Our Food Is highjacked by YourEnchantedGardener .....

Our Food Is highjacked, sez KEEP The BEET MEDIA STAR SENATE CONSIDERS FOOD SAFETY BILL S 510. The Highjackers appear to be at play here....

Date:   1/8/2010 9:04:47 PM ( 14 y ago)









7:11 AM
January 9, 10


NAUGHTY AND NICE LIST...
from Food POISON JOURNAL
very interesting take on things.
I do not agree with numbers of these.

http://www.foodpoisonjournal.com/2009/12/articles/food-poisoning-information/...


How To Fix S.510: A Sustainable Ag Perspective III
by Helena Bottemiller via http://www.foodsafetynews.com


http://www.citizens.org/?p=1769


Part three of a three part discussion with Harry Hamil, founder of North Carolina’s Black Mountain Farmers Market, on how he would change the Senate food safety bill to lessen the impact on small and sustainable agriculture

NOV 16 REPORT?
http://www.citizens.org/?page_id=40


SENATE CONSIDERS
FOOD SAFETY BILL S 510.
http://community.seattletimes.nwsource.com/reader_feedback/public/display.php...



http://curezone.com/upload/Blogs/Your_Enchanted_Gardener/KEEP_the_BEET_Shop_the_fM_2010.jpg


7:02 PM
January 8, 09

DAlYA MIRi's BIRTHDAY

I was just eating some pasture fed chicken
on organic tortila.

Wow! KEEP The BEET having her say,
"Our Food is Highjacked."


sounds like a theme for her next column
in SPACE OF LOVE MAGAZINE.

I want to write to REGINA JENSEN
and get a copy of the two two issues.

KEEP The BEET Media Star
is the Czarina of Foods.

On THE CZAR OF FOOD

GOOGLED FOOD CZAR
JANUARY 8, 10
7:13 PM


Favorite Quotes from Our Food Czar for 2009 by YourEnchantedGardener
Dec 20, 2009 ... Our Food Czar for the FDA Senior Adviser to the Commissioner on food issues. FOR MORE about KEEP THE BEET and her latest outing at the ...
Http://www/curezone.com/blogs/fm.asp?i=1542360
- Cached -

Skunks Eat What? by YourEnchantedGardener - 2 visits - 12/28/09
Aug 5, 2009 ... Our Food Czar for the FDA Senior Adviser to the Commissioner on food issues. The above quote is from the written testimony
Http://www/curezone.com/blogs/fmp.asp?i=1467854
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More on Michael Taylor - Our New Food Czar : Health Freedom Alliance
Jul 24, 2009 ... 6 Responses to “More on Michael Taylor - Our New Food Czar”. Adrienne Baksa on July 31st, 2009 8:59 am. How do we contact Obama and let him ...
Http://www.blogs.healthfreedomalliance.org/.../more-on-micahel-taylor-our-new-food-
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Monsanto's man Taylor returns to FDA in food-czar role | Grist
Jul 8, 2009 ... I'm thinking maybe we deserve to be terrified of our food and food czars.... Maybe I just need a nap. Permalink ...
Http://www.grist.org/article/2009-07-08-monsanto-FDA-taylor/
- Cached

Food Czar
So, again without furthur ado, here are the Food Czar Top Ten Restaurants of 2009. .... My lovely wife and myself still spend most of our days tippling the ...
foodczar.blogspot.com/ - Cached - Similar -


Jeffrey Smith: You're Appointing Who? Please Obama, Say It's Not So!
Jul 23, 2009 ... He is now America's food safety czar. What have we done? ..... Our food supply is in jeopardy, and we are paying the price if we allow this ...
Http://www.huffingtonpost.com/.../youre-appointing-who-plea_b_243810.html

The person who may be responsible for more food-related illness and death than anyone in history has just been made the US food safety czar. This is no joke.

Here's the back story.

When FDA scientists were asked to weigh in on what was to become the most radical and potentially dangerous change in our food supply -- the introduction of genetically modified (GM) foods -- secret documents now reveal that the experts were very concerned. Memo after memo described toxins, new diseases, nutritional deficiencies, and hard-to-detect allergens. They were adamant that the technology carried "serious health hazards," and required careful, long-term research, including human studies, before any genetically modified organisms (GMOs) could be safely released into the food supply.

But the biotech industry had rigged the game so that neither science nor scientists would stand in their way. They had placed their own man in charge of FDA policy and he wasn't going to be swayed by feeble arguments related to food safety. No, he was going to do what corporations had done for decades to get past these types of pesky concerns. He was going to lie.

