JUICE
LABELING COMMENTS
May 26, 2025
Dockets
Management Branch (HFA-305)
Food and Drug Administration
12420 Parklawn Dr., Rm 1-23
Rockville, MD 20857
RE:
Docket No. 97N-0524
On
behalf of the members of S.T.O.P. and the following groups,
- Center
for Science in the Public Interest
- Consumer
Federation of America
- Government
Accountability Project
- Natural
Resources Defense Council
- OMB
Watch
- Public
Citizen
- United
Food and Commercial Workers Union
we
are providing comments on FDA's Proposed Rule for Juice Labeling.
Safe
Tables Our Priority is a nonprofit, grassroots organization
consisting of victims of foodborne illness, family, friends
and concerned individuals who recognize the threat pathogens
pose in the U.S. food supply. We count among our members victims
of outbreaks from E. coli O157:H7 contaminated juice.
S.T.O.P.'s mission is to prevent unnecessary illness and
loss
of life from pathogenic foodborne illness. We have sent comments
for the February 3, 2025 dockets on the topic of juice safety,
as well as the September
12, 1997 dockets addressing the FDA's Notice of Intent
on juice safety. Today, we are writing in support of FDA's
plan to place warning labels on juices that have not been
processed to eliminate pathogens (hereafter referred to as
"raw juices").
We
support the placement of warning labels on raw juices because
of the following market characteristics:
1)
History of Repeated Juice Outbreaks
To
be sure that it is part of the record, we list the following
outbreaks, arising from U.S. -sourced raw juices:
- Apple
juice - Salmonella typhimurium; NJ, 1974
- Apple
juice - E. coli O157:H7; MA, 1991
- Apple
juice - Cryptosporidium; ME, 1993
- Apple
juice - Cryptosporidium; NY, 1996
- Apple
juice - E. coli O157:H7; WA, CA, CO, 1996
- Apple
juice - E. coli O157:H7; WA, 1996
- Apple
juice - E. coli O157:H7; CT, 1996
- Orange
juice - Bacillus cereus; AL, 1994
- Orange
juice - Salmonella typhi; NY, 1989
- Orange
juice - Salmonella hartford; FL, 1995
- Carrot
juice - Clostridium botulinum; WA, 1993
In
the fall of 1997, the state of Michigan recalled several
hundred gallons of E. coli O157:H7 contaminated cider
from Schlubatis Orchards. Exactly whether the contaminated
cider caused illnesses and the severity of the illnesses
was not determined. We note that these outbreaks are exclusively
from U.S. sources. Raw apple juice has also caused outbreaks
in Canada.
2)
Consumers do not understand the level of harm these pathogens
cause
Fortunately,
decades of consistent pasteurization of milk have allowed
a generation to grow up without direct exposure to life-threatening
illnesses in unpasteurized milk products. Unfortunately,
consumers assume that all beverages intended for human consumption
offer the same level of protection. Consumers are unaware
that virulent, pathogenic organisms can exist in raw juice.
As FDA knows, some of these organisms have emerged over
the last 20 years, and there are no consistent, national
awareness or education campaigns about the nature of pathogens
in juice.
3)
Consumers do not understand the "benefits" of
pasteurization
For
the labels "pasteurized" and "unpasteurized"
to be effective without further wording, the consumer would
need to know:
- pasteurization
is a heat treatment to a certain temperature and of a
certain duration
- such
heat treatment kills bacterial and viral microorganisms,
but not necessarily mold/fungal spores
- the
organisms destroyed by pasteurization could otherwise
be life- threatening.
Research
conducted by the Processed Apples Institute in 1997 found,
"Although
they know that pasteurization does something to apple
juice, most consumers are probably not quite sure what
that might be. Not many participants could state confidently
that apple juice is pasteurized. Some seemed to confuse
pasteurization with filtering (no pulp, not cloudy)."
