for Salmonella
On Sept. 15, four states were reporting a total of 25 victims, with two cases in Hawaii and one in New Jersey. Also on Sept. 15, the Oregon agriculture department reported its investigation of “Seafood Company X” had returned a positive result for Salmonella from a sample of the company’s tuna.

At that point, the Oregon agriculture department recommended that restaurants “hold” tuna from the company.

By Sept. 27, the victim count was at 30, with Salmonella infections identified in people in three additional states, California, Florida and Texas. However, lab tests showed the tuna that has tested positive for Salmonella did not match the strain isolated from outbreak victims.

Relish Foods recalls tuna; outbreak not mentioned
A company in Culver City, CA, initiated a recall of frozen, Newport brand tuna loins on Oct. 13, but the U.S. Food and Drug Administration did not post a copy of the recall until Oct. 19.

The recall by Relish Foods Inc. did not mention the outbreak. It reported only that an FDA test on a sample of its tuna had returned a positive result for Salmonella.

Tuesday this week Relish Foods posted an expanded recall, adding tuna steaks and different sizes of tuna loins not included in the original recall. The company did not mention the outbreak in this week’s expanded recall notice.

As of Oct. 26, Oregon and Washington agriculture and health department websites didn’t have information about the outbreak or investigation — neither did the U.S. Food and Drug Administration or the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Both federal agencies have been involved in the outbreak investigation since Sept. 27, according to the Clark County epidemiologist.

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Thursday, October 26, 2017

EFSA confirms health concerns for furans in food

The European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) has published a scientific opinion on the risk to human health of the presence of furan and methylfurans (2-methylfuran, 3-methylfuran, and 2,5-dimethylfuran) in food. The agency has found that “consumer exposure to furan and methylfurans in food could lead to possible long-term liver damage.”

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Listeria concern triggers veggie recalls in U.S. and Canada

Mann Packing, Salinas, Calif., is voluntarily recalling minimally processed vegetable products that were distributed in the U.S. and Canada because they may be contaminated with Listeria monocytogenes.

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New food incubator breaks ground in Chicago

Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel has broken ground on The Hatchery Chicago, a new food and beverage business incubator in East Garfield Park.

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USDA launches new ARS website to improve access to research

The U.S. Dept. of Agriculture’s Agricultural Research Service (USDA ARS) has launched a newly designed website that improves access to information about ARS research.

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Cereal becomes popular snack food in U.S.

While it has long maintained a seat at the kitchen table, it seems cereal may be moving beyond breakfast and even beyond the bowl.

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Coca-Cola North America appoints James Dinkins president

Coca-Cola has announced that J. Alexander Douglas Jr. will retire as president of Coca-Cola North America (CCNA).

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Researchers insert maize gene into rice to increase yields

By introducing a single maize gene into the rice plant, researchers working on the Oxford-led C4 Rice Project have moved towards “supercharging” rice to the level of more efficient crops.

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Dietary supplement usage in U.S. hits all-time high

Dietary supplement usage among adults in the United States has hit an all-time high, with 76% reporting they consume dietary supplements, up five percentage points from last year’s results, according to a survey commissioned by the Council for Responsible Nutrition.

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Evaluating sensory differences in rum

A study published in the Journal of Food Science evaluates and quantitates the sensory differences of a variety of seven premium aged rums and two mixing rums as well as to validate the developed rum flavor lexicon.

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Some consumers see ‘organic’ and ‘non-GM’ food labels as synonymous

Consumers are confused between foods labeled as “organic” and “non-genetically modified,” according to a recent study from researchers at the Univ. of Florida (UF) and Purdue University.

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Study explores beliefs and behaviors behind food choices

Results of a new research study commissioned by the James Beard Foundation underscore how consumer thinking about food has changed over the past three years.

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Ferrero to acquire Ferrara Candy

Italian confectionery conglomerate Ferrero Group has announced a definitive agreement to acquire Ferrara Candy Co., the third largest U.S. non-chocolate confectionery company, with strong positions in the gummy and seasonal candies categories.

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Kraft Heinz acquires Cerebos’ brands in Australia for $290 million

Suntory Beverage & Food has announced that it has entered into an agreement to sell its Cerebos Food & Instant Coffee business in Australia and New Zealand to Kraft Heinz.

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NestlĂ©’s 9-month sales show slight dip

NestlĂ©, the world’s largest food company, saw its 9-month sales drop 0.4% to CHF 65.3 billion, reduced by net divestments of 2.6% (mainly due to the creation of the Froneri joint venture) and negative foreign exchange effects of 0.4%.

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Sunday, October 22, 2017

Recall insurance can benefit consumers by helping businesses

Food recall.

For consumers, those two words send a red-flag alert: Don’t buy the recalled food or get rid of any of it you might have in your home.

To retailers and food companies, the two words can strike fear in their hearts. “The food industry’s biggest threat to profitability,” read a recent headline in an industry magazine.

Food recalls happen for a variety of reasons. The food might have dangerous bacteria such as E. coli or Salmonella in it, or pieces of metal or plastic, or allergens such as soy or milk that aren’t declared on the label, or other toxins or pesticides.

For consumers, a recall means the food has to be taken to of the fridge or off the kitchen shelf. They can throw it out or take it back for a refund. Nothing much complicated about that.

But recall situations are not that simple for the rest of the links in the field-to-fork chain. They can cost a farm, company or store a lot of money. A lot of money as in an estimated average of $10 million in direct costs, according to a study conducted by the Grocery Manufacturers Association (GMA) and the Food Marketing Institute (FMI).

A separate survey sponsored by GMA, found that 5 percent of companies incurred more than $100 million in direct and indirect costs — even more sometimes.

Take Peanut Corporation of America, which in 2009 knowingly shipped out peanut butter contaminated with Salmonella to a multitude of producers. That recall, the largest in U.S. history, has been estimated to have cost $1 billion in production losses and sales for the U.S. producers that used the peanut butter. Thousands were sickened and nine people died. Three of the company’s top officials are now in prison.

