$1 M grants to enhance food and feed safety, US

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration recently enhanced its food and feed protection initiatives with the award of three one-year Food Safety and Security Monitoring grants totaling $1 million to the states of Arkansas, Nebraska, and Wisconsin. The funds support cooperative agreements designed to create a national integrated food safety system through enhanced federal and state collaboration in food emergency response activities.
"We are excited to partner with these states as they perform such critical roles in ensuring food safety," said Margaret A. Hamburg, M.D., Commissioner of Food and Drugs. "The FDA is committed to investing in efforts that will better protect American consumers from food safety and food defense threats."
The three states each received $350,000 to fund Food Emergency Response Network (FERN) chemistry laboratories. FERN labs are essential to the FDA's regulatory efforts and the grants may be used for facility upgrades, training in current food testing methodologies, and increased laboratory sample analysis capacity, and other activities.
In the event of a large-scale event affecting food or food products, the grant recipients may be required to perform selected analyses of food samples collected by the FDA or provided by other government agencies through the FDA.
The state recipients and highlights for each grant include:
Arkansas – Arkansas Department of Health, Little Rock, Ark. The grant award will be used to increase the department's ability to test for toxic and unknown substances in food products, provide regional support for national responses during food surveillance activities, increase state and local emergency response capacities and become more proficient in testing foods for toxic and unknown substances.
Nebraska – Nebraska Department of Agriculture, Lincoln, Neb. The award will enable analyses of foods and food products in the event redundancy or additional laboratory capacity is needed for chemical-related analyses.
Wisconsin – Wisconsin Department of Agriculture, Madison, Wis. The grant will provide for standing reserve capacity within the FERN for response to chemical-related analysis needs, or an event of such significance that it threatens the national food supply.
In 2008, the FDA awarded $5.2 million in food and feed safety grants to state and local agencies selected by a review panel that scored proposals based on technical and programmatic merit. The grants fund major cooperative agreements in four major areas: the Ruminant Feed Ban Support Program, Innovative Food Defense, Rapid Response Teams, and Food Safety and Security Monitoring. California, Ohio, and Colorado were the 2008 recipients of the Food Safety and Security Monitoring grants.
(Editor compiled and published
$1 M grants to enhance food and feed safety, US at HealthNewsTrack on June 3, 2009 sourced from U.S. Food and Drug Administration - http://www.fda.gov/)
Food safety - recent articles and current news stories:
-
Salsa and guacamole important causes of foodborne disease-
FDA should ensure food safety measures in US-
Obama administration launches food safety working-
Diet Coke Plus violating US FDA food safety lawFood safety article/news source:
Read more health articles from
U.S. Food and Drug Administration and
health articles from USA.
Food safety - search related terms:
Feed safety,
Food,
Food Safety,
Food surveillance,
Grant,
Safe food,
Security Monitoring,
Food safety books,
Mission
Health Newstrack is dedicated to serve recent and updated health & medical research, events/news, views/reviews to its subscribers and free access to general public, health & medical professionals, and other health seekers worldwide online with a user-friendly system.
Subscribe to Health News by Email
Current news
FDA Awards $1 Million in Grants to Three States to Enhance Food and Feed Safety - Arkansas, Nebraska, and Wisconsin funded for Food Safety and Security Monitoring.
About Food safetyFood safety is a matter that affects anyone who eats food. Whether or not a person consciously thinks about food safety before eating a meal, a host of other people have thought about the safety of that food, from farmers to scientists to company presidents to federal government officials and public health officials. Ensuring the safety of food is a shared responsibility among producers, industry, government, and consumers. Safe food is food that is free not only from toxins, pesticides, and chemical and physical contaminants, but also from microbiological pathogens such as bacteria, parasites, and viruses that can cause illness.