And
Now, a Billion for the Food Police?
by
Vin Suprynowicz
by Vin Suprynowicz
President
Obama last week accused the Bush administration of creating a hazard
to public health by failing to curb food contamination problems.
Mr. Bushs successor announced he will form a Food Safety
Working Group to upgrade our food safety laws for the
21st century.
Money came
up. The president will ask Congress for $1 billion in new funds
for starters to add FDA inspectors and modernize laboratories.
He further announced the Agriculture Department is moving ahead
with a rule change banning sick or disabled cattle from the food
supply.
There
are certain things only a government can do, Mr. Obama said.
And one of those things is ensuring that the foods we eat,
and the medicines we take, are safe and do not cause us harm.
Food
safety sounds like an issue everyone can get behind. Getting
downer cows out of the food chain certainly sounds like
a no-brainer. But in fact, the history of government regulation
of food safety has been far from perfect. After all, no one shut
down or even reduced the budget of the FDA, the USDA, and a score
of other regulatory agencies in recent years. If government
is the answer, why have there been recurrent problems? Furthermore,
the assertion that only government can do it flies in
the face of common sense.
Imagine you
pull off the highway late in the evening in a strange part of the
country. On one side of the exit rises a lighted sign for Greasyburgers
locally owned and cheapest in town. Our last customer is
now out of the hospital and doing fine. (My apologies to the
real Greasyburgers, should there prove to be one. This
is intended to be a hypothetical example.)
On the other
side of the exit you spot the familiar, lighted logo of McDonalds,
or Burger King, or Wendys. Which do you choose?
The adventurous
are always free to try the locally owned eatery. But we all know
the majority of motorists will choose the well-known brand name,
not because the food is necessarily a gourmet delight, but because
we realize that corporation has millions of dollars invested in
a brand name, and thus a vested interest in protecting that brand
by delivering a consistently wholesome product.
Should budget
shortfalls require federal food regulatory agencies to shut down
tomorrow, do we really believe manufacturers who have spent billions
building up the reputations of things called Cheerios
and Campbells Soup would immediately start ignoring
the long-term costs of adding harmful adulterants to make better
short-term profits tomorrow?
Branding
is a free-market device, requiring government action only to protect
the trademark, through which consumers reward providers with their
repeat business for maintaining high standards. Most recent problems
in the food chain have involved products which consumers could not
readily identify by brand name. Maybe we need more branding,
rather than less.
When we fail
to recognize the brand, instinctively, despite a solid century of
government food safety regulation, we dont always
act on the presumption: Government regulators would already
have shut down any eatery that was below par, so its equally
safe to eat at Greasyburgers.
Yes, the American
public (whether or not their confidence is well placed) have long
since accepted a role for government regulation in the food and
medical supply chains. So long as theyre in the business,
of course we want those jobs done as effectively as possible.
But its
also fair to ask President Obama if part of his new food safety
initiative will include HR 875, introduced by far-left Connecticut
Democrat Rosa DeLauro, chairwoman of the Agriculture Subcommittee
of the House Appropriations Committee, whose husband, Stanley Greenberg,
is a leading Democratic political strategist and consultant whose
clients have included pesticide and fertilizer giant Monsanto. (Though
both Mr. Greenbergs outfit and Ms. DeLauros office tell
me, rather insistently, that the Monsanto relationship ended a decade
ago.)
Now, bills
that start out overly broad are sometimes narrowed and improved
during the hearing process thats what hearings are
for. All the current Internet hyperventilating over Rep. DeLauros
proposed Food Police may turn out to be a tad overblown.
Nonetheless,
the bill does appear to define food producers so broadly
as to invite suspicion that even a small, backyard gardener growing
food for his or her own family or for local sale at a roadside
stand would be subject to uniform federal regulations (enforced
by state agricultural police) requiring pesticide use and so forth,
all in the name of public safety.
Would HR 875
effectively ban seed banking and small-scale organic farming? Would
it allow the Food Police to trespass on private property to check
our vegetables? Would it mandate 24-hour GPS tracking of farm
animals? Could lands and crops be seized for non-compliance?
A lot can be
justified under the rubric of food safety. Do we really
believe granting a monopoly to large-scale factory farms, with their
standardized artificial fertilizers and pesticides, is safest for
our health and nutritional needs in the long run?
As H.L. Mencken
said, Democracy is the theory that the common people know
what they want, and deserve to get it good and hard.
March
30, 2009
Vin
Suprynowicz [send
him mail] is assistant editorial page editor of the daily Las
Vegas Review-Journal and author of The
Black Arrow. Visit his
blog.
Copyright
© 2009 Vin Suprynowicz
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