In 2006, a deadly E. coli outbreak traced to raw, bagged spinach led to $350 million in economic losses. That outbreak sickened 205 people,102 were hospitalized, and at least 31 people developed hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS), a severe complication of E. coli infection that can lead to kidney failure. Of the victims, five died..

Sometimes a recall happens because there’s been an outbreak of foodborne illness related to the food. But sometimes no illnesses are reported. In those recall scenarios, problems are usually discovered by a company’s internal testing or government investigators conducting routine, random pathogen testing. In either case, the food must be recalled when pathogens are detected.

According to an analysis of the food recalls in the United State and the United Kingdom from 2002 to 2012, only 21 percent of those identified were detected by the company in question, while 68 percent were detected during routine of spot testing by regulatory bodies.

Bottomline, food recalls are an important tool that companies and government regulators use to improve food safety — for the sake of the consumer.

An important tool because, according to a government report on the economic impact of outbreaks on food businesses, an estimated 300,000 hospitalizations and 5,000 deaths annually in the United States are related to food-borne illnesses. The estimated costs of these incidents to the nation’s economy adds up to around $7 billion — costs that come from notifying consumers, removing food from shelves, destroying or relabeling food, and paying damages as a result of lawsuits.

Worse than that, companies’ or farms’ reputations can be so damaged that they have to close their doors, sometimes leading to the end of a multi-generational company and the loss of jobs for their employees. Again, the word “devastating” comes to mind.

According to a Harris Interactive poll, 55 percent of consumers would switch brands temporarily following a recall. About 15 percent would never again buy the recalled product.

One in five of the consumers answering the poll, 21 percent, would go even further and never buy any brand made by the company that produced the recalled product.

Why are foods recalled

According to a report on the cost of product recalls to food businesses, 540 food products were recalled in the United States in 2016 — up about 23 percent from the 437 food recalls in 2015.

In the United Kingdom, 84 food products were recalled in 2016 — up 29 percent from 65 in 2015

In both the United States and the United Kingdom, biological contaminants such as E. coli, Salmonella, Listeria and other bacteria, parasites and toxins were the main cause of recalls — 46 percent in the United States and 44 percent in the United Kingdom.

Other causes were mislabeling, foreign matter contamination, product defects, chemical contamination, hygiene issues and unapproved ingredients.

Illnesses from many pathogens can occur from eating fresh or raw foods such as vegetables and fruits simply because they don’t go through a so-called kill step such as cooking. In cases like this, there can be many causes, including unsanitary food handling practices along the supply chain, the use of contaminated water by a producer, and pest infestations.

Canned, frozen and other processed foods, including basic food ingredients such as flour, can become contaminated with pathogens in original source foods or from contaminated equipment and surfaces on production facilities.

So why do recalls cost so much?

The four direct costs of a recall are assembling a crisis team; tracing and removing the product from the stream of commerce; investigating and addressing the cause; and managing the public relations fallout of the recall.

Take removing the product from the market as an example. Somehow that food has to be removed, stored, transported and then destroyed.

Investigating and addressing the cause behind a recall calls for experts who know how to do that. Again, a lot of money.

Managing the public relations is another expensive, but essential, part of the effort. Press releases need to be sent out. Statements from company officials need to be gathered and shared with the public. And somehow, consumers need to be assured that all necessary steps have been taken to prevent another recall from happening.

Indirect costs can go on long after a recall and are more challenging to measure. These would include loss of reputation and loss of trust in a brand. Worse, sometimes a recall can affect producers whose products weren’t even part of the recall as happened in the spinach recall when consumers avoided spinach of all kinds, leading to lost sales for the fresh spinach industry across the country.

The indirect costs can be more damaging that the direct costs. Litigation, a decline in stock value, fines, sales losses and impact to the industry are all indirect costs. Location Companies, a product recall insurer, estimates that about 80 percent of the total costs are incurred long after a recall has been executed.

The overall goal, of course, is to get the food out of distribution as soon as possible. To do otherwise is to risk ruining the trust consumers have in a product and/or retailers that sell it.

According to the 2017 U.S. Grocery Shopper Trends report, 76 percent of shoppers said they’re more likely to shop at stores that take a proactive approach and are prompt in communicating recalls. In other words, consumers value the ability of stores to quickly take action during a recall.

Why are there more recalls?

The number of recalls continues to rise, according to a survey done by the Grocery Manufacturers Association. A number of factors are involved.

Because of global supply chains, contaminated products can quickly distributed across the nation or even across the globe before the problem is identified.

Inventories are concentrated in the hands of fewer global suppliers who source their foods through complex supply chains. This, in turn,  boosts food safety risks. Compounding the problem is that if one supplier has a problem, it can affect many more retailers and consumers than in the past.

Also, improved technologies and practices are being used to trace problems and detect pathogens. In the not too distant past, testing could only detect pathogens based on parts per million. Current testing can detect pathogens based on parts per billion. For food in the U.S., where there is a zero-tolerance policy for pathogens, that improved testing is resulting in more recalls.

Whole genome sequencing, the process of determining the complete DNA sequence of an organisms’s genome, means there’s no doubt about the specific bacteria or virus strains involved in a contamination incident.

Stricter regulations and enforcement, especially in the United States under the Food Safety Modernization Act, have helped  strengthened regulations, which could lead to even more recalls of contaminated food.

Other countries, meanwhile, have strengthened food safety regulations and enforcement, thus boosting the number of recalls.

What’s going on in the grocery stores?

Some big changes have come to grocery stores in the 21st Century, and it’s all been driven by what consumers want: fresh, organic, natural, and when possible, local food. Oh, and cheap, too. That’s the name of the game. You can see it in how many of these items are now in the stores — and how much advertising money retailers put into them.

 

There’s even talk about Walmart delivering groceries to your house and actually coming into your house to put them in your refrigerator.

