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WASHINGTON, Feb. 17, 2006 - Agriculture
Secretary Mike Johanns today announced the
results of an investigation into the ineligible
shipment of veal that was sent to Japan last
month. He also released a comprehensive USDA
report that details the findings of the
investigation and actions taken by USDA.
"The thoroughness of this report demonstrates
just how serious we are about addressing this
incident and providing assurance to our trading
partners that our system is among the best in
the world," said Johanns. "I believe our actions
fully address the facts that led to this
incident and provide added protections on a
broader scale to prevent similar problems in the
future."
The report, which totals 475 pages,
establishes several facts surrounding the
ineligible shipment, including noting that it
posed no risk to human health. The report lays
out the unique circumstances surrounding this
shipment: it was the first shipment of veal sent
to Japan; only two plants were certified to ship
veal to Japan; and both of them were delisted
before any other shipments were sent to Japan.
In addition, veal had only recently been added
to the U.S. export agreement with Japan.
The document relayed to Japan contains two
distinct reports: an investigation by the Food
Safety and Inspection Service and an audit by
the Office of the Inspector General. In total,
it contains eleven findings: five resulting from
the FSIS investigation and six from a separate
Inspector General's audit, with the findings
closely mirroring each other.
The report concludes that mistakes were made
by the plants involved with the shipment and by
USDA inspection personnel. Those mistakes
resulted from a lack of understanding of which
products were eligible for shipment to Japan.
The ineligible product included veal with the
vertebral column intact and veal offal.
In addition, the report concludes that FSIS
inspection program personnel at the
establishment were not sufficiently aware of the
Agricultural Marketing Service (AMS) Export
Verification program and should not have
certified or approved the shipment of ineligible
product to Japan.
USDA is taking several actions in response to
the findings of this report, in addition to the
actions that were announced on January 20, when
USDA learned of the ineligible shipment. These
actions go beyond the circumstances of this
incident to incorporate further efficiencies and
protections into the U.S. export system. These
actions can be summarized as follows:
All FSIS inspectors who work in plants that
are certified to export beef are undergoing
additional mandatory training to ensure they
fully understand U.S. export agreements.
USDA will require plants to maintain a list
of specific products they are certified to ship
to any country, instead of a blanket export
certification and that list will be kept readily
available to USDA inspectors.
USDA inspectors in the plants will be
notified of changes to a plant's eligibility to
export at three separate times in the
certification process: when the plant applies
for certification, when the plant is audited and
when a plant is certified or delisted.
Final export certification cannot be
completed until in-plant inspectors have
undergone additional training, ensuring
coordination between AMS and FSIS.
Initiating with the resumption of exports to
Japan, USDA will require a second signature on
every shipment of beef for export, unless a
trading partner indicates a second signature is
not necessary for U.S. exports to that country.
The report is available on the web at:
www.fsis.usda.gov. Additional appendices to the
report, which are not posted on the web, are
available by contacting USDA's Office of
Communications at (202) 720-4623 or FSIS at
(202) 720-9113.
Japan Export Investigation
Report (Feb 17, 2006; PDF Only, 2.4MB)
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