WASHINGTON(AP)
The tomato scare may be over, but it has taken a toll _ it's
cost the industry an estimated $100 million and left millions of
people with a new wariness about the safety of everyday foods.
An Associated Press-Ipsos poll finds that nearly half of
consumers have changed their eating and buying habits in the past
six months because they're afraid they could get sick by eating
contaminated food.
They also overwhelmingly support setting up a better system to
trace produce in an outbreak back to the source, the poll
found.
The people who feel that way include the growers.
Virginia's East Coast Brokers, one of the largest tomato
growers in the country, has been hammered by slumping demand and
falling prices, although Virginia tomatoes were cleared early on,
said sales manager Batista Madonia III. He said he's frustrated
by the government's inability to find the root cause of the
outbreak despite a nearly two-month long investigation.
The salmonella outbreak has sickened more than 1,200 people in
42 states since the first cases were seen in April.
"I guarantee in that time frame, more than 1,000 people
were injured slipping on a banana peel," said Madonia.
Although federal officials lifted the tomato warning Thursday,
the cause of the outbreak remains unknown. Hot peppers are under
suspicion, and tomatoes have not been cleared everywhere.
While the poll found that three in four people remain confident
about the overall safety of food, 46 percent said they were worried
they might get sick from eating contaminated products. The same
percentage said that because of safety warnings, they have avoided
items they normally would have purchased.
Christy Taylor, a first-grade teacher from Sacramento, Calif.,
said she has all but given up on supermarket produce and is buying
most of her fresh fruits and vegetables at the local farmers'
market instead.
"I see the same farmers every single week," said
Taylor, 30, the mother of 2-year-old twin girls. "You meet the
people and you see where the (produce) is coming from."
Her twins love tomatoes, she said, and chomp on them as if they
were apples. But until the mystery of the tainted food is solved,
"I feel a little bit more comfortable, a little more safe,
doing the local farmers' market," she said.
Eighty-six percent in the poll said produce should be labeled so
it can be tracked through layers of processors, packers and
shippers, all the way back to the farm. The lack of such a system
frustrated disease detectives working on the salmonella outbreak.
However, the industry is divided over mandatory tracing technology,
and Congress is running out of time to act on any major food safety
changes before the election.
The poll found that 80 percent of Americans said they would
support new federal standards for fresh produce. Meat and poultry
have long been subject to enforceable federal safeguards, but
fruits and vegetables are not, although produce increasingly is
being implicated in outbreaks.
The high level of uneasiness should not be taken lightly, said
Michael R. Taylor, a former senior federal food safety official who
now teaches at George Washington University.
"When you have almost half the population avoiding certain
foods because of safety concerns, that's very significant from
the standpoint of economic impact for the people selling the food,
and from the standpoint of peace of mind for consumers," said
Taylor.
In addition to the salmonella outbreak, this year has seen the
largest ground beef recall in history, raising consumer concerns
reflected in the poll.
The survey found gender, racial and economic gaps on attitudes
about food safety.
Women, who do most of the shopping, were more concerned than
men. For example, 39 percent of men said they were "very
confident" that the food they buy is safe, but only 23 percent
of women said they felt that way. However, men and women agreed on
the need for better federal oversight.
In Congress, a leading advocate of food safety reforms said the
industry would do well to listen to consumers on the need for
tracing.
"We live in an age of technology where you can bar-code a
banana," said Sen. Richard Durbin, D-Ill. "We've got
to work this through with the industry and come up with something
that's reasonable. The more confidence consumers have, the more
goods they will purchase."
___
Associated Press polling director Michael Mokrzycki and AP
writers Christine Simmons in Washington,and Steve Szkotak in
Richmond, Va., contributed to this report.
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