Food safety becomes even more complicated with such services. If the store were to pack up the groceries you wanted, many of them fresh and local, the last thing Walmart would want to have happen is to have them sit on your doorstep in the sun until you get home.

 

That’s because a lot of food items, among them fresh cut produce, have to be kept at 41 degrees or cooler. If they aren’t, any bacteria such as E. coli, Listeria and Salmonella that may be on or in the food will multiply — quickly and abundantly.

 

For consumers, that means possible foodborne illnesses, hospitalizations or even death. For retailers, it could trigger recalls.

In other words, all of this fresh food — and the private-label brands, which are made exclusively for a retailer in order to compete with more expensive brand names — call for strict attention to food safety. It’s not like the old days when packaged processed food were the mainstay of a store. For the most part, that just took some clever advertising and creative displays.

 

“Consumers have definitely changed the grocery stores,” said Joe Bermudez of Berrian Insurance Group. “Change brings in new different and unfamiliar risks. Now there are different exposures stores have to think about. Nothing’s static.”

 

What’s also happening is that the stores’ investments in freshly prepared foods and private-label products are growing into important profit centers — in some cases the highest-performing segments in the food retail business, according to the Food Marketing Institute.

 

No surprise then that risk is part of the new profit picture, as it always is when fresh foods are involved. That’s where recall insurance comes into the picture.

 

“It can be the difference between companies going out of business or surviving,” said Bermudez, explaining that product liability insurance and general liability insurance leave gaps in coverage in the case of recalls.

 

Seattle food safety attorney Bill Marler said in his experience, one of the reasons to have recall insurance is that if there is an outbreak, the cost of the illnesses can sometimes pale compared to the cost of a recall.

 

He also pointed out that when a product goes out to multiple places, as usually happens, the stores can charge the offending party the cost of taking the product off the shelves, transporting it, and destroying it.

 

“The entire cost can be really, really expensive,” Marler said.

 

And while almost everyone thinks of insurance as a way to cover an injury, Marler said that if a company has insurance for injury claims but no recall insurance, “the expense of a recall can really tip a company over.”

 

With this harsh reality in mind, the Food Marketing Institute, whose U.S. members operate nearly 40,000 retail food stores, is partnering with RevenueShield to promote an insurance program to protect grocers and supply-chain partners from risks associated with managing retail fresh prepared food initiatives and private brand manufacturing.

 

The institute reports that as these profit centers continue to grow, the risk to a brand and balance sheet has consequently expanded, particularly with regard to product recalls and the potential for food-safety risk.

 

“The expansion into these non-traditional revenue centers has resulted in significant sales growth, customer loyalty, and stronger brand awareness,” said Joel Berrian, co-owner of Berrian Insurance Group. “With that expansion comes additional risk, especially to a retailer’s brand reputation during an outbreak or recall event.”

 

He describes RevenueShield as the first of its kind to address business income loss from this type of risk as the crisis management tool needed to keep customers coming through the doors as well as a number of other factors that protect a company’s revenue stream.

 

Bermudez, who helped develop RevenueShield, said many grocery stores are family owned and are generally doing a great job when it comes to food safety.

 

“But you still can’t stop this with some foods,” he said, referring to foodborne pathogens. “The nature of the beast is that it’s going to sneak through. Human error is our biggest enemy.”

 

It could be something as unnoticeable as a worker coming to work with norovirus or Listeria monocytogenes that comes into a food environment on a fork lift or someone’s boots.

 

“Pathogens don’t care if the food is local or comes from big ag,” he said. “This is change that brings in new and different and unfamiliar risks. It’s different exposures you’ve got to think about. There has to be a comprehensive effort to make sure that the insurance is there, and that includes recall insurance.”

 

Bermudez said he’s seen too many companies suffering economic death inflicted by something that happened in the supply chain.

 

“Retailers need to go through their insurance policies and make sure they’re ready for recalls,” he said.

 

With some recall insurance, a panel of experts arrives like the calvary, rushing in to help. Expenses such as freight and disposal are covered. And many policies pay for lost profits and other economic costs. And there’s also money for marketing “rehabilitations.”

 

“It covers all kinds of exclusions found in general liability policies,” he said.

 

He warns that many CEOs and other top company officials underestimate the potential problem.

 

“You need to go through your insurance policies and make sure you’re ready for a recall,” he said. “I’ve seen recalls, some good and some bad, but even with good recalls,  it can still cost in the millions. It’s going to be a big number; I promise you.”

 

As for the cost of recall insurance, Bermudez said he’s never seen two recalls that are the same. Each company faces its own risks and each company needs to decide on the specific coverage it needs.

 

Recall insurance for fresh produce

Stores have their challenges when it comes to ensuring the food on their shelves is safe, but food producing companies — from seed to store shelves — have plenty of challenges of their own. That’s especially true for fresh produce, which consumers continue to demand in increasing amounts.

Yet, there have been many recalls of fresh produce, ranging from baby spinach leaves to cantaloupe, and from papayas to broccoli.

With this in mind, the United Fresh Produce Association and Western Growers have teamed up to promote Western Growers Shield, which is described as a “first-of-its-kind insurance program specifically designed to protect food companies from recall liability.”

Tom Stenzel, United Fresh President and CEO, described it as a way to bring recall insurance to every segment of the fresh-produce supply chain.

Western Growers represents local and regional family farmers growing fresh produce in Arizona, California, Colorado and New Mexico. Its members and their workers provide half of the nation’s fresh fruits, vegetables and tree nuts, including half of American-grown fresh organic produce.

By teaming up with United Fresh in this endeavor, Western Growers will be able to extend its reach for recall insurance into other states.

Jeff Gullickson, senior vice president of Western Growers Insurance Services, said “Western Growers Shield” is a response to what the growers said they were worried about and what they needed.

Some of those concerns are the physical loss of the product being recalled, the cost of recapturing that loss, the cost of a recall, which includes the interruption of business or the halt of processing the food, and the cost of restoring a brand.

Also of concern was management’s liability, since owners, directors and managers are held to higher accountability.

