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Congress To Protect Food From Pests

18 Feb 2011

Posted by Joseph Coupal

Congress Poised to Pass Ambitious Food-Safety Bill

Congress Poised to Pass Ambitious Food-Safety Bill

The bill would give the FDA broad new powers to force recalls of tainted foods, regulate imported foods and ingredients, and conduct more frequent inspections of food-production facilities.

In a world where we get garlic from China, shellfish from Thailand and sugar cane from Mexico, Congress is poised to approve an ambitious food safety bill that would strengthen the nation's top regulator and impose new rules on domestic production and trading partners.

The legislation is aimed at preventing tainted food from entering the supply chain, sickening Americans and forcing massive recalls. It would give the Food and Drug Administration sweeping new powers to demand recalls and require importers to certify the safety of what they're bringing into this country.

By allowing regulators, for instance, to react more quickly to reports of illness, the legislation could limit or prevent recalls like those of spinach and peanuts in recent years, supporters said.

The House is expected to pass the measure Tuesday, sending it to President Obama for his signature.

"This is a once-in-a-lifetime update. A lot has changed since 1938," when the current food regulatory regime was established, said Ami Gadhia, policy counsel for Consumers Union. "This will put FDA in a posture to prevent food-borne illness before it happens."

The overhaul also would be good for business because "it's going to provide a measure of security and certainty that there's a system in place and bad actors will be weeded out. It's going to save business costly recalls," Gadhia said.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention last week said tainted food is responsible for 3,000 deaths and 48 million illnesses a year.

But even with sweeping new powers, federal regulators may be hard-pressed to overcome a challenge that has grown in recent years: Food safety rules have changed little over the last 70 years even as the U.S. food supply has evolved into a global network including foreign growers, producers and processors over whom the United States has little or no direct control.

Today, imported food accounts for about 15% of the nation's food supply by value, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Imports amounted to $76 billion through the first 10 months of this year, a 12% increase over last year and on track to be twice the $41 billion in 1998.

But about 80% of seafood and one-third of fruits and nuts today come from abroad. Foreign sources also account for significant shares of certain ingredients even though the finished product is turned out in the United States. Most cereals, for example, include supplemental vitamins that primarily come from China, which is the third-largest food importer into the U.S. behind Canada and Mexico.

Most of the high-profile recalls in recent years involved problems with domestic producers. But the increasing flow of food from overseas has vastly complicated the challenge of protecting the nation's food supply, and new power to regulate foreign foodstuffs and components of domestically produced products is a crucial part of the pending legislation.

"FDA is able to inspect only about 1% of the food imported into the U.S.," said Erik Olson, deputy director of the Pew Health Group. "Right now, we don't have a standard for meeting U.S. requirements.

"When this legislation is put in place, we'll have a framework to ensure that food that's imported into the U.S. meets U.S. standards and importers are held accountable," Olson said.

The bill would give the FDA, which is responsible for overseeing about 80% of the nation's food supply, the authority to require domestic food producers to draw up detailed plans to ensure the safety of their products.

Domestic companies also would have to make their records available more quickly to the FDA, and the agency would be directed to inspect production facilities more frequently — a process now so inadequate that many plants are not checked for years at a time.

Businesses that fail inspections or are involved in recalls could be assessed the costs of complying with regulations. Failure to maintain a safety plan could lead to a fine of up to $1,000 and/or one year in prison.

The FDA also would receive a long-sought club to wield against recalcitrant food producers: the power to order recalls itself rather than asking for industry cooperation.

One challenge: The legislation does not come with built-in funding and would require an appropriation of about $1.4 billion over the next five years.

Next year, the spending bill would have to be approved in a House controlled by Republicans, many of whom voted against the original measure. However, the incoming chairman of the Appropriations Committee, Harold Rogers (R-Ky.), voted in favor of the bill.

Amid growing consumer anxiety about food safety, the industry willingly accepted the new level of government involvement, although some noted that the new law is likely to come with higher costs to producers.

That may hurt smaller farmers in particular who would have to buy new equipment for tracking products and pay higher insurance costs, which are likely to be passed on to consumers.

