Salmonella causes 1.35 million infections in the United States each year, according to the CDC
The Trump administration has a proposal from the Biden era which would have forced poultry companies to limit the bacteria of Salmonella in their products to prevent food intoxication.
After receiving what the Department of Agriculture said it was 7,000 comments on the proposed rule – stakeholders who included the poultry and meat industry, Congress members and a risk assessment company – the USDA removed the plan “to further assess its approach to treat Salmonella diseases associated with the poultry product”.
The Biden administration effort had aimed to reduce Salmonella diseases by 25%, according to a federal register notice, demanding that poultry companies sell chicken or turkey products to keep the Salmonella bacteria under a certain threshold and test six dangerous strains of Salmonella. If the threshold was exceeded or if one of the strains was identified, the poultry product would be drawn and subjected to a reminder.
Each year, there are more than 1.3 million infections in Salmonella in the United States, according to the opinion, adding that the rate has not changed in the past two decades.
Friday, food officials said that the proposed plan would impose an “overwhelming burden” on small producers and poultry processors and said that the USDA “would evaluate if it should update” the current Salmonella regulations.
President Donald Trump’s inaugural committee received a record cash amount, with a large part from the pride of Pilgrim. The poultry company was the largest donor of the Trump inaugural committee, giving $ 5 million. Two of the business leaders – CEO Fabio Sandri and Kendra Waldbusser, head of company security and quality insurance – serve alongside many other executives on the board of directors of the National Council of Chicken, a lobbying group who called on the USDA to cancel the proposed plan and “consider alternative approaches to address Salmonella in Bruts.” The company agreed last year to pay an antitrust regulations of $ 100 million for the plans with other food companies in order to keep the producers of underpaid chicken.