Guest guest Posted December 31, 2003 Report Share Posted December 31, 2003 (Well, it's about time! Your pets are another matter, I guess...) USDA bans downer cattle from human food Last Updated: 2003-12-31 8:00:06 -0400 (Reuters Health) By Abbott WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. Agriculture Secretary Ann Veneman said on Tuesday the government was banning downer cattle - animals too sick or injured to walk on their own at the slaughter plant - from being used as food for humans. Veneman told a news conference the Agriculture Department would continue its " aggressive surveillance " of cattle for neurological ailments that could signal mad cow disease. Meat from those animals cannot be sold until tests show they are free of mad cow disease, she said. As a precaution, Veneman said, processors would be barred from using the brains, eyes and small intestines of cattle in human food. Also, there will be a new regulation to ensure spinal tissue does not enter human meat products as a result of using sophisticated meat recovery systems that scrape tiny bits of meat off the bones of a carcass. " The actions we are taking today are steps to enact additional safeguards to protect the public health, " Veneman said. Packing plants will be barred from using air injection stunning to kill cattle as another precaution, she announced. In that method, an air-injection rifle is used to stun cattle before they are killed. However, the injection of air into the brain can cause nervous system tissue to spread throughout the body. " USDA is also working to take the next steps toward implementation of a verifiable system of a national animal identification, " Veneman said. The first step of the voluntary animal identification program was expected July 2004, with the release of identification numbers for farms, ranches and feedlots. Veneman said she did not expect the new measures to cause an increase in beef prices for consumers because " this involves a very small number of animals in the scheme of things. " There are an estimated 150,000-200,000 downer cattle out of 35 million slaughtered each year in the United States. She also said the new steps would not be overly costly. " I don't anticipate that the change in the specified risk materials, the ban on downer animals in the food system, are going to cost the USDA significant amounts of money or for that matter the industry significant amounts of money, " she said. A meat industry official said the new restrictions might prompt slaughterhouses to refuse to accept downer cattle. That would impair USDA's mad-cow surveillance system, which relies on spotting suspect animals at slaughter. " The practical reality is most plants will say 'no downers', " the meat official said. The USDA is investigating the cause of the first U.S. case of mad cow disease. The disease was found in a Holstein dairy cow in Washington state last week. Copyright © 2003 Reuters Limited. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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