Administration may move FMD research to mainland
Agriculture News from HPJ - Your Ag News Source

Administration may move FMD research to mainland

WASHINGTON (AP)--The government's research into highly contagious Foot and Mouth Disease likely will move from a remote island to the U.S. mainland near livestock herds, raising concerns about the risks of a catastrophic outbreak.

Skeptical Democrats in Congress are demanding to see internal documents from the Bush administration that they believe highlight the risks and consequences of the research from a lab on isolated Plum Island, N.Y., accessible only by ferry or helicopter. A major outbreak of the virus, which does not sicken humans, could devastate the U.S. livestock industry.

One government report, produced last year and already provided to lawmakers by the Homeland Security Department, combined commercial satellite images and federal farm data to show the proximity to livestock herds of locations that have been considered for the new lab.

"Would an accidental laboratory release at these locations have the potential to affect nearby livestock?" asked the nine-page document. It did not directly answer the question.

A simulated outbreak of the disease in 2002--part of an earlier U.S. government exercise called "Crimson Sky"--ended with fictional riots in the streets after the simulation's National Guardsmen were ordered to kill tens of millions of farm animals, so many that troops ran out of bullets. In the exercise, the government said it would have been forced to dig a ditch in Kansas 25 miles long to bury carcasses. In the simulation, protests broke out in some cities amid food shortages.

"It was a mess," said Sen. Pat Roberts, R-KS, who portrayed the president in that 2002 exercise. Now, like other lawmakers from the states under consideration, Roberts supports moving the government's new lab to his state. Manhattan, Kan., is one of five mainland locations under consideration. "It will mean jobs" and spur research and development, he says.

Other possible locations for the new National Bio- and Agro-Defense Facility are Athens, Ga.; Butner, N.C.; San Antonio; and Flora, Miss. The new site could be selected later this year, and the lab would open by 2014. The number of livestock in the counties and surrounding areas of the finalists range from 542,507 in Kansas to 132,900 in Georgia, according to the Homeland Security Department's internal study.

FMD virus can be carried on a worker's breath or clothes, or vehicles leaving a lab, and is so contagious it has been confined to Plum Island for more than a half-century, far from commercial livestock. The existing lab is 100 miles northeast of New York City in the Long Island Sound. Researchers there who work with the live virus are not permitted to own animals at home that would be susceptible, and they must wait at least one week after work before attending outside events where such animals might perform, such as a circus.

Leaders of the House Energy and Commerce Committee also are worried about the lab's likely move to the mainland. The chairman, Rep. John Dingell, D-MI, and the head of the investigations subcommittee, Rep. Bart Stupak, D-MI, are threatening to subpoena records they say Homeland Security is withholding from Congress. Those records include reports about "Crimson Sky," an internal review about a publicized 1978 accidental release of foot-and-mouth disease on Plum Island, and reports about any previously undisclosed virus releases on the island during the past half century.

The lawmakers set a deadline of Friday for the administration to turn over reports they requested. Otherwise, they warned in a letter to Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff, they will arrange a vote next week to issue a congressional subpoena.

Two lawmakers from New York, Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton and Rep. Timothy Bishop, both Democrats, expressed concerns in letters they wrote last year about the Homeland Security Department's ability to protect the existing lab at Plum Island, which relies for security on a private security company and local police rather than federal agents.

"We are particularly concerned that DHS has not been meeting the security needs of the facility since Federal Protective Service agents were removed from the island," Clinton and Bishop wrote in a letter obtained by The Associated Press.

Homeland Security Undersecretary Jay Cohen responded that Plum Island used a contract with a private security firm and relied on an agreement with local police, who were deputized to enforce federal laws on the island.

The White House said modern safety rules at labs are sufficient to avoid any outbreak. But incidents in Britain have demonstrated that the foot-and-mouth virus can cause remarkable economic havoc--and that the virus can escape from a facility.