“Our members said these are some of the things that concern them,” said Gullickson.

With that in mind, Western Growers Shield designed a program that starts off with “pre-event planning.” In other words, what are you doing to get ready for a food-safety recall. This includes a mock recall.

Also important is what companies are doing to self-measure actual practices versus their written policies and guidelines. Businesses have to show in writing what they’re actually doing.

Should there be a contamination event, many managers and owners are unsure how to respond. Do you need a recall? Who notifies whom?

When it comes to recovering after a recall, different questions come up, such as how do yo restore the brand and how do you recover financially? Who talks to the media and what’s your message?

“Judging from their responses, it’s clear they’re looking for input and assistance,” he said. “They want an insurance policy that will help pay for all of this. Our policy connects the dots.”

He also emphasized the importance about being transparent about what happened and what you’re doing.

“You want to tell the people the truth, said Gullickson. “People want to know you’re taking it seriously.”

Being a farmer, packer, manufacturer or shipper involves taking risks every day, Gullickson said, and the new recall insurance program measures the risks involved.

According to Western Growers Shield, the program can help managers and owners:

Understand the true cost of a recall. Recognize which costs are associated with a recall and how to quantify unique exposures.

Manage economic risk. Reduce the exposure to the brand and the balance sheet during a contamination event by preparing, responding and recovering.

Plan for financial recovery. Understand your specific opportunities to recover expenses related to a recall.

How does this benefit consumers?

Gullickson said that consumers definitely benefit from recall insurance. That’s because Western Growers Shield scores a company’s risk.

“We can quantify what risk looks like,” he said. “We can actually score the risk. Those with high scores get the best policies.”

But in the case of applicants with lower scores, Western Growers Shield can help them improve their scores.

What this does, he said, is give members the chance to improve, and that, in turn, benefits consumers. You have to meet qualifications to get the best prices on an ongoing basis.

Gullickson said that cost is variable as each risk is underwritten individually. High limits and deductibles are available.



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Friday, October 20, 2017

Canada recalls caviar, smoked fish for botulism concerns

To view photos of all of the varieties of recalled smoked fish, please click on the image.

The Canadian Food Inspection Agency says a variety of fish products from two grocery stores in the Toronto area are being recalled due to a risk of botulism.

Initially only one product was recalled, “Smoked Lake Trout w/Pepper with Cracked Black Pepper.” One illness has been reported in connection with that product.

The Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) reported the affected products were sold at Yummy Market stores in northern Toronto and Maple, Ontario. Several fish products are implicated, including the store’s brand of smoked herring, lesch, mackerel, rainbow trout, salmon and sturgeon.

The initial recall was issued last week after a consumer complaint and was expanded this week to include additional products based on information gathered during the CFIA investigation. The agency reported there have been no illnesses reported to the products listed in the expanded recall.

The CFIA advises people to throw out the recalled products or return them to the store where they were purchased. For a complete list of the Yummy Markey branded fish products under recall, please click here.

Caviar also recalled for botulism risk
In a separate notice, the Canadian Food Inspection Agency reports International House of Caviar is recalling its brand of rainbow trout caviar because of a risk of botulism.

The company distributed the caviar in Alberta, British Columbia, Manitoba, Ontario and Saskatchewan.

The recalled item is sold in 100-gram jars with a best before the date of Aug. 30, 2018.

The CFIA reported there have been no reported illnesses linked to the caviar.

Food contaminated with Clostridium botulinum toxin may not look or smell spoiled, but can still make you sick. It frequently paralyzes respiratory muscles, so timely medical attention is very important.

Symptoms in adults can include facial paralysis or loss of facial expression, unreactive or fixed pupils, difficulty swallowing, drooping eyelids, blurred or double vision and difficulty speaking.

Symptoms in children can include difficulty swallowing, slurred speech, generalized weakness and paralysis.

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Tuna loins recalled in several states for risk of Salmonella

Relish Foods Inc. of Culver City, CA, is recalling frozen Newport brand tuna loins because a routine, random test by the Food and Drug Administration returned results for Salmonella bacteria.

Relish Foods is working with the FDA on an investigation into what caused the problem, according to the recall notice posted on the agency’s website.

The recalled tuna loins were distributed in Washington, Oregon, Northern California, Nevada, Idaho and Arizona between Aug. 15 and Sept. 25 to food service operations, retail stores and restaurants. Relish distributed the 5- to 8-pound, vacuum-packed, frozen, whole tuna loins in 30-pound Newport branded cases. The cases are labeled with the production lot codes of MTNT 0947C, MTNT 0957B, MTNT 0967A, and MTNT 0977D.

On the retail side, Relish Foods distributed the tuna to retailers including Basha’s, Randall’s Fine Meats, Yokes Fresh Market, CalMart, Raley’s, Concord Produce Market, Bel Air Market, Speedy Market and Nob Hill.

Tuna from the recalled lots will have been displayed at the retailers’ seafood departments where it is likely to have been sold as steak loins or pieces of loins on trays with clear plastic wrap covers. It may also have been sold out of the fresh case and wrapped to-order in “butcher paper.”

