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USDA cut back on listeria testing nationwide, ahead of deadly Boar’s Head outbreak

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In the year leading up to a deadly listeria outbreak now traced back to recalled Boar’s Head deli meats, U.S. Department of Agriculture records show that Biden administration officials quietly made significant cuts to planned testing for germs across America’s food supply. 

The department says the cuts did not translate to significantly fewer tests at the now-shuttered Boar’s Head plant in Jarratt, Virginia, that’s been blamed for the outbreak. 

Other Boar’s Head plants are also now under law enforcement investigation, CBS News reported Thursday, and federal food safety officials have pledged a “top-to-bottom review” of what went wrong leading up to the outbreak linked to at least 59 hospitalizations and 10 deaths.

The Biden administration has not provided an explanation for the decision to make the changes. And questions are now being raised about why the Boar’s Head plant’s years of violations didn’t spur regulators to reverse course, do more testing and step up federal scrutiny.

“The threat of the agency coming in and taking samples and finding a positive and shutting everything down keeps them honest and sets the standard,” said Thomas Gremillion, head of food policy at the Consumer Federation of America.

The Consumer Federation of America helms a coalition of nonprofit groups that advocates for food safety and meets monthly with Biden administration officials on these issues, including in recent weeks following the Boar’s Head outbreak.

The federal Food Safety and Inspection Service has limited resources from Congress relative to the scale of testing done by the private sectors. The agency has also faced “continuing difficulty” with recruitment and retention for its food safety inspectors, as it competes with the private sector for personnel.

Federal oversight is one important way to push producers — and the retailers they serve — to test more aggressively between inspections, Gremillion said.

“You want to test in a way so that, when the agency comes in and tests, that they’re going to get the same results, a negative,” he said.

Cutting random sampling by 50%

After years of running more than 200,000 tests annually, planning documents in 2023 show the USDA’s Food Safety and Inspection Service made changes that amounted to at least 54,000 fewer lab tests for the coming fiscal year.

Those cuts spanned a wide range of products overseen by the inspection service, which is tasked with ensuring food safety at slaughterhouses, processing facilities and importers nationwide. The list of changes included fewer tests of poultry for Campylobacter bacteria to ending testing of pork products for “forever chemicals.”

For ready-to-eat foods, the category that includes deli meats, inspectors would run 7,392 fewer tests. A large share of that decrease came from a decision to cut random sampling by 50% for the bacteria Listeria monocytogenes and salmonella, common culprits of food poisoning outbreaks. 

At the time, the agency said it would still maintain product sampling levels at “higher risk establishments” during the fiscal year.

A spokesperson acknowledged in an email that the agency reduced random product sampling in the last year, but said “routine, risk-based sampling remained the same. This had no bearing on testing done at the Boar’s Head facility in Jarratt.”

At the Boar’s Head plant in Jarratt, Virginia, FSIS records show testing, at a cadence of around once per month, remained mostly unchanged. Instead, a larger share of recent tests look to have been simply coded instead as risk-based tests instead of random tests.

“A real head-scratcher”

Deli meats like liverwurst have long been known to pose a higher risk of food poisoning. Boar’s Head announced earlier this month it had decided to discontinue selling the liver sausages, after its investigation blamed the root cause of the outbreak on a “specific production process” used at Jarratt for liverwurst.

“It’s a high-risk food for a reason. There is the raw side and the ready-to-eat side. And there’s more risk of cross-contamination than with, you know, a granola bar factory. But in a way, that means there should be greater scrutiny of the liverwurst, if they’re the ones causing all the listeria,” said Gremillion.

Federal inspectors also had the option to have done more “intensified” testing at the plant, he said, though an analysis of federal records CBS News shared with Gremillion suggest that was not done at the Boar’s Head facility in Jarratt. 

“If not this plant with the black mold and pig’s blood, then who is getting the extra sampling? That is just a real head-scratcher,” he said.

CBS News first reported in August that inspectors had flagged dozens of violations at the plant leading up to the outbreak. Those “noncompliance” records, obtained through a Freedom of Information Act request, showed inspectors had written up the plant multiple times over concerns about problems including like live insects and mold that were found throughout the facility.

