It seems every day brings notice of a new US petfood recall
due to potential Salmonella contamination. Most people in the industry
would say this is not because petfood manufacturers are making unsafe products
or failing to follow safety protocols. Rather, it’s from the US Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) stepping up its inspections (many unannounced) of
manufacturing facilities and rules on reporting the findings from those
inspections.
And with the various strains of Salmonella being the
type of organisms that are nearly always present in minute amounts, they’re very
likely to show up during an inspection, even if nowhere near the raw materials,
processing areas or finished products and even if the amount present is nowhere
significant enough to cause any sort of problem.
Food safety is of the utmost importance, and today’s
consumers demand not just the highest levels of safety but also transparency
and communication about it. This is especially true in petfood since the
massive 2007 recalls. Though those were caused by intentional adulteration with
melamine, a substance that normally is not and should not be anywhere in the
vicinity of petfood, the 2007 situation made pet owners, especially in the US,
keenly aware of what goes into their furry charges’ food and how it’s made.
But are the increasing inspections and reporting regulations
a classic case of overkill? One industry member says the business models of many
small companies don’t account for the costs of meeting the heightened regulations;
and even larger companies that can afford the latest equipment, programs and
consultants will never recoup their costs.
At the other extreme, a recent article from the Associated
Press (AP) describes how several states—including Wisconsin, Wyoming, Maine and
Tennessee—are easing licensing and inspection regulations for homemade goods
sold at farmers markets, small farms and similar venues. As more US consumers
become interested in buying locally grown food, the article says, these states
are creating exemptions for “amateur chefs” who want to sell their extra jams
and canned goods. The exemptions are causing anxiety among food processors
still required to follow inspection and licensing rules.
This got me thinking about the many times I’ve heard owners
of small petfood companies, especially those specializing in raw products,
describe how they started making food for their own pets in their kitchens,
began sharing it with friends and acquaintances and then decided to make and
market the foods commercially.
Many of these start-ups have gone on to become successful
manufacturers that now have state-of-the-art safety programs, as do most raw
petfood companies (see the Nature’s Variety profile). But how many others
are giving away or selling their homemade products without any sort of safety
standards in place? As long as they’re not subjecting their own pets to unsafe
foods, should we trust that those foods, like the homemade goods now being
exempted by some states, are OK without following licensing and inspection rules?
I believe recent crises like the economic meltdown (fueled
by massive speculation and investment in ultra risky home mortgages and other
bogus financial products) and the ongoing oil-spill disaster in the Gulf of
Mexico make the case that government oversight is necessary. But regulations
should be based on science and enforced in a way that doesn’t penalize
companies doing the right things and making safe, healthy products that
consumers want and need.
The AP author, Dinesh Ramde, hit the nail on the head with a
reference to “regulatory common sense.” If only that didn’t seem an oxymoron at
times.