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Title: ‘Pink Slime’ Furor Means Disaster for U.S. Meat Innovator
Source: Bloomberg
URL Source: http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012- ... er-for-u-s-meat-innovator.html
Published: Apr 13, 2012
Author: Bryan Gruley and Elizabeth Campbell
Post Date: 2012-04-13 11:21:05 by Brian S
Keywords: None
Views: 3302
Comments: 10

Thirty-one years ago, a young man with no college degree and the restless mind of a tinkerer started an unusual meat-processing company. Eldon Roth’s Beef Products Inc. bought tons of fatty scraps left over after cattle were carved into steaks and roasts.

Roth concocted a way to use centrifuges to spin the fat away and quick-freeze the remaining meat into a pink pulp that made ground beef leaner when it was mixed in. He called it “lean finely textured beef.” McDonald’s Corp. (MCD), Wal-Mart Stores Inc., Burger King Worldwide Holdings Inc., Kroger Co., and Yum! Brands (YUM) Inc.’s Taco Bell chain used it. Roth opened plants in Texas, Kansas, Iowa, and Nebraska, employing about 1,500 workers. He was inducted into the Meat Industry Hall of Fame last fall in a ceremony that brought him to tears.

Then last month, a news article referring to Roth’s product as “pink slime” caught the attention of food blogger Bettina Elias Siegel. She launched an online petition to have it banned from the federal school lunch program. As Walt Disney Co.’s ABC News and other media jumped on the story, portrayals of BPI’s product as gross and unsafe rippled through the blogosphere. With his customers abandoning him, Roth on March 26 suspended production at three plants, laid off almost half his workers, and now faces a struggle to keep BPI alive, Bloomberg Businessweek reports in its April 16 issue.

“It’s gotten to the point of absurdity,” said Craig Letch, 39, Roth’s son-in-law and BPI’s chief of safety and quality, as he wound his way through a warren of stainless-steel pipes and whirring grinders at the company’s plant in South Sioux City, Nebraska. “Have you had a hamburger in the last 20 years? Odds are lean finely textured beef was a part of that.”

Overblown

BPI’s predicament is unusual because it wasn’t precipitated by an outbreak of food-borne illness, and its product has never been directly linked to one. Plaintiffs attorney Bill Marler, noted for suing fast-food restaurant owner Jack in the Box Inc. and other companies over unsafe meat, said the rap against Beef Products is overblown.

“BPI’s product is no more or less safe than other parts of hamburger,” Marler said. “There’s a lot of scraps that get put into hamburger because that’s what the hell hamburger is.”

Why the outrage around BPI? The Web petition? The TV coverage?

“That’s the wrong way to think about this,” said Matthew Salganik, an assistant professor of sociology at Princeton University. “Imagine a forest fire. No one thinks, ‘Which lightning strike did it?’” More telling are the scant rainfall and hot weather that set the stage for a blaze, he said.

PR Disaster

The meat industry has been taking heat in books, films, and news stories for years. Add a catchy phrase, schoolchildren, and the prospect that some icky-sounding stuff is in Junior’s Whopper, and you have a PR disaster, he said.

“Social media is something that adds oxygen to the environment,” Salganik said. “It increases the chance that a small spark will turn into a big fire.”

Associates describe Roth, 69, as heartbroken. He declined to be interviewed. He’s paying sidelined employees through May, but is facing the real possibility that he may be forced to permanently ditch them.

While blogger Siegel said the job losses are “tragic,” she notes that BPI “should have had no hesitation to inform consumers” that its product “was in the ground beef from the beginning,” perhaps through labeling. “I have never expressed anywhere a desire to drive this company out of business,” she said.

Trimming Waste

Roth grew up poor in South Dakota, where his company is now headquartered in Dakota Dunes. He became fascinated with refrigeration while working at an ice cream plant, and in 1971 started a refrigeration company that worked with meat processors.

