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Cattle Abuse, Beef Recall Highlight Systemic Weaknesses
On Sunday, the U.S. Department of Agriculture recalled 143 million pounds of frozen beef from Hallmark/Westland Meat Co. in California - the largest beef recall in U.S. history. The recall comes three weeks after the Humane Society posted a graphic video of cattle abuse at the plant, a supplier to more than 100,000 school lunch and child care programs in 36 states, including 700 schools in Minnesota.
The abuse, including beating and shocking animals with electric prods, violated U.S. Department of Agriculture rules, and the agency initially informed state Departments of Education to put a "hold" on using Westland meat. Minnesota Education Commission Alice Seagren informed school districts where Westland ground beef had been shipped, "so that they can take appropriate action."
Unfortunately, the recall affects beef products dating back to February 2006, and most have already been consumed. Thus far, there has been no official explanation for hundreds of anxious Minnesota parents who called to ask why eating such beef might make their children ill. The USDA is now investigating to determine whether Westland meat is contaminated by pathogens, including salmonella, E. coli 0157:H7 and BSE (mad cow), that occur more frequently in animals unable to walk.
According to the Washington Post's Rick Weiss, the workers had been abusing animals to force them to stand for the brief time that USDA inspectors were in the plant to certify them as "healthy" for slaughter.
The Westland incident, unfortunately, is emblematic of a meat food safety system cracking at its foundation. In 2007, more than 30 million pounds of ground beef were pulled off the market in 20 recalls because of possible E. coli contamination. As the industry has consolidated, larger plants process more cows than ever before. In the case of ground beef, one sick cow can contaminate thousands of pounds of hamburger. Older dairy cattle, more prone to disease, are often used for ground beef. And as we've seen in the Westland case, a contamination in a single plant can affect consumers all over the country.
While contamination outbreaks have increased, our food safety inspection system has declined. The Humane Society's six-week undercover investigation, not USDA inspectors, detected rule violations that would have prohibited the cattle's slaughter for food consumption. Instead of thanking the Humane Society, brand-new USDA Secretary Ed Schafer scolded the group for not contacting the USDA as soon as the "alleged violations" were discovered, apparently unaware of the USDA's history of disciplining government inspector whistleblowers and the lack of whistleblower protection for slaughterhouse employees.
Many animal-health and food-safety system weaknesses have been documented over the past decade. In a nutshell, the current system has not invested in an adequate number of inspectors and has not equipped those inspectors with state-of-the art technology. But perhaps most importantly, the USDA relies on the meat and poultry processors, instead of federal officials, to control the sampling of meat products to detect contamination.
To remedy these systemic vulnerabilities, the USDA wants to implement a "risk-based" system, where the agency sends inspectors to plants where management believes contamination is most likely to occur and reduces inspections elsewhere. But for this approach to have any chance of success, the USDA needs not only more inspectors and better technology, but more knowledge of possible risks only by reasserting federal control over the food safety system. In December 2007, the Office of the Inspector General reported that the USDA's Food Safety Inspection Service had neither sufficient data nor enough food safety assessments of slaughterhouses and meat processors to implement a risk-based inspection program.
Weaknesses in the USDA food inspection system are not limited to the United States. President Bush's Interagency Working Group "Action Plan for Import Safety" wants to apply the current system to foreign firms whose food products would be certified as safe for export to the U.S. According to the president's July 18 mandate to the Working Group, U.S. oversight of foreign "risk-based" inspection must be done "within existing resources," both human and monetary.
The Government Accountability Office, the OIG and nongovernmental organizations have documented how a food safety system hobbled by not enough inspectors, inadequate detection technology, ineffective enforcement, and de facto industry control over sampling of food products for contamination have dangerously weakened federal food safety oversight. The U.S. government and food industry should heed recommendations in these reports to redesign the system and enforce its rules.
Minnesota parents shouldn't have to worry about the meat their children are eating in school. The horrors revealed in the Humane Society video and the anxiety of the parents of Minnesota's school children must not become widespread and recurrent features of our food supply system.
Steve Suppan is a policy analyst at the Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy, a Minneapolis-based organization that promotes "resilient family farms, rural communities an ecosystems." His e-mail address is ssuppan@iatp.org.
© 2008 The Pioneer Press



36 Comments so far
Show AllAnother example of the invisible hand of the free market at work. Of course when caught get rid of the workers, management had no idea any of this was going on, just like those rogue soldiers at Abu Graib.