Retail locations that received the recalled tuna and may have sold it in unbranded form are:

BASHA’S #71 TUCSON AZ
BASHA’S #66 CAREFREE AZ
BASHA’S #47 FOUNTAIN HILLS AZ
RANDALS FINE MEATS FLAGSTAFF AZ
YOKES FRESH MKT #07 DEER PARK WA
YOKES FRESH MKT #10 MEAD WA
YOKES FRESH MKT #13 KENNEWICK WA
YOKES FRESH MKT #11 SPOKANE WA
YOKES FRESH MKT #05 KELLOGG ID
YOKES FRESH MKT #15 RICHLAND WA
YOKES FRESH MKT #16 LIBERTY LAKE WA
YOKES FRESH MKT #17 POST FALLS ID
YOKES FRESH MKT #20 CHENEY WA
CAL MART CALISTOGA CA
RALEY’S #103 SEAFOOD RENO NV
RALEY’S #106 SEAFOOD RENO NV
RALEY’S #108 SEAFOOD RENO NV
RALEY’S #109 SEAFOOD GARDNERVILLE NV
RALEY’S #110 SEAFOOD SPARKS NV
RALEY’S #113 SEAFOOD INCLINE NV
RALEY’S #114 SEAFOOD CARSON CITY NV
RALEY’S #119 SEAFOOD SO. LAKE TAHOE CA
RALEY’S #127 SEAFOOD SO. LAKE TAHOE CA
RALEY’S #213 SEAFOOD GRASS VALLEY CA
RALEY’S #229 SEAFOOD AUBURN CA
RALEY’S #317 SEAFOOD TRACY CA
RALEY’S #319 SEAFOOD NAPA CA
RALEY’S #331 SEAFOOD FAIRFIELD CA
RALEY’S #332 SEAFOOD FAIRFIELD CA
RALEY’S #343 SEAFOOD BENICIA CA
RALEY’S #410 SEAFOOD FOLSOM CA
RALEY’S #412 SEAFOOD GRANITE BAY CA
RALEY’S #417 SEAFOOD FAIR OAKS CA
RALEY’S #421 SEAFOOD FAIR OAKS CA
RALEY’S #422 SEAFOOD PLACERVILLE CA
RALEY’S #426 SEAFOOD JACKSON CA
RALEY’S #440 SEAFOOD RANCHO CORDOVA CA
CONCORD PRODUCE MRKT CONCORD CA
RALEY’S #338 SEAFOOD OAKDALE CA
RALEY’S #339 SEAFOOD MODESTO CA
RALEY’S #329 SEAFOOD PETALUMA CA
BEL AIR MKT #501 SEAFOOD SACRAMENTO CA
BEL AIR MKT #502 SEAFOOD SACRAMENTO CA
BEL AIR MKT #509 SEAFOOD ROSEVILLE CA
BEL AIR MKT #514 SEAFOOD SACRAMENTO CA
BEL AIR MKT #516 SEAFOOD ELK GROVE CA
BEL AIR MKT #517 SEAFOOD AUBURN CA
BEL AIR MKT #519 SEAFOOD SACRAMENTO CA
BEL AIR MKT #521 SEAFOOD YUBA CITY CA
BEL AIR MKT #522 SEAFOOD GOLD RIVER CA
BEL AIR MKT #524 SEAFOOD FOLSOM CA
BEL AIR MKT #528 SEAFOOD SACRAMENTO CA
SPD MARKET #1 NEVADA CITY CA
NOB HILL #602 SEAFOOD GILROY CA
NOB HILL #603 SEAFOOD MORGAN HILL CA
NOB HILL #605 SEAFOOD HOLLISTER CA
NOB HILL #615 SEAFOOD CAPITOLA CA
NOB HILL #617 SEAFOOD WATSONVILLE CA
NOB HILL #620 SEAFOOD SCOTTS VALLEY CA
NOB HILL #621 SEAFOOD MARTINEZ CA
NOB HILL #623 SEAFOOD NAPA CA
NOB HILL #635 SEAFOOD SAN JOSE CA

Salmonella can cause serious and sometimes fatal infections in young children, frail or elderly people, and others with weakened immune systems. Healthy people infected with Salmonella often experience fever, diarrhea that may be bloody, nausea, vomiting and abdominal pain.

In rare circumstances, infection with Salmonella can result in the organism getting into the bloodstream and producing more severe illnesses such as arterial infections, endocarditis and arthritis.

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BrightFarms recalls packaged salads, herbs for E. coli risk

BrightFarms is voluntarily recalling packaged produce sold in Roundy’s Supermarkets due to the potential presence of E. coli at its greenhouse farm in Rochelle, IL, in Ogle County.

The affected BrightFarms branded products are sold at Mariano’s Markets in Illinois and Metro Market and Pick ‘n Save stores in Wisconsin.

The recall includes the below salad products packaged in clear, plastic clamshells with best by dates located on the label of the package: 10/24/2017, 10/25/2017, 10/26/2017, 10/27/2017 and 10/28/2017.

  • BrightFarms Baby Spinach (4 oz. and 8 oz. package)
  • BrightFarms Spring Mix (4 oz. and 8 oz. package)
  • BrightFarms Spinach Blend (4 oz. package)
  • BrightFarms Baby Greens Blend (4 oz. and 8 oz. package)
  • BrightFarms Baby Kale (3 oz. package)
  • BrightFarms Baby Arugula (4 oz. package)
  • BrightFarms Baby Romaine Mix (4 oz. package)

Basil products, packaged in clear plastic clamshells with best by dates located on the label of the package: 10/20/2017, 10/21/2017, 10/22/2017, 10/23/2017 and 10/24/2017.

  • BrightFarms Basil (.75 oz. and 2 oz. package)
  • BrightFarms Thai Basil (.75 oz. package)
  • BrightFarms Lemon Basil (.75 oz. package)

BrightFarms chose to take this action out of an abundance of caution after receiving routine lab results and discovering that certain product may have been compromised. Affected retailers have been instructed to remove all affected products from store shelves.

The recall is limited to products grown at the company’s Rochelle, IL, farm. BrightFarms products from greenhouses in other regions are not affected.

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Listeria test prompts FSIS recall of Fresh Foods chicken bowls

Fresh Foods Manufacturing Co. of Freedom, PA,  is recalling 701 pounds of heat-treated, not fully cooked, not shelf stable chicken products that may be adulterated with Listeria monocytogenes, the USDA’s Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS) announced today.

The problem was discovered Thursday when Fresh Foods Manufacturing Co. received notification from a supplier that the broccoli used by the company was recalled due to Listeria concerns. Fresh Foods did not indicate who that supplier is, but the recall coincides with a huge recall of freshcut produce by Mann Packing Co. Inc. of Salinas, CA, following a finding of Listeria monocytogenes in one of its products.

