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http://www.mercurynews.com/healthandscience/ci_8472500?nclick_check=1

Raw-milk law enforced for 1st time

BAN ON DAIRY'S CREAM ANGERS DEVOTEES, INDUSTRY LEADERS

By Barbara Feder Ostrov

Mercury News

Article Launched: 03/06/2008 01:30:28 AM PST

When California's raw milk dairies learned about new legislation

tightening safety standards for their unpasteurized milk and cream, they

- alongside passionate raw milk devotees - bitterly lobbied against

mandates they believed would destroy their business.

Now their fears are starting to be realized.

State agriculture officials have temporarily banned the sale of raw cream

from the Organic Pastures dairy in Fresno, citing bacteria levels of up

to 150 times the legal limit. They also have warned a ville dairy,

Claravale Farm, that it faces a similar ban if its raw skim milk or raw

cream fails another inspection.

The ban marks the state's first enforcement of the controversial raw milk

law that took effect Jan. 1. And it could reignite last year's fierce

political and legal battles over its requirement that raw milk meet the

same safety standards as pasteurized milk.

Mark McAfee, Organic Pastures' founder and owner, along with Claravale

Farm, is suing to overturn the law. He says the action will help propel

his lawsuit through the courts now that he is facing economic losses.

" I was actually looking forward to this day, " McAfee said.

" We're losing $10,000 a week on cream we can't sell. "

Organic Pastures' other products, including skim and whole raw milk,

aren't included in the sales ban and may still be sold at Whole Foods and

other stores, said Steve Lyle, a spokesman for the California Department

of Food and Agriculture. Raw cream already in stores also is not affected

by the regulatory action and may remain on the shelves.

The sales ban on Organic Pastures' raw cream will last until two new

cream samples tested within the same week meet state standards. McAfee

said those tests were conducted on Sunday and Monday and that he's

expecting results soon.

The cream that could not be sold is being made into butter to be sold at

stores like Whole Foods, which carries Organic Pastures products, McAfee

said.

Small, but devoted Although California boasts the nation's largest raw

milk production and Organic Pastures is believed to be the nation's

largest raw milk dairy, actual sales are small compared with the state's

massive dairy industry.

Under the new state law, to avoid a sales ban raw milk dairies must pass

three of every five inspections of samples of their milk products,

including whole milk, skim milk, cream and colostrum, a type of milk

produced by cows for newborn calves.

Before Jan. 1, raw milk was tested for dangerous bacteria such as

salmonella, but dairies were not required to provide counts of other

classes of bacteria.

Unlike pasteurized milk, raw milk is not heat-treated to kill bacteria

that can cause disease, although it's routinely tested for certain

disease-causing bacteria such as E. coli and salmonella.

Raw milk devotees consider it a healthy elixir, touting its ability to

ease allergies, lactose intolerance and digestive disorders among other

health problems. Public health experts, however, argue that raw milk is

far more likely than the pasteurized kind to make people sick.

From 1998 to 2005, raw milk and cheese were implicated in 39 disease

outbreaks nationwide that sickened 831 adults and children, hospitalized

66 and killed one, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease

Control.

Mark Barbieri, manager of the Whole Foods supermarket in , said

the temporary ban on Organic Pastures cream would not scare him away from

his raw milk habit. He said he simply loves the taste and has confidence

that the state agriculture department is diligently inspecting raw milk

dairies.

" It's like drinking ice cream, " said Barbieri, who favors

Claravale Farm milk. " It's so sweet. "

California's new raw milk safety standards allow no more than 10 coliform

bacteria per milliliter, the same requirement for pasteurized

milk.

Coliform bacteria include those that aid digestion as well as those that

cause disease. Their presence is not necessarily a predictor of

food-borne illness, but high levels can indicate a sanitation problem,

said dairy scientist Bruhn, professor emeritus at the University of

California-' Department of Food Science and Technology.

In one raw cream sample taken from Organic Pastures on Feb. 6, the

overall bacteria count was 250,000 per gram, with coliform bacteria

numbering 1,500 per gram - which Bruhn suggested could indicate a

sanitation problem at the dairy. Milk destined for pasteurization, he

said, should have less than 50,000 total bacteria per milliliter or

gram.

Debate over standard Organic Pastures and Claravale Farm argued that the

standard is impossible to meet. But Lyle, the agriculture department

spokesman, said previous tests at both dairies last year suggested that

the standard is attainable.

" The West is filled with states that have similar coliform

standards, including Washington, which has a vibrant raw milk

industry, " Lyle said. " We think it's a reasonable

limit. "

Organic Pastures in particular has been beset by potentially harmful

bacteria in its raw milk in recent years.

In 2006, five children were infected with E. coli bacteria linked to

Organic Pastures' raw milk. Some suffered bloody diarrhea; others, kidney

failure. The dairy is now facing lawsuits from two families affected by

the outbreak.

The dairy's raw cream was recalled in September 2007 after listeria was

found in a sample, although no illnesses were reported. Then, in November

and December, state public health officials investigated reports of a

campylobacter bacterial outbreak that sickened five people who drank

Organic Pastures raw milk.

" The link appears suspicious, but it's just not something we can

prove, " said state epidemiologist Dr. Gil Chavez. " Our message

still is that consuming raw milk carries a risk. "

Bruhn wonders whether repeated reports of sales bans or recalls over

potentially harmful raw milk may cause consumers to rethink their raw

milk habits.

If the dairies are " having more trouble than success, then raw milk

drinkers might develop doubts, " Bruhn said. " Whether that will

lead them to change their purchasing habits, I don't know. I know a lot

of them are very dedicated to the product regardless of what the state

does or says. "

Organic Pastures' McAfee couldn't agree more.

" I invite (the agriculture department) to keep on sticking me in the

ribs because it keeps increasing our sales, " he said. " It stirs

up the grass roots. "

Contact Barbara Feder Ostrov at bfeder@....

Don Neeper

Senior Software Engineer

SofTechnics, a METTLER TOLEDO Company

dneeper@...

don.neeper@...

http://www.OhioRawMilk.info/dneeper

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