An epidemic in 2001 devastated Britain's livestock industry, as the government slaughtered 6 million sheep, cows and pigs. Last year, in a less serious outbreak, Britain's health and safety agency concluded the virus probably escaped from a site shared by a government research center and a vaccine maker. Other outbreaks have occurred in Taiwan in 1997 and China last year and in 2006.

If even a single cow signals an outbreak in the U.S., emergency plans permit the government to shut down all exports and movement of livestock. Herds would be quarantined, and a controlled slaughter could be started to stop the disease from spreading.

Infected animals weaken and lose weight. Milk cows don't produce milk. They remain highly infectious, even if they survive the virus.

The Homeland Security Department is convinced it can safely operate the lab on the mainland, saying containment procedures at high-security labs have improved. The livestock industry is divided. Some experts, including the former director at the aging Plum Island lab, say research ought to be kept away from cattle populations--and, ideally placed where the public already has accepted dangerous research.

The former director, Dr. Roger Breeze, suggested the facility could be safely located at the Atlanta campus of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, or at Fort Detrick in Frederick, Md., home of The United States Army Medical Research Institute for infectious diseases.

Another possibility, Breeze said, is on Long Island, where there is no commercial livestock industry. That would allow retention of most of the current Plum Island employees.

The former head of the U.S. Department Agriculture's Agricultural Research Service said Americans are not prepared for a foot-and-mouth outbreak that has been avoided on the mainland since 1929.

"The horrific prospect of exterminating potentially millions of animals is not something this country's ready for," said Dr. Floyd Horn.

The USDA ran the Plum Island lab until 2003. It was turned over to the Homeland Security Department because preventing an outbreak is now part of the nation's biological defense program.

Plum Island researchers work on detecting the disease, controlling epidemics using vaccines and drugs, testing imported animals and training professionals.

The new facility will add research on diseases that can be transferred from animals to humans. The Plum Island facility is not secure enough to handle that higher-level research.

A new facility at Plum Island is technically a possibility. Signs point to a mainland site, however, after the administration spent considerable time and money scouting new locations. Also, there are financial concerns about operating from a location accessible only by ferry or helicopter.

The Homeland Security Department said laboratory animals would not be corralled outside the new facility, and they would not come into contact with local livestock. All work with the virus and lab waste would be handled securely and any material leaving would be treated and monitored to ensure it was sterilized.

"Containment technology has improved dramatically since foot-and-mouth disease prohibitions were put in place in 1948," said Homeland Security spokeswoman Amy Kudwa.

Cattle farmers and residents are divided over the proposal to move the lab to the mainland.

"I would like to believe we could build a facility, with the knowledge and technology we have available, that would be basically safe from a bio-security standpoint," said John Stuedemann, a cattle farmer near Athens, Ga., and a former scientist at the USDA.

Nearby, community activist Grady Thrasher in Athens is worried about an outbreak from a research lab. Thrasher, a former securities lawyer, has started a petition drive against moving the lab to Georgia, saying the risks are too great.

"There's no way you can balance that equation by putting this in the middle of a community where it will do the most harm," Thrasher said. "The community is now aroused, so I think we have a majority against this."

In North Carolina, commissioners in Granville County originally endorsed moving the lab to their area but later withdrew support. Officials from Homeland Security ultimately met with residents for more than four hours, but the commissioners have taken no further action to back the facility.

"Accidents are going to happen 50 years down the road or one year down the road," said Bill McKellar, a pharmacist in Butner, N.C., who leads an opposition group that has formed a research committee of lawyers and doctors.


None\0-

Date: 4/29/08


Comments on Articles
Readers Comments
Rafick — 05/21/2008 12:05:51
Laboratory biosecurity systems have failed in the recent past. Forgot UK FMD episode? Its better to be strong now and prevent the disease coming on the mainland than be sorry later.

Readers Comments
Bill McKellar — 05/17/2008 08:05:02
DHS says that classified forensic investigations will also be done in NBAF. Also, DHS is exempt from Freedom of Information. The combination of the above along with working with special agents absolutely is not "working to insure the safety of our nation's food supply." How can anyone believe that "hogwash".