The heat-treated, not fully cooked, not shelf stable chicken products were packaged from Oct. 10-16, 2017. The following products are subject to recall:

  • 7-oz. plastic bowl containing “great to Go BY MARKET DISTRICT CHICKEN & VEGETABLE POTSTICKERS,” with a best-by date 10/17/2017 through 10/23/2017, and case code UPC 815712014975.
  • 12-oz. plastic bowl containing “great to Go BY MARKET DISTRICT SESAME CHICKEN RAMEN NOODLES,” with a best-by date 10/17/2017 through 10/23/2017, and case code UPC 815712014937.
  • 12-oz. plastic bowl containing “great to Go BY MARKET DISTRICT CHICKEN & VEGETABLE FRIED RICE,” with a best-by date 10/17/2017 through 10/23/2017, and case code UPC 81571201494.
  • 12-oz. plastic bowl containing “great to Go BY MARKET DISTRICT SPICY THAI-STYLE CHICKEN WITH UDON NOODLES,” with a best-by date 10/17/2017 through 10/23/2017, and case code UPC 815712014951.

The products subject to recall have the establishment number “EST. P-40211” printed inside the USDA mark on their labels. These items were shipped to retail locations in Indiana, Ohio and Pennsylvania.

There have been no confirmed reports of adverse reactions due to consumption of these products.

Consumption of food contaminated with Listeria monocytogenes can cause listeriosis, a serious infection that primarily affects older adults, persons with weakened immune systems, and pregnant women and their newborns.

Listeriosis can cause fever, muscle aches, headache, stiff neck, confusion, loss of balance and convulsions sometimes preceded by diarrhea or other gastrointestinal symptoms. An invasive infection spreads beyond the gastrointestinal tract. In pregnant women, the infection can cause miscarriages, stillbirths, premature delivery or life-threatening infection of the newborn.

In addition, serious and sometimes fatal infections in older adults and persons with weakened immune systems. Listeriosis is treated with antibiotics. People in the higher-risk categories who experience flu-like symptoms within two months after eating contaminated food should seek medical care and tell the health care provider about eating the contaminated food.

Consumers who have purchased these products are urged not to consume them.

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Tuesday, October 17, 2017

Roundy’s recalls 8 tons of chili, soup products for plastic bits

The Wisconsin-based Roundy’s Supermarkets Inc. is recalling 16,320 pounds of chili and soup after an employee found plastic materials in a bag of soup, according to a notice posted today by the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Food Safety and Inspection Service.

The ready-to-eat chili and soup items were produced and packaged on Oct.3 and have a “Sell by” date of Dec. 2. The products subject to the recall and identifying codes on the packages are:

  • 24-lb. boxes containing six 4-lb. bags of “Meat and Bean Soup in Tomato Base” with lot code 354191-2767.
  • 24-lb. boxes containing six 4-lb. bags of “Santa Fe Style Turkey and White Chicken Chili with Beans” with lot code 354464-2767.

The recalled products have the establishment number “EST. 33997” or “P-33997” printed inside the USDA mark of inspection. These items were shipped to retail locations in Illinois and Wisconsin. The products are sold to retail stores to be prepared for sale to consumers in the soup bar area.

The problem was discovered Monday when a member of Roundy’s food safety staff notified management that plastic foreign material had been discovered in a bag of “Meat and Bean Soup in Tomato Base.” The FSIS was notified today. The firm decided to recall all soups produced on Oct. 3.

There have been no confirmed reports of adverse reactions due to consumption of these products. Anyone concerned about an injury or illness should contact a healthcare provider.

Retailers and consumers who have purchased these products are urged not to sell or consume them. It is against federal law for anyone to sell recalled food. These products should be thrown away or returned to the place of purchase.

FSIS routinely conducts recall effectiveness checks to verify recalling firms notify their customers of the recall and that steps are taken to make certain that the product is no longer available to consumers. When available, the retail distribution list(s) will be posted on the FSIS website.

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Friday, October 13, 2017

Ground beef recalled because of E. coli O157:H7 illnesses

  State and federal officials have traced two E. coli O157:H7 to ground beef from Vermont Livestock Slaughter and Processing LLC. The company recalled 133 pounds of their ground beef today after a sample tested positive for the bacteria, according to USDA’s Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS).

The ground beef was produced and packaged on July 24 and 25. The company sold the recalled product at Bread & Butter farm in Shelburne, VT, according to the FSIS recall notice.

Subject to recall are:

  • 1-pound vacuum sealed packages of “Bread & Butter Farm Ground Beef””, lot code #072517BNB
  • 1-pound vacuum sealed packages of “Bread & Butter Farm Ground Beef”, lot code #072417BNB

The recalled products have the establishment number “EST. 9558” printed inside the USDA mark of inspection.

The problem was discovered Sept. 30 when the firm notified FSIS of an investigation of  E. coli O157:H7 illnesses.

“Vermont Department of Health and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, FSIS determined the cooked beef burgers that were served at an event at Bread & Butter Farm was the probable source of the reported illnesses.”

According to the recall notice, “two case-patients were identified in Vermont with illness onset dates ranging from September 18, 2017, to September 23, 2017.” Furthermore, “Traceback information indicated that both case-patients consumed ground beef products at Bread & Butter Farm which was supplied by Vermont Livestock Slaughter & Processing.”

E. coli O157: H7 is a potentially deadly bacterium that can cause dehydration, bloody diarrhea and abdominal cramps that usually begin two to eight days after exposure to the organism. While most people recover within a week, some develop a type of kidney failure called hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS).

This condition can occur among people of any age, but is most common in children younger than 5, older adults, pregnant women and people with suppressed immune systems. HUS is marked by easy bruising, pallor, and decreased urine output. People who experience these symptoms should seek emergency medical care immediately.

FSIS and the company are concerned that some product may be frozen and in customers’ freezers. Customers who purchased the Vermont Livestock Slaughter and Processing ground beef are urged not to consume it. The meat should be thrown away or returned to the place of purchase.