In
summary, the consuming public does not fully understand
the safety ramifications of pasteurization; therefore, using
the term "pasteurized" or "unpasteurized"
alone is insufficient.
4)
The primary consumers of apple juice are children
Apple
juice, the number two juice sold in the United States after
orange juice, is primarily consumed by children, and E.
coli O157:H7 can be deadly to children. Thus, raw apple
juice is promoted to a market of people most at-risk to
sustain life threatening illness or death, children. Children
should not have to suffer because their parents are susceptible
to industry marketing.
To
these four reasons, we add information gathered since the
FDA's announcement of its Notice of Intent, which publicized
that FDA planned to require mandatory warning labels by the
fall of 1998:
1)
Members of the raw juice industry, including juice bars,
continue to promote the benefits of raw juice as a "health"
related product. Parents, and consumers seeking to improve
their health such as people with weakened immune systems,
seniors and pregnant women, can thus be led to believe that
raw juice is superior to pasteurized juices. In contrast,
the American Academy of Pediatrics comments that, with respect
to children, "Juice offers little of nutritional value."
Raw juices, if contaminated with pathogens, can be life
threatening, particularly to the at-risk groups.
2)
Some members of industry continue to believe that grounders
and unpotable water are the ways in which their product
can become contaminated. By eliminating these practices,
industry members believe they have done all that is needed
to ensure their products are safer.
3)
Some members of industry continue to believe that FDA is
making a "big deal" out of contamination; and
that consumers do not need to be informed of risks. They
specifically downplay the risks .
4)
Some members of industry do not understand the life threatening
nature of pathogenic E. coli bacteria, killsteps
or the science of the conditions under which bacteria survive.
Lastly,
we regret having to point out that two elements of FDA's approach
to juice safety in the fall of 1997 were failures. FDA's request
for voluntary warning labels was virtually ignored by industry.
While some juicers may have distributed leaflets, S.T.O.P.
knows of only one producer and one grocery store chain that
actually placed a warning label on bottles. Likewise, FDA's
consumer education efforts failed to reach at-risk groups
in time. For example, a notice from CFSAN Director Shank arrived
at one private, California elementary school in January of
1998, long after the conclusion of the apple cider season.
We know of no pediatricians' offices that have posted the
juice education information, though, for example, they have
posters regarding recalls of playpens and other child-related
equipment.
In
short, S.T.O.P. supports the placement of clear warning labels
on juice containers because the combination of industry practices
and consumer folk wisdom have led to a situation that specifically
endangers the lives of children and at-risk groups. The at-risk
groups deserve to have on the product, at the point of purchase,
the same information that government and industry already
have.
Our
comments today address the following components of the FDA's
Proposed Rule:
- Error
and Omissions
- Market
Sizing and Segmentation
- Applicability
of Labeling
- Implementation
of Labeling
- Timing
of Labeling
- Label
Size, Shape and Language
- Addressing
the "Pasteurized Juice" Market
Errors
and Omissions
In
the Background section of the Proposed Rule, FDA states that
a juice outbreak announced on October 30, 2025 involved "at
least 66 cases of illness." The final total of detected
illnesses was 70. Underreporting of foodborne illnesses and
outbreaks downplays the severity of the problem. We would
ask that, when stating the number of people identified as
part of an outbreak, FDA change the final number to 70 and,
in the future, verify its numbers with CDC rather than repeat
previously published, erroneous information.
We
would also note that in the section "Circumstances In
Which Warning Statements Required," the FDA states that
the NACMCF recommended that a tolerable level of risk may
be achieved through certain processes. USDA currently mandates
a zero tolerance for the adulterant E. coli O157:H7
in raw ground beef. We strongly believe that with respect
to this pathogen, which can be deadly in as few as 1 to 10
organisms, zero risk is the only tolerable risk. Further,
it would be inconsistent for one federal food regulating agency
to declare O157 an adulterant, and another to support a "tolerable
level of risk" for the same pathogen.
