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USA: OTA applauds passage of Food Safety reform

by Redaktion (comments: 0)

The Organic Trade Association has applauded Congress for finally passing the FDA (Food and Drug Administration) Food Safety Modernization Act that will help tighten food safety oversight while also including provisions to protect organic farmers and producers from costly duplicative requirements. “As an early supporter of food safety reform, OTA is pleased that this critically needed legislation will provide greater consumer protection from food-borne illness, and is crafted to protect organic producers from duplicative trace-back and record-keeping systems, or any requirements that would violate National Organic Standards,” said Christine Bushway, OTA’s Executive Director and CEO.

The legislation, originally passed 30 November 2010 by the Senate, first cleared the House of Representatives as an addition to its Continuing Resolution for funding the federal government without a new appropriations bill in place. When Senators were unable to pass an identical bill, they subsequently approved food safety by unanimous consent as a stand-alone measure on 19 December 2011. The stand-alone bill, which has now cleared the House, maintains language which OTA had sought that prevents regulations forcing certified organic operations to duplicate or conflict with requirements set by the Organic Food Production Act.

Specifically, the legislation prevents any regulations that would force organic operations to use prohibited materials or practices, such as irradiation, as identified by the National Organic Program. The legislation also includes resources and guidance for technical assistance to be provided through the states and local governments for operations that will be subject to the new law - provisions which OTA had also supported. In addition, it includes language offered by Senator Sherrod Brown of Ohio to amend the traceability and record-keeping section of the bill to allow for food directly marketed from farmers to consumers or to grocery stores and food labeled with the identity of the farm which produced it. That amendment also prevents the US Food and Drug Administration from requiring any farm to keep records beyond the first point of sale when the product leaves the farm, except when farms co-mingle product from multiple farms. Fully supporting an improved food safety system, OTA is especially pleased that members of Congress recognized that steps taken by organic producers align with the goals of food safety reform, including business registration, record keeping and audits, and inspection requirements.
 

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