Like the mammoth healthcare overhaul, the new food safety law would be slow to take full effect.

For smaller food producers, the bill has a lengthy phase-in period designed to minimize financial effect.

And it would take time for the FDA to draft implementing regulations and increase staffing for its expanded responsibilities.

Moreover, many large producers in sectors of the food business particularly hard hit by illness outbreaks — such as produce — said they already were using many of the protective systems that would be mandatory under the legislation.

Foreign producers, though, might feel changes most dramatically.

"Historically, FDA's never had much authority overseas. They had to wait until food got to the border," said Chris Waldrop, director of the Food Policy Institute at the Consumer Federation of America.

In addition to requiring certification from importers, the legislation would allow the FDA to evaluate food safety authorities in other countries to ensure that they're controlling risks.

It also would allow the agency to enter deals with foreign nations to inspect overseas food facilities and to refuse entry of foods from facilities or countries that won't allow the inspections.

The FDA would be authorized to open new offices overseas. It currently has offices in China, India, Mexico, Costa Rica, Chile, Britain and Belgium.

"They will be able to get better knowledge of who's producing clean food and who's producing suspect food," said Craig Harris, a food safety expert at Michigan State University.

SOURCE: LA TIMES

Pest Control, MA ,  Pest Control, RI

Fruit Flies Join the Air Force

28 Dec 2010

Posted by Joseph Coupal

The U.S. air force is studying fruit flies to mimic swarming behavior for military needs.

The US Air Force is engaged in wacky research on fruit flies maneuvering within a heavily instrumented "simulation tunnel" in order to develop tiny, potentially murderous insect-sized flying robots.

According to a statement issued yesterday by the Air Force Office of Scientific Research (AFOSR), research underway at in Californian labs will teach military designers how to build tiny robot aircraft which can fly around indoors or in built-up areas the way flies do.

"This work investigates sensory-motor feedback mechanisms in the insect brain that could inspire new approaches to flight stabilization and navigation in future insect-sized vehicles for the military," said Dr Willard Larkin of AFOSR.

Dr Andrew Straw of Caltech, leading the project for the Air Force, has built a special arena for his test flies to aviate around in, with video walls allowing a simulated environment to be presented to the fly. The insect test subject is tracked using a cunning multi-camera system.

"We developed a 3D fly tracking system which was our most significant technical challenge: localizing a fly in 3D nearly instantaneously," says Straw. "Next, we developed visual stimulus software capable of making use of this information to project virtual edges and textured floors in which we could modify the fly's sensory-motor feedback mechanism."

According to the AFOSR:

"The scientists have found that, counter to earlier studies suggesting that insects adjust their height by measuring the motion beneath them as they fly, flies in fact follow horizontal edges of objects to regulate altitude. Remarkably, this edge following behavior is very similar to a rule they use for steering left and right and always turning towards vertical edges."

If Straw and his colleagues can work out the rules the flies use to navigate - thought to be primarily visually based - it could be possible to design control systems for so-called Micro Air Vehicles (MAVs, small robot aircraft already in development) which would let them maneuver in places where there is no GPS signal.

Then the dark/exciting future shown in the vid above could become reality, with tiny military swarm droids scattering across towns or cities to locate or spy on persons of interest to the US authorities. They might even, as shown in the vid at around three minutes, be able to land on the back of your neck and blow your head off using some kind of tiny warhead.

Amazing what they can do nowadays.

By Lewis Page
Posted in Rise of the Machines, 8th December 2010 17:00 GMT

Eating Insects is Normal???

09 Dec 2010

Posted by Joseph Coupal

Food Services, Restaurants - EHS Pest Control Solutions

A week or so ago, Abbott Laboratories recalled its powdered form of Similac because of the presence of small beetles in the baby formula. I don’t blame Abbott from recalling the product. It was necessary, if not from a health standpoint, at the very least for a public relations position.

