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"Given the lack of effective control that has historically prevailed,
"Given the lack of effective control that has historically prevailed, we are doing a lot of work to prevent this from happening again," Gottlieb said in an interview Wednesday. He said the program will begin on July 1.
Gottlieb noted that the FDA now has to issue orders for foreign food to be inspected, and it's not clear whether this could happen before then.
"We continue to have these meetings to try to work out whether this is a real food safety issue," Gottlieb said. "I'm disappointed that the FDA and the Department of Agriculture aren't taking this seriously, but as I said earlier, our work is ongoing."
The agency's decision comes with the Department of Justice releasing new details about how it will review and prosecute the U.S. Food and Drug Administration's order to ban imports of romaine lettuce from over 90 countries.
Gottlieb announced the move after the Food and Drug Administration informed Congress earlier this week that the FDA had suspended the importation of romaine lettuce, a nutrient-rich component that has been used in cooking recipes for decades, while the agency has been reviewing safety testing of domestic food.
The FDA has also issued new guidance to help prevent the spread of a deadly E. coli outbreak in the U.S. of the bacterium Escherichia coli, which has been linked to a foodborne illness in children.
The new guidance, known as the Food Safety Modernization Act, was signed into law by President Obama in late August. It requires all U.S. food processors to follow the same standards as those set by the Foodborne Diseases Surveillance and Control Act, the agency says.
"This Act is an important tool to reduce foodborne outbreaks and prevent food safety problems in the United States, as well as providing certainty for food safety authorities and other health authorities in the country to better address food safety issues and prevent outbreaks in other countries," the FDA said in a statement.
Gottlieb said the agency was "working with the Food Safety Modernization Act Task Force and the U.S. Department of Agriculture to review the program's implementation and implementation to ensure that these two programs will not lead to serious food safety problems."
The Food and Drug Administration has yet to issue new orders for new production and distribution facilities after a decade of outbreaks of E. coli outbreaks.A man accused of killing a man in a suburban Kansas city on Wednesday night is facing murder charges for
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