By Frank Pecarich
California Progress Report, October 13, 2006
Straight to the Source
Here's what I think is going on in Monterey County vis a vis this E. coli issue.
Monterey County officials stand to be in big trouble if this spinach and
lettuce disaster continues to get more "light of day". They talked farmers
whose farms are located in the Castroville Sea Water Intrusion Project area
into using tertiary treated sewage effluent to irrigate 12,000 acres of high
quality vegetables including leafy green spinach and lettuce. This had never
been done before in the United States on vulnerable soft tissue vegetables
such as lettuce or spinach. These are particularly vulnerable crops to E.
coli pathogens anyway because of the soft cellular tissue and the fact that
they are typically consumed raw. Also, much of that CSIP cropland uses
sprinkler irrigation which means that the vegetables are getting a frequent
sprinkling of water that has a chance of containing the highly toxic
pathogen E.coli 0157:H7.
There is no known cure to human infection of E. coli 0157:H7. Your body
simply has to fight the pathogen by itself and one hopes the victim's
immunity system will defend itself. That’s why people with weak immune
systems are most at risk, the old and the very young. You might notice the
ages of the three people who have died so far with this 20th crisis. It was
a two year old who had consumed a spinach smoothie and a couple of seniors.
Now here comes the 9th infection crisis in 10 years and the State hasn't
even finished writing the reports of the crisis since 2004 and worse, a
state senator now seems to be "on to them". Also seemingly terrified and
noticeably desperate is Congressman Sam Farr who has been suckered into this
deceit and now has his political fingerprints "all over the bloody knife."
The first retort of the local officials and Sam Farr was to shout "Is he
crazy?" and "What's he thinking?" in their local press -- The Monterey
Herald -- at the understandable reactions of State Senator Dean Florez to
this news. When that didn't seem to faze the Senator, Congressman Sam Farr
started to try and distract the attention this bad news was receiving and
the unwanted attention of the press by suggesting that the Feds should try
and trap some wild pigs for testing. He then -- as the press later put it --
"staged” a press event where he was going to eat raw spinach in front of the
cameras. Trouble was, he couldn't find any spinach in his drive around town
and looking in grocery stores. That was widely reported in the press and so
far he's 0 for 2.
Now comes October 11th and the Dean Florez-led State Legislative Hearing in
the State Capitol on this matter. The outcome of that revealing hearing was
all over the news on the following day. The FDA was a no-show at that
Hearing and had sent in an unsigned document that was supposed to be
"testimony". The State Department of Health, who did at least show up, took
a real beating by admitting they pretty much hadn't done anything useful on
the previous cases for the past several years. Those would be cases 17
through 19 if you’re keeping score and with actual dates, no report has even]
been issued on the one in 2004, two years ago. They must not want to rush to
judgment...
Speaking of not wanting to rush to judgment, Salinas local State Senator
Jeff Denham and a farmer by trade, has gone on record in the media as not
wanting to reach any premature conclusions before all the facts were in. He
said to the press “that he will convene his own hearing once the spinach
investigation is concluded”.
I would like to ask Mr. Denham that after waiting more than two years to
receive a report from the State Department of Health, what his idea of an
appropriate waiting time would be? How many more people have to die while
we’re waiting on the State bureaucrats, Mr. Denham? By the way, after
shooting his faulty logic into the new media recorders, Denham didn’t even
attend the Florez Hearing. What you have something more important to do
Senator. I think I’ll award you strike three right away and not waste more
time on your brand of “delusion and diffusion”. Step to the back of the
room…
The officials from Monterey County also took a shellacking on October 11th
which was highly embarrassing since they had bragged a few weeks ago that
Senator Florez didn't know what he was talking about and that they would be
pleased to educate him. When the time came at the Hearing and their
opportunity to teach Senator Florez, they were, well, speechless.
Then, less than 24 hours after the Hearing and weeks into this Inspector
Closeau type “investigation”, our stalwart regulatory protectors -- the FDA
and the State -- come up with an "I found a cow pie less than a mile from a
spinach field story". While they admit that they cannot explain how the
E.coli 0157:H7 got to the spinach fields, or if there is any connection at
all -- and "those other farms are still not off the hook" -- we are somehow
supposed to take this as good news?
In an article the day after the Hearing, this was written:
“This is exactly what we hoped, that they could narrow their focus and come
back with conclusions, conclusions on how the product got contaminated so we
can learn as much as we can from this particular situation and enhance or
improve or change our practices accordingly," said Joseph Pezzini, vice
president of operations for Ocean Mist Farms in Castroville. And while the
FDA said this does not let the other farms off the hook, Joseph Pezzini
continues by saying, "Other Salinas Valley processors and farmers also
expressed relief that inspectors had traced the bacteria to a single ranch."
It should be noted here that Ocean Mist Farms is a large Castroville-based
grower with most of its acreage located within the CSIP boundary area where
Monterey County uses tertiary treated sewage effluent to irrigate 12,000
acres.
Meanwhile, not one to leave a bad situation alone and just silently sneak to
the rear of the room, Congressman Sam Farr is well on his way to being 0 for
3 (or is it strike 3?) by challenging the Mexican government for it’s recent
banning of California grown lettuce.
In addition, I haven’t had time to do the research but chances are that
Congressman Sam Farr was involved in getting some federal funds for this
modern day version of cesspool we now call Castroville Sea Water Intrusion
Project (CSIP). If my suspicions are correct about some federal money having
financed this nightmare idea, that sure won’t look good on his resume. Would
that be strike 4?
Yes, it’s true folks, those people in places like Tijuana where raw sewage
runs down their creeks and water byways now don’t want California lettuce
and spinach to come into their environment. Hey, pretty soon places like
Bangladesh will order a similar embargo on California grown leafy green
vegetable if this keeps up.
The local Monterey Herald reported in their story on October 12th in an
obvious under-statement, ”now may not be the best time for Mexico and the
United States to get into an agricultural trade dispute.” Seemingly
perplexed, Mexican President Fox was quoted as saying in this same article,
"With this as the basis for the Mexican government actions, there would be
no apparent basis for the U.S. government to retaliate," Fox wrote in an
e-mail. "Note that other governments ban U.S. imports without damaging their
overall trade relations -- like Japan's ban on U.S. beef."
There’s nothing like a little trade war with Mexico to liven things up for
the good old USA and California right now. So this one is clearly shaping up
to be Sam’s strike? Golly, I seem to have lost track.
Well I’m getting tired for the day and need to go take a nap but,
reluctantly, I have to accuse these people of a cover-up, pure and simple.
They have been dissembling information for years it appears. It is time to
put an end to this collusion and subterfuge. Our food safety, our lives and
our children's lives are at stake.
Frank Pecarich retired from the Washington, D.C. headquarters of the US
Bureau of Reclamation in 1987. During his 26 year federal career he worked
as a soil scientist with the USDA on the now- published Soil Survey for
Monterey County. He lives in Ventura County.