That being said, we Americans unintentionally consume over a pound of insects each year, possibly as much as two pounds. Insects are so prevalent in our food supply that the Food and Drug Administration has pretty much given up on trying to exclude them completely from our diet. Guidelines by the FDA allow various amounts of insects (and insect parts) in our food because it would be next to impossible to keep them out. However, once these limits are exceeded, the FDA will respond and take legal action.

It may well be that in the not-too-distant future, insects may become part of the American diet.

Flies transmit diseases

01 Dec 2010

Posted by Joseph Coupal

GAINESVILLE, Fla. — Everyone knows that house flies aren’t welcome around food. But University of Florida scientists have discovered five new reasons why.

Researchers with UF’s Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences have documented five more bacteria species carried by house flies, and all of them cause illness in humans, ranging from food poisoning to respiratory infections.

In the current issue of Florida Entomologist, the researchers describe collecting house flies near rear entrances and trash bins at four restaurants in Gainesville. About 20 flies from each location were collected in sterile containers and returned to the campus laboratory.

The team used fatty acid analysis and DNA sequencing to identify a total of 11 pathogens carried by the flies – five of them not previously linked to house flies: Acinetobacter baumanni, Bacillus pumilus, Cronobacter sakazakii, Methylobacterium persicinum and Staphylococcus sciuri.

The findings reinforce the notion that fly control is key, especially around food sources, said UF’s Jerry Butler, a retired entomology professor who led the research team.

“People need to know that there’s a reason for health requirements in restaurants,” he said. “Most people have a good immune response, but there are those who are susceptible.” They include infants, seniors and people whose immune systems are compromised by illness or chemotherapy.

Fly control is a day-to-day battle because the insects are so mobile, traveling up to 10 miles in just a couple days’ time, Butler said.

Until this study, house flies were known to carry some 200 bacteria. But both Butler and researcher Jim Maruniak, a UF associate professor of insect pathology, said they expect additional research would turn up even more.
“It just shows you don’t need a lot of flies to contaminate food sources,” Maruniak said.

In addition to the 11 bacteria documented in the study, there were five others that could not be positively identified, researchers said.
House flies’ feeding preferences are particularly troublesome for humans because the insects are attracted to decaying plant and animal matter – materials often found in garbage and animal waste.

“If it smells good to them, we probably want to hide it,” Butler said.  House flies must liquefy food before ingesting it, by placing spongy mouthparts on the food source and secreting saliva or regurgitated gut contents onto it.  The pathogens that can hurt humans are spread by flies through the food-liquefying process, or by defecation.  This updated research stresses the importance of fly control in restaurants and kitchens.

“Most people simply wave a fly away and go back to eating, but a cockroach crawling across the table elicits a very different reaction in a restaurant,” Bultler said. “However, our research shows that the housefly carries potentially twice as many pathogens as a cockroach. We think it’s important to educate our customers and the public about the health risks pests can pose.

Flies in Restaurants Hate EHS

14 Jun 2010

Posted by Joseph Coupal

Flies Hate EHSFlies in Restaurants Hate EHS!!!
Location = Providence, RI

Of course they hate us……we eliminate them!!! We have been perfecting ways to eliminate flies for over 24yrs. It is no easy task because there is so VERY much emphasis on sanitation & cultural practices. We work very hard to make sure we educate our clients on what they must do to eliminate breeding areas for flies. All of the small fly species that infest bars & restaurants need a micro-environment to live, it is these very hard and in some cases, impossible areas that they breed the most in. We at EHS know all their hiding spots and effectively treat them!

Waiter there is a fly in my soup! It is a Hollywood & cartoon joke. It is no laughing matter when you are buying customers martini’s because there is a fly in it. Apologizing & buying meals for customers for the very same reason. Worse yet is the involvement of the health department. Most people think flying insects are a nuisance, they are a very serious health threat that have the ability to transmit diseases. It is your reputation at stake when pest visibility is high. A customers bad experience no goes virtual with all the social networking & blogs that are available. When a customer slams you on the internet that comment or bad review is read by an average of 239 PEOPLE!!! Leave the gambling to the casinos!

George E. Williams Jr., A.C.E.
General Manager - Staff Entomologist

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