Records later released by the agency from earlier years suggest frontline inspectors had concerns about the plant dating back to at least 2022, when they conducted a food safety assessment of the facility.

Short of deciding to suspend inspection at the facility, making it illegal for the plant to continue operating, inspectors can seek these kinds of ramped-up inspections over an “increased public health risk.”

“They’ve got this one big punishment of pulling the inspector. And then otherwise, they just wag their fingers a lot. And with a food safety assessment, that’s, we’ve been wagging our fingers, now we’re going to have a bunch of people come down and wag our fingers even harder at you,” Gremillion said.

Rethinking the regulatory structure

Outside of the assessment, routine oversight of the Boar’s Head plant — carried out largely by state inspectors in Virginia, through a decades-old outsourcing arrangement drawn up for rural facilities — also appears to have gone on as normal.

A spokesperson for Virginia’s Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services said its inspectors had carried out 2,127 “tasks” assigned to them by the USDA’s public health system in the year leading up to the plant’s closure.

A Food Safety and Inspection Service spokesperson confirmed that, over the past decade, inspectors have “completed a relatively consistent number of routine inspection tasks assigned” to the plant each year.

A Boar’s Head spokesperson did not immediately respond to a request for comment. In previous statements, the company has defended its response to violations raised by inspectors at its Jarratt plant, saying they always promptly addressed concerns after they were flagged.

Gremillion said it was “one of the most disturbing things about this outbreak,” that Virginia inspectors were there for the USDA inside the plant daily, documenting the growing issues.

“It makes you wonder if the whole regulatory structure needs some rethinking. There’s a reluctance to close down a plant, and there’s not enough that FSIS can do shy of that,” he said.



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Supreme Court denies RFK Jr.’s bid to be reinstated on New York ballot

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Washington — The Supreme Court on Friday rejected a bid by independent presidential Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to restore his name to New York’s general election ballot.

The unsigned order from the court leaves intact a lower court decision declining to place his name back on New York’s ballot ahead of the Nov. 5 contest. Kennedy mounted an unsuccessful independent bid for the White House and, after suspending his campaign last month, is working to have his name removed from ballots in more than a dozen states.

He has since endorsed former President Donald Trump, the Republican nominee.

Kennedy asked the high court in an emergency appeal this week to reinstate his name in the Empire State, arguing that his supporters “have a constitutional right to have Kennedy placed on the ballot — and to vote for him, whether he is campaigning for their vote or not.” 

“Whatever inconvenience the [state] may have in adding Kennedy to the ballot seven weeks before the election, it seems inconceivable that those difficulties or expenses could outweigh the constitutional rights of 108,417 New York voters,” his campaign told the court in its request for emergency relief.

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. before the first presidential debate between former President Donald Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris on Sept. 10, 2024, in Philadelphia.
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. before the first presidential debate between former President Donald Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris on Sept. 10, 2024, in Philadelphia.

Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images


The dispute arose after Kennedy collected more than 120,000 signatures to appear on New York’s ballot. The signatures were submitted to the state elections board in May, which went on to certify their validity and vote to place Kennedy on the ballot.

But several individuals filed a lawsuit in state court challenging Kennedy’s nominating petition. A state court and appeals court both ordered the board to keep Kennedy off the ballot on the grounds that his nominating petition listed an invalid address for the presidential hopeful. State law requires a nominating petition to show the candidates “place of residence” which is defined as their “fixed, permanent and principal home.”

The address in Katonah, New York, that Kennedy listed on his petition belongs to a friend, whom he paid $500 a month beginning in May for a room that he and the friend both say he has stayed in just once. 

Kennedy said in a sworn declaration filed with a federal court in New York that he is registered to vote in the state and “for consistency purposes” was advised by his election law counsel to use the Katonah address on the nominating petition and other state petitions requiring a residence.

But the state appeals court concluded that the Katonah address wasn’t Kennedy’s “fixed” or “permanent” home, and determined he never lived there. New York’s top court, the Court of Appeals, declined to review the lower court’s decision.

