In a recent report put out by a public interest group, they claim that grocers do a poor job in communicating recall information. In "Food Recall Failure Will your supermarket warn you about hazardous food?, the group gave the grocers a failing grade. Their primary reason, so it seems, the grocers did not send the group the information they requested. Then the firm conducted their one investigation based on their evaluation of a company's procedures.
Whatever. This is more of a headline grab than a real evaluation. Actual evidence will show that grocery stores do a pretty good job at removing items from the shelves, and contacting consumers as best they can. Can they do better, sure, but it is not the catastrophic failure the article makes it to be.
This is the same group that released "New report: Meat recalls remain high; produce and processed food recalls drop". One of their top findings - "The most hazardous meat and poultry recalls (Class I) have nearly doubled, up 85 percent percent since 2013. This is a slight increase from 2018. Total meat and poultry recalls are up 65 percent since 2013." There was no evaluation into what the recalls were, but more of a insinuation that it is all extremely dangerous, when in fact, many of the recalls are either related to allergens or physical material contamination, or are proactive due to a potential issue, not an actual issue.
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