Latest Article|September 3, 2020|Free
::Making Grown Men Cry Since 1992
8 min read
In October, the FBI and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) executed search warrants on two California produce companies. It does seem kind of surreal, actually, that the FBI would carry out a spinach bust, but e.coli contamination in packaged spinach did, after all, sicken 199 people, including five New Mexicans, and lead to the death of three people. (For those who would rather not know, the bacteria e.coli is found in human or animal feces, and though exposure to it is usually harmless, it can cause diarrhea, cramps and fever. In some instances, it can also lead to kidney damage, and, in old people or children, even death.)The outbreak began in early August, though panic didn’t really take over until September, as grocery stores, restaurants and households dumped out their spinach and swore off leafy greens. When the FDA traced the contaminated spinach to California’s Natural Selection Foods, it settled the minds of millions, but it also gave groups such as The Heartland Institute the opportunity to take a bizarre potshot at organic growers: According to Jay Lehr, science director of the Libertarian Institute, “The recent e. coli outbreak thought to be tied to organic spinach farms in California should serve to remind Americans that organic food is not necessarily safer food.” (For clarity’s sake, it’s helpful to point out that although Natural Selection Foods does process and package organic produce, the e.coli contamination was found in conventional spinach.) Meanwhile, as the FDA continues investigating the exact origins of the contamination, Natural Foods Selection CEO Charles Sweat is blaming growers, saying the contamination came from their fields, not his packing and shipping facilities.But in the larger sense, food safety isn’t about growers versus packing facilities, or even organic versus conventional farmers. It’s about knowing where food comes from, how it was grown and what it’s been exposed to—from seed to dinner plate.