A federal court in Missouri has denied the motion to dismiss filed by a food-safety company responsible for auditing conditions at the Jensen Farms cantaloupe facility some six weeks before the U.S. Food and Drug Administration inspected the farm and found the Listeria strains associated with a nationwide outbreak that allegedly sickened the plaintiff. West v. Frontera Produce Ltd., No. 13-0943 (W.D. Mo., decided November 7, 2014). Primus Group, Inc. had argued that it owed no duty to the plaintiff, but the court disagreed, citing Missouri case law, which is consistent with the Restatement (Second) of Torts, Section 324A, allowing liability for third persons who render services that should be recognized “as necessary for the protection of a third person or his things.” According to the court, the plaintiff sufficiently stated a cause of action against the defendant, “given that Primus assumed a duty pursuant to contract and the performance of that duty…
Category Archives Issue 545
According to press reports, New York Assemblyman Karim Camara (D-Brooklyn) announced this week that he intends to propose legislation requiring sugar-sweetened beverages (SSBs) to carry labels cautioning that their consumption contributes to “obesity, diabetes and tooth decay.” He introduced a similar bill (A10172) in August 2014, but no action was apparently taken on that initiative. “We can’t sit back and pretend that sugary drinks aren’t harmful to people,” Camara was quoted as saying. “The research is clear—too much sugar leads to health problems such as obesity and diabetes.” A California Assembly committee defeated like-minded legislation earlier in 2014. More details about that proposal appear in Issue 527 of this Update. See The New York Post, November 13, 2014. Issue 545
The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) has determined that KK179 alfalfa, a genetically engineered (GE) crop that was created “to express reduced levels of guaiacyl lignin, a major subunit component of total lignin that slows the digestion of cellulose in livestock, as compared to conventional alfalfa at the same stage of growth,” is unlikely to constitute a plant pest, thus granting Monsanto Co. and Forage Genetics International’s petition for nonregulated status. APHIS found no significant impact following several opportunities for public comment on the petition and the preparation of an environmental assessment. See Federal Register, November 10, 2014. Issue 545
The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s (USDA’s) Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) has approved for commercial planting a new variety of potato genetically engineered (GE) for low acrylamide and reduced black spot bruise. The potatoes in question use a technique known as RNA interference to silence genes involved in bruising and the production of acrylamide, which USDA defines as “a human neurotoxicant and potential carcinogen that may form in potatoes and other starchy foods under certain cooking conditions.” Submitted by J. R. Simplot Co., the petition for Innate™ potatoes (E12, E24, F37, J3, J55, J78, G11, H37, and H50) underwent plant and environmental risk assessments as well as a review period that generated more than 40,000 public comments—many of them identical raising concerns about “potential effects on conventional potato production, export markets, and plant fitness.” After reviewing all available data, APHIS issued a final environmental assessment with a finding…