While the state court proceedings were underway, Kennedy’s campaign challenged his exclusion from New York’s ballot in federal court, claiming the state’s residence requirement is unconstitutional. A district judge and the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 2nd Circuit, however, declined the campaign’s request to restore Kennedy to the ballot.

The Board of Elections issued a certification of New York’s general election ballot on Sept. 11 that omitted Kennedy from it.

Kennedy, the son of the late Robert F. Kennedy and nephew of John F. Kennedy, argued in a filing with the Supreme Court that the address on his nominating petition is “entirely immaterial” to voters and to New York, and said the residence requirement is not related to a qualification to run for the presidency.

His campaign also argued that disclosing a “controversial” public figure’s home address puts him and his family at risk.

“It can result in round-the-clock demonstrations outside his house, attacks on his home, and harassment of his family, including his children,” Kennedy’s campaign argued. “This is a severe burden to impose on a presidential candidate on pain of exclusion from the ballot.”

The Board of Elections urged the Supreme Court to reject Kennedy’s request, noting that not only has the ballot certification deadline already passed, but so has a federal deadline for mailing ballots to overseas and military voters, which was Sept. 21.

“The requested injunction would not only severely disrupt the state’s election processes and trigger substantial voter confusion, but also cause New York to miss federal deadlines for mailing overseas and military ballots and potentially disenfranchise voters who receive and vote the original ballot,” state officials wrote in a Supreme Court filing.

They also noted that Kennedy has already called off his own presidential campaign, endorsed Trump and is in court in other states to remove his name from their ballots.

“Kennedy’s purported concern for his petition signers’ rights is highly questionable given his attempts to remove his name from the ballots in other states,” New York officials said. “Meanwhile, voters who may not be aware of Kennedy’s suspension of his candidacy may be misled by his presence on the ballot into thinking that he remains a bona fide candidate for the presidency.”

Kennedy’s suspension of his campaign came after months of fighting to get on the ballot in every state and Washington, D.C. At the time, he said he would seek to have his name removed from the ballots in 10 states that his campaign considered competitive because it risked harming Trump’s chances of winning the election against Vice President Kamala Harris. He also endorsed Trump, but said his supporters should still vote for him in states where it would not be to the detriment of the Republican nominee. 

But Kennedy later encouraged his supporters in every state to vote for Trump and has sought to remove his name from the ballot in more states than the original 10. According to CBS News’ latest tally, Kennedy’s name won’t appear on the ballot in 18 states

His campaign website now declares “a vote for Trump is a vote for Kennedy.”

In August, a Georgia judge determined Kennedy was “not qualified” to appear on the state’s ballot, citing questions about his New York residency. Georgia was one of the 10 states where Kennedy wanted his name removed from the ballot and he did not challenge the decision.

While he fights to have his name reinstated in New York, he’s waging a separate battle in Michigan to have his name removed. The Michigan Supreme Court ruled in September to keep him on the ballot. He has appealed to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 6th Circuit.  

Kennedy’s request for relief is the third involving the 2024 election to land before the Supreme Court, though more are expected. The justices in August revived part of an Arizona law requiring documentary proof of citizenship when registering to vote using a state-created form, but declined to allow enforcement of provisions mandating such proof in order to vote for president or by mail.

Earlier this month, it rejected a bid to put Green Party presidential candidate Jill Stein on the Nevada general election ballot.



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Preview: Chris Martin and Jonny Buckland of Coldplay

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Preview: Chris Martin and Jonny Buckland of Coldplay – CBS News


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In this preview of an interview to be broadcast on “CBS Sunday Morning” September 29, correspondent Anthony Mason talks with Chris Martin and Jonny Buckland of the rock band Coldplay about their massively-successful world tour.

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New York City Mayor Eric Adams pleads not guilty to federal charges

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New York City Mayor Eric Adams pleads not guilty to federal charges – CBS News


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New York City Mayor Eric Adams appeared in court Friday and pleaded not guilty to federal charges against him. CBS News’ Nikki Battiste was in court while the Adams’ arraignment took place.

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