Http://www.huffingtonpost.com/.../youre-appointing-who-plea_b_243810.html


Sep 17, 2009 ... Next Michele Bachmann Will Attack Obama's "Food Czar". ... cars and home heating and air conditioning -- and our food consumption is next: ...
Http://www.pamshouseblend.com/.../next-michele-bachmann-will-attack-obamas-
food-czar-whomever-the-hell-that-is - Cached - Similar -
Rosie Boycott: London's "food czar" | MNN - Mother Nature Network
Rosie Boycott: London's "food czar". By PlentyMag.com. Tue, May 12 2009 at 3:47 PM EST. Read more: ORGANIC FOODS ... Check out our food section. ...
Http://www.mnn.com
› Food - Similar -

Nation & World | Can new food safety czar mend "broken" system ...
"Simply put, our food-safety system in this country is broken," Dr. David Kessler told the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee. ...
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/nationworld/2003689479_fda02.html

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How to Fix S.510: A Sustainable Ag Perspective
by Helena Bottemiller via http://www.foodsafetynews.com

Jan 03, 2010

Part one of a three part discussion with Harry Hamil, founder of North Carolina’s Black Mountain Farmers Market, on how he would change the Senate food safety bill to lessen the impact on small and sustainable agriculture

Harry Hamil has worked to revive local, healthy food for people in western North Carolina since 1995. He and his wife, Elaine, work full time growing, distributing and retailing locally grown food at the Black Mountain Farmers Market, a year-round market the couple founded in 2003.
Since the passage of the House Food Safety Enhancement Act (H.R. 2749) last July, Hamil–who has a rare affinity for detail and a keen understanding of the policy making process–has focused full time on the pending FDA Food Safety Modernization Act (S.510) in the Senate, advocating for changes that would help lessen what he foresees as a detriment to the burgeoning small and sustainable agriculture movement.
Food Safety News had a chance to discuss, in detail, some changes Hamil would like to see made to the food safety bill before it clears the Senate.
Part I: Regulation should be appropriately scaled
Hamil, like many small and sustainable agriculture advocates, sees S.510, as it’s currently written, as “one-size-fits-all” regulation with the potential to force small growers and producers out of the business.
“They’re calling for increased regulation because of globalization,” says Hamil. “We aren’t globalizing, folks. We’re producing it locally–local health food for local people. The level of regulation that applies to us clearly is different.” Hamil would like to see the regulations in the bill tiered so that they are more appropriately scaled.
Hamil points to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s (FDA’s) new egg rule, finalized last summer, to help minimize Salmonella Enteritidis, as an example of of the kind of tiered regulation that could be applied to the rest of the food industry.
“The egg rule says very clearly that the rule shall apply to egg producers with greater than 3,000 layers,” says Hamil, who explains that the rule is tiered because the smaller producers, of which there are few, just don’t have the same impact. “Federal regulation needs to focus on those food production enterprises with the potential to distribute products to large numbers of people rather than those distributing to small numbers of customers.”
Hamil advocates for a tiered approach based on annual gross profit. He’d like to see the language in S.510 amended so that sections 418 and 419 of the bill–on hazard analysis and risk-based controls, and produce safety–would only apply to entities that are above a certain threshold, to be determined by the FDA.
The House version of the food safety legislation contains some exemptions for farmers who sell directly to consumers, restaurants, or grocery stores–but according to Hamil it’s not about the small producers being exempt. “I’m not arguing in favor of exemption. What I’m simply saying is that there needs to be a tiered approach to it.”
“The word exemption gives the impression that you’re unregulated,” adds Hamil. “The reality is, we’re not unregulated! There are plenty of regulations that apply already to what we are doing.”
Plus, Hamil doesn’t buy into the notion that there are exemptions for direct-sale farmers in the House bill.
“On direct sales you don’t have to keep up on traceback, but no retail person has to keep up on traceback on the direction to the customer…well in direct sales there is no other direction.” To say that small farmers selling directly to consumers are exempt from the trace back provisions is, as Hamil puts it “correct, but also grotesquely misleading.”
Though Hamil is not advocating for across the board exemptions for small and sustainable growers and producers, he doesn’t hide the fact that he believes they pose a far lesser food safety risk.
“In most of the recent outbreaks of foodborne illness, the main source of the problem was large centralized processing and distribution and its retail distribution network,” says Hamil. “The problems have not been with growing and harvesting nor small scale processing and distribution.”


 

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