Now let's put it country simple. If you were a cow would you just simply walk into the slaughter house or would you resist? From what I saw on those tapes, those cows were resisting and had to be dragged in.
Propping up sick things prior to slaughter is hardly unique to the US meat industry. In fact, US meat production isn't unique to its meat industry.
I think this is a very sad case, but it would be even worse if the meat were to be wasted, for no good reason, when there are millions starving in the World.
When your republic becomes a feudal state, then the king resorts to the historically tried and true method of slaying the messenger of bad news. In modern parlance that means silencing, punishing or otherwise getting rid of all whistleblowers. Then no viable force exists to reveal the truth, and those with the agenda of "necessary deceptions" are free to prosper.
It would be so much easier if they could convince the cattle that they were just going in for showers.
Cattle know they are going to slaughter.
Only humans are stupid enough to be tricked(or to go willingly).
Yes--all that wasted meat with millions starving.
Answer: vegetarianism.
Water would be saved
global warming hindered
deforestation stalled
wildlife slaughter curbed
grain and soybeans spared
But the activities in slaughterhouses are normal. Meat eaters just want to make excuses and claim that its abnormal instead of doing the right thing.
Peta once said that meat eating is child abuse--because it forces children to eat an unhealthy diet and to be part of a killing society whether they want to or not. They really arent given a choice.
How convenient to recall millions of pounds of beef already been sold and eaten. Like they're doing the job. What a joke. The horror of the slaughterhouse will continue, nothing, absolutely nothing will change, because that's the way Amerika does business, and the business of Amerika is unadulterated greed.
"Minnesota parents shouldn't have to worry about the meat their children are eating in school."
I beg to differ. People who feed that vile shit to their children should very rightly have to worry about the diseases and nightmares that come with it. Of course the videos weren't showing us the prettiest part of the slaughterhouse. To my thinking no amount of inspectors is sufficient to justify the industries cooked up by our questionable race - the ground flesh industry, the blowing people to smithereens industry, the keeping people in cages industry or the using animals for target practice industry. If we can't stop acting like devils we should stop having babies.
deal with it people...or go vegetarian....
that is how MOST meat is produced....
vegetarianism could change the world....
Eric Schlosser's "Fast Food Nation" plainly laid out all of these abuses--and the carefully orchestrated cronyism between the USDA and the meat packing industry (such as Tyson). What a joke the USDA is: absolutely NO enforcement of meat packing standards, done on purpose. Like it's a surprise that the meat packing industry bankrolls neo-cons like Bush? Please. It's just more of the same, as with banks and the defense sector. If liberals or progressives ever want to compete politically in the USA with the republicans they've got to pony up and bankroll the politicians running for office like the meat packing industry does. Otherwise, forget it. Why would a republican politician ever listen to some idealistic liberal's preaching about meat quality standards when Tyson donated thousands to his election fund? End of story.
In the same way that we can tour a winery, or the local brewery, or chocolate factory, or a cereal producer, we ought to be able to tour the local slaughterhouse. Open up the doors and let the public see the way millions of animals are "slaughtered" (oh so that's why they call it a slaughterhouse). At the end of the tour they could hand you a fresh sample of the bloody muscle of the animal you saw earlier being dragged to it's death, it might even still be warm.
Pungent and delicious irony, rebelnow! Yes, words do sway people and yours are powerful. The case for vegetarianism gets stronger with every such outrage. Maybe some day we can have the first black, woman... – no: VEGAN president. Ah yes, we might have had one, but he was cut to pieces in the capitalist slaughterhouse. His name was Dennis Kucinich.
Bigger Profits, Obscene Greed, and Corruption over-ride health and legal considerations. Something is seriously and criminally wrong when the USDA orders a massive recall of meat, long after it has disappeared. .Then states not to worry it is already gone...too late.
Where were the USDA Inspectors and who are the USDA managers, and Regional Directors who looked the other way???
There should be some serious JAIL TIME for dozens of these greedy criminals, both the Civil Service Officials, as well as, the Owners and Managers of these Meat Packing Corporations.........
A strong message must be sent...the health and welfare of the American People is of paramount legal and moral concern to the United States Government!!!!!!!!!!!!