FSIS routinely conducts recall effectiveness checks to verify recalling firms notify their customers of the recall and that steps are taken to make certain that the product is no longer available to consumers.



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Friday, October 6, 2017

State closes raw milk dairy; Salmonella matched to sick people

State officials suspended the license of Pride & Joy Dairy today and again warned the public to not drink any of the dairy’s organic, unpasteurized, raw milk because lab tests have confirmed it is contaminated with a rare strain of Salmonella that hospitalized two people.

Until further notice, the dairy “may not legally bottle and sell raw milk on the retail market,” according to the Washington State Department of Agriculture, which suspended the Pride & Joy license late this afternoon.

“Health officials are urging consumers not to drink Pride & Joy Dairy organic raw milk in any container size or sell-by date,” according to the Washington Department of Health.

The dairy owners have until Oct. 16 to appeal the suspension. The state also issued a Notice of Correction to Pride and Joy on yesterday because of the presence of pathogens in their milk.

“The milk processing plant, based in Toppenish, still has milk producer licenses, allowing it to ship milk to other processing facilities for pasteurization,” the ag department (WSDA) reported.

“WSDA took the step of suspending the milk processing plant license for Pride and Joy after tests by the state Department of Health confirmed that the Salmonella pathogens detected in the milk samples matched the unique strain, Salmonella Dublin, identified in illnesses that hospitalized two people this past January.

“In September, WSDA’s laboratory detected the Salmonella pathogen in samples from the dairy taken as part of the routine testing of all licensed raw milk dairy operations. Isolates from those samples were submitted to Department of Health for further testing, resulting in the confirmed linkage to the earlier salmonella illnesses.”

Several images of the Pride & Joy production facility, including this one, are posted on the company’s Facebook page.

Dairy owners believe they are targets
The owners of Pride & Joy Puget Sound LLC were uncharacteristically quiet this evening after the Washington agriculture and health departments posted the new information. The owners, Allen Voortman, Cheryl Voortman, Ricky Umipig and Cindy Umipig, did not immediately respond to requests for comment today.

Since February the dairy operators have been denying that there are any food safety issues with raw milk in general or their operation specifically. They have posted statements on their company’s website and Facebook page saying they are being unfairly targeted by state officials, suggesting big dairy if orchestrating actions by state officials across the country to kill the raw milk movement.

Eight days ago, on Sept. 28, the Voortmans and Umipigs refused a request from the Washington State Department of Agriculture to recall a batch of their raw milk that was found to be contaminated with Salmonella bacteria during routine testing by the state. All dairies in the state are subject to such testing.

The Pride & Joy owners said no one had reported becoming ill and that the contamination could have occurred after the milk left their control — suggesting retailers, consumers, state inspectors and laboratory employees could have contaminated the unpasteurized milk.

Seven days ago, on Sept. 29, the dairy owners quietly asked retailers to pull the milk and posted a note on the company’s Facebook page telling consumers they could return the milk for a full refund. That batch of milk was produced on Sept. 13, bottled in various sized containers, stamped with a use-by date of Oct. 4, and distributed to retailers and drop-off points across the state of Washington.

Months of health concerns
Washington state officials began investigating possible contamination of the unpasteurized, organic milk being produced by Pride & Joy in January when two people with lab-confirmed Salmonella infections reported having consumed raw milk from the dairy before becoming ill.

Several images of the Pride & Joy production facility, including this one, are posted on the company’s Facebook page.

When state inspectors collected samples of the dairy’s raw milk at that time, they didn’t return positive results for Salmonella, but they were contaminated with E. coli. The dairy owners recalled some of their raw milk, temporarily ceased sales, and worked with the state to clean and sanitize their operation.

At that time, Washington officials reminded the public that although unpasteurized milk can be sold at farm stands, drop off sites and retail stores in the state, it is considered a health hazard and is not recommended for young children, the elderly, pregnant women or people with suppressed immune systems.

The danger comes from the fact that the milk is not pasteurized, which allows bacteria and parasites that are often present in raw milk to survive and infect people. Washington state law requires raw dairy to carry warning labels to that effect.

With the confirmation today that the Salmonella found in the Pride & Joy raw milk in September matches the bacteria that infected people in January, state officials renewed their warnings.

“Unpasteurized ‘raw’ milk can carry harmful bacteria and germs. Foodborne illnesses are possible from many different foods; however, raw milk is one of the riskiest,” said Dr. Scott Lindquist, Washington state communicable disease epidemiologist.

The state health officials referenced information from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to back up their warnings. According to the CDC, states that allow the sale of raw milk have more raw milk-related illness outbreaks than states that prohibit raw milk sales. Federal law prohibits the sale of unpasteurized milk across state lines.

Anyone who has consumed Pride & Joy organic, raw milk and developed symptoms of Salmonella infection should immediately seek medical attention and tell their doctors about the possible exposure to the bacteria. Symptoms usually begin within hours, but can take up to two weeks to develop in some people.

Symptoms can include fever, diarrhea, nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain and, in some cases, arterial infections, endocarditis and arthritis.



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Tuesday, October 3, 2017

H-E-B Meat recalls 1,150 pounds of diced chicken thighs

San Antonio’s H-E-B Meat Plant recalled 1,150 pounds of diced chicken thighs on Tuesday because of misbranding and undeclared allergens, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS).

The product contains wheat, a known allergen that is not declared on the product label.  The raw, diced chicken thighs were produced on Sept. 22. Consumers can identify the recalled chicken by looking for the following label information:

  • 1.75-lb. (approximate catch weight per package) plastic shrink-wrapped packages of “MI TIENDA PARA TACOS DE POLLO CASERO SEASONED DICED SKINLESS CHICKEN THIGHS” with a freeze by -/- sell by date of Oct. 12, 2017.

The product subject to recall has the establishment number “P-7231” printed inside the USDA mark of inspection. The product was shipped to retail locations in Texas.