Market
Sizing and Segmentation
We
believe that it is quite possible that FDA has substantially
underestimated the quantity of raw juice sold in the United
States, perhaps by more than 100%. FDA states in both the
Proposed Rule and repeated public remarks that "approximately
ninety-eight percent of juice sold in the United States is
pasteurized." We believe this ignores several critical
juice market segments and characteristics that result in the
98% figure downplaying the importance and urgency of the juice
safety issue.
Segmentation
by Point of Sale
Consumers
can buy raw juices in many different styles and sizes at many
different types of establishments. Below we attempt to describe
as many as possible:
- Grocery
Stores (produce-section-related juice). Juice is squeezed
from fruit on the premises and sold in multi-serving-size
containers or jugs.
- Grocery
Stores (refrigerated section). Juice is supplied by external
raw juice processor in single or multi-serving-size container
or jugs.
- Roadside
Stands. Juice is processed by the vendor and sold relatively
near the originating orchard direct to the consumer in multi-serving-size
containers. Samples are often given out in small disposable
cups.
- Farmer's
Markets. Juice is processed by the vendor and sold relatively
near the originating orchard direct to the consumer in multi-serving-size
containers. Samples are often given out in small disposable
cups.
- Onsite.
Juice is processed by the vendor and sold onsite at the
originating orchard direct to the consumer in multi-serving-size
containers. Samples are often given out and single servings
sold in disposable cups.
- Storefront
Juice Bars. Juice is squeezed from fruit/vegetables on premises
OR blended with externally supplied, bulk raw juices OR
blended with raw juice concentrate and sold in single serving
size, disposable cups; juice is typically not consumed in
volume on the premises because the sound of the blenders
is unpleasant.
- In-Store
Juice Bars. These bars typically exist inside a facility
devoted to another activity, e.g. shopping mall, restaurants,
grocery store or fitness facility. They have similar production
processes and serving containers to Storefront Juice Bars.
Juice is more often consumed on the premises because the
loud blenders are used only intermittently.
- Restaurants.
Juice is squeezed from fruit/vegetables on premises OR blended
with externally supplied bulk raw juices OR blended with
raw juice concentrate and sold in a single serving size
in a reusable glass.
- Amateur
Segment. Juice is processed by churches or schools as part
of anevent and sold by the disposable cup or a multi-serving-size
container.
Thus,
a significant percentage of raw juices may, in fact, be sold
by the glass. To date, Jamba Juice, a California-based juice
bar franchise, has 32 juice bars. In a February, 1997
New York Times article, Jamba Juice officials stated that
their businesses grossed between $300,000 and $1,000,000 per
storefront. If there were only 200 other juice bars (which
is a low estimate) in the U.S., and they and Jamba Juice's
stores averaged only $300,000 per store, the Juice Bar market
alone would be worth $69,600,000.
Unfortunately,
education efforts by the "juice" industry and government
have alerted only a percentage of the juice producers closest
to growing the fruit and not juice producers across the other
segments listed above. S.T.O.P. believes that the farther
away the processor gets from the raw fruit industry, the less
aware they are likely to be of the potential problems for
contamination in juice. As anecdotal information we offer
a grocer indicating he would sell raw orange juice into an
elementary school lunch program because "we squeeze it
ourselves on site." It is quite possible that juicing
equipment in stores is cleaned less frequently than the average
apple press.
Because
it does not address the "immediate consumption"
segments, the FDA's Proposed Rule is creating an imbalance
in the marketplace by requiring only the "later-consumption"
containers bare a label. As a result, we believe that all
raw juice suppliers will feel pressured to sell their products
into market segments where they are not required to label
and where consumers will not receive proper warning. Juice
bar suppliers specifically tout their concentrates which have
"not been heat treated and therefore have superior flavor."
