Showing remarkable bipartisan support, today the Senate voted to pass S510, the . The legislation would give the FDA the authority to test widely for dangerous pathogens such as salmonella and E. coli, recall contaminated food, and hold imported food to the same standard as domestic鈥攑owers the agency currently lacks. It鈥檚 the most extensive changes to food safety regulations in seven decades.
鈥淭his is crucial because the FDA is responsible for the safety of 80 percent of the nation鈥檚 food supply,鈥 Erik D. Olson, director of the Pew Health Group food programs, said in response to the act鈥檚 passage. 鈥淩epeated disease outbreaks from contaminated foods, including eggs, lettuce, spinach, cookie dough, peanut products and so many other foods illustrate how serious foodborne disease problems continue to harm consumers and the food industry鈥檚 bottom line.鈥
The House has already passed its own version of the bill, and time is short for both houses to negotiate a compromise. Luckily, it sounds like top House Democrats are considering simply passing the Senate鈥檚 version to speed approval.
As we reported yesterday, Eric Schlosser, producer of the documentary , and Michael Pollan, author of , have of the bill, while noting that鈥檚 it鈥檚 not perfect.
to read why they believe it will greatly benefit consumers without harming small farmers or local food producers.
to read why they believe it will greatly benefit consumers without harming small farmers or local food producers.