Fact Sheet
U.S. Department of Agriculture
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services

FORC-G

Many outbreaks of foodborne illness cross geographic or jurisdictional lines,
requiring close inter-agency cooperation.  FORC-G, the Foodborne Outbreak
Response Coordinating Group, brings together federal, state, and local
agencies to develop a comprehensive, coordinated, national foodborne illness
outbreak response system.
 
Specifically, FORC-G will
 
       *    increase coordination and communication among these agencies and
            organizations;
       *    help guide the efficient use of resources and expertise during an
            emergency;
       *    and better prepare the United States to meet new and emerging
            threats to the food supply.
 
FORC-G is co-chaired by the Department of Agriculture's Under Secretary for
Food Safety and the Department of Health and Human Services' Assistant
Secretary for Health.  Other FORC-G members include representatives of the
 
       *    Centers for Disease Control and Prevention;
       *    Food and Drug Administration;
       *    Food Safety and Inspection Service;
       *    Environmental Protection Agency;
       *    Association of Food and Drug Officials;
       *    National Association of City and County Health Officials;
       *    Association of State and Territorial Public Health Laboratory Directors;
       *    Council of State and Territorial Epidemiologists; and
       *    National Association of State Departments of Agriculture.
 
In January, 1997, President Clinton directed the Secretary of Agriculture, the
Secretary of Health and Human Services, and the Administrator of the
Environmental Protection Agency to identify specific steps to improve the
safety of the food supply.  Their May 1997 report to the President recommended
the creation of FORC-G.
 
                                #
                                                     May 22, 1998
 
 
 
 
 Clinton-Gore Administration Accomplishments in Food Safety
 
 
     October, 1997.  President announces new initiative to enhance FDA oversight over imported foods
       and develop guidance on good agricultural and manufacturing practices for fruits and vegetables.
 
     October, 1997.  Administration announces public-private partnership to promote food safety
       education, that includes the "Fight BAC" campaign .
 
     May, 1997.  President announces comprehensive new initiative to improve the safety of the nation's
       food supply -- "Food Safety from Farm to Table"--detailing a $43 million food safety initiative
       program, including measures to improve surveillance, outbreak response, education, and research.
 
     January, 1997.  President announces new Early-Warning System to gather critical scientific data to
       help stop food-borne disease outbreaks quickly and to improve prevention systems.
 
     January, 1997.  Administration requires generic E.coli testing for all meat and poultry slaughter
       plants and Sanitation Standard Operating Procedures.
 
     August, 1996.  President signs Safe Drinking Water Act of 1996.  The law requires drinking water
       systems to protect against dangerous contaminants like crytosporidium, and gives people the right to
       know about contaminants in their tap water.
 
     August, 1996.  President signs Food Quality Protection Act of 1996, which streamlines regulation of
       pesticides by FDA and EPA and puts important new public-health protections in place, especially for
       children.
 
     July, 1996.  President announces new regulations that modernize the nation's meat and poultry
       inspection system for the first time in 90 years.  The HACCP systems approach  emphasizes
       science-based controls and microbiological testing directly targeted at E. coli O157:H7 and
       Salmonella.
 
     December, 1995.  Administration issues new rules to ensure the safety of seafood using the HACCP
       regulatory approach.
 
     October, 1994.  Administration declares E. coli O157:H7 an adulterant in raw ground beef and
       initiates a nationwide sampling program in federally inspected plants and retail stores that process
       ground beef.
 
     March, 1994.  Administration requires safe handling and cooking labels on raw meat and poultry
       products.
 
 

This is a mirror of the page at HTTP://www.usda.gov:80/news/releases/1998/05/fsis

Memorandum of Understanding


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