The meat industry, dairy industry, oil industry, tobacco industry, pharmaceutical industry, gun industry, energy industry ....all are big contributors to our "elected" government...does it surprise anyone that their advertising agencies that bring us "our representatives" have been in our schools...supplying big colorful posters,audio/video tools to indoctrinate the very young into a consumer-robot life style?...we think we have been making the choices all of our lives...but in reality our belief systems have been programed from an early age....all of our beliefs...so that we blindly trust in a system that serves the rich only.
Yes, as children we do have tender hearts...most of us don't equate that beautiful calf we just connected with on our farm field trip is related to the burger Mom has fixed us for lunch...we are innocent and loving...but then something happens to harden those little hearts...I have witnessed 4H kids at county fairs with tears streaming down their faces after their steers/pigs/lambs have been bought to be slaughtered...I have seen the glazed look in the eyes of students who have been programed by our "factory" school system.
When did it happen to you?
My first response when I read this kind of thing is, "It's simple: become a vegetarian."
Now I'm thinking that's not good enough, and it should be, "Become a vegetarian and then do your best to convince as many of your friends, relatives and neighbors to do the same."
It makes sense, really. Meat isn't physically addictive, like nicotine or alcohol or heroin, so giving it up is simply a matter of choice, which is much easier than fighting off an addiction. Not eating meat won't make us sick (but eating meat might). Not eating meat is cheaper than eating meat. Not eating meat will help fight global warming. And it's NOT our responsibility to support the meat industry.
We could, of course, opt for a middle ground, which would be to only eat meat produced by small farmers who we know treat their animals humanely and don't fill them full of growth hormones or antibiotics, but that's much more difficult than is simply not eating meat.
Is there a way to say thank you to the Human Society members? Because of them we know about this horror that not only can hurt us, but it also shows us the extreme cruelty of the society in where we are living today.
If we continue to eat meat, we are as bad as the workers and owners of that plant, and the worst part is that this is just one of them, they are thousands just like this one all over the world. Please let's try not to eat meat any more!!!!
Well, I've been a vegetarian for the past 13 years or so -- so I'm not particularly concerned directly.
The crux of the problem isn't bad inspection practices OR bad butchery (though these problems are clearly quite serious). The real, underlying, problem is that the economy of scale our agri-giants and meat-giants have BOTH reached is dangerous. It puts tremendous amounts of food through very narrow pipelines.
We've seen this sort of problem recently with the spinach recall also. So even though I'm a vegetarian, I remain concerned about the ueber-centralization of our food supply at-large. I believe this to be a strong argument in favor of buying at local farmer's markets, CSA's, co-ops, direct from a family grower's food stand if you live near rural areas, etc. The narrow HIGH volume industrial pipelines (conveyor belts, machinery, etc.) rarely seem to produce small problems. As with automobiles, recalls are never just a few units. It's regularly 6 figures or thereabouts.
I don't eat meat but I do eat fish. Sometimes my body needs that protein. I think of our ancestors, the hunter/gatherer idea. In all probability they ate fruits or grains or nuts and occasionally slayed an animal that was shared by a group. There is no historical precedent for the AMOUNT of meat being devoured by Americans today and look at the result?! A totally obese nation, 30 million on anti-depressants, at least 10 million alcoholics, etc. Occasional meat might make some sense, but plenty of AMericans do meat at EVERY meal. Eggs/bacon in the AM, some kind of breaded beef sandwich for lunch, and add it on yet again for dinner. This is pretty insane for nature, global warming and their own health. In UK I read they give cheaper Life Insurance rates to vegetarians because the analogy between life expectancy/heart disease lessened and vegetarianism are positively linked.
I correct my earlier post here -- I see the article did make the point that contamination at a single plant can affect the entire country. (But this point, I believe, affects both the meat and fruit/vegetable supply.)
The article was right on target.
"....food safety system hobbled by not enough inspectors, inadequate detection technology, ineffective enforcement, and de facto industry control over sampling of food products for contamination have dangerously weakened federal food safety oversight. The U.S. government and food industry should heed recommendations in these reports to redesign the system and enforce its rules."
You can say the same or similar about consumer products, drugs, financial, environmental, health, etc, issues.