FDA should not underestimate the size of businesses such as
JR Woods (Atwater), VacuDry (Sebastapol), MetWest Agribusiness
(Del Rey) in California which buy fruit and vegetables and
supply juice or concentrates to retail storefronts. These
same types of businesses can also be found in Florida and
other states.
In
Conclusion
An
understanding of the total market size shows that the problems
that have led FDA to take action are particularly urgent because
the market is in all likelihood substantially larger than
FDA had originally concluded. Different areas of the country
are likely to see raw juices with a higher marketshare percentage
than FDA presently suggests with its 98% figure, specifically,
the North East, Florida and the West. Roadside stand sales
are more likely to represent significant marketshare in New
England, Florida, Washington, Oregon and California. Juice
bars have proliferated in California and are likely to flourish
in areas where coffee bars have become prevalent, and where
weather supports interest in fruit juices and smoothie drinks
for at least 2/3 of the year.
Applicability
of Labeling to the Market
S.T.O.P.
believes that the Juice Bar market is here to stay, or at
least until a major foodborne illness outbreak is traced to
it. Juice bars consistently advertise the "health"
component of their drinks ("One 8 oz. glass of orange
juice has the nutritional value of five whole oranges."--Jamba
Juice website), thereby contributing to the consumer perception
that raw juices are superior to pasteurized beverages. In
actuality, juice smoothie recipes can contain fruit or vegetables
that are grown on or in the ground, including but not limited
to carrots, broccoli and celery, and are therefore more likely
to harbor contamination. Juice Bars often sell unregulated
additives to these beverages, such as spirulina or wheat grass,
which may make them even more risky than straight juice. Lest
there be any doubt that juice bars target at-risk groups,
the smallest serving size offered by Jamba Juice is called
"child" size.
In
its Proposed Rule, FDA suggests it will exempt "unpackaged
juice sold for immediate consumption, e.g. products sold by
the glass in restaurants, grocery stores or other food establishments,"
and also described as "establishments such as restaurants,
in-store delis, and juice bars."
S.T.O.P.
maintains that the combination of:
- high
employee turnover,
- lack
of employee education on juice risks,
- external
supplies coming from unpasteurized juices or juice concentrates,
- probability
of cross-contamination,
- lack
of oversight on equipment sanitation,
- limited
inspection,
- lack
of regulation of additives, and
- blatant
marketing emphasis on health
makes
juices and juice smoothies sold through these establishments
as great a risk as those at roadside stands, if not greater.
We therefore strongly recommend that establishments selling
by the disposable cup for immediate consumption off premises
be required to label their raw beverages and smoothies as
well.
The
distinction S.T.O.P. recommends is that, if the juice or smoothie
is sold for immediate consumption in a disposable single-serving
of multi-serving size, it also must bear a warning label.
Under this definition, restaurants that serve their patrons
in glasses would not be required to place a label on the glass.
We would expect those establishments to bear warning information
signs in accordance with similar size and location requirements
for posting warnings about the hazards of alcohol and pregnancy.
Implementation
of Labeling
S.T.O.P.
is surprised and dismayed to see that FDA considered that
implementation of the labeling at the point of sale through
a placard, in lieu of on-package stickers or labels, would
be sufficient. Industry has had 9 months of advance notice
that labeling was going to be required. FDA cannot
ensure that placards will be positioned in a manner such that
all consumers will read them. For example, in 1997, FDA gave
juice processors the option to produce informational language
on slips of paper to be distributed at points of sale. While
the U.S. Apple Association incorporated the intent of the
language into a slip, it was placed below a paragraph promoting
cider as part of a healthy lifestyle. Consumer research indicates
that placards and leaflets are less effective means of educating
consumers.
S.T.O.P.
urges that, as FDA indicated in its August, 1997 Notice of
Intent, raw juices be labeled with the label language.
If a juice producer is unable to integrate the label language
into the back or front label on their juice in time, the package
should be required to carry a separate sticker that meets
all the other requirements defined by FDA, with the exception
of the surrounding box graphic, which would be unnecessary
on a separate sticker.