Seeing beef trimmings going to waste, he experimented with ways to harvest the bits encased in fat. Slicing it out by hand was costly. So, Roth figured out how to cull the meat by warming ground-up scraps to about 100 degrees Fahrenheit (37.8 degrees Celsius) -- the approximate body temperature of a steer -- and spinning them in industrial centrifuges at thousands of revolutions per minute. The meat was frozen on a 14-foot (4.3- meter) drum Roth developed, then chopped into chips or compressed into 60-pound (27-kilogram) blocks that look like Spam, the meat spread made by Austin, Minnesota-based Hormel Foods Corp.

He started BPI in 1981 with a plant in Amarillo, Texas, selling to processors that blended the product with other beef. At more than 90 percent lean, BPI’s product is usually added to make fattier grinds leaner, mostly in packaged ground beef and hamburger patties but also taco meat and low-fat hot dogs. At peak production in the last decade, BPI churned out 500 million pounds a year.

Bacteria Precaution

After four children died of E. coli poisoning from Jack in the Box burgers in 1992 and 1993, Roth began looking for ways to avoid similar tragedies. In 2001, he received U.S. Department of Agriculture approval to treat his product with a puff of ammonium hydroxide after the fat was spun out. Ammonia occurs naturally in beef and other foods and has long been approved as an additive in many products, from cheese to pudding. BPI’s puff treatment raises the meat’s pH to a level that can kill bacteria. Every carton of BPI’s beef is tested for E. coli and other pathogens before going to customers.

“Eldon Roth basically is a genius,” said Steve Kay, editor of newsletter Cattle Buyers Weekly. “BPI has been in the forefront of food safety in the beef industry for a decade or more.”

‘Pink Slime’

BPI has had detractors. About a decade ago, a USDA microbiologist coined “pink slime” in an e-mail about BPI’s product. The term surfaced publicly in a prize-winning New York Times Co. (NYT) story about BPI in late 2009, quoting the e-mail as saying the microbiologist didn’t consider treated trimmings to be actual ground beef. The story said that E. coli and salmonella had shown up in beef trimmings destined for school lunches, but never reached kids’ meals.

A year ago, celebrity chef Jamie Oliver mocked BPI’s product on his Food Revolution television show, sloshing household ammonia over a mound of beef. Also in 2011, fast-food restaurants including McDonald’s, Burger King and Taco Bell stopped using textured beef in their meat. Oak Brook, Illinois- based McDonald’s said it wanted to standardize its global beef supply. Burger King, based in Miami, said its move “wasn’t related to safety concerns.” Taco Bell, owned by Louisville, Kentucky-based Yum! Brands (YUM), didn’t return calls. BPI’s Letch said no customers have expressed safety concerns.

Business Lost

Cattle Buyers Weekly reported the defections on Jan. 2, saying they had cost BPI about 25 percent of its business and forced the company to reduce production to four days a week from five. A few short stories about McDonald’s shift ran in mainstream media later that month.

Then blogger Siegel, who monitors food coverage from her Houston home, got involved. The 46-year-old Harvard University law-school graduate started her blog, The Lunch Tray, in 2010 after working on the Houston school district’s parent advisory committee on food. That July, her blog reported that the USDA had announced tougher testing standards for school lunch beef. Siegel says she thought it meant lean finely textured beef would no longer be used.

So, she was surprised to read on March 5 of this year a story about BPI’s product on the website TheDaily.com, owned by News Corp. Headlined “Partners in ‘Slime,’” it was accompanied by a photo of chef Oliver wielding a bottle of ammonia. The story said the USDA planned to use 7 million pounds of BPI’s treated meat in school lunches.

Blogger’s Petition

The next morning, Siegel started a petition at Change.org, asking Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack to “put an immediate end to the use of ‘pink slime’ in our children’s school food.”

Explains Siegel: “The contrast was stark to me, that McDonald’s was responding to consumer concern, I believe in part. And yet schoolchildren have no say.”

The next evening, ABC News aired its first of at least six reports including material previously reported by TheDaily.com and the Times. TheDaily.com wrote several follow-up stories, and Siegel blogged, tweeted, and Facebook-posted about her petition to great effect: On one weekend, more than 137,000 signed it, Change.org says.