The mistake was discovered on Oct. 2, when a consumer noticed an incorrect label and notified the company, which then notified FSIS.

There have been no confirmed reports of adverse reactions due to consumption of these products. Anyone concerned about an injury or illness should contact a healthcare provider.  Consumers who have purchased these products are urged not to consume them. These products should be thrown away or returned to the place of purchase.

FSIS routinely conducts recall effectiveness checks to verify recalling firms notify their customers of the recall and that steps are taken to make certain that the product is no longer available to consumers.

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Monday, October 2, 2017

Dairy pulls raw milk from stores; one retailer stops carrying it

Several images of the Pride & Joy production facility, including this one, are posted on the company’s Facebook page.

An organic raw milk dairy quietly pulled its unpasteurized milk from Washington state retailers Friday, one day after refusing a request from state officials who wanted the milk recalled because lab tests had confirmed Salmonella contamination.

The owners of Pride & Joy Puget Sound LLC posted a short statement about their decision to remove their raw milk from stores on the company’s Facebook page on Friday. That afternoon they again turned to social media to announce the news that a retailer in Vancouver, WA, is no longer carrying Pride & Joy milk.

The dairy’s Facebook post regarding what state officials refer to as a “market withdrawal” said, in its entirety:

“Out of an abundance of caution we have talked to all of our stores and asked them to pull any milk dated October 4th for a full credit. We will be continuing to investigate the situation. We stand behind our products and will offer a full refund to anyone who would like for their October 4th milk. We will be continuing our production as normal.”

As of Monday night, the Pride & Joy corporate website did not have any information about the product withdrawal or the news that Chuck’s Produce stores in Vancouver are no longer carrying dairy’s milk. A spokesman at Chuck’s Produce declined to discuss the situation.

None of the dairy owners — Allen Voortman, Cheryl Voortman, Ricky Umipig and Cindy Umipig — responded Monday to requests for comment.

State continues investigation
The dairy owners did not notify the Washington State Department of Agriculture (WSDA) of their move to pull product from retailers and offer consumers refunds, according to a spokesman for the department.

The department issued a warning Thursday, Sept. 28, advising people to not consume Pride & Joy organic raw milk. The state officials recommended that any unused milk in consumers’ homes should be thrown out. They also urged anyone who has consumed unpasteurized, raw milk from the Toppenish, WA, dairy and developed symptoms of Salmonella infection to immediately seek medical attention.

The agriculture department doubled down on its warning Monday as investigators continued their work.

“We are concerned that production and distribution is continuing, which is why we continue to advise consumers to avoid consuming Pride & Joy dairy organic retail raw milk,” a WSDA spokesman told Food Safety News Monday afternoon.

“Today, WSDA obtained additional samples of Pride & Joy Creamery product for testing.”

Initial results from those tests won’t be available for several days. If they come back positive for pathogens, confirmation testing will take several more days.

Pride & Joy produced the implicated batch of organic raw milk on Sept. 13 and marked it with what the dairy owners referred to as a “pull date” of Oct. 4.  It can take from several hours to two weeks for symptoms of Salmonella infection to develop, so health officials say it is possible that people who recently drank the unpasteurized milk may not yet have become sick.

Symptoms can include fever, diarrhea that is often bloody, nausea, vomiting and abdominal pain. In rare circumstances, infection with salmonella can result in the organism getting into the bloodstream and producing more severe illnesses such as arterial infections, endocarditis and arthritis, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

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Aldi, Publix, Weis ground turkey recalled after metal bits found

St. Pauls, NC-based Prestage Foods Inc. Monday recalled 38,475 pounds of ground turkey after a retailer found extraneous metal in the product, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS).

The problem was discovered on Sept. 27 when FSIS was contacted by plant employees who were sanitizing processing equipment. On the same day, one of the retail locations that received some of the products noticed “metal shaving” in a package of ground turkey from the recalling firm and notified the company, according to the recall notice on the FSIS website.

Prestage Foods shipped the ground turkey to retail distribution centers in Alabama, Connecticut, Florida, Georgia, New York, North Carolina, South Carolina, Pennsylvania and Tennessee. The recall notice did not indicate whether those distribution centers sent the recalled product to other states.

There have been no confirmed reports of adverse reactions due to consumption of these products. Anyone concerned about an injury or illness should contact a healthcare provider.

“Consumers who have purchased these products are urged not to consume them. These products should be thrown away or returned to the place of purchase,” according to the recall notice.

Publix and Weis Markets branded ground turkey, as well as Aldi’s house brand of Fit & Active ground turkey, are included in the recall. The fresh ground turkey was produced on Sept. 25 and 26.

Consumers can identify the recalled ground turkey by looking for the following label information:

  • 1.3-lb. White Styrofoam trays with clear plastic film covering packages containing ground turkey labeled “Publix ground turkey breast WITH NATURAL FLAVORINGS” with inkjet printing on the side of trays displaying the first 4 digits of 7268 and 7269.
  • 1.3-lb. White Styrofoam trays with clear plastic film covering packages containing ground turkey labeled “Publix ground turkey WITH NATURAL FLAVORINGS” with inkjet labeling on the side of trays displaying the first 4 digits of 7268 and 7269.
  • 1.2-lb. White Styrofoam trays with clear plastic film covering packages containing ground turkey labeled “Fit & Active Fresh Ground Turkey With Natural Flavoring” with inkjet labeling on the side of trays displaying the first 4 digits of 7268 and 7269.
  • 1.0-lb. White Styrofoam trays with clear plastic film covering packages containing ground turkey labeled “Weis Markets Fresh Ground Turkey Breast” with inkjet labeling on the side of trays displaying the first 4 digits of 7268 and 7269.

All of the products subject to recall also have the establishment number “P-22000” printed inside the USDA mark of inspection.

FSIS routinely conducts recall effectiveness checks to verify recalling firms notify their customers of the recall and that steps are taken to make certain that the product is no longer available to consumers. When available, the retail distribution list(s) will be posted on the FSIS website.

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