Timing/Cost
of Labeling
S.T.O.P.
considers unacceptable FDA's proposal that industry might
need 1.5 to 2.5 years to place stickers or labels on their
product. USDA required that the meat industry place safe-handling
stickers on packaged raw meats within 60 days of the finalization
of the proposed rule. USDA felt the severe threat of E.
coli O157:H7 warranted immediate action. Again, it would
be inconsistent for FDA to move slowly toward labeling a product
with the same threat.
S.T.O.P.
spoke with five separate companies about the timing and cost
of implementing labels. Note that with respect to placing
a label on products, the only factor that differs significantly
in labeling between the foods industry and other industries
is the temperature/humidity conditions of the product, which
require different glues and inks. The following examples demonstrate
the feasibility of requiring labels in less than 60 days of
issuance of the Final Rule.
Zeigler's
Apple Cider and Apple Juice Products
Zeigler's
considers itself the largest apple cider producer and distributes
to 30 states. They recently had a label change when they
moved their entire production of cider from unpasteurized
to pasteurized. It would take Zeigler's 2-3 weeks to make
changes to the black plate on an existing label and get
it into production. Working with the label company would
take 2 weeks, they would need a night to produce the plate
and a 1/2 week to print the labels. According to the company,
six weeks would be "extremely doable."
Odwalla
After
the outbreak associated with their product, Odwalla needed
to reintroduce reformulated products in 6 days with round
stickers that said, "contains no apple juice."
Odwalla considers 6 weeks to be a reasonable amount of time
in which to create and implement a completely new label.
Product
Marketing Manager, the Santa Cruz Operation (Software Company)
SCO
has recently added a quick label. A "not pretty"
label done in-house took them 2 1/2 weeks. A nicer label
takes 4 to 6 weeks, with print production taking 2 of those
weeks and another 2 weeks to get the label into production.
According to SCO, six weeks is realistic.
Product
Marketing Manager, Legato Systems (Software Company)
Even
under the most relaxed circumstances, Legato Systems need
only a few weeks. They have produced labels and put them
on product with rush charges in as little as 2 days. More
typical would be 1 to a few weeks. Typically, if you want
to rush a job, the printer will bump other jobs based on
payment of rush charges.
Product
Marketing Manager, Netcom, (Internet Services Provider)
Netcom
can get stickers printed in about 5 days. Then, they need
one day to fulfillment/assembly house for shipping and another
day to pull inventory and apply stickers. To achieve this
kind of turnaround, the printer needs to be ready to print
the stickers as soon as the artwork is finished, the fulfillment
house needs to be ready to apply the stickers as soon as
they receive the stickers, the stickers are applied by hand,
and rush charges are paid at both the printer and the fulfillment
house.
Hence
larger companies are easily able to produce labels and get
them into production within 6 weeks without paying rush charges;
and with sufficient warning to work on a label design, they
could probably achieve the same in 4 weeks.
S.T.O.P.
notes that despite FDA's assumption of hardship, smaller companies
have multiple advantages over larger companies when it comes
to labeling. Smaller companies can develop and produce labels
more quickly. Assuming a juice company designed a label on
a computer to a standard format, that company could take advantage
laser printable labels. Avery labels now makes a "permanent"
adhesive label, so that separate stickers can be produced
on a laser printer at 600 dpi and still look professional.
Thus, for a small company, production of a separate sticker
might take at most 2 days.
We
have calculated the additional costs of printing new stickers
and modifying labels. FDA's proposed language will fit on
a label of standard size, 1 inch by 2 inch. The time and cost
required to "design" such a sticker is negligible.