USDA’s Concession

On March 15, the USDA, while insisting BPI’s product was safe, said it would let schools choose whether to buy meat with or without textured beef. BPI started a website, pinkslimeisamyth.com, and ran full-page newspaper ads in which Roth bemoaned a “campaign of lies and deceit.” But one by one, Kroger and other customers said they would stop using the product, while Bentonville, Arkansas-based Wal-Mart and others said they’d offer a choice of beef with and without it. Three weeks after TheDaily.com’s first story, Roth closed all but one of his plants.

Other companies have been affected as well. Minnesota-based Cargill Inc., which makes a similar product using citric acid instead of ammonia, has cut production. Meat processor AFA Foods Inc. cited “ongoing media attention” that hurt beef demand when it filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy on April 2. Tyson Foods Inc. (TSN), based in Springdale, Arkansas, and others are seeking USDA permission to list beef trimmings on package labels in the hope of calming consumers.

Iowa Governor Terry Branstad, whose state is home to a BPI plant, is seeking a congressional investigation of what he calls a “smear campaign” against BPI. Letch and other meat industry executives still profess bafflement at why this story went viral. “It’s emotional, it’s concrete, it’s easy to tell someone about,” said Salganik, the sociologist.

“The most painful part,” Letch said, “was looking 700” employees “in the eye, and them asking why and not having a good answer.”

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#1. To: Brian S (#0)

“It’s gotten to the point of absurdity,” said Craig Letch, 39, Roth’s son-in-law and BPI’s chief of safety and quality, as he wound his way through a warren of stainless-steel pipes and whirring grinders at the company’s plant in South Sioux City, Nebraska. “Have you had a hamburger in the last 20 years? Odds are lean finely textured beef was a part of that.”

Typical of the industry to ignore the truth in advertising angle.

Let's stop stealing the meat scraps that rightly belong to Fido.

Almost every country in the Middle East is awash in oil, and we have to side with the one that has nothing but joos. Goddamn, that was good thinkin'. Esso posted on 2012-01-13 7:37:56 ET

mininggold  posted on  2012-04-13   11:30:10 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#2. To: mininggold (#1)

Let's stop stealing the meat scraps that rightly belong to Fido.

That's a good point. Better than having the Chinese dog food poisoning them.

Fred Mertz  posted on  2012-04-13   11:36:08 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#3. To: Fred Mertz (#2)

That's a good point. Better than having the Chinese dog food poisoning them.

A vet told me that over a 1100 dogs died from that just in my own county. Mine died about a year later from kidney failure, so that couldn't be counted as the cause.

Almost every country in the Middle East is awash in oil, and we have to side with the one that has nothing but joos. Goddamn, that was good thinkin'. Esso posted on 2012-01-13 7:37:56 ET

mininggold  posted on  2012-04-13   12:26:51 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#4. To: mininggold (#1)

I worked for the Ill. Dept of Agriculture and visited many slaughter houses and know the foul crap they used to make this Pink shit.

I will never buy anything from a food store or fast food place that used that crap. I had five pounds of safeway burger which I gave my dog when i found out they used pink slime.

calcon  posted on  2012-04-13   12:36:09 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#5. To: Fred Mertz, All (#3)

A vet told me that over a 1100 dogs died from that just in my own county. Mine died about a year later from kidney failure, so that couldn't be counted as the cause.

They were also putting it into additives that go into rabbit and cow feed before they were putting it in dog food. It killed off a big rabbit operation in Canada and was killing off feeder steers by causing an acute B vitamin deficiency. I know this, because it killed one of mine, but I managed to save the others after the vet told me what was going on. This was about a year before the dog food started killing dogs.

Almost every country in the Middle East is awash in oil, and we have to side with the one that has nothing but joos. Goddamn, that was good thinkin'. Esso posted on 2012-01-13 7:37:56 ET

mininggold  posted on  2012-04-13   13:05:44 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#6. To: Brian S (#0)

“It’s gotten to the point of absurdity,” said Craig Letch, 39, Roth’s son-in-law and BPI’s chief of safety and quality, as he wound his way through a warren of stainless-steel pipes and whirring grinders at the company’s plant in South Sioux City, Nebraska. “Have you had a hamburger in the last 20 years? Odds are lean finely textured beef was a part of that.”

