Farmer wants USDA fish inspections

— Each year, Joey Lowery, a catfish farmer in Newport, has let more of his growing pools dry up as cheaper, imported fish take a larger share of his market.

Since catfish and similar species called basa and tra began arriving in large volumes from China and Vietnam over the past decade, Lowery has pulled the plug on 15 ponds on his 400-acre farm.

The foreign-grown fish are not only cheaper, Lowery said, but they’re also a potential health hazard.

On Thursday, Lowery, president of the Catfish Farmers of America, made his case on Capitol Hill. A study his group commissioned by Exponent Inc., an international science and engineering consulting firm, found fish imported from Vietnam were grown in potentially contaminated water, possessed an increased risk of the presence of salmonella and sometimes had the presence of anti-microbial drugs that are illegal in the United States.

Lowery would like to see imported-catfish inspections moved from the Food and Drug Administration to the U.S. Department of Agriculture - arguing that the USDA standards are stricter. Congress directed the shift in 2008 when it updated farm policy, but the Office of Management and Budget and USDA have not completed the necessarysteps to make the change.

“All of the foreign countries claim to be putting out safe products,” he said. “If they are, inspection shouldn’t bother them at all. A USDA stamp would help them.”

U.S. Sen. Blanche Lincoln, D-Ark. and chairman of the Senate Agriculture Committee, agreed. “Each day the USDA delays, is another day we put the health of Americans at risk.”

But others claimed that the catfish farmers are simply attempting to unfairly squash foreign competition.

The report is nothing more than a “food-safety scare,” according to the National Fisheries Institute, a group that promotes free trade and seafood safety and nutrition.

“There’s no reason to go from the FDA to the USDA from a food-safety standpoint,” said Gavin Gibbons, spokesman for the National Fisheries Institute.

Gibbons said that both domestic and imported fish have been required to follow FDA rules for 40 years. Domestic farmers didn’t complain, he said, until cheaper imports started getting a toehold in the U.S. market.

“Now, all of the sudden, the FDA is bad and the USDA is good,” he said. “They want to use the USDA system as a barrier to trade.”

Gibbons said that because of the small amounts of catfish people usually eat annually, claims made in the report that anti-microbial drugs usedin their cultivation could contribute to antibiotic resistance in the United States are “an absurd exaggeration.”

Front Section, Pages 4 on 07/23/2010

Upcoming Events