
From VOA Learning English, this is the Agriculture Report in Special English.
 
Each year, bad food sickens about one in six Americans. Proposed new  rules aim to improve food safety. Officials say the changes could  prevent more than one million cases of food-related illnesses each year.
 
The new rules were proposed this month, exactly two years after  President Obama signed the Food Safety Modernization Act. The rules are  the first step in putting the law into effect, making the biggest  changes in food safety since the 1930s.
 
The law makes the Food and Drug Administration responsible for  preventing foodborne illnesses. Experts say this is a change from the  role that the FDA has played in the past in reacting to disease  outbreaks.
 
Congress passed the law after a series of outbreaks linked to bagged  spinach, peanut butter and other foods. Margaret Hamburg is commissioner  of the FDA.
 
They occurred because of problems that would have been addressed by  these kinds of approaches. So I think, you know, we’re very optimistic  that we will begin to see real change.”
 
The agency is proposing to require food manufacturers to show that they  have identified where contamination is most likely to happen.  Manufacturers would also have to show that they have taken steps to  prevent it. The proposed rules also deal with safety in growing and  harvesting fruits and vegetables.
 
The Congressional Budget Office estimates that establishing all of the  provisions of the law will cost the government $1.4 billion. The Grocery  Manufacturers of America, an industry group, has not released an  estimate of what it will cost producers.
 
But FDA Deputy Commissioner Michael Taylor says the new rules are worth the price.
 
“Even if you just look at estimated reductions in illness, but if you  also take into account avoiding disruption of the food supply and the  loss of confidence in those commodities by consumers, so I think we’ll  see that the benefits substantially outweigh the costs of  implementation.”
 
Caroline Smith-DeWaal is director for food safety at the Center for  Science in the Public Interest. She says the rules should have been  released a year ago.
 
 “We’re really happy that the new rules have come out. They’re a little late.”
 
And she notes that they are not finished.
 
 “The bigger question is, where are the rules on imports that haven’t been released yet?”
 
The FDA says about 15 percent of food eaten by Americans is imported,  and that share is growing. Rules have not been released yet to require  imported foods to meet the same standards as food produced in the United  States. But the agency says they are coming soon.
 
The rules released this month will not go into effect for more than a  year. Final versions will be announced after the agency considers public  comments. And experts point out that Congress will need to approve  money to enforce the new rules.