Readers Comments
NoNBAF — 05/16/2008 11:05:14
A much anticipated (long over due) hearing in scheduled to examine issues, that have not yet officially been addressed concerning the National Bio Agro Defense Facility and its intended research purposes; to relocate (FMD) Foot and Mouth Disease on to the U.S. mainland. The hearing entitled; Germs, Viruses, and Secrets: Government Plans to Move Exotic Disease Research to the Mainland United States is scheduled for 10:00AM on May 22nd. Agriculture and Food Safety is not the purpose for the NBAF.If it were the USDA who not be trying to prevent companies from testing to ensure our food supply is safe. The Bush administration on Friday, May 9th urged a federal appeals court to stop meatpackers from testing all their animals for mad cow disease.,The USDA argues that more widespread testing does not guarantee food safety and could result in a false positive that scares consumers. Why would an adminstration so concerned about our Nations food supply and agriculture appeal a case for more testing by a company wanting to reassure consumers their product is safe and then argue we need the NBAF? Think about it?

Readers Comments
Caroline — 05/16/2008 06:05:04
The idiocy of bringing FMD to the mainland can only be outdone by an Executive Branch that has no regard for the law or the US Constitution. FMD is illegal on the US mainland unless the Bush administration has been successful in turning that Federal law on its ear. The idea of bringing pathogens that either have not ever existed in the US or like FMD have been eradicated here and is illegal on the mainland is outrageous. If the President MUST have this disease brought to the mainland, let him put it on his ranch in Crawford, TX...

Administration may move FMD research to mainland
Add Your Comment

New:
You can now post a comment without the need of registering. Enter your name and email. Your email will not be displayed. All comments are monitored and will be removed if considered inappropriate.

66 Recommend | 4 Comments

Agriculture News from HPJ - Your Ag News Source
Google
 
Web hpj.com
Copyright/Privacy
Copyright 1995-2008.  High Plains Publishers, Inc.  All rights reserved.  Any republishing of these pages, including electronic reproduction of the editorial archives or classified advertising, is strictly prohibited. If you have questions or comments you can reach us at
High Plains Journal 1500 E. Wyatt Earp Blvd., P.O. Box 760, Dodge City, KS 67801 or call 1-800-452-7171. Email: webmaster@hpj.com
Cimarron from DuPont    
EquipmentForTheFarm
New or used farm equipment
Latest Ag News High Plains Journal - Farm, Ranch, Agribusiness, Crops and Livestock
  •  BSE Timeline
  • Ag Leaders Pan GOP Ethanol Stance
  • Cheap Land, Good Weather Help Expansion
  • Farm Rents At Tipping Point-3
  • By the Numbers-Dornfeld
  • How Will Brazil's Land Expansion Grow?
  • Farm Rents at Tipping Point 2
  • Brazil Land Expansion has Potential
  • Farm Rents Hit Price Tipping Point
    ©2008 DTN. Licensed under U.S. Patent No. 4,558,302 and foreign counterparts. All rights reserved.
    High Plains Journal - Farm, Ranch, Agribusiness, Crops and Livestock
  • DTN Early Word Grains 09/05 06:02
  • DTN Midday Grain Comments 09/05 12:09
  • DTN Closing Grain Comments 09/05 14:36
  • DTN Cattle Close/Trends 09/05 15:30
  • DTN Early Word Opening Livestock 09/05 05:40
  • DTN Midday Livestock Comments 09/05 12:25
  • DTN Closing Livestock Comments 09/05 16:31
  • DTN Chart Technical Points 09/05 15:00
  • DTN Feeder Pig Index
    ©2008 DTN. Licensed under U.S. Patent No. 4,558,302 and foreign counterparts. All rights reserved.
    Visit PickensPlan

    National Ag News Agriculture Industry Today

    Farm and ranch survey.

    High Plains Journal agriculture news RSS Feed
     

    Add agriculture and ranching news RSS XML feed to My Yahoo!
    Add agriculture and livestock RSS XML news feed to Google