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USDA Issues New Regulations To Address BSE
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Congressional and Public Affairs
(202) 720-9113; FAX: (202) 690-0460
Steven Cohen
WASHINGTON, Jan. 8, 2004 - The U.S. Department of
Agriculture's Food Safety and Inspection Service today issued four new rules to
implement announcements made last week by Agriculture Secretary Ann M. Veneman
to further enhance safeguards against Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy (BSE).
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Related Documents
The following regulations will be published in the Federal Register, and go into effect, on January 12, 2004.
Docket No. 03-048N, Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy Surveillance Program | PDF
Docket 03-025IF, Prohibition of the Use of Specified Risk Materials for Human Food and
Requirements for the Disposition of Non-Ambulatory Disabled Cattle | PDF
Docket No. 03-038IF, Meat Produced by Advanced Meat/Bone
Separation Machinery and Meat Recovery (AMR) Systems | PDF
Docket No. 01-033IF,
Prohibition of the Use of Certain Stunning Devices Used to Immobilize Cattle During Slaughter | PDF |
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On Dec. 30, 2003, Secretary Veneman announced
a number of policies that will further strengthen protections against BSE, including the immediate banning of
non-ambulatory (downer) animals from the human food supply. Rules to address the
remaining issues are on display at the Federal Register today and are the
result of many months of development. These policies involve: requiring
additional process controls for establishments using advanced meat recovery
(AMR) systems; holding meat from cattle that have been tested for BSE until the
test results are received and they are negative; and prohibiting the
air-injection stunning of cattle.
The rules released today include:
Product Holding. USDA is publishing a notice (PDF)
announcing that FSIS inspectors are no longer
marking cattle tested for BSE as "inspected and passed" until confirmation is
received that the cattle have, in fact, tested negative for BSE. FSIS will be
issuing a directive to inspection program personnel outlining this policy.
Specified Risk Material. With the filing of an interim
final rule (PDF), FSIS is declaring that skull, brain, trigeminal ganglia, eyes, vertebral column,
spinal cord and dorsal root ganglia of cattle 30 months of age or older and the
small intestine of all cattle are specified risk materials, thus prohibiting
their use in the human food supply. Tonsils from all cattle are already
considered inedible and therefore do not enter the food supply. These
enhancements are consistent with the actions taken by Canada after the discovery
of BSE there in May. These prohibitions are effective immediately upon
publication in the Federal Register.
In this rule, FSIS is requiring federally inspected establishments that slaughter cattle remove,
segregate and dispose of these specified risk materials so that they cannot
possibly enter the food chain. To facilitate the enforcement of this rule, FSIS
has developed procedures for verifying the approximate age of cattle that are
slaughtered in official establishments. State inspected plants must have
equivalent procedures in place to prevent these specified risk materials from
entering the food supply.
Comments on this interim final rule will be accepted for 90 days after the publication of the rule in the
Federal Register. Comments should be directed to: FSIS Docket Clerk,
Docket #03-025IF, Room 102, Cotton Annex, 300 12th and C Street, SW, Washington, DC 20250-3700.
Advanced Meat Recovery. AMR is a technology that removes muscle tissue from the bone of beef carcasses
under high pressure without incorporating bone material. AMR product can be
labeled as "meat." FSIS has previously established and enforced regulations that
prohibit spinal cord from being included in products labeled as "meat."
This interim final rule (PDF)
expands that prohibition to include dorsal root ganglia, clusters of nerve cells
connected to the spinal cord along the vertebral column, in addition to spinal
cord tissue. In addition, because the vertebral column and skull in cattle 30
months and older will be considered inedible, they cannot be used for AMR.
Comments on this interim final rule will be accepted for 90 days after the publication of the rule in the
Federal Register. Comments should be directed to: FSIS Docket Clerk,
Docket #03-038IF, Room 102, Cotton Annex, 300 12th and C Street, SW,
Washington, DC 20250-3700.
Air-Injection Stunning. To ensure that portions of the brain are not dislocated into the tissues of the
carcass as a consequence of humanely stunning cattle during the slaughter
process, FSIS is issuing an interim final rule (PDF) to ban the practice of
air-injection stunning.
Comments on this interim final rule will be accepted for 90 days after the publication of the
rule in the Federal Register. Comments should be directed to: FSIS Docket
Clerk, Docket #01-033DF, Room 102, Cotton Annex, 300 12th and C
Street, SW, Washington, DC 20250-3700.
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Last Modified:
January 8, 2004 |
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