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Tell Congress Now to Rein in FDA &
Comment on Proposed FSMA Regulations by Nov. 15th
 
FDA Food Safety Modernization Act (FSMA) regulations pose significant threat to sustainable farmers and food producers across the U.S.

Farm Bill Conferees - Call Now

How to Submit FDA Comments
   
Share FSMA Flyer - 
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Support Benishek Amendment
Farm Bill Conferees Meet This Week
 
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is yet again putting burdens on farmers who use healthy, sustainable practices, and justifying them with fear-based assumptions rather than data. 

The Farm Bill is finally making progress.   

  

The House and Senate have both appointed conferees to try to work out the differences between the two chambers' versions of the Farm Bill, and the conferees are meeting this week.

 

One of the issues under discussion is the FDA's proposed food safety regulations under the Food Safety Modernization Act (FSMA). FTCLDF, as part of a coalition of 39 farming and consumer organizations, urged Congress to include a provision in the Farm Bill that would require the FDA to do more analysis before enforcing rules under FSMA. 

 

The provision, proposed by Representative Dan Benishek (R-MI), would require the agency to publish an analysis of the science used to develop the rules and the anticipated economic impacts.   

 

Please speak up for local food and small, independent farmers and food producers.

  

 
FDA's proposed regulations pose a significant threat to sustainable farmers and food producers across the country. While small-scale, direct-marketing producers are protected by the Tester-Hagan exemption, it does not solve all of the problems with FSMA. First, there are problems with FDA's implementation of the Tester-Hagan exemption. Second, there are many good family farmers and food producers who do not have access to direct markets or who sell more than allowed under the exemption, but who are not big enough to absorb the costs that will be imposed by the FDA's proposed rules. 

 

FDA has failed to provide a sound scientific basis for many of the requirements, choosing instead to take a "guilty until proven innocent" approach to traditional farming methods. This places unfair and unnecessary burdens on farmers who use sustainable inputs such manure and compost teas, as well as those with diversified livestock-crop farms.

 

Please add your voice!    

 

   Share this Farm Bill Action Alert - bit.ly/ftcaa-fb1

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ACTION #1:  CALL YOUR U.S. LEGISLATORS
Ask Farm Bill Conferees to Support the Benishek Amendment      

 

The Farm Bill conferees represent about half the states in the country. If you live or work in any of the States listed below, please call the conferee from your state.

 

Ask your conference member to "support the Benishek Amendment in the House version of the Farm Bill, to protect farmers from unnecessary and costly new regulations by FDA."

 

If you don't live in one of the states listed below, call your Representative and Senators and ask them to speak to the conferees on behalf of their constituents.

  • Find out who represents you by going to www.House.gov and www.Senate.gov or by calling the Capitol Switchboard at 202-224-3121.
  • Call and ask to speak to the staffer who handles agricultural issues. Explain that you're a constituent and that high-quality food is very important to you. Ask your Congressman to speak to the Farm Bill conferees to urge them to support the Benishek Amendment in the House version of the Farm Bill.
  • Get the staffer's email address and follow up by sending them a copy of your comments to FDA (see Action #2).

View List of Conferees     

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ACTION #2:  SUBMIT COMMENTS TO FDA 
Submit Comments to FDA by Friday,  November 15, 2013

 

If you haven't already submitted comments to the FDA, time is running out! Comments must be received by the agency by Friday, November 15, 2013. Please personalize your comments; simply submitting a form letter will be counted as only one comment regardless of how many are sent.

 

View sample comments below. Italicized portion will help you personalize your message.

 

To submit comments by mail, send to:  

 

Division of Dockets Management (HFA-305)

Food and Drug Administration

5630 Fishers Lane, Room 1061

Rockville, MD 20852

 

To submit comments online, go to:

TIP: We recommend that you write your comment ahead of time and save it on your computer -- there is a time limit when using the Federal Register System, and you may get timed out if you write your comment from scratch. (See sample comments below)

  • If your comment is less than one page, you can copy and paste it into the comment box.
  • If it is longer, you can instead write "see attached" and UPLOAD a separate document, such as a Word or PDF file, with your comments.

Simple Steps for submitting comments online:  

    1. Enter your comment in the "Comment" box or type "see attached". If you are attaching comments as a separate file, click on "Choose files" to select and upload your document.
    2. Enter your "First Name" and "Last Name".
    3. If you want to give your "Zip/Postal Code" and/or "Email Address", click the box for "I want to provide my contact information" and enter your information. Otherwise, leave box unchecked
    4. Click the box to deselect "I am submitting on behalf of a third party" to remove the fields for "Submitter's Representative" and "Organization Name".
    5. For "Category," select "Individual Consumer" or "Private Industry".
    6. Click "Continue" to see "Your Preview" and verify the information you entered. You may click "Edit" if you need to make changes; otherwise, click the box "I read and understand the statement above" and click "Submit Comment".

