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Ex-attorney for Daniels and McDougal testifies in Trump trial; CT paid sick days bill passes House, heads to Senate; Iowa leaps state regulators, calls on EPA for emergency water help; group voices concerns about new TN law arming teachers.

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Lawsuit Seeks to Eliminate Arsenic in Animal Feed

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Wednesday, May 15, 2013   

SALT LAKE CITY - The Food and Drug Administration is facing a lawsuit because it continues to allow arsenic in animal feed given to chickens, turkeys and hogs.

The suit was filed on behalf of a handful of advocacy groups, including the Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy. David Wallinga, its senior adviser for science, food and health, said it stems from a petition that was filed against the FDA three years ago, "basically saying, 'This is arsenic. We don't need it to raise these animals for meat and, in fact, it's a public health hazard. So, let's do something about it.'

"We think FDA did not respond to the petition," he said, "so we're filing suit to force their hand and protect public health."

The suit seeks to yank FDA approval of the four different animal-feed arsenic products now on the market. Arsenic that's used in animal feed is known as organic. It had been considered somewhat benign, but in Wallinga's view, arsenic is ... arsenic.

"Whether you're talking about a chicken that's eating this arsenic in their feed or whether it's a human being who's taking it in somehow in the meat they eat," Wallinga said, "the body can convert that organic form of arsenic into the other forms that are actually closely tied with risk of cancer."

The arsenic in the feed is supposed to help with animal growth and meat coloring, but Wallinga said mixed in with all the other drugs and ingredients, it isn't clear that arsenic helps at all.

"Long before we fed arsenic to animals, we were raising them just fine without arsenic," he said. "In fact, countries around the world, including the European Union, never approved these arsenic chemicals as being safe to put into animal feed."

The text of the lawsuit is online at iatp.org.


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