AP: 'Pink slime' maker suspends production at some plants

6am: Pink slime in ground beef


Photographer: WEWS
Copyright 2012 Scripps Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Ground beef_20110928115133_JPG

Getty Images

advertisement

Posted: 03/26/2012

LUBBOCK, Texas - The company that makes "pink slime" suspended operations Monday at three of four plants where the beef ingredient is made, saying officials would work to address recent public concern about the product.

Beef Products Inc. will suspend operations at plants in Amarillo, Texas; Garden City, Kan.; and Waterloo, Iowa, according to Craig Letch, the company's director of food safety and quality assurance. The company's plant at its Dakota Dunes, S.D., headquarters will continue operations.

"We feel like when people can start to understand the truth and reality then our business will come back," Letch said. "It's 100 percent beef."

Federal regulators say the ammonia-treated filler, known in the industry as "lean, finely textured beef," meets food safety standards. But critics say the product could be unsafe and is an unappetizing example of industrialized food production.

The low-cost ingredient is made from fatty bits of meat left over from other cuts. The bits are heated and spun to remove most of the fat. The lean mix then is compressed into blocks for use in ground meat. The product is exposed to ammonium hydroxide gas to kill bacteria, such as E. coli and salmonella.

The result is a product that is as much as 97 percent lean beef, Letch said.

The product has been used for years, but it wasn't until earlier this month that social media suddenly exploded with worry and an online petition seeking its ouster from schools garnered hundreds of thousands of supporters. The U.S. Department of Agriculture decided to allow school districts to stop using it and some retail chains have pulled products containing it from their shelves.

About 200 employees at each of the three plants will get full salary and benefits for 60 days during the suspension, Letch said. The plant in Amarillo produced about 200,000 pounds a day, while the Kansas and Iowa plants each produced about 350,000 pounds a day.

Copyright 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

  • Comments
Advertisement
  • Related Stories
BPI sues ABC News for 'pink slime' defamation
BPI sues ABC News over 'pink slime'

Beef Products Inc. sued ABC News, Inc. for defamation Thursday …

Schools in majority of states, including Ohio, to order ground beef without 'pink slime'
Schools turn noses up at 'pink slime'

The nation's school districts are turning up their noses at …

How the term 'pink slime' for low-cost lean ground beef filler came to be
The making of the term 'pink slime'

The microbiologist who coined the term for lean finely textured…

Butchers seeing a rise in business since pink slime controversy, and their prices are often cheaper
Meat prices that won't break the bank

Butchers are seeing a rise in business after the pink slime …

Pink slime debate has shoppers looking for alternative meat sources without breaking the bank
Do you know where this meat came from?

Meat labels don't tell you much, so can you tell where it came …

Move over 'pink slime,' some beef stuck together with 'meat glue'
Another strange substance found in meat

The meat industry has taken a lot of heat lately about …

Wendy's says its ground beef is 'pink slime'-free
Wendy's says beef is 'pink slime'-free

The Wendy's Co. ran full-page advertisements in eight major …

Governors urge consumers to reconsider pink slime
Consumers urged to reconsider pink…

The main producer of "pink slime" and the politicians defending…

Which northeast Ohio grocery stores are selling ground beef with beef trimmings, aka ‘pink slime’?
LIST: Local stores selling 'pink slime'

A national investigation recently revealed some grocery stores …

Latest Headlines


  1. Jump in cyclists raises safety concerns

    Jump in cyclists raises safety concerns

    The number of cyclists pedaling through city streets has jumped more than 200 percent in the last decade, according to the city of Cleveland.

    • PHOTOS: Remembering OK tornado victims

      PHOTOS: Remembering OK tornado victims

      See photos and information about the victims of the deadly tornado in Moore, Oklahoma.

      • WEWS matching 'Courage Fund' donations

        • Amphibians disappearing at alarming rate

          • Lincoln West students learn gardening

            • FirstEnergy mailing bulbs & power strips

            • Cockroach survives by losing sweet tooth

              • Trending now on newsnet5
               
              • Stay Connected

              Send us a News Tip Send us a News Tip
              Mobile & iPhone/Android Apps Mobile & iPhone/Android Apps
              Twitter Twitter
              Facebook Facebook
              YouTube YouTube
              Community Calendar Community Calendar
              RSS Feeds RSS Feeds
              ClevelandLaw.tv ClevelandLaw.tv