SEE SAMPLE COMMENTS 


 

      Share the FSMA Action Alert with others: bit.ly/frn12806    

 

Distribute the Flyer at Farmers Markets or share the link -  bit.ly/FSMA-flyer 

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FARM BILL CONFEREES BY STATE  

Urge Your U.S. Senators and Representative to Support the Benishek Amendment    

 

If you live or work in any of the States listed below, please call the conferee(s) from your state.

 

Ask the conference members to "support the Benishek Amendment in the House version of the Farm Bill, to protect farmers from unnecessary and costly new regulations by FDA."

 

STATE -- REPRESENTATIVE/SENATOR -- DISTRICT -- PHONE NO.

 

Alabama -- Rep. Mike Rogers -- R-3rd -- 202-225-4872

Alabama -- Rep. Martha Roby -- R-2nd -- 202-225-2901

Arkansas -- Rep. Rick Crawford -- R-1st -- 202-225-4076

Arkansas -- Sen. John Boozman -- 202-224-4843

California -- Rep. Jeff Denham -- R-10th -- 202-225-4540

California -- Rep. Jim Costa -- D-16th -- 202-225-3341

California -- Rep. Gloria Negrete McLeod -- D-35th -- 202-225-6161

Colorado -- Sen. Michael Bennet -- 202-224-5852

Florida -- Rep. Steve Southerland -- R-2nd -- 202-225-5235

Georgia -- Sen. Saxby Chambliss -- 202-224-3521

Georgia -- Rep. Austin Scott -- R-8th -- 202-225-6531

Illinois -- Rep. Rodney Davis -- R-13th -- 202-225-2371

Iowa -- Rep. Steve King -- R-4th -- 202-225-4426

Iowa -- Sen. Tom Harkin -- 202-224-3254

Kansas -- Sen. Pat Roberts -- 202-224-4774

Mass. -- Rep. Jim McGovern -- D-2nd -- 202-225-6101

Michigan -- Chairwoman Sen. Debbie Stabenow -- 202-224-4822

Minnesota -- Ranking Member Collin Peterson -- D-7th -- 202-225-2165

Minnesota -- Sen. Amy Klobuchar -- 202-224-3244

Minnesota -- Rep. Tim Walz -- D-1st -- 202-225-2472

Mississippi -- Sen. Thad Cochran -- 202-224-5054

Montana -- Sen. Max Baucus -- 202-224-2651

N. Carolina -- Rep. Mike McIntyre -- D-7th -- 202-225-2731

N. Dakota -- Sen. John Hoeven -- 202-224-2551

Ohio -- Sen. Sherrod Brown -- 202-224-2315

Ohio -- Rep. Marcia Fudge -- D-11th -- 202-225-7032

Oklahoma -- Chairman Frank D. Lucas -- R-3rd -- 202-225-5565

Oregon -- Rep. Kurt Schrader -- D-5th -- 202-225-5711

Penn. -- Rep. Glenn Thompson -- R-5th -- 202-225-5121

S. Dakota -- Rep. Kristi Noem -- At Large -- 202-225-2801

Texas -- Rep. K. Michael Conaway -- R-11th -- 202-225-3605

Texas -- Rep. Randy Neugebauer -- R-19th -- 202-225-4005

Texas -- Rep. Filemon Vela -- D-34th -- 202-225-9901

Vermont -- Sen. Patrick Leahy -- 202-224-4242

Washington -- Rep. Suzan DelBene -- D-1st -- 202-225-6311

 

If you don't live or work in one of the states listed above, call your Representative and Senators and ask them to speak to the conferees on behalf of their constituents.

TAKE ACTION NOW - Call Congress 

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SAMPLE COMMENT FOR FDA  

It is very important that you personalize these comments!  

Form letters will all be counted as a single submission regardless how many received.

 

The italicized portions at the beginning are intended to help you personalize your comments. You don't have to write a lot -- even a couple of sentences can really increase the impact your comments will have!   Use the sample below as a starter for your own comments or you can download a Word version for editing with bit.ly/FSMA-sample-letter-doc 

 

Date


Division of Dockets Management (HFA-305)
Food and Drug Administration
5630 Fishers Lane, Room 1061
Rockville, MD 20852

      Re: Preventive Controls Rule: FDA-2011-N-0920 and RIN 0910-AG36
      Produce Standards Rule: FDA-2011-N-0921, and RIN 0910-AG35

I am a ______ [farmer, food producer, consumer, parent...]. I am deeply concerned about the impact that FDA's proposed rules under FSMA would have on [my farm, my food business, the farms that I buy food from...].