For standard papers and standard inks, the cost of printing
the label at Shortrun Labels in San Carlos, CA (800-522-3583)
would be:
| Number
of Labels |
Total
Price |
Price
Per Label |
| 500 |
$26.15 |
$.0523 |
| 1000 |
$27.55 |
$.02755 |
| 2000 |
$52.10 |
$.02605 |
| 3-4000 |
$23.45/1000 |
$.02345 |
| 5-9000 |
$17.50/1000 |
$.01750 |
| 10-14,000 |
$13.15/1000 |
$.01315 |
With
a resale certificate, no tax is charged for these labels.
S.T.O.P. acknowledges that there would be a slight additional
cost for putting a sticker on a bottle. At the high end, one
$5.15 per hour laborer applying 6 stickers a minute, or 360
per hour, the cost to sticker 1000 bottles would be $14.31.
Based on conversations with industry, many small companies
own a piece of equipment called a "Labelaire" which
"blows" the sticker onto the bottle with a puff
of air. This would represent nearly a zero application cost.
If neither of these options were palatable, the juice vendor
has the option of having the bottle supplier place the label
on it. Costs for this type of application would be as low
as 7/10 of a cent per bottle, or $.70 for a 1000 in the North
East.
Redesign
of the label integrating the warning language should also
have negligible cost. Given that all companies should be able
to print entirely new labels with the warning integrated into
them in 6 weeks without rush charges, the cost associated
with integrated labeling would be the loss of previously inventoried
labels. To avoid such a loss, the company need merely expend
the money for the stickers.
To
summarize, with advance warning, companies can put a label
on their product in between 1 and 6 weeks, depending on the
quality of printing required, the level of integration with
an existing label, and the desire to avoid rush charges. The
cost of a separate sticker would be approximately $27.55 for
1000 stickers plus $.70 in sticker application charges, e.g.
a total of $28.25 or less than 3 cents per bottle. This represents
the worst case, with a small vendor who sells only
1000 bottles; per sticker prices go down with increasing numbers
of containers. S.T.O.P. concludes that there is no hardship,
with respect to finances or timing for smaller vendors. Therefore,
FDA should require that all stickers or label revisions be
completed and on packaging in 6 weeks from the FDA announcement
of the Final Rule.
Label
Size, Shape and Language
S.T.O.P.
supports the graphical requirements developed by FDA for the
labeling language. As consumers, we have strong preference
for the word "WARNING" in caps. "WARNING"
is consistent with cigarette and alcohol public health labels
and may be better understood as a precautionary statement
by those with limited reading skills. "ATTENTION,"
"NOTICE," and "CONSUMER ADVISORY" are
too weak to attract the appropriate level of attention. "CONSUMER
ALERT" is not as strong as "WARNING" and is
longer, both disadvantages; and "HAZARD ADVISORY"
is more complicated and longer. We might suggest that the
font size requirement be increased just slightly; with seniors
as a primary at-risk group, weaker eyesight may make it challenging
to read any font as small as 1/16th of an inch.
FDA's
proposed labeling language is:
"WARNING:
This product has not been pasteurized and, therefore, may
contain harmful bacteria that can cause serious illness
in children, the elderly and persons with weakened immune
systems"
Three
elements of the label language should be changed. First, "pregnant
women," who are particularly susceptible to miscarriage
from Listeria monocytogenes should be listed as a separate
category of at-risk consumers. Many pregnant women do not
fully understand that they fall into the category of a person
with a weakened immune system. Second, the word "elderly,"
should be changed to "seniors (55+)," which more
accurately describes the at-risk group. "Elderly"
connotes a frail person in a nursing home. We strongly urge
a definition of age be added to seniors to ensure that older
at-risk consumers are aware that they fall into this category;
in our current youth-oriented culture, many people are in
denial that they might be considered senior. In contrast,
we do not believe the term "children," requires
modification by age because most adults are conscious that
the age range of childhood ends between 12 and 18, and the
devastation of these illnesses is not specific enough to say
at which age between 12 and 18 a child would be less affected.
