Safety is all very well, but is this really the best that they can do?
The bits I put in bold remind me of the GMO issue - they won't buy it if we label, therefore we should be allowed not to label. This argument comes up so often, and just stuns me every time.
"Jeff Farrar, the FDA's associate commissioner for food safety, said the government wants the spice industry to do more to prevent contamination. That would include use of one of three methods to rid spices of bacteria: irradiation, steam heating or fumigation with ethylene oxide, a pesticide."
"No retail spice company uses irradiation because federal law requires disclosure of irradiation on the label, and the industry thinks consumers will not buy those products.
"If the labeling issue would go away, I think there would be a high interest to go to irradiation," Markus said, adding that irradiation is the cheapest and most effective method to decontaminate spices."
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/03/13/AR2010031301111.html?hpid=topnews
The bits I put in bold remind me of the GMO issue - they won't buy it if we label, therefore we should be allowed not to label. This argument comes up so often, and just stuns me every time.
"Jeff Farrar, the FDA's associate commissioner for food safety, said the government wants the spice industry to do more to prevent contamination. That would include use of one of three methods to rid spices of bacteria: irradiation, steam heating or fumigation with ethylene oxide, a pesticide."
"No retail spice company uses irradiation because federal law requires disclosure of irradiation on the label, and the industry thinks consumers will not buy those products.
"If the labeling issue would go away, I think there would be a high interest to go to irradiation," Markus said, adding that irradiation is the cheapest and most effective method to decontaminate spices."
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/03/13/AR2010031301111.html?hpid=topnews