The following is from the April 2002 issue of Acres
USA, a monthly journal on eco-agriculture.
Irradiation: Farm Bill Fine Print
Although irradiated food has proved to be a flop
with consumers, the industry hasn't given up, and it's getting some powerful
help. In addition to the mail irradiation bonanza following 9-11, two
last-minute additions to the U.S. Senate version of the Farm Bill are clearly
designed to increase consumption--and decrease public awareness--of irradiated
foods.
Section 442 ("Use of Approved Food Safety
Technology") states that the Secretary of Agriculture cannot prohibit the
purchase of commodities for nutrition programs it administers if those
commodities have been treated with food safety technologies approved by the U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services. Among the technologies approved
by HHS is irradiation. Programs covered include the National School Lunch
Program and the Child Nutrition Act of 1996.
Section 1079E ("Pasteurization") directs the HHS
Secretary to redefine pasteurization to include any process that HHS has
approved to improve food safety. Irradiation is one of those
processes. For the past five years, the food irradiation industry has been
attempting to persuade the FDA to change the current labeling requirements for
irradiated foods so that they could be labeled as either "Cold
Pasteurized" or "electronic Pasteurized," but public opposition has been
stiff.
Both provisions were added by Sen. Tom Harkin
(D-Iowa) to the Senate version of the Farm Bill (H.R. 2646) during the final
hours of debate. They were hidden in a 396-page amendment that few
senators had seen prior to its being considered on the floor. The Senate
passed the Farm Bill on February 13.
Meanwhile, the USPS admits in a press release that
"irradiation can adversely affect some mailable products, such as biological
samples, diagnostic kits, photographic film, food and eyeglasses and contact
lenses. Electronic devices would likely be rendered inoperable and drugs
and medicines also can be affected." Customers are reassured, however,
that "the only mail currently being irradiated is mail going to specific
government offices."