Third,
S.T.O.P. strongly urges FDA to use the term "life threatening"
in place of the word "serious." The word "serious"
is used in medical terminology for a person in stable condition
who, barring unforeseen circumstances, is expected to recover
through medical care. One pediatrician with whom we spoke
said "stable, not dying." It is, in fact, a downgrading
from "critical," which means there is a possibility
of death. In contrast, the reason FDA is placing warning labels
on juice is specifically because at-risk groups can contract
a disease from which they will die. Indeed, some of these
organisms are antibiotic resistant and others are becoming
so; medical treatment does not provide a cure for all of them.
To imply that these illnesses might be cured by a trip to
a hospital is to encourage consumers to take risks. "Life
threatening," more accurately and clearly conveys the
nature of the potential illnesses.
Therefore,
S.T.O.P. advocates:
"WARNING:
This product has not been pasteurized and, therefore, may
contain harmful bacteria that can cause life threatening
illness in children, pregnant women, seniors (55+), and
persons with weakened immune systems"
If
"life threatening" is not used, we believe that
FDA should require additional language because "serious"
does not convey that the at-risk groups should avoid the product.
The at-risk groups should be modified with the word "particularly,"
and should be followed by the sentence: "Members of these
at-risk groups should avoid this product." The alternate
label would then say,
"WARNING:
This product has not been pasteurized and, therefore, may
contain harmful bacteria that can cause serious illness,
particularly in children, pregnant women, seniors (55+),
and persons with weakened immune systems. Members of these
at-risk groups should avoid this product."
Addressing
the Pasteurized Juice Market
S.T.O.P.
understands that FDA does not currently have the authority
to require that pasteurized beverages be labeled to differentiate
them from raw beverages. This makes it challenging for consumers
to make a truly informed choice. S.T.O.P. has received numerous
calls from consumers seeking guidance on differentiating between
pasteurized and raw juice products. Clearly, the public wants
this information.
S.T.O.P.
urges FDA to seek the authority in this matter. In the meantime,
we urge you to publicly encourage juice companies that use
processes to eliminate pathogens to clearly label their juices
with the term describing their killstep and additional phrasing
that indicates the process eliminates harmful bacteria. Ideally,
FDA would ask that all pasteurized juice manufacturers include
appropriate language in their next revision to any labeling
or packaging they are doing.
In
Conclusion
S.T.O.P.
strongly supports FDA efforts to place warning labels on raw
juices. We believe that timing is critical and can be completed
within 6 weeks of the announcement of the Final Rule. Not
only does S.T.O.P. believe small businesses should be treated
the same as larger businesses, but we also find no economic
or timing hardship differences for small businesses with regards
to labeling. Small businesses can create juice that is just
as lethal as that of larger businesses. Therefore, small businesses
should not be treated differently. We expect FDA to require
retail establishments distributing raw juices in disposable
cups to label their beverages as well. We ask that FDA encourage
pasteurized juice manufacturers to clearly differentiate in
packaging their pathogen-eliminated juices from those that
are not pathogen-eliminated. FDA should incorporate juice
labeling requirements into the Food Code as soon as possible.
Sincerely,
Laurie
Girand
Board Member,
S.T.O.P. -- Safe Tables Our Priority
Nancy
Donley,
President,
S.T.O.P. -- Safe Tables Our Priority
Caroline
Smith DeWaal
Director of Food Safety,
Center for Science in the Public Interest
Mary
Rouleau
Legislative Director
Consumer Federation of America
Felicia
Nestor
Food Safety Project Director
Government Accountability Project
David
Wallinga, M.D.
Senior Scientist,
Natural Resources Defense Council
dwallinga@nrdc.org
202-289-6868
Gary
D. Bass
Executive Director,
OMB Watch
Maura
Kealey
Deputy Director of Congress Watch
Public Citizen
Gary
Sauter
Director of Legislative & Political Affairs
United Food and Commercial Workers Union
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