I knew when this entire thing was exposed why I have been getting physically sick after eating hamburger for the last twenty years.

I quit buying anybody's hamburger. I quit going to Mickey D's, I accepted that I'd usually feel sick after a cheap burger. I figured I was just getting old.

Now look for “lean finely textured beef.” on processed meats that you usually eat.

You aren't going to like what you see.

You know that "healthy" turkey? Turkey products? Not "beef" of course but turkey how about dem mcnuggatoids kiddies?

It's like sugar and high fructose in our food, it's everywhere.

READ the F'ing label people.

Spoiled, stupid and ignorant, brain dead phuckwads, libTURD fools, tools, and idiots, are the real sickness; the messiah "king" obammy and his regime are only the symptoms.

Mad Dog  posted on  2012-04-13   15:53:09 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#7. To: Fred Mertz (#2)

.

That was a bad one freddy.

The chinese were using melamine to fool protein tests into higher numbers.

Melamine is NOT a food.

"

Agence France-Presse — Getty Images Updated: March 4, 2011

Melamine is an industrial chemical used to make concrete, fertilizer and plastics. But it also can mimic protein in certain food-quality tests, and its illegal use by food manufacturers led to a series of scandals in China whose repercussions are still being felt.

Eaten in large enough quantities, melamine can cause kidney damage. In 2008, about 300,000 children in China were sickened and at least six babies died when some manufacturers added it to infant formula to make it appear more nutritious. The chemical helped cover up the fact that the milk had been diluted with water to increase the amount the milk producers were able to sell.

The scandal caused panic among Chinese parents, weakened the nation’s dairy industry and provoked a global recall of Chinese-made dairy products.

The year before, pet foods contaminated with Chinese-supplied melamine killed dozens of dogs in the United States and Africa, sickened thousands of pets and forced recalls of nearly 90 brands. Melamine has also been found in chocolate and eggs from China.

The incidents damaged the reputation of Chinese products worldwide, angered the nation’s citizens and underscored the problem posed to China’s development by lax law enforcement, corruption and a corner-cutting mentality among some businesses.

Some critics said that some officials had covered up the problem until after the Olympics in August 2008 to spare the government embarrassment over its widespread regulatory failure.

...

topics.nytimes.com/top/re...cts/m/melamine/index.html

Spoiled, stupid and ignorant, brain dead phuckwads, libTURD fools, tools, and idiots, are the real sickness; the messiah "king" obammy and his regime are only the symptoms.

Mad Dog  posted on  2012-04-13   16:01:22 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#8. To: Mad Dog (#7)

Melamine has also been found in chocolate and eggs from China.

Uh-oh, I'd better check my Easter basket. Thanks for the sane and informative reply.

Fred Mertz  posted on  2012-04-13   16:13:23 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#9. To: Fred Mertz (#8)

.

I'll tell you what I do, and I was partly raised in Asia.

NEVER eat anything from China.

NEVER feed anything you like any feed from China.

It's best to just believe that China does NOT make ANY safe food.

I LOVE Chinese food, I ate on the economy and in every Chinatown of every city I ever lived in.

I'm talking about grocery store stuff.

Now on the other hand Korean KimChee is safe to eat, at least healthwise, it's fermented so you have to deal with that ...

Spoiled, stupid and ignorant, brain dead phuckwads, libTURD fools, tools, and idiots, are the real sickness; the messiah "king" obammy and his regime are only the symptoms.

Mad Dog  posted on  2012-04-13   16:35:42 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#10. To: Brian S (#0)

Luckily I'm close to being a vegetarian.

I still eat pepperoni on my Neapolitan style pizza... How can one NOT eat pepperoni on pizza???

Other than that, I gave up meat about 7 years ago.

No pink slime for me.


Iran’s main drive for acquiring atomic weapons is not for use against Israel but as a deterrent against U.S. intervention -- Major General Zeevi Farkash, head of the Israeli Military Intelligence Directorate

jwpegler  posted on  2012-04-13   19:01:58 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


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