RADIO ADDRESS BY THE PRESIDENT
TO THE NATION
Release May 6, 2000
Clinton calls on Congress to support
his
food safety initiatives, as well as
directing
the Departments of Agriculture and
Health
and Human Services to prepare an aggressive
new strategy to significantly reduce
the
risk of illness from Listeria.
RADIO ADDRESS BY THE PRESIDENT TO THE
NATION
The Oval Office
THE PRESIDENT: Good morning. Warm weather
has finally taken hold in most of the
country,
and millions of families are now taking
weekend
picnics and hosting backyard barbecues.
Today,
I want to speak with you about the
foods
we serve at these gatherings, and how
we
can make them even safer than they
already
are.
Our food supply is the most bountiful
in
the world. And for seven years, now,
our
administration has been committed to
making
it the safest in the world. We've improved
dramatically the nation's inspection
system
for meat, poultry and seafood. We've
added
new safeguards to protect families
from unsafe
imported foods. We've established a
sophisticated
early warning system that uses DNA
fingerprinting
techniques to detect and prevent outbreaks
of food-borne illness. From farm to
table,
we've made great strides to ensure
the safety
of our food supply.
But outbreaks of food-related illnesses
are
still far too prevalent. In fact, millions
of Americans get sick from eating contaminated
food each year.
One threat we must address immediately
comes
from a food-borne pathogen called Listeria,
which has been the cause of recent
recalls
of hot dogs and luncheon meats, and
several
deadly outbreaks of disease. The most
famous
case emerged a year and a half ago,
when
Listeria killed 21 people and sickened
100
others, all of whom had eaten contaminated
meat from a single plant. It was the
nation's
most deadly food safety epidemic in
15 years.
Fortunately, Listeria is less common
than
salmonella, E. coli, and other food-borne
bacteria. But unfortunately, it is
far more
dangerous. A staggering 20 percent
of Listeria
infections result in death. As with
other
food-borne bacteria, it's rarely healthy
adults who come down with Listeria
infections.
Instead, it's the most vulnerable among
us:
infants, the elderly, pregnant women,
and
those whose immune systems have been
weakened
by chemotherapy or AIDS.
While our administration has already
taken
a number of important steps to reduce
the
threat of Listeria, it's clear we must
do
more to protect Americans from this
deadly
pathogen. So today, I'm directing the
Departments
of Agriculture and Health and Human
Services
to prepare an aggressive new strategy
to
significantly reduce the risk of illness
from Listeria. As part of this strategy,
we will propose new regulations to
require
scientific approaches, such as systematic
testing for Listeria at food-processing
plants
-- not just random checks. This and
other
measures will allow us to cut in half
the
number of Listeria-related illnesses
over
the next five years, and save well
over 1,000
lives.
Today, I call on the food industry
to work
with us as we develop our new Listeria
strategy.
And I call on Congress to help us strengthen
food safety across the board. Just
this week,
unfortunately, the Congress took a
major
step backward by refusing to fully
fund our
food safety initiative. In fact, they've
now voted to block funding for our
new efforts
to protect millions of American families
from the dangers of salmonella poisoning
in eggs. We should be doing more, not
less,
to ensure the safety of our food.
If we work together, we can make real
gains
this year. We can increase the number
of
inspections of domestic and imported
foods.
We
can expand the FDA's authority to turn
away
imported food that does not meet our
high
safety standards. And at long last,
we can
give the Department of Agriculture
the authority
to recall bad food, and impose civil
penalties
for repeat violations. After all, the
Department
has the right to penalize a circus
to protect
animals from harm; it's about time
we gave
them the tools they need to protect
human
beings from harm, too.
Ensuring the safety of our food and
the health
of our people are among the most important
parts of our citizens' basic contract
with
their government. For the sake of millions
of Americans, especially the most vulnerable
among us, it's an obligation we simply
must
work together to uphold.
Thanks for listening.
END
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