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Home » Watchdog Group: Nation’s Largest Supermarkets Fall Short On Food Recalls

Watchdog Group: Nation’s Largest Supermarkets Fall Short On Food Recalls

by CLAYCORD.com
5 comments

A consumer watchdog group is sounding an alarm over the food recall policies of the nation’s largest supermarket chains.

In a 32-page report released Wednesday, the non-profit Public Interest Research Group (PIRG) said that 22 of the 26 chains it surveyed earned an “F” when it comes to developing and implementing policies designed to keep the public safe from dangerously contaminated food.

The stores failed to “adequately inform the public about recall notification efforts, how to sign up for direct notifications or where to find in-store postings,” according to PIRG.

“Supermarkets should be our best recall notification system, but instead, we found that shoppers must go on a nearly impossible scavenger hunt to learn if they’ve purchased contaminated food,” said Laura Deehan, a health
advocate with the CALPIRG Education Fund.

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“Stores already use modern technology to track customers, place products, and target us with ads. There’s no reason why they can’t also keep us healthy,” Deehan said in a news release.

The nation’s food recalls for meat, poultry and egg products are issued by the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Food Safety and Inspection Service.

Recalls for other food, including pet and animal feed, are issued by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.

Those agencies, as well as the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which tracks food-borne illnesses, rely heavily on media outlets to alert the public during a recall.

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Supermarkets play a key role by removing tainted products from shelves and, ideally, alerting customers about the recalls.

Too often, however, the country’s major chains make it difficult for people to access information about recalls in a timely and comprehensive way, according to PIRG’s report, “Food Recall Failure: Will your supermarket
warn you about hazardous food?”

Of the 26 supermarket chains surveyed, only four earned a passing grade: Harris Teeter, Kroger, Smith’s Food and Drug, and Target.

Whole Foods Market, Safeway and Trader Joe’s are among the stores that earned an “F” in PIRG’s report.

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Representatives from those chains didn’t immediately respond to calls or emails asking for their reactions to the report.

In order to improve the country’s food recall system, PIRG says the federal government should require stores to make notification policies available on their websites, and post signs about major recalls at cash registers and store shelves for at least two weeks for perishable food and for at least one month for frozen food.

Stores should also be required to create systems that can directly alert customers about recalled products within 48 hours of a recall announcement, according to PIRG.

5 comments


Poodlme February 14, 2020 - 8:48 AM - 8:48 AM

It figures! My favorite 2 stores to shop at is Whole Foods (which I’m surprised to see on the list) and Trader Joe’s?

S February 14, 2020 - 10:52 AM - 10:52 AM

Safeway doesn’t surprise me, don’t know much about Whole Foods. Seems like the only store recalls I hear on the radio are Trader Joe’s. Seemed they were on top of it… So, that was a bit of a surprise.

Captain Bebops February 14, 2020 - 11:23 AM - 11:23 AM

Yeah, Trader Joe’s would even have signs up about something (often produce) that had been recalled. BTW, my comment earlier was in response to a poster who blamed Democrats but it was deleted so now my reply does not make sense. 🙂

Bill Bob February 14, 2020 - 12:35 PM - 12:35 PM

Keep the guverment outta muh food stores.

Whoa! February 16, 2020 - 7:32 AM - 7:32 AM

trader joes doesnt do like a membership thing, like target with their target circle, how would they alert someone that the food the bought was recalled? Safeway, sure, lucky, yup, same with nob hill, (i dont shop whole foods,,so not sure about them!).


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