This is case where we WANT to know how the sausage is made
Edward Carver for Common Dream
In the year leading up to a deadly listeria outbreak, the Boar's Head plant where it started had insects on meat, "dirty" machinery, water leaking from pipes and pooling, mold, rancid smells, "heavy meat buildup" on walls, and puddles of blood on the floor, according to United States Department of Agriculture documents released to CBS News.The deli meat plant in Jarratt, Virginia, which has been
temporarily shut down, has been cited for at least 69 instances of
noncompliance with federal food safety regulations since August 2023. The
listeria outbreak, which is the largest in the U.S. since 2011, has killed nine
and caused 57 hospitalizations across many states, according to the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Millions of pounds of Boar's Head's
products were recalled this
summer.
The revelations about conditions at the plant led experts to
question the adequacy of the USDA's inspection system.
"We have food safety regulators because we want them to take action before consumers die," Sarah Sorscher, the director of regulatory affairs at the Center for Science in the Public Interest, told The Washington Post. "It shouldn't take people dying for the plant to take food safety issues seriously; USDA is supposed to be there to ensure that that happens."
Jerold Mande, a former food safety official at both the USDA
and Food and Drug Administration, indicated that the inspection protocol needs
updating.
"Most of what they're doing is relying on their sight,
smell and other things to detect problems," Mande told the Post.
"They could be armed with tools to detect bacteria in real time, but
they're not."
All nine people who have died have been over the age of 70.
Listeria is a bacterial illness most dangerous to people who are older,
pregnant, or immunocompromised. It kills about 255
people in the U.S. every year—third among food-borne illnesses.
Gunter Morgenstein, an 88-year-old hair stylist in Newport
News, Virginia, contracted the disease after eating a Boar's Head liverwurst
purchased at Harris Teeter on June 30. The food reminded him of his home
country of Germany, which he was forced to flee as a child to escape Nazi rule.
He died on July 18 after 10 days in the hospital, The New York Timesreported. The
bacteria had reached his brain.
Genome sequencing tests determined in late July that the
strain of listeria found at the Boar's Head plant matched the one found in the
multi-state outbreak.
Barbara Kowalcyk, a public health and food safety expert
based at George Washington University, questioned why the Virginia plant was
allowed to continue operating after all of the noncompliance findings.
"The first thing I thought when I read the report is
'Where is the leadership of this establishment and where are the
regulators?'" Kowalcyk said. "When you see repeated violations within
days and chronically over that length of time, it suggests that their food
safety system is not working as intended. Whatever corrective action is being
taken is obviously not being integrated into their system."
It's not yet clear what penalties or legal action Boar's
Head could face for its role in the outbreak.
CBS News reporter Alexander Tin broke the story about the
unsanitary conditions at the Boar's Head plant after receiving the USDA documents following
a Freedom of Information Act request. The 69 instances of noncompliance dated
from August 1, 2023 until August 2, 2024.