But vegetarians rejoice on their "wise" lifestyle choice and attack the meat eaters choice to eat meat. They should know, and some do, that they have problems with milk (antibiotics, hormones, pus), GMO foods, animal-including cow manure (raw and composted)as fertilizer which have E-Coli 0157 and salmonella which can survive the composting process and contaminate vegetables with antibiotics as well, irradiated foods, contaminated water supplies- fluoridation and chlorination that causes cancer causing THM's, aspartame in diet sodas and artificial sweeteners, etc.
Like so much of everything today, the regulators are the foxes guarding the henhouse. In other words, the regulatory system controlled by your government is so corrupted as to be non-existent at best, and at worst is in collusion with industry and neo-malthusians to sanction unsafe product with minimal risk and maximal profit with the added benefit of reduced population.
Vegetarians are as much at risk as meat eaters in what they eat and drink. Both have a common enemy, and yet fall for the same divide and rule tactic used in so many other areas of life, and so fight each other, instead of focusing on the real problem, which this article has clearly stated.
The bottom line is, I don't want to be complicit in causing another creature terror and pain.
It's worse than just inspectrion. Nature itself promotes diversity, decentralization, etc. The damned actuaries have piped our food supply through such narrow channels that recalls (waste), by definition, must be large-scale. Peak scale.
meat is abused, painfully slaughtered animals that are really just emotionless dollar signs to the companies that own and murder them.
Be vegitarian - save hundreds of animals fom a painful life and even worse death
Be omnivorous/carnivorous - condemn hundreds of animals to suffer excessivly for the purpose of your taste buds
You choose but your victims dont
I grew up on a ranch surrounded by ranches, dairies, orchards and vineyards. I have friends whose livelihoods still depend on cows and cattle. There is no similarity between our family-owned facilities and those of the investment groups that now control our food supply. Menu Foods Investment Fund poisoned our pets last year. The "Westland" of Hallmark/Westland Meat Packing is an investment group. On the ranch, we humanely put down our sick animals. Eating a sick animal is medieval, filthy. Torturing a downed animal is not only cruel but is an insult to the Creator. Our names and our reputations were attached to our animals. They were more than just bags of money on 4 hooves. They represented us. We all took pride in producing the "best" whether it was poultry, cattle, sheep or peaches.
In an era when it mattered, people paid attention to where their food came from and they demanded the best not just the cheapest. So, some of the blame rests on the shoulders of today's busy consumers who think they can get the best while paying the least, who make others responsible for keeping food safe but who resist paying for a system that will actually do the job, who don't take the time to think about where their food comes from until it begins killing them.
Ranchers and farmers are some of most rigidly ethical people you'll ever meet. Don't confuse them with the arrogant, distant, suit-wearing slimeballs who value money more than their obligations to the public, to their employees or to the livestock.
I get so sick of vegetarians preaching to the rest of us to "become vegetarian", blah blah blah. Please, spare us the self righteous finger-wagging. I can see why so many folks don't like liberals: we are always preaching to everybody else how to be! Yuk.
A couple of things come to mind. #1) For lack of a more serious federal budget for inspectors, the nation now sees enormous waste of meat. Pennypinching, then pound foolish. What an example of stupidity in front of our children and the whole world.
#2) This episode probably half negates all the promotion money spent by the beef industry on the "Beef, it's what's for dinner" campaign. Some of us will definitely eat less of it, remembering those secret videos more than remembering industry ads.
Zamboni_fahrer,
Re: Tell others how to behave. You a point there.
However, my point about narrow food channels and massive industrial/centralization of our food supply remains. This isn't merely about what others are free to do. This is a problem (like sub-prime) that has an aggregate/social dimension to it, and it affects both meat and produce. Recalls are large-scale, we're forced to throw away huge amounts of food. In addition to potential large-scale illnesses, there is large-scale waste.
None of this should surprise anyone. They just didn't want to let those downed cows stay down. Imagine being taken out of pallative care and people using shock and pain to get you to walk to work. The video (on your right) is - er - says it all:
Government issues biggest beef recall in U.S. history
The U.S. Department of Agriculture on Sunday recalled 64.4 million kilograms of frozen beef from a California slaughterhouse, the subject of an animal-abuse investigation, which provided meat to school lunch programs.
Officials said it was the largest beef recall in the United States, surpassing a 1999 ban of 15.8 million kilograms of ready-to-eat meats. No illnesses have been linked to the newly recalled meat, and officials said the health threat was likely small.
