-
Peter Pan® peanut butter is safe and wholesome for consumers to
continue to eat.
-
The U.S. government agrees ConAgra Foods made significant upgrades
to its plant, policies and procedures eight years ago to help ensure
the safety of its peanut butter. These upgrades were based on new
knowledge food safety experts gained about peanut butter during this
outbreak.
-
ConAgra Foods has become a recognized leader in food safety.
-
ConAgra Foods acted responsibly during the 2007 recall. It
took immediate and comprehensive action eight years ago, quickly and
voluntarily recalling all of its peanut butter products on Feb. 14,
2007 and stopping production for almost six months, until the
integrity of new production processes was proven.
-
Despite testing, no finished product showed contamination between
2004 and 2007.
-
The U.S. government agrees that ConAgra Foods has a demonstrated
record of sharing with both competitors and government agencies
scientific data learned about the safe manufacture of peanut butter.
OMAHA, Neb.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--May 20, 2015--
ConAgra Foods, Inc. (NYSE: CAG) announced today a negotiated resolution
by a subsidiary, ConAgra Grocery Products Company LLC, with the Office
of the United States Attorney for the Middle District of Georgia and the
Consumer Protection Branch of the Department of Justice. The resolution
relates to the previously announced investigation into a peanut butter
recall that occurred in February 2007, more than eight years ago. Peter
Pan peanut butter is safe for consumers to continue to eat.
ConAgra Foods immediately and voluntarily recalled its Peter Pan peanut
butter in February 2007 once the presence of salmonella was suspected.
Peter Pan peanut butter was reintroduced into the marketplace in August
2007 after ConAgra Foods took significant steps to improve the
Sylvester, GA., facility where Peter Pan was made, using new knowledge
about the potential for salmonella in peanut butter.
Peter Pan peanut butter has continued to be safe for consumers to enjoy
since its reintroduction to the marketplace more than seven-and-a-half
years ago. Leading food safety practices, including robust testing, new
equipment and extensive training, have helped ensure that the plant has
made safe and wholesome peanut butter on a daily basis. ConAgra Foods
has been recognized as a leader in food safety since that time. The
company and its 175 dedicated employees in Sylvester, GA., who make
Peter Pan peanut butter products every day, are deeply committed to food
safety.
“We did not, and never will, knowingly ship a product that is not safe
for consumers. We’ve invested heavily in leading-edge food safety
technology and practices over the past eight years, and we are thankful
for all of the people who recognize that and are loyal Peter Pan fans,”
said Dr. Al Bolles, chief technical and operations officer for ConAgra
Foods. “ConAgra Foods took full responsibility in 2007, taking immediate
steps to determine the potential causes of and solutions for the problem
and acting quickly and definitively to inform and protect consumers.
This incident brought to light previously unknown aspects of making safe
peanut butter, and we have been passionate about sharing what we learned
to help others join us in creating an even safer food supply. We will
remain vigilant to maintain the trust we’ve worked so hard to earn from
our consumers.”
Before the 2007 recall, food safety experts and the regulatory community
believed that salmonella was unlikely to be present in finished peanut
butter products. It was generally believed that the low moisture content
of finished peanut butter inhibited the growth of bacteria such as
salmonella. This case provided new insight into the essential components
of making safe peanut butter, and ConAgra Foods has applied these
components each day since reopening its Sylvester plant in August 2007.
Prior to 2007, ConAgra Foods employed industry standard food safety
practices for the production of peanut butter, including random testing
of finished products. That testing led to a positive finding of
salmonella in the Sylvester facility in 2004. The 2004 product was
destroyed prior to shipment. None of ConAgra Foods’ testing between 2004
and 2007 showed contamination in any finished product. Less common but
more robust testing protocols were used in 2007 after the evidence of a
salmonella outbreak was found. Today, ConAgra Foods uses those testing
mechanisms, and more robust food safety practices at every step of its
production, to ensure that each jar of peanut butter is safe for
consumers.
Under the terms of a Plea Agreement with the government, ConAgra Grocery
Products Company will agree to plead guilty to a single misdemeanor
violation of The Food, Drug & Cosmetic Act. If the plea is accepted by
the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Georgia, the
government’s investigation into the recall will conclude and ConAgra
Grocery Products Company will make payments totaling $11.2 million to
the federal government. The expense relating to this payment was accrued
during previous periods.
Beginning in 2007, ConAgra Foods reimbursed and compensated impacted
consumers and customers, took significant steps to create a
state-of-the-art facility in Sylvester, GA, and invested $275 million in
quality assurance infrastructure upgrades to enhance food safety
practices company-wide.
The signing of the Plea Agreement was the first formal step toward
completing the legal resolution of this matter. The Plea Agreement is
subject to Court approval, which will be sought along with the formal
sentencing process in the coming months.
About ConAgra Foods
ConAgra Foods, Inc., (NYSE: CAG) is one
of North America's largest packaged food companies with branded and
private branded food found in 99 percent of America’s households, as
well as a strong commercial foods business serving restaurants and
foodservice operations globally. Consumers can find recognized brands
such as Banquet®, Chef Boyardee®, Egg Beaters®, Healthy Choice®, Hebrew
National®, Hunt's®, Marie Callender's®, Orville Redenbacher's®, PAM®,
Peter Pan®, Reddi-wip®, Slim Jim®, Snack Pack® and many other ConAgra
Foods brands, along with food sold by ConAgra Foods under private brand
labels, in grocery, convenience, mass merchandise, club and drug stores.
Additionally, ConAgra Foods supplies frozen potato and sweet potato
products as well as other vegetable, spice, bakery and grain products to
commercial and foodservice customers. To learn more about our commitment
to food safety at ConAgra Foods, please visit http://www.conagrafoods.com/our-company/our-commitment/food-safety.
![](https://cts.businesswire.com/ct/CT?id=bwnews&sty=20150520006120r1&sid=acqr7&distro=nx&lang=en)
View source version on businesswire.com: http://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20150520006120/en/
Source: ConAgra Foods
ConAgra Foods
Media:
Teresa Paulsen, 402-240-5210
Vice
President, Communication & External Relations
Teresa.Paulsen@ConAgraFoods.com
or
Investors:
Chris
Klinefelter, 402-240-4154
Vice President, Investor Relations
Chris.Klinefelter@ConAgraFoods.com
EIN Presswire provides this news content "as is" without warranty of any kind. We do not accept any responsibility or liability
for the accuracy, content, images, videos, licenses, completeness, legality, or reliability of the information contained in this
article. If you have any complaints or copyright issues related to this article, kindly contact the author above.