 

For consumers, do you make an effort to buy from farms that use sustainable practices? Why do you care about these rules? Just a sentence or two is sufficient to explain.

 

If you are a farmer, explain your farm practices that would be impacted by the rule. Do you use manure, vermicompost, or compost teas? Do you use surface water or multiple different water sources? Do you do rotational grazing of your livestock with your crops, or use draft horses?

 

Do you have a CSA that involves more than one farm and would thus be required to do a HARPC plan? Do you do low-risk activities, such as bottling honey, grinding grains, or making jam? Do you have staff who could handle the HARPC paperwork or would you need to hire new people?

 

For food processors or food hubs, could you absorb the cost of writing a HARPC plan? Do you rely on supplies from farms that would be exempt under the Tester-Hagan provision?

 

I urge the FDA to address the following issues in the proposed FSMA rules:

 

TESTER-HAGAN "QUALIFIED EXEMPTION" in both the Produce and the Preventive Controls Rules:

    1. The gross sales test to qualify for the Tester-Hagan provision should be based on sales of food that is subject to FSMA, whether the produce standards or the preventive controls rule. Sales of food that would not be regulated under FSMA should not be included.
    2. The FDA should not rush the process of revoking a producer's Tester-Hagan exemption. The agency has other mechanisms it can use if there is an immediate threat of foodborne illness.

      a) The FDA should be held to specific evidentiary standards before it can revoke a farmer's or food facility's Tester-Hagan exemption.
      b) A farm or facility that is exempt under Tester-Hagan should be given at least 90 days to submit evidence and defend its exemption if FDA seeks to revoke it.
      c) If the exemption is revoked, the farm or facility should have at least two years to come into compliance with the FSMA rules.

ON-FARM PRODUCE STANDARDS RULE [FDA-2011-N-0921]:

    1. The FDA's approach to traditional farming methods, such as diversified livestock-crop farms, the use of working animals, and the use of biological soil amendments, is fundamentally flawed. The agency should not restrict these sustainable methods of farming without data showing an actual, verified increased rate of foodborne illness; the simple fact that these methods include diverse microbiological communities is not a sound scientific basis for restricting them.
    2. The waiting period between applying manure and harvesting the crop should be no more than 4 months, and there should be no waiting period between applying compost and harvesting the crop. The excellent track record for safety on organic farms shows that this standard is sufficient.
    3. Compost teas and other biological inoculants, including normal additives such as molasses, should be treated the same as compost.
    4. Water testing should not be required more often than once a month, and farmers should be able to test less frequently after establishing the safety of their water source through consecutive negative tests. In addition, farmers should be given the option to test for pathogens, rather than having to treat or stop using the water that tested positive for generic e. coli.
    5. The provisions on wildlife and domestic livestock need to be clarified to protect farmers who use biologically diverse farming from field inspectors using their discretion to require measures such as fencing or destruction of habitat.

PREVENTIVE CONTROLS AND HARPC RULE [FDA-2011-N-0920]:

    1. "Very small facilities" should be defined as being under $1 million in total annual sales, adjusted for inflation. Imposing HARPC requirements on businesses smaller than that is unnecessary and overly burdensome.
    2. Any requirement for "supplier verification" should not prevent a facility from purchasing foods or ingredients from farms and facilities that are exempt from the regulations under the Tester-Hagan provision or other exemptions.
    3. Low-risk activities conducted by a farm using its own products, such as making jams, grinding grains, or dehydrating vegetables, should not be subject to these regulations.
    4. Low-risk activities, when conducted off-farm or by multiple farms working together, should not be subject to the same requirements as high-risk processing activities. The requirements should address both the scale of the operations and the level of risk of the activity.

Sincerely,

Full Name  

 

TAKE ACTION NOW - Submit Comments  

 

Share the FSMA Action Alert with others: bit.ly/frn12806    

Distribute the Flyer at Farmers Markets or share the link -bit.ly/FSMA-flyer 

 

 
Farm-to-Consumer Legal Defense Fund, a 501(c)(4) nonprofit, defends the rights and broadens the freedoms of family farms and artisan food producers while protecting consumer access to raw milk and nutrient-dense foods. Learn more About Us  or check out the FTCLDF 2013 Summary.  

Membership benefits include the possibility of representation in court; the Fund typically pays for all court costs. The Fund is not an insurance company and cannot guarantee representation on all legal matters. Your membership fees and donations help to keep local food sources available and preserve family farms facing unjust enforcement actions.

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