The recall will affect beef products dating to Feb. 1, 2006, that came from Chino-based Westland/Hallmark Meat Co., the federal agency said. ...
Advocacy groups also weighed in, noting the problems at Westland wouldn't have been revealed had it not been for animal right activists.
"On the one hand, I'm glad that the recall is taking place. On the other, it's somewhat disturbing, given that obviously much of this food has already been eaten," said Jean Halloran, director of food policy initiatives at Consumers Union. "It's really closing the barn door after the cows left."
http://www.cbc.ca/health/story/2008/02/17/us-beefrecall.html
California slaughterhouse at centre of recall
LOS ANGELES -- An undercover video showing crippled and sick animals being shoved with forklifts has led to the largest beef recall in the United States and a scramble to find out if any of the meat is still destined for school children's lunches. ...
Federal officials suspended operations at Westland/Hallmark after an undercover video from the Humane Society of the United States surfaced showing crippled and sick animals being shoved with forklifts.
Two former employees were charged Friday. Five felony counts of animal cruelty and three misdemeanors were filed against a pen manager. Three misdemeanor counts -- illegal movement of a non-ambulatory animal -- were filed against an employee who worked under that manager. Both were fired.
Authorities said the video showed workers kicking, shocking and otherwise abusing "downer" animals that were apparently too sick or injured to walk into the slaughterhouse. Some animals had water forced down their throats, San Bernardino County prosecutor Michael Ramos said.
No charges have been filed against Westland, but an investigation by federal authorities continues.
About 150 school districts around the nation have stopped using ground beef from Hallmark Meat Packing Co., which is associated with Westland. Two fast-food chains, Jack-In-the-Box and In-N-Out, said they would not use beef from Westland/Hallmark.
Most of the beef was sent to distribution centers in bulk packages. The USDA said it will work with distributors to determine how much meat remains.
Federal regulations call for keeping downed cattle out of the food supply because they may pose a higher risk of contamination from E. coli, salmonella or mad cow disease since they typically wallow in feces and their immune systems are often weak.
http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/20080218/beef_recall_080218/20080218/
RE: - I think this is a very sad case, but it would be even worse if the meat were to be wasted, for no good reason, when there are millions starving in the World.
Spoken with the conviction of someone who may already have mad cow disease.
They didn't even "shoot, shovel and shut up" like Ralph Klein recommended one do when one comes across a downed animal - they put it into the food chain. Out doing Ralph in the sleaze department is not a good thing since he's said and done things that would make Jane Fonda blush.
Klein suggests farmer should have hid mad cow
http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/20030917/madcow_tests_030916?s_name='&no_ads=
If it bothers you to hear that eating meat is wrong, that means you're on the wrong side of the issue. When you're on the wrong side of an issue, your mind has 2 choices: change or go into defense mode. Example: Abolitionists were once viewed as preachy liberals. When they spoke their mind, it came across as nails on a chalkboard to the racists.
Care about animals? Care about the planet? Whether it bothers you or not, there's only one diet for you - Vegan.
I believe that reverence of all life is the primary issue, and that diet will automatically become engaged, or not, regardless.
¿ Shall we exclude billions of humans who do care about the planet's carrying capacity, have effective principles, and also eat meat (dairy) ?
I say NO. Being against meat eating has gotten no one to nowhere (no how).
See the change, and make it so (oneself).
Namaste … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … Mahatma Gandhi … … … … … … … … … …
« We must be the change we wish to see in the world »
« There is a sufficiency in the world for man's need but not for man's greed »
« We adopt the means of nonviolence because our end is a community at peace with itself » — ML King
ticonderoga--I disagree. I think eating meat is addictive. That's why people are so defensive about it. Even Siouxrose says she eats fish because "sometimes my body needs that protein" even though there is an abundance of protein in plant foods that don't involve cruelty. Some people can quit cold turkey, others have a more difficult time. As with other addictions, you first have to admit there is a problem.
One plus that my vegetarian lifestyle has given, is great health (in my 60s). I observe the wretched shape of meat-eaters one third my age and think "pay back." There is something freeing about not having to play the games: I can look into any animal's eyes and be at a place of a "totally deserved" peace.
Hallmark/Westland Meat Packing is out of business due to the recall. The packing house will be permanently closed, the customers have spoken, and the free market (combined with a free press) ensured that "the system" really does work.
Good news !
Thanks for the update Starbuck