Hamilton Herald Masthead

Editorial


Front Page - Friday, February 13, 2015

Good advice from mother


Read All About It



Pettus L. Read

During a recent visit to the local grocery store, I heard a young mother give her toddler advice I’d not heard since my children were small. It was the same advice mothers have been using since Eve had to deal with Cain and Abel, and it’s just as important today as it has been through the ages.

With all toddlers, anything they find that’s not tied down will sooner or later end up in their mouths. This little guy I was watching was no different, and as he prepared to put a discarded grape in his mouth, his mother immediately gave that age-old advice, “Don’t put that in your mouth; you don’t know where it’s been.”

Those words spoken by a true mother echoed in my ears, and brought back memories of my mother telling me the same thing many years ago. Just like the rest of you who heard those words of advice as you grew up (as well as the threat that went along with it - and all of you know what I mean), they’re still a part of our conscience as adults.

After seeing the child hand the grape to his mother and her discard it, I proceeded to check out the meat counter, and as I picked up a pound of lean ground beef, I noticed the words “Product of the USA” printed on the label. Looking down at that imprint, I wondered to myself if we really do question everything we put in our mouths - as our mothers taught us. Do you ever wonder just exactly where the food you’re eating was produced or where it came from? Did that T-bone steak you enjoyed last night come from Tennessee, California, or even originate in the USA?

I know we spend a lot of time expressing our “true” feelings about those officials up in Washington D.C., but thanks to our U.S. Congress, back in October of 2008, the country-of-origin information started appearing on meat product labels, or on signs in the meat department, to indicate the country or countries where an animal might have been born, raised, and processed. The Country of Origin Labeling program, known to many as COOL, got its early beginning in 2002 after consumer groups approached Congress demanding its implementation. They presented numerous surveys proving their point that most of us want to know where our food comes from, just as our mothers did after we’d put something disgusting in our mouths. Their surveys at that time said that 56 percent of consumers thought produce grown in the United States is safer than imported produce. They also said if price and appearance were equal, 61 percent of consumers would select U.S.-grown meat. Over the years, their thoughts have been somewhat true, and today, more individuals are hanging around the counter reading labels looking to see where their cows have been spending their time.

When COOL was first implemented, I did spend a lot of time checking my meat purchases, making those early surveys come true. If you did also and continue to do so, then you’ve also noticed something else about the COOL labeling: that some labels list more than one country. I’ve noticed in some stores, you’ll see a label that says, “Product of the U.S., Canada, and Mexico.” With a label like that, you have to wonder if maybe the ground chuck you’re about to consume was created by three cows at an international rally or something.

There is a simple answer. A label with multiple countries of origin listed is from an animal that was born and/or raised in a different country, or countries, and then slaughtered in the U.S. Covered commodities in this category would have to identify all the relevant countries. Not often, but there are times when young cattle are imported from Mexico or Canada and are subsequently raised and processed in the U.S. For a meat product to have the label “Product of the United States” it has to be derived “exclusively from an animal that is exclusively born, raised and slaughtered in the United States.” Meaning the animal had to be a homebody, and never been anywhere else but here.

Today, after additional laws in 2013 under COOL, USDA reports that retailers must provide their customers with information about the origin of various food products, including fruits, vegetables, fish, shellfish, and meats. USDA’s Agricultural Marketing Service is responsible for the implementation, administration, and enforcement of the COOL regulation.

Good advice like what your mama gave you is always important to remember, and it looks like the American consumers 

are getting what they wanted from their policymakers. But, many mamas have also told their children there is no such thing 

as a free lunch. That’s something to also remember when you ask the U.S. government for something.

Pettus L. Read writes for the Tennessee Farm Bureau Federation. He may